[00:00.000 --> 00:06.720] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.720 --> 00:13.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.040 --> 00:21.440] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.960] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $200.00 [00:29.960 --> 00:41.280] $27.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.280 --> 00:52.280] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.280 --> 00:58.200] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing 10 and [00:58.200 --> 01:07.360] injuring 40 today in history and recent news since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:07.360 --> 01:12.560] 1325 legalizing Hemp and the taxes law back in June. County prosecutors around the state, [01:12.560 --> 01:17.120] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and [01:17.120 --> 01:21.360] even refusing to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or [01:21.360 --> 01:26.720] the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:26.720 --> 01:30.720] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and [01:30.720 --> 01:35.120] delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, [01:35.120 --> 01:39.360] including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on [01:39.360 --> 01:44.440] Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a [01:44.440 --> 01:50.920] misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the District Attorney in [01:50.920 --> 01:57.240] El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.240 --> 02:02.080] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, [02:02.080 --> 02:06.640] the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in [02:06.640 --> 02:11.120] Harris County, who stated that quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.120 --> 02:15.640] illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [02:15.640 --> 02:25.000] the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five [02:25.000 --> 02:29.680] and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [02:29.680 --> 02:35.480] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [02:35.480 --> 02:40.240] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, [02:40.240 --> 02:47.360] the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized [02:47.360 --> 03:16.360] to lure and prey who may be drawn into the globe. [03:17.360 --> 03:29.360] So, what do you want to do? What you gonna do? Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? [03:29.360 --> 03:35.360] What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What [03:35.360 --> 03:41.360] you gonna do when they come for you? When you were eight and you had bad traits, you [03:41.360 --> 03:48.360] know just school and learn the golden rules, so why are you acting like a bloody fool if [03:48.360 --> 03:53.360] you get hot and you must get cool? Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna [03:53.360 --> 03:58.360] do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna do when [03:58.360 --> 04:03.360] they come for you? You're chocking down that one, you're choking down this one, you're [04:03.360 --> 04:06.360] choking down your mother and you're choking down your father, you're choking down your [04:36.360 --> 04:39.360] Now, baby, no break, that's also jamanna. [04:39.360 --> 04:41.360] Give ya no break, that's Stephen your IJ. [04:41.360 --> 04:45.360] Now give ya no break, hey, hey, hey, Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:45.360 --> 04:49.360] And we're whatcha gonna to do, we're whatcha gonna to do when they come for you [04:49.360 --> 04:50.360] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:50.360 --> 04:51.360] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:51.360 --> 04:55.360] We're whatcha gonna be, we're whatcha gonna to do when they come for you [04:55.360 --> 05:00.360] Ok, howdy howdy, whatcha gonna to do when they come for you. [05:00.360 --> 05:05.360] What I gotta suggest you, go right back for them. [05:05.360 --> 05:12.360] This is Friday, the third day of December 2021. [05:12.360 --> 05:14.360] Did I get that right, Brad? [05:14.360 --> 05:16.360] You got it. [05:16.360 --> 05:18.360] Brad has to watch out for me. [05:18.360 --> 05:19.360] Professional. [05:19.360 --> 05:22.360] Old and senile. [05:22.360 --> 05:24.360] Okay. [05:24.360 --> 05:27.360] We'll go back after them. [05:27.360 --> 05:28.360] I want to start out tonight. [05:28.360 --> 05:32.360] I'm going to turn on the phone lines. [05:32.360 --> 05:33.360] Lines are on. [05:33.360 --> 05:36.360] Give us, if you have a question or a comment, [05:36.360 --> 05:42.360] give us a call 512-646-1984. [05:42.360 --> 05:48.360] And I'm going to start out talking about running the routine. [05:48.360 --> 05:52.360] If you have the system coming after you, [05:52.360 --> 05:56.360] it is our opinion on this show, [05:56.360 --> 05:59.360] or at least is my opinion on this show, [05:59.360 --> 06:04.360] that the best fight has the one you picked. [06:04.360 --> 06:06.360] Somebody wants to start a fight with me, [06:06.360 --> 06:08.360] while I will accommodate them. [06:08.360 --> 06:12.360] And I'll start one with them. [06:12.360 --> 06:18.360] The way you do that is you get them to do something [06:18.360 --> 06:23.360] or get them to do something they're not supposed to do, [06:23.360 --> 06:27.360] or get them to fail to do something that they are required to do. [06:27.360 --> 06:29.360] That you can do most of the time. [06:29.360 --> 06:31.360] We get a lot of people complaining, [06:31.360 --> 06:35.360] because these guys don't do what they're supposed to. [06:35.360 --> 06:38.360] And I say, good. [06:38.360 --> 06:40.360] Make them complaint officials. [06:40.360 --> 06:42.360] Don't just fuss and whine. [06:42.360 --> 06:43.360] Yeah. [06:43.360 --> 06:46.360] The more they don't do what they are supposed to do, [06:46.360 --> 06:49.360] the more fun I get to have with them. [06:49.360 --> 06:55.360] And when they do what they're supposed to, [06:55.360 --> 07:01.360] I go down there and give them opportunity to screw up, [07:01.360 --> 07:03.360] so that I can sting them. [07:03.360 --> 07:05.360] If they're no fun, if they're not screwing up. [07:05.360 --> 07:08.360] Like the story I tell about the hearing aid thing, [07:08.360 --> 07:11.360] where I asked the judge to provide accommodation [07:11.360 --> 07:14.360] on the hearing of the Americans with Disabilities Act. [07:14.360 --> 07:17.360] It started out by making him mad at me [07:17.360 --> 07:20.360] and got him to refuse to do it. [07:20.360 --> 07:23.360] So when I went out in the hall and drugged a bailiff out with me, [07:23.360 --> 07:26.360] I asked him to arrest the judge. [07:26.360 --> 07:30.360] Oh, that was so much fun. [07:30.360 --> 07:36.360] If you haven't set up a policeman or judge or a prosecutor, [07:36.360 --> 07:41.360] so that you could then ask the bailiff or the 9-1-1 guy [07:41.360 --> 07:47.360] to arrest them, you just haven't lived. [07:47.360 --> 07:53.360] So what you do is get rid of that notion [07:53.360 --> 07:57.360] that public officials are going to do what they're supposed to do. [07:57.360 --> 08:01.360] They're only going to do what they're supposed to do [08:01.360 --> 08:05.360] if it is administratively convenient. [08:05.360 --> 08:12.360] And in my experience, they very seldom find it administratively convenient. [08:12.360 --> 08:17.360] It's more convenient for them to follow policy [08:17.360 --> 08:23.360] and in my experience, policy seldom follows law. [08:23.360 --> 08:27.360] We write these laws to control our public officials [08:27.360 --> 08:30.360] and we wrote laws to control our public officials [08:30.360 --> 08:34.360] because we needed laws to control our public officials [08:34.360 --> 08:37.360] because public officials always try to get out of control [08:37.360 --> 08:39.360] and do whatever they want to. [08:39.360 --> 08:42.360] They want to streamline procedures [08:42.360 --> 08:45.360] and make things administratively convenient [08:45.360 --> 08:49.360] and adjudicatively expedient. [08:49.360 --> 08:51.360] Well, we don't want them to do that. [08:51.360 --> 08:54.360] It's always a pushing pull. [08:54.360 --> 08:58.360] So over the last 30 years or so, [08:58.360 --> 09:02.360] we have developed a set of tools [09:02.360 --> 09:07.360] to help bring them, our public officials, [09:07.360 --> 09:11.360] back from the code, back off the brink [09:11.360 --> 09:16.360] and bring them back into compliance with code [09:16.360 --> 09:18.360] the way they're supposed to be. [09:18.360 --> 09:22.360] Now, sometimes we have to thump them. [09:22.360 --> 09:24.360] It's not out of meanness. [09:24.360 --> 09:27.360] It's not out of anger or avarice. [09:27.360 --> 09:29.360] It's just doing our jobs. [09:29.360 --> 09:32.360] We are citizens in a republic [09:32.360 --> 09:34.360] and when the republic gets out of hand, [09:34.360 --> 09:37.360] it is the duty of the citizen to fix it [09:37.360 --> 09:39.360] and I'm going to suggest to you, [09:39.360 --> 09:42.360] don't wait until they do something horrible. [09:42.360 --> 09:44.360] The best way to keep you living line, [09:44.360 --> 09:48.360] well, I speak about my grandkids. [09:48.360 --> 09:51.360] I love them dearly [09:51.360 --> 09:54.360] and I am not going to wait until one gets out in the road [09:54.360 --> 09:56.360] and gets run over before I do something. [09:56.360 --> 09:59.360] The first time they get close to the road, [09:59.360 --> 10:01.360] I'm going to tan their hides. [10:01.360 --> 10:05.360] It's not out of anger or meanness. [10:05.360 --> 10:08.360] It's out of love because I care about them. [10:08.360 --> 10:12.360] I don't want them to get into big trouble. [10:12.360 --> 10:15.360] I don't want my police officer to get in big trouble [10:15.360 --> 10:19.360] so I filed first degree felony aggravated assault charges [10:19.360 --> 10:24.360] against him for following policy. [10:24.360 --> 10:27.360] And that always gets their attention [10:27.360 --> 10:29.360] and then when the prosecuting attorney [10:29.360 --> 10:32.360] doesn't give my complaint to the grand jury, [10:32.360 --> 10:36.360] I file criminal charges against the prosecuting attorney. [10:36.360 --> 10:40.360] And when the magistrate that I filed criminal charges [10:40.360 --> 10:44.360] against the district attorney with, [10:44.360 --> 10:47.360] he doesn't do his job, well, [10:47.360 --> 10:51.360] guess what I do? [10:51.360 --> 10:55.360] At the end of the day, it's not about the law. [10:55.360 --> 10:59.360] Most of us want to think that we are in a land of law [10:59.360 --> 11:05.360] and we can trust the legal system that it works. [11:05.360 --> 11:07.360] And I'm going to say, yeah, it does work, [11:07.360 --> 11:11.360] but it's not self-initiating. [11:11.360 --> 11:16.360] You have to make it work. [11:16.360 --> 11:20.360] So the way you make it work is start a fight. [11:20.360 --> 11:22.360] We've got a couple of people in Oregon. [11:22.360 --> 11:25.360] Oregon's coming after them. [11:25.360 --> 11:29.360] So if that's me, I go down to the court clerk [11:29.360 --> 11:31.360] and I ask to see some records. [11:31.360 --> 11:35.360] She's not going to want to show me. [11:35.360 --> 11:37.360] She's going to give me some hassle. [11:37.360 --> 11:39.360] And I get about two words I don't like. [11:39.360 --> 11:44.360] I call 911, ask them to send somebody out to arrest her. [11:44.360 --> 11:47.360] And they generally give me a little hassle, [11:47.360 --> 11:50.360] but I can generally get them to send somebody. [11:50.360 --> 11:53.360] And then when the 911 operator shows up, [11:53.360 --> 11:54.360] I reach in my satchel, [11:54.360 --> 11:57.360] I pull out this criminal complaint against the person, [11:57.360 --> 12:04.360] already made out, alleging them of doing what they just did. [12:04.360 --> 12:08.360] It's not hard for us to predict. [12:08.360 --> 12:10.360] Especially after a few times. [12:10.360 --> 12:12.360] Yeah, they always do the same stupid stuff. [12:12.360 --> 12:14.360] I went down to the clerks, [12:14.360 --> 12:18.360] I went down to the office of blank county clerk [12:18.360 --> 12:23.360] and requested records under 15.16. [12:23.360 --> 12:28.360] And that's when you're asked for a warrant that has been executed. [12:28.360 --> 12:32.360] Once a warrant has been issued and executed, [12:32.360 --> 12:37.360] the clerk is required to make the warrant [12:37.360 --> 12:40.360] available for public inspection [12:40.360 --> 12:43.360] by all interested parties all regional times. [12:43.360 --> 12:45.360] Well, she violated that. [12:45.360 --> 12:50.360] And the cop is going to think that's really technical. [12:50.360 --> 12:56.360] And she may need time to contact a lawyer [12:56.360 --> 12:58.360] to find out if she's supposed to give them to her or not. [12:58.360 --> 13:00.360] And I say, yeah, well, good luck for that. [13:00.360 --> 13:03.360] She can go contact the lawyer she wants to. [13:03.360 --> 13:06.360] And if she didn't have to give them to me, [13:06.360 --> 13:08.360] she'll have an affirmative defense. [13:08.360 --> 13:12.360] In the meantime, I want to arrest it. [13:12.360 --> 13:15.360] But it wouldn't be the county clerk that would have that. [13:15.360 --> 13:17.360] It would be the magistrate's clerk, right? [13:17.360 --> 13:20.360] Well, yeah. [13:20.360 --> 13:22.360] The magistrate that issued it. [13:22.360 --> 13:24.360] The clerk for whatever magistrate. [13:24.360 --> 13:25.360] Could be a county judge. [13:25.360 --> 13:27.360] Could be a district judge. [13:27.360 --> 13:30.360] Whatever the clerk is, they're required to produce it. [13:30.360 --> 13:32.360] And you look up something like that. [13:32.360 --> 13:33.360] Yeah. [13:33.360 --> 13:34.360] Do your research. [13:34.360 --> 13:37.360] Find something they're not going to want to give you. [13:37.360 --> 13:39.360] And go down there and get them to do something [13:39.360 --> 13:41.360] they're not going to want to do. [13:41.360 --> 13:45.360] I was this judge that I had a stop to hearing. [13:45.360 --> 13:47.360] I stood at the bar, wouldn't sit down, [13:47.360 --> 13:49.360] and he finally looked up and said, can I help you? [13:49.360 --> 13:51.360] Yes, your honor, I have a hearing deficiency. [13:51.360 --> 13:53.360] Yeah, Mr. Cannon, what's wrong with your hearing? [13:53.360 --> 13:55.360] This guy was a real jerk. [13:55.360 --> 13:56.360] And I knew him. [13:56.360 --> 13:57.360] He knew me. [13:57.360 --> 14:00.360] He has already didn't like me. [14:00.360 --> 14:03.360] I said, well, Joe, Joe's down in Mexico the other day, [14:03.360 --> 14:05.360] and I drank too much of that cheap tequila [14:05.360 --> 14:06.360] and lost my hearing aid. [14:06.360 --> 14:08.360] Well, why are you telling me this? [14:08.360 --> 14:10.360] Well, you have a combination for the hearing impaired. [14:10.360 --> 14:11.360] You're not. [14:11.360 --> 14:13.360] Well, you have a sound system here. [14:13.360 --> 14:14.360] You turn it up. [14:14.360 --> 14:15.360] No, I will not. [14:15.360 --> 14:17.360] Well, then we use speaker. [14:17.360 --> 14:19.360] Well, that didn't go over well. [14:19.360 --> 14:21.360] He told me to sit down. [14:21.360 --> 14:24.360] He told me if I didn't shut up, he said, [14:24.360 --> 14:27.360] throw me out of the courtroom. [14:27.360 --> 14:29.360] So when I finished my hearing, [14:29.360 --> 14:30.360] I called the bailiff out in the hall [14:30.360 --> 14:33.360] and asked him to rest the judge. [14:33.360 --> 14:35.360] Well, why would I rest the judge class? [14:35.360 --> 14:40.360] I said, Mr. Mayor, official oppression criminal violation 39.03 penal code. [14:40.360 --> 14:46.360] In that, he failed to perform a duty he was required to perform. [14:46.360 --> 14:51.360] And in the process, denied me the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right. [14:51.360 --> 14:54.360] Well, Mr. Cutler, what right did he deny you in? [14:54.360 --> 14:58.360] He denied me in a competition under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [14:58.360 --> 15:00.360] Well, Mr. Cutler, why didn't you tell the judge [15:00.360 --> 15:03.360] about the Americans with Disabilities Act? [15:03.360 --> 15:07.360] If I'd done that, he might have turned the sound up. [15:07.360 --> 15:11.360] The bailiff stood there. [15:11.360 --> 15:13.360] This grid came across his face. [15:13.360 --> 15:14.360] Well, you set him up. [15:14.360 --> 15:16.360] I said, yeah, I did. [15:16.360 --> 15:18.360] Now, you go in there and arrest him. [15:18.360 --> 15:19.360] Well, I can't arrest a judge. [15:19.360 --> 15:20.360] He sure can. [15:20.360 --> 15:23.360] Just look there to console him, drag him off to jail. [15:23.360 --> 15:25.360] You can do this. [15:25.360 --> 15:29.360] All of us can do this. [15:29.360 --> 15:31.360] Most of us don't realize it, [15:31.360 --> 15:35.360] but we are the most powerful person in the courtroom. [15:35.360 --> 15:37.360] When you walk into a courthouse, [15:37.360 --> 15:40.360] you're the most powerful person in the building. [15:40.360 --> 15:41.360] Yeah. [15:41.360 --> 15:44.360] But I'll suggest that the place to start flexing those muscles [15:44.360 --> 15:51.360] is not when you're under the oppressive heavy foot [15:51.360 --> 15:54.360] of them about to step on you for something. [15:54.360 --> 15:57.360] You need to get off the hood. [15:57.360 --> 15:59.360] But then the time to start flexing all that other [15:59.360 --> 16:01.360] is when you pick the fight [16:01.360 --> 16:05.360] and you choose something that they're in trouble for. [16:05.360 --> 16:07.360] Absolutely. [16:07.360 --> 16:11.360] We keep saying the best fight has the one you picked. [16:11.360 --> 16:15.360] However, sometimes you get one picked for you. [16:15.360 --> 16:16.360] Yep. [16:16.360 --> 16:23.360] And then we say the best defense is a good aggressive offense. [16:23.360 --> 16:25.360] You want a fight, Bubba? [16:25.360 --> 16:27.360] I will give you one. [16:27.360 --> 16:31.360] I'll give you a good reason to go to the prosecutor and say, [16:31.360 --> 16:35.360] hey, why don't you just let this thing go? [16:35.360 --> 16:39.360] It's going to be more trouble than it's worth. [16:39.360 --> 16:40.360] Hang on. [16:40.360 --> 16:43.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue Law Radio. [16:43.360 --> 16:49.360] I call in number 512-646-1984. [16:49.360 --> 16:51.360] We're going to our sponsors. [16:51.360 --> 16:56.360] When we come back, I will go to callers. [16:56.360 --> 16:59.360] And Brett, I didn't even call off the cliff. [16:59.360 --> 17:03.360] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, [17:03.360 --> 17:05.360] letters, or even losses? [17:05.360 --> 17:09.360] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. [17:09.360 --> 17:12.360] Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [17:12.360 --> 17:14.360] and now you can win two. [17:14.360 --> 17:17.360] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [17:17.360 --> 17:20.360] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [17:20.360 --> 17:24.360] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [17:24.360 --> 17:26.360] How to answer letters and phone calls? [17:26.360 --> 17:28.360] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [17:28.360 --> 17:33.360] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [17:33.360 --> 17:38.360] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.360 --> 17:40.360] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.360 --> 17:44.360] For more information, please visit RueLawRadio.com [17:44.360 --> 17:46.360] and click on the blue Michael Meares banner, [17:46.360 --> 17:49.360] or email MichaelMeares at yahoo.com. [17:49.360 --> 17:57.360] That's RueLawRadio.com, or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com. [17:57.360 --> 18:00.360] To learn how to stop debt collectors next. [18:00.360 --> 18:04.360] RueLawRadio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. 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Craig, in conjunction with RueLawRadio, [18:28.360 --> 18:31.360] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:31.360 --> 18:33.360] that will help you understand what due process is [18:33.360 --> 18:35.360] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:35.360 --> 18:37.360] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [18:37.360 --> 18:40.360] by going to RueLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.360 --> 18:42.360] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:42.360 --> 18:45.360] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:45.360 --> 18:47.360] and the audio of the original 2009 seminar. [18:47.360 --> 18:50.360] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.360 --> 18:52.360] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [18:52.360 --> 18:54.360] from RueLawRadio.com. [18:54.360 --> 19:16.360] RueLawRadio.com. [19:16.360 --> 19:44.360] RueLawRadio.com. [19:44.360 --> 20:02.360] RueLawRadio.com. [20:02.360 --> 20:04.360] Okay, we are back. [20:04.360 --> 20:07.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, RueLawRadio. [20:07.360 --> 20:10.360] And I was gonna go to college, but I really need to touch... [20:10.360 --> 20:14.360] I don't go over this particular issue often enough. [20:14.360 --> 20:18.360] So I want to go a little farther. [20:18.360 --> 20:26.360] I know in this first segment, I sounded a bit flippant. [20:26.360 --> 20:29.360] This really is serious. [20:29.360 --> 20:37.360] But if we take it too serious, we kind of fall into a trap. [20:37.360 --> 20:43.360] The public officials want us to take what they do really serious [20:43.360 --> 20:46.360] because they want us to be terrified of them. [20:46.360 --> 20:55.360] And I make it a point to demonstrate how easy it is to beat them up. [20:55.360 --> 20:58.360] It's intentional ridicule. [20:58.360 --> 21:07.360] And I do that to get past this fear we have indoctrinated into us by the public schools. [21:07.360 --> 21:11.360] We're taught in the public schools what great and wonderful rights we have, [21:11.360 --> 21:15.360] but at the same time they demonstrate to us that while you're in this school, [21:15.360 --> 21:20.360] don't even think about trying to exert one of those a whole way to the system [21:20.360 --> 21:22.360] or fall right on your head. [21:22.360 --> 21:27.360] Then they expect us to get out of school and become empowered citizens [21:27.360 --> 21:32.360] after we've had 12 years of this hypocritical indoctrination. [21:32.360 --> 21:36.360] Well, we need a way to get past that. [21:36.360 --> 21:43.360] And the best way to get past it is to go in and pick a fight. [21:43.360 --> 21:48.360] We've got Robert in California, went down to I think it was Riverside, [21:48.360 --> 21:51.360] and picked a fight with them. [21:51.360 --> 21:55.360] Just to practice these are routines. [21:55.360 --> 21:58.360] It's not hard at all. It's really easy. [21:58.360 --> 22:06.360] The hardest thing is signing your name on that criminal complaint the first time. [22:06.360 --> 22:10.360] Some people need help and they don't really know what to do, [22:10.360 --> 22:16.360] and then you help them with that, and then they feel a little reticent about that. [22:16.360 --> 22:23.360] They don't want to put their name on that piece of paper and step out in front of them [22:23.360 --> 22:25.360] and get everybody looking at them. [22:25.360 --> 22:28.360] It turns out it's about the best thing you can do. [22:28.360 --> 22:32.360] Now, you've got to know these guys don't like me. [22:32.360 --> 22:40.360] In the county I live in, you can't tie a sheriff's deputy or public official up and throw a magnate. [22:40.360 --> 22:45.360] I had one who knew I was going to file criminal charges against him with a grand jury [22:45.360 --> 22:49.360] and arrested a grand jury, I'm sorry, with the district attorney, [22:49.360 --> 22:55.360] and arrested me in the district attorney's office to keep me from doing it. [22:55.360 --> 22:58.360] He just got stupid, let me push him over the edge, [22:58.360 --> 23:06.360] and I was giggling and gouging him the whole time, and I sued him for $400 million. [23:06.360 --> 23:11.360] You want to fight? I'll give you one. [23:11.360 --> 23:17.360] The best fight has the one you picked, even if they came after you first. [23:17.360 --> 23:23.360] They come after me, they came after me, and arrested me, threw me in jail all night, [23:23.360 --> 23:27.360] and I came right back after them. [23:27.360 --> 23:37.360] By the time the officer got his report filed, [23:37.360 --> 23:47.360] I had a motion to dismiss ready, and as soon as they got filed, I filed a motion to dismiss the dismiss case immediately. [23:47.360 --> 23:54.360] But too late, they already stuck their finger in the hornet's nest. [23:54.360 --> 24:01.360] You need to be their hornet's nest, and it's easy. [24:01.360 --> 24:09.360] Read the section in your state code that goes to public officials. [24:09.360 --> 24:16.360] In Texas, it's Chapter 39. [24:16.360 --> 24:23.360] Every state has a statute that reflects the federal code, the Federal Ku Klux Klan Act. [24:23.360 --> 24:33.360] The Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 was codified into code into 18 U.S. Code 242, [24:33.360 --> 24:46.360] or 18 U.S. Code 241 through 50-something, and that's the first half, that's the criminal side of it. [24:46.360 --> 24:57.360] The civil side was codified into 42 U.S. Code 1980, 2, 3, I think 4, 5, and 6. [24:57.360 --> 25:09.360] 1983 specifically, that's the one everybody uses, allows you to sue public officials if they deny you a due process. [25:09.360 --> 25:15.360] 18 U.S. Code 242 makes it a criminal act for them to deny you due process. [25:15.360 --> 25:23.360] Everybody should have this one memorized, who deals with the courts and public officials. [25:23.360 --> 25:38.360] 18 U.S. Code 242 essentially says, it's a little long and convoluted, but the crux of it is, matches Texas 39.03 [25:38.360 --> 25:51.360] and most states word it this way, if a public official, acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity, [25:51.360 --> 26:01.360] exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not expressly have, or fails to perform a duty he is required to perform [26:01.360 --> 26:09.360] and in the process denies a citizen in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right. [26:09.360 --> 26:16.360] That's a classic misdemeanor in most every state. You're in jail, $10,000 fine. [26:16.360 --> 26:21.360] So just see if you can get one to do that. [26:21.360 --> 26:26.360] I want to see these records. Well, why do you want to see those? [26:26.360 --> 26:31.360] 9-1-1. They can't ask me that question. [26:31.360 --> 26:37.360] They can ask me who I am and what records I want to see, but they can't ask me why I want to see them. [26:37.360 --> 26:39.360] Not in Texas, anyway. [26:39.360 --> 26:41.360] And most states are that way. [26:41.360 --> 26:53.360] And that's so that if they know what you're looking for and when you get the records, you don't find it, they're compromised. [26:53.360 --> 27:01.360] And so I deliberately ask for records that will cause them to think, why does he want to see that? [27:01.360 --> 27:07.360] Because they're pretty arrogant most of the time and what they think comes out their mouth. [27:07.360 --> 27:11.360] Why do you want to see that? [27:11.360 --> 27:19.360] I just ask for records that I know that they're not going to want to tell me, but things that are absolutely public. [27:19.360 --> 27:21.360] How much money do you make? [27:21.360 --> 27:23.360] Exactly. [27:23.360 --> 27:31.360] I want to know about the pension fund and how much have we, the people, been paying into your pension? [27:31.360 --> 27:37.360] Well, they don't like to tell about that kind of stuff and they don't want to tell about the fax number. [27:37.360 --> 27:43.360] That's another one I like to start off with, is you've got a fax number where attorneys send stuff in here. [27:43.360 --> 27:45.360] I want to know what that fax number is. [27:45.360 --> 27:47.360] I might want to send something. [27:47.360 --> 27:51.360] No, you're not an attorney, you can't use that. [27:51.360 --> 27:55.360] That was a refusal of public information. [27:55.360 --> 28:01.360] So they're forbidden to give legal advice. [28:01.360 --> 28:11.360] Okay, if you have them coming after you or if you know of them doing, if they're going after someone else that you know [28:11.360 --> 28:17.360] and they're doing something improper with them. [28:17.360 --> 28:21.360] A friend of mine just got arrested for failure to appear. [28:21.360 --> 28:27.360] And I had sent him down a couple of months ago to dig through the records and find all the cases. [28:27.360 --> 28:37.360] Give me a hundred cases, criminal cases from the Tarrant County District Court [28:37.360 --> 28:41.360] because none of them have 16, 17 orders. [28:41.360 --> 28:47.360] He got me all of that information and I have a set of documents that I just run a mail merge on them [28:47.360 --> 28:55.360] and it'll turn those hundred cases into a hundred first degree felony aggravated assault charges. [28:55.360 --> 29:03.360] A hundred Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Professional Conduct charges [29:03.360 --> 29:11.360] for every one of those cases that has a lawyer, it'll create a bar grievance. [29:11.360 --> 29:17.360] A hundred bar grievances against the prosecuting attorney. [29:17.360 --> 29:25.360] And I'm not doing the magistrates yet because they don't have all their names, but we'll get to them. [29:25.360 --> 29:33.360] Say, you guys want to start a fight? We'll give you a fight you will not believe. [29:33.360 --> 29:41.360] Okay, I have a book, an e-book we sell on the show, leave it one-on-one. [29:41.360 --> 29:47.360] We use that to help support the show. It goes through most of this. [29:47.360 --> 29:54.360] And try that out. I'm going to start putting together some videos to get all this where everybody can look at. [29:54.360 --> 30:02.360] Hang on, we'll be right back. [30:02.360 --> 30:07.360] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.360 --> 30:15.360] I'm Dr. Cameron Albright and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.360 --> 30:20.360] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.360 --> 30:25.360] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.360 --> 30:30.360] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.360 --> 30:33.360] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [30:33.360 --> 30:40.360] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.360 --> 30:44.360] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.360 --> 30:47.360] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. It's a fact. [30:47.360 --> 30:52.360] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:52.360 --> 30:56.360] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:56.360 --> 31:02.360] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:02.360 --> 31:11.360] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.360 --> 31:16.360] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any chances. [31:16.360 --> 31:20.360] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.360 --> 31:47.360] Look at your Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:50.360 --> 32:05.360] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.360 --> 32:11.360] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:11.360 --> 32:21.360] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [32:21.360 --> 32:26.360] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.360 --> 32:34.360] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.360 --> 32:41.360] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [32:41.360 --> 32:48.360] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [32:48.360 --> 33:00.360] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:00.360 --> 33:11.360] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:11.360 --> 33:31.360] Yeah, I got a warrant and I'm going to solve them, to the government them, prosecute them. Okay. [33:31.360 --> 33:51.360] Okay, right now we're talking about this on the break. I'm trying to find out a way to make this sound as easy as possible. [33:51.360 --> 34:02.360] Okay, right now we're talking about this on the break. I'm trying to find out a way to make this sound as easy as it really is. [34:02.360 --> 34:11.360] We tend to be afraid of the system, afraid of the police, afraid they'll arrest us to do all this horrible stuff. [34:11.360 --> 34:20.360] Well, there are a bunch of lawless criminals, so it makes sense to be scared. It makes sense to be afraid. They don't do things right and that's true. [34:20.360 --> 34:27.360] Absolutely. It is heavy. It is oppressive. But the response is not that complicated. [34:27.360 --> 34:36.360] Yeah, we're trying to give you a methodology so that keeps you from getting arrested. [34:36.360 --> 34:46.360] If you're trying to go into a place without a mask and the proprietor comes out huffing and a puffing and telling you you've got to wear a mask and blah, blah, blah. [34:46.360 --> 34:55.360] It's no good to fight with him. We have a kind of rule, never give fair warning. [34:55.360 --> 35:09.360] You never say, oh, I got this right. I got that right. You're supposed to do this. You're supposed to do that. All that'll do is get you accused of being agitated. [35:09.360 --> 35:22.360] In another situation, it could also just give them warning to not be in trouble themselves. It gives them an opportunity to slide out from under the mask they just made. [35:22.360 --> 35:24.360] I don't think it's not good. [35:24.360 --> 35:34.360] Yeah, why would you do that? We go down there to set them up. The last thing we want to do is say, hey, I'm about to set you up. [35:34.360 --> 35:41.360] When you go fishing, you don't hang a sign from the fish hooks and, hey, this is a hook. You bite this and it'll hang in your mouth. [35:41.360 --> 35:50.360] No, yeah, you want to trick him so he doesn't know it's there. So never give fair warning. Bushwack is so much better. [35:50.360 --> 35:55.360] Go down and ask him to do something the law requires him to do. It's not going to want to do it. [35:55.360 --> 36:08.360] Open records is probably the easiest way to do that. And what you want to do is make up a set of complaints before you go there. [36:08.360 --> 36:24.360] I'm going to ask for a certain open records and I can pretty well predict what the custodian of the record is going to do because I have carefully crafted my request to get him to do that. [36:24.360 --> 36:36.360] I want to know how much he gets paid. I want to see the 1040 that was sent to him last year. That'll pretty well get him hopping up and down. [36:36.360 --> 36:42.360] And if I'm lucky, it'll get him to say, well, why do you want to see that? [36:42.360 --> 36:55.360] In Arlington, Texas, I went to the clerk and I said, I want to see all the traffic citations from this number to this number. [36:55.360 --> 37:06.360] I had a friend that got a ticket and I went five before and five after. Actually, I went six before and four after so they wouldn't back up to the middle and find the right one. [37:06.360 --> 37:14.360] So I gave him these numbers and she said, are you an attorney? No, no, no, no, no. Are you the accused? Oh, no, no, no, I never do anything wrong. [37:14.360 --> 37:21.360] She said, are you the attorney? And I said, no, no, no, I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. Thank you very much. [37:21.360 --> 37:25.360] Well, are you the accused? Oh, no, I'm a good guy. I never do anything wrong. [37:25.360 --> 37:30.360] Well, if you're not the attorney or the accused, you can't see these. [37:30.360 --> 37:41.360] Oops. Now, I could have told her what the code said. I could have told her the Constitution guaranteed me a public court. [37:41.360 --> 37:51.360] I could have told her that she's extolling the record that she's the clerk and it's her duty to make these records available for public inspection. [37:51.360 --> 38:00.360] Yeah, I could have told her that, but I'm not a lawyer and I would hate to get accused of the illegal practice of law. [38:00.360 --> 38:09.360] So I called the bailiff over and asked him to arrest her. That was so much more fun. [38:09.360 --> 38:13.360] And then the bailiff asked me the same questions the clerk did. [38:13.360 --> 38:21.360] And then he told me, since I wasn't the lawyer or the accused, that I couldn't see those. [38:21.360 --> 38:26.360] Oh, wow. Whoops. You shouldn't have said that. [38:26.360 --> 38:30.360] I forgot my cell phone dial 911. [38:30.360 --> 38:37.360] Folks, if you've never done that, you've got to once. [38:37.360 --> 38:50.360] It is so much fun. You get to see what we call this little chicken dance where they're responding 911 officers just one foot to the other. [38:50.360 --> 38:55.360] Oh, well, Mr. Kelton, I can't arrest this public official. [38:55.360 --> 39:01.360] So sure you can. Just throw the cops on them, drag them off to jail. [39:01.360 --> 39:10.360] And then when the 911 responder refuses to take your complaint, then you take out this. [39:10.360 --> 39:14.360] Well, first you take out this complaint that's already made up. [39:14.360 --> 39:26.360] I asked for these records. The clerk refused to give them to me or I'm making up some PDFs, the checkboxes, all the things the clerk does. [39:26.360 --> 39:33.360] The clerk asked me why I wanted to see them. The clerk told me that I couldn't look at these records because I didn't meet some criteria. [39:33.360 --> 39:41.360] The clerk told me she didn't have to give them to me. Whatever comes up. [39:41.360 --> 39:50.360] And then called that a violation of the Open Government Act 552.353 is a class A misdemeanor. [39:50.360 --> 39:56.360] And I just fill in the blank and give it to the responding officer. [39:56.360 --> 40:00.360] And when he refuses to act, I take out my one for the responding officer. [40:00.360 --> 40:05.360] I asked him to arrest this public official. For violating the law related to his office, he refused to. [40:05.360 --> 40:13.360] He put his name in it and asked him to get you a supervisor to come out here and arrest him. [40:13.360 --> 40:22.360] Oh, that is so much fun. You never get excited. You never get upset. You never raise your voice. [40:22.360 --> 40:35.360] That's because you don't give legal advice. You start giving legal advice and you start getting excited and you access all these old responses that don't work well. [40:35.360 --> 40:47.360] When you shift gears and you become the boss, you become the head of this republic and they become the servants and you treat them like servants. [40:47.360 --> 40:53.360] It accesses a whole different set of internal responses. [40:53.360 --> 41:04.360] That's when we start having effect. When I put all of the nine justices of the Court of Criminal Appeals in front of a grand jury in 2008. [41:04.360 --> 41:10.360] What I was complaining about does not happen in Texas anymore. [41:10.360 --> 41:17.360] That's just one human being. About a 29 million. [41:17.360 --> 41:23.360] When I filed a criminal complaint against the governor because it didn't like all his executive orders. [41:23.360 --> 41:27.360] The week it went to the grand jury, he rescinded all of them. [41:27.360 --> 41:33.360] Twenty states immediately followed suit. One person, one complaint. [41:33.360 --> 41:37.360] Any one of you could have filed that complaint. [41:37.360 --> 41:41.360] Matter of fact, if you're in another state, you still can't. [41:41.360 --> 41:52.360] Just go to ruleoflawradio.com and you can download the complaint and rework it for your state and go fire it. [41:52.360 --> 41:56.360] Oh, it gets real excited when you do that. [41:56.360 --> 42:07.360] The prosecuting attorney refuses to act on your complaint. Then you make up a complaint against the prosecuting attorney, which I just did in Travis County. [42:07.360 --> 42:09.360] And file it with the grand jury. [42:09.360 --> 42:22.360] And when he secrets that from the grand jury, then you make up a complaint for all the district judges in Travis County against the district attorney accusing him of secreting criminal complaints against himself from the grand jury [42:22.360 --> 42:28.360] and ordered the magistrates to issue a warrant for his arrest. [42:28.360 --> 42:33.360] I'm having way too much fun going after these guys. [42:33.360 --> 42:36.360] And I'm just one person. [42:36.360 --> 42:42.360] What if we could right now forget a hundred people doing this? [42:42.360 --> 42:45.360] Imagine what would happen. [42:45.360 --> 42:54.360] We might actually begin to see glimmers of that thing we call justice. [42:54.360 --> 43:05.360] And it's my opinion, the flip side of this is that we should not blame our public officials for not following our rules. [43:05.360 --> 43:12.360] Because we did not bother to stand up and make them follow our rules. [43:12.360 --> 43:16.360] Our fault, not theirs. [43:16.360 --> 43:21.360] Now, when my grandson runs out on the road, it's really not his fault. [43:21.360 --> 43:27.360] I hadn't disciplined him enough. [43:27.360 --> 43:31.360] So I take care of that, folks. [43:31.360 --> 43:34.360] It's time to take care of that. [43:34.360 --> 43:36.360] We haven't disciplined him enough. [43:36.360 --> 43:38.360] We need to get it done. [43:38.360 --> 43:44.360] When we come back on the other side, we're going to go to our callers. [43:44.360 --> 43:48.360] Our call in number is 512-646-1984. [43:48.360 --> 43:53.360] We've got one more spot left on the board. [43:53.360 --> 43:56.360] We'll go to you guys before we get back. [43:56.360 --> 44:00.360] Brett, I've got too much time. Bail me out here. [44:00.360 --> 44:06.360] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.360 --> 44:09.360] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [44:09.360 --> 44:11.360] And it's time we changed all that. [44:11.360 --> 44:17.360] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.360 --> 44:22.360] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.360 --> 44:25.360] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.360 --> 44:31.360] Logo Shradio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.360 --> 44:34.360] We have come to trust Jevity so much. [44:34.360 --> 44:39.360] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.360 --> 44:47.360] When you order from Logo Shradio Network.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.360 --> 44:51.360] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.360 --> 44:58.360] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.360 --> 45:00.360] Order now. [45:00.360 --> 45:04.360] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.360 --> 45:11.360] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course [45:11.360 --> 45:15.360] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.360 --> 45:19.360] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.360 --> 45:23.360] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.360 --> 45:28.360] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.360 --> 45:34.360] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.360 --> 45:43.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.360 --> 45:52.360] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.360 --> 46:01.360] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.360 --> 46:29.360] Yeah, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.360 --> 46:34.360] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:34.360 --> 46:40.360] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:40.360 --> 46:46.360] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:46.360 --> 46:55.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to go to our collars. [46:55.360 --> 47:01.360] We're going to go to Mary in Texas. Mary, what do you have for us today? [47:01.360 --> 47:04.360] I'm up. [47:04.360 --> 47:07.360] You're up. [47:07.360 --> 47:12.360] I was so tired, I didn't think I was going to make it. [47:12.360 --> 47:16.360] I thought you would probably be close to on point. [47:16.360 --> 47:20.360] You're one of the most energetic people I've met. [47:20.360 --> 47:31.360] Yeah, well that's at six in the morning when I can't sleep, and then by two or three I'm dead to the world. [47:31.360 --> 47:35.360] Okay, what do you have for us today? [47:35.360 --> 47:44.360] Well, I don't know. I have some political party I registered for Christmas, but I don't really know anybody, and I don't know. [47:44.360 --> 47:52.360] It'd be kind of cool if I could bring Randy Kelton with me, the guy who just put on criminal complaints on our jerk local DA, [47:52.360 --> 47:59.360] and show you off, and be like a popular party with my cool friend. [47:59.360 --> 48:04.360] Yeah, but some of them might recognize me. [48:04.360 --> 48:09.360] That's not me. [48:09.360 --> 48:13.360] This is Travis County. They know me in Travis County. [48:13.360 --> 48:23.360] Last time I got prosecuted there, the prosecutor told my lawyer to tell me that we know who you are, [48:23.360 --> 48:33.360] and if you start filing criminal charges, we'll charge you with tampering the government document. [48:33.360 --> 48:35.360] That could have hurt my feelings. [48:35.360 --> 48:40.360] I'm going to put you in a little bow and put you in a box and say, here you go, here's my present. [48:40.360 --> 48:42.360] And you pop it off. [48:42.360 --> 48:46.360] And you say, are you going to poke the bear? [48:46.360 --> 48:50.360] Did you read the last document I sent you? [48:50.360 --> 48:53.360] I haven't done anything. I've been busy. [48:53.360 --> 48:58.360] Okay, I would like you to take the phone and beat yourself around the eyes and ears. [48:58.360 --> 49:00.360] Which one? [49:00.360 --> 49:03.360] Let me just finish what it said. [49:03.360 --> 49:04.360] Yes, sir. [49:04.360 --> 49:13.360] Tina Cobra, who calls in a lot, and Brett worked together, put together a bunch of criminal complaints, [49:13.360 --> 49:22.360] and filed them with the Travis County District Attorney against Manukin, Manukin's lawyer, and a notary. [49:22.360 --> 49:31.360] And then the prosecutor messed with them for a while and then decided not to prosecute and sent Tina a letter telling them, [49:31.360 --> 49:35.360] claiming that they didn't have jurisdiction. [49:35.360 --> 49:48.360] So I filed criminal charges against the prosecuting attorney, claiming that the prosecuting attorney does not have prosecutorial discretion. [49:48.360 --> 49:55.360] The prosecutors across the country decide what they'll prosecute and what they want. [49:55.360 --> 50:09.360] Well, other states notwithstanding, in Texas, there is no provision allowing a prosecuting attorney to make that determination. [50:09.360 --> 50:19.360] As a matter of fact, there are a lot of laws put in place to prevent just exactly that. [50:19.360 --> 50:24.360] One of the views that when a person is arrested with or without a warrant, [50:24.360 --> 50:29.360] they are to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate and the magistrate is told in the examining trial, [50:29.360 --> 50:32.360] and make a determination of probable cause. [50:32.360 --> 50:41.360] Are you saying they shouldn't go directly to a pretrial where they get to have a chat with the prosecutor? [50:41.360 --> 50:46.360] That is exactly the case. [50:46.360 --> 50:53.360] They must be taken directly to the nearest magistrate by the most direct route. [50:53.360 --> 50:59.360] And the magistrate must notify them of their rights. [50:59.360 --> 51:05.360] It must give them opportunity to make a statement before evidence is presented against them, [51:05.360 --> 51:10.360] give them opportunity to secure lawyers, a whole bunch of stuff they have to do. [51:10.360 --> 51:13.360] Cross-examine the alleged witnesses? [51:13.360 --> 51:18.360] Exactly, but they don't do that. [51:18.360 --> 51:21.360] What they do is take them straight to jail instead. [51:21.360 --> 51:30.360] What I'm saying about the prosecutor is he's making this determination a probable cause. [51:30.360 --> 51:32.360] As if you were a magistrate. [51:32.360 --> 51:34.360] Exactly. [51:34.360 --> 51:37.360] And 2.01, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [51:37.360 --> 51:43.360] Chapter 2, the Code of Criminal Procedure, goes to duties of officers. [51:43.360 --> 51:46.360] First officer they address, prosecuting attorneys. [51:46.360 --> 51:51.360] It's 2.01, it shall be the primary duty of the prosecuting attorney. [51:51.360 --> 51:57.360] Not to secure conviction, but to ensure that justice is served. [51:57.360 --> 52:04.360] He shall not secret witnesses or evidence that would show the innocence of the accused or mitigate the guilt of the accused. [52:04.360 --> 52:08.360] Well, that's a lot of nice, high-minded rhetoric. [52:08.360 --> 52:13.360] But it really doesn't tell the prosecutor to do anything specifically. [52:13.360 --> 52:19.360] 2.02 says, county attorneys handle this, district attorneys handle this. [52:19.360 --> 52:25.360] 2.03, 2.03, 4, 5, and 6. [52:25.360 --> 52:29.360] Tell the prosecutor how he's to handle criminal cases. [52:29.360 --> 52:37.360] If he gets a complaint against a public official under 2.03, he's to reduce it to near information submitted to the grand jury. [52:37.360 --> 52:38.360] No discretion. [52:38.360 --> 52:39.360] Okay. [52:39.360 --> 52:48.360] If he gets a complaint under 2.04, he's to reduce it to an information filed with the clerk or the court. [52:48.360 --> 52:57.360] If it's a statute says if it's a felony, he's to also file it with the grand jury. [52:57.360 --> 53:04.360] 2.05, what does that one say? [53:04.360 --> 53:05.360] I forget. [53:05.360 --> 53:12.360] It tells him he's supposed to, in all of this, that he's supposed to 1.05, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [53:12.360 --> 53:14.360] A neglect of duty? [53:14.360 --> 53:15.360] Let's see here. [53:15.360 --> 53:20.360] No, that's 2.03. [53:20.360 --> 53:22.360] That might be the one where he's supposed to draw up complaints. [53:22.360 --> 53:26.360] Yeah, let me get to a quick search. [53:26.360 --> 53:30.360] Yeah, when the complaint is made, he has to draw up complaints. [53:30.360 --> 53:43.360] He has to draw up an information says if the offense be a misdemeanor, the attorney shall forthwith prepare an information based on such complaint and file the same in the court having jurisdiction. [53:43.360 --> 53:56.360] And then they have a little, a couple of exceptions like if the county doesn't have a county attorney, then the misdemeanor case can be tried on complaint alone without information. [53:56.360 --> 54:01.360] And 2.06 authorizes him to verify complaints. [54:01.360 --> 54:08.360] 2.07 addresses where he is disqualified. [54:08.360 --> 54:18.360] And he's to petition to have an attorney pro tem appointed. [54:18.360 --> 54:41.360] 2.08 tells the district judge once he's been requested by the prosecutor to appoint another, a different prosecutor, either an attorney general, attorney general lawyer, or another prosecutor to step in the lawyer in the prosecutor's shoes. [54:41.360 --> 54:51.360] The lawyer in all of that is the prosecuting attorney given any option to dismiss the case. [54:51.360 --> 54:53.360] I did not. [54:53.360 --> 54:56.360] Yeah, I found nothing in there. [54:56.360 --> 55:09.360] Well, it's under where they can sell government property and imprison their enemies and make a dictate somewhere, I guess, in between the lines of all this. [55:09.360 --> 55:22.360] What I'm doing here is making an argument that if I win that argument, it eliminates prosecutorial discretion in the state of Texas. [55:22.360 --> 55:27.360] And that'll give every prosecutor in the state apoplexy. [55:27.360 --> 55:34.360] They are not going to want to get this to the court of appeals or the supreme. [55:34.360 --> 55:49.360] So I filed that, sealed it in an envelope, gave it to the head investigator for the DA and told her, give this to grand jury, do not open it, and tell your boss, do not open it, it's a trap. [55:49.360 --> 55:51.360] They opened it. [55:51.360 --> 56:02.360] So now I made up a document that has that whole argument in it and filed it with, I'm filing it with all the district judges in Travis County. [56:02.360 --> 56:09.360] And in there, I cite 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [56:09.360 --> 56:23.360] It says that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, the magistrate shall issue a warrant for it. [56:23.360 --> 56:34.360] It doesn't say hold an examining trial. It doesn't say examine into the sufficiency of the accusation and determine whether or not it's sufficient. [56:34.360 --> 56:38.360] You know, the magistrate can't say, well, you don't have enough evidence, blah, blah, blah. [56:38.360 --> 56:41.360] No, no, no, it says he shall issue a warrant. [56:41.360 --> 56:51.360] So what are these judges going to do when I send them criminal complaints against a couple of district attorneys, the elected DA, and the head of their public integrity unit, [56:51.360 --> 56:57.360] and demand that they issue wants? [56:57.360 --> 57:10.360] What are the chances that these judges fail to perform a duty they're required to perform and in the process deny me the fully free access to or enjoyment of a right? [57:10.360 --> 57:12.360] What do you think the chances are, Mary? [57:12.360 --> 57:15.360] A hundred and one percent. [57:15.360 --> 57:18.360] A hundred and two percent. [57:18.360 --> 57:27.360] Okay, Mary found me the district judge in Williamson County who's not a Democrat. He's a Republican. [57:27.360 --> 57:41.360] So then I take all of the district judges in Travis County and file shielding from prosecution against them, 3805 Penal Code, that's 38.05, [57:41.360 --> 57:44.360] and that's a felony in the state of Texas. [57:44.360 --> 57:55.360] And I file against them with this other judge and ask him to petition to have a court of inquiry convened. [57:55.360 --> 57:59.360] This will create so much politics. [57:59.360 --> 58:05.360] Everybody listening, any one of you could do the same thing. [58:05.360 --> 58:14.360] As a matter of fact, I'm building these documents in to fill in the blank PDFs, and if you want to do this, let me know. [58:14.360 --> 58:23.360] I'll get them to you. All my websites are down now. I'll have them up pretty soon, and you'll be able to get them off my websites. [58:23.360 --> 58:35.360] The point is, we can take these guys on, and one problem I'm having with it is it's way too much fun. [58:35.360 --> 58:50.360] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [58:50.360 --> 59:01.360] If you'd like to make more definite progress in your walk with God, Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.360 --> 59:06.360] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.360 --> 59:13.360] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.360 --> 59:27.360] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. 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. [59:27.360 --> 59:44.360] 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. That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.360 --> 01:00:00.360] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:00.360 --> 01:00:15.360] To follow these flashes brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:30.360 --> 01:00:45.360] $7.26, XRP Ripple, $0.33, White Coin, $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.360 --> 01:01:00.360] 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. [01:01:00.360 --> 01:01:24.360] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing heaven 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, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.360 --> 01:01:33.360] 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. [01:01:33.360 --> 01:01:47.360] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works. [01:01:47.360 --> 01:02:01.360] 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. [01:02:01.360 --> 01:02:12.360] 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. [01:02:12.360 --> 01:02:22.360] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:22.360 --> 01:02:26.360] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark. [01:02:26.360 --> 01:02:38.360] 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. [01:02:38.360 --> 01:02:50.360] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.360 --> 01:03:08.360] This was Book Roadie with the Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:20.360 --> 01:03:30.360] This is the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico. [01:03:30.360 --> 01:03:40.360] This is the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico. [01:03:40.360 --> 01:03:50.360] This is the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico. [01:03:50.360 --> 01:04:00.360] This is the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico. [01:04:00.360 --> 01:04:12.360] Okay, Howdy Howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue LaRidio on this Friday, the third day of December, 2021. [01:04:12.360 --> 01:04:18.360] And I did that date so good, I forgot what we were talking about. Mary? [01:04:18.360 --> 01:04:24.360] That was great. You might even use the same date next week. That worked great. [01:04:24.360 --> 01:04:30.360] No, I've lost my mouse. You want to unmute Mary? [01:04:30.360 --> 01:04:34.360] Okay, I got it. [01:04:34.360 --> 01:04:40.360] All those things about how, yeah, all those things should, do I tell myself off? [01:04:40.360 --> 01:04:44.360] Sometimes I tell myself off. Okay. [01:04:44.360 --> 01:04:56.360] All those things said about what the DAs must and may not do, and the district attorneys must do, and these others must do. [01:04:56.360 --> 01:05:12.360] So you're operating under the assumption that we have a criminal complaint regarding an official to any one of these recorders, police, and they should know the law reads and it's a magistrate or a recorder, dumbass. [01:05:12.360 --> 01:05:16.360] Yeah, let me go a little deeper into that. [01:05:16.360 --> 01:05:30.360] Actually, what the code says, and what I'm saying is, in this case, the prosecutor claimed that he didn't have jurisdiction. [01:05:30.360 --> 01:05:38.360] And I'm saying, what a heck did you get authority to make that determination? [01:05:38.360 --> 01:05:48.360] Maybe we don't have jurisdiction, but as I understand it, jurisdiction is an affirmative defense that must be pledged. [01:05:48.360 --> 01:05:54.360] What are you doing pleading affirmative defenses for the accused? [01:05:54.360 --> 01:06:00.360] Not your job. You're not their lawyer. You're our lawyer. [01:06:00.360 --> 01:06:14.360] And the only officials in Texas who can dismiss the prosecution, who can make that determination a probable cause, are magistrates and trial judges. [01:06:14.360 --> 01:06:20.360] So what are you doing impersonating a magistrate or a trial judge? [01:06:20.360 --> 01:06:22.360] Correct. [01:06:22.360 --> 01:06:27.360] The code is very carefully crafted. [01:06:27.360 --> 01:06:31.360] All the pieces fit together very nicely. [01:06:31.360 --> 01:06:40.360] You mess up one of them. It's like a house of cars. The whole system starts to get disrupted. [01:06:40.360 --> 01:06:48.360] And we wind up with exactly the disaster we experience right now. [01:06:48.360 --> 01:06:54.360] And that's my argument. I'm saying there is plenty of law. [01:06:54.360 --> 01:06:58.360] The law is very well crafted. We don't need any new law. [01:06:58.360 --> 01:07:01.360] Just follow the one we got. [01:07:01.360 --> 01:07:02.360] We follow the one we got. [01:07:02.360 --> 01:07:03.360] Very good. [01:07:03.360 --> 01:07:06.360] These problems fix themselves. [01:07:06.360 --> 01:07:18.360] I'm hoping that this DA, that this conversation is revolving around Jose Garza and Travis County, [01:07:18.360 --> 01:07:24.360] he was funded at least $5,000 by Soros. [01:07:24.360 --> 01:07:35.360] And the anti-police defunding movement was a million dollars raised mostly by Soros on our proposition to refund the police. [01:07:35.360 --> 01:07:40.360] They just took away 150 million that they had given them two years ago. [01:07:40.360 --> 01:07:49.360] We actively are having Soros compete with our local leadership here and local citizens. [01:07:49.360 --> 01:07:54.360] And this DA is technically somehow kind of representing Soros. [01:07:54.360 --> 01:08:02.360] God forbid it was on the Kelby JSM talk radio two months ago. [01:08:02.360 --> 01:08:09.360] So he needs to get beat up. [01:08:09.360 --> 01:08:12.360] Am I there? Can you hear me, Brett? [01:08:12.360 --> 01:08:14.360] Yeah, I hear you. [01:08:14.360 --> 01:08:18.360] Okay, because I've got two Skype windows up. [01:08:18.360 --> 01:08:21.360] One of them shows me beauty, the other one not. [01:08:21.360 --> 01:08:24.360] Okay. [01:08:24.360 --> 01:08:31.360] So I'm not, in this case, I don't have an extra grind with Garza. [01:08:31.360 --> 01:08:34.360] I don't care where you got his funds from. [01:08:34.360 --> 01:08:41.360] From my perspective, because I'm a political or I try to be. [01:08:41.360 --> 01:08:45.360] I just want him to follow the law where it's written. [01:08:45.360 --> 01:08:47.360] Don't care what his opinion is about it. [01:08:47.360 --> 01:08:51.360] Don't care the politics about it. [01:08:51.360 --> 01:08:53.360] Just follow how it's written. [01:08:53.360 --> 01:08:56.360] If you don't, I'm coming for you. [01:08:56.360 --> 01:09:03.360] And I can come for you like nobody else in Texas can for one reason. [01:09:03.360 --> 01:09:10.360] Buddy, I'm just an ordinary citizen. [01:09:10.360 --> 01:09:17.360] And that makes me the most powerful motor scooter in the state. [01:09:17.360 --> 01:09:22.360] And I'm hoping that we can go ahead, Mary. [01:09:22.360 --> 01:09:24.360] Go ahead. [01:09:24.360 --> 01:09:31.360] I'm hoping we can convince others that they are just as powerful as I am. [01:09:31.360 --> 01:09:39.360] Well, I was under the perception that we had a duty to report crying as citizens. [01:09:39.360 --> 01:09:44.360] And I don't know if there's maxims of law that go to a citizen's duty [01:09:44.360 --> 01:09:49.360] to hold a republic together, whether it's by leadership or by teamwork. [01:09:49.360 --> 01:09:52.360] But we've got to have something here. [01:09:52.360 --> 01:09:57.360] There is a code in Texas. [01:09:57.360 --> 01:10:01.360] Is it 38, Brett,.151? [01:10:01.360 --> 01:10:04.360] I don't know that one. [01:10:04.360 --> 01:10:13.360] It says that if you have knowledge that a felony has been committed [01:10:13.360 --> 01:10:19.360] that involves grievous bodily injury and you don't report that crime, [01:10:19.360 --> 01:10:22.360] then that is a class A misdemeanor. [01:10:22.360 --> 01:10:24.360] Did you find it, Brett? [01:10:24.360 --> 01:10:28.360] 38, 151 is interfered with police service animals. [01:10:28.360 --> 01:10:30.360] That might not be the one. [01:10:30.360 --> 01:10:35.360] Do a search for a duty to report crying. [01:10:35.360 --> 01:10:36.360] How about this? [01:10:36.360 --> 01:10:40.360] There's 38, 171 is a felony to report a felony. [01:10:40.360 --> 01:10:41.360] There we go. [01:10:41.360 --> 01:10:42.360] That's it. [01:10:42.360 --> 01:10:45.360] Does that misdemeanor? [01:10:45.360 --> 01:10:47.360] Yeah, that's the only one. [01:10:47.360 --> 01:10:53.360] You're not required to report a misdemeanor. [01:10:53.360 --> 01:10:59.360] It's only a crime not to report a felony that involves grievous bodily injury. [01:10:59.360 --> 01:11:01.360] Is that right, Brett? [01:11:01.360 --> 01:11:06.360] Well, I'm also thinking about a 702, which is criminal responsibility [01:11:06.360 --> 01:11:10.360] for the conduct of another. [01:11:10.360 --> 01:11:15.360] I don't know of anything that makes you criminally culpable for someone else [01:11:15.360 --> 01:11:18.360] just because you don't report their bad behavior. [01:11:18.360 --> 01:11:20.360] What about aiding and abetting? [01:11:20.360 --> 01:11:21.360] What about that? [01:11:21.360 --> 01:11:23.360] That has to tie into this. [01:11:23.360 --> 01:11:32.360] Not reporting you're not doing anything to aid the crime. [01:11:32.360 --> 01:11:39.360] The only one I could find that gets there is this 38, 171. [01:11:39.360 --> 01:11:46.360] But if you can be prosecuted for not reporting one crime, [01:11:46.360 --> 01:11:51.360] you absolutely cannot be prosecuted for reporting any crime. [01:11:51.360 --> 01:11:53.360] And that's the case. [01:11:53.360 --> 01:12:02.360] When you report crime, you have the same protection that a judge has. [01:12:02.360 --> 01:12:08.360] I still think that this 702 is a catch-all that covers reporting of anything [01:12:08.360 --> 01:12:11.360] because it's not talking about only felonies. [01:12:11.360 --> 01:12:15.360] And it's perfectly reasonable to say, hey, I didn't want to be in trouble. [01:12:15.360 --> 01:12:17.360] I didn't want to share his culpability. [01:12:17.360 --> 01:12:19.360] I didn't want to be guilty just because he's guilty. [01:12:19.360 --> 01:12:21.360] I know about it, so I'm going to report it [01:12:21.360 --> 01:12:25.360] and keep myself clear of this shared complicity stuff. [01:12:25.360 --> 01:12:28.360] Read 702. [01:12:28.360 --> 01:12:29.360] All right. [01:12:29.360 --> 01:12:30.360] Do you have it for me? [01:12:30.360 --> 01:12:33.360] Yeah, it says a person, this is an A. [01:12:33.360 --> 01:12:36.360] There's A and B. B does talk about felonies. [01:12:36.360 --> 01:12:41.360] A says a person is criminally responsible for an offense [01:12:41.360 --> 01:12:43.360] committed by the conduct of another. [01:12:43.360 --> 01:12:49.360] If acting with the kind of culpability required for the offense he causes [01:12:49.360 --> 01:12:55.360] or aids an innocent or nonresponsible person to engage in conduct prohibited [01:12:55.360 --> 01:12:57.360] by the definition of the offense. [01:12:57.360 --> 01:12:59.360] That one doesn't really fit. [01:12:59.360 --> 01:13:00.360] No, that doesn't fit. [01:13:00.360 --> 01:13:02.360] That's causing or aiding. [01:13:02.360 --> 01:13:11.360] And then it says here, an innocent person or nonresponsible. [01:13:11.360 --> 01:13:14.360] Go ahead. [01:13:14.360 --> 01:13:16.360] You said a lot of what? [01:13:16.360 --> 01:13:20.360] A lot of their underlings in these bureaucracies, [01:13:20.360 --> 01:13:24.360] they don't know per se that they're committing crimes [01:13:24.360 --> 01:13:28.360] and the older folks are encouraging them to do so. [01:13:28.360 --> 01:13:30.360] Right. [01:13:30.360 --> 01:13:37.360] So then A2 says acting with intent to promote or assist the commission of the offense. [01:13:37.360 --> 01:13:42.360] He solicits, encourages, directs, aids or attempts to aid the other person [01:13:42.360 --> 01:13:44.360] to commit the offense. [01:13:44.360 --> 01:13:50.360] Or A3, having the legal duty to prevent commission of the offense [01:13:50.360 --> 01:13:54.360] and acting with intent to promote or assist its commission, [01:13:54.360 --> 01:13:59.360] he fails to make a reasonable effort to prevent commission of the offense. [01:13:59.360 --> 01:14:04.360] So this failing to make a reasonable effort is A3. [01:14:04.360 --> 01:14:10.360] Then B talks about felony stuff. [01:14:10.360 --> 01:14:11.360] That's beautiful. [01:14:11.360 --> 01:14:13.360] Where is that? [01:14:13.360 --> 01:14:15.360] That's in our Texas penal code. [01:14:15.360 --> 01:14:21.360] It's 7, chapter 7, and it's section 7.02. [01:14:21.360 --> 01:14:22.360] So we have this. [01:14:22.360 --> 01:14:24.360] We have racketeering. [01:14:24.360 --> 01:14:25.360] We have conspiracy. [01:14:25.360 --> 01:14:26.360] We have fraud. [01:14:26.360 --> 01:14:29.360] We have official oppression. [01:14:29.360 --> 01:14:30.360] We have shielding. [01:14:30.360 --> 01:14:34.360] I mean, these are things that we're going to have to memorize. [01:14:34.360 --> 01:14:39.360] Well, the 38171 is definitely an easier fit [01:14:39.360 --> 01:14:44.360] if what you're accusing them of is felony, then that's a stronger... [01:14:44.360 --> 01:14:48.360] With a bodily harm? [01:14:48.360 --> 01:14:55.360] In which, let's see, 38171, a person commits an offense [01:14:55.360 --> 01:15:00.360] if the person observes the commission of a felony under circumstances [01:15:00.360 --> 01:15:06.360] in which a reasonable person would believe that an offense had been committed [01:15:06.360 --> 01:15:11.360] in which serious bodily injury or death may have resulted [01:15:11.360 --> 01:15:16.360] and fails to immediately report the commission of the offense [01:15:16.360 --> 01:15:19.360] to a peace officer or law enforcement agency. [01:15:19.360 --> 01:15:25.360] Under circumstances... [01:15:25.360 --> 01:15:29.360] Under circumstances in which a reasonable person would believe [01:15:29.360 --> 01:15:32.360] that the commission of the offense had not been reported [01:15:32.360 --> 01:15:36.360] and the person could immediately report the commission of the offense [01:15:36.360 --> 01:15:39.360] without placing himself or herself in danger [01:15:39.360 --> 01:15:44.360] or suffering serious bodily injury or death. [01:15:44.360 --> 01:15:50.360] So if you can report it and you're not going to get hurt by doing so, [01:15:50.360 --> 01:15:55.360] then you're in trouble for not reporting it. [01:15:55.360 --> 01:16:02.360] So they're admitting that there's consequences to being a witness? [01:16:02.360 --> 01:16:05.360] Well, the way I look at it, let's say that you saw something happen [01:16:05.360 --> 01:16:09.360] but you're hiding in a bush and you're not going to immediately pull out your cell phone, [01:16:09.360 --> 01:16:12.360] you're going to wait until it's safe for you to get away [01:16:12.360 --> 01:16:13.360] and then you're going to call somebody. [01:16:13.360 --> 01:16:16.360] If you sit there and pull out your phone and start making a call, [01:16:16.360 --> 01:16:18.360] they're going to find you in the bush [01:16:18.360 --> 01:16:21.360] and they're going to come and get you and do whatever to you [01:16:21.360 --> 01:16:23.360] they were to do into the other person, right? [01:16:23.360 --> 01:16:25.360] So you wait until it's safe, [01:16:25.360 --> 01:16:29.360] even though you're supposed to immediately report it. [01:16:29.360 --> 01:16:35.360] Kind of seems familiar to the failure to render aid. [01:16:35.360 --> 01:16:39.360] In the transportation coach? [01:16:39.360 --> 01:16:42.360] I guess so. [01:16:42.360 --> 01:16:46.360] Well, we're just about to go to our sponsors. [01:16:46.360 --> 01:16:50.360] So, Randy, you want to take us off the cliff? [01:16:50.360 --> 01:16:53.360] I was waiting for you to jump off the cliff. [01:16:53.360 --> 01:17:21.360] We'll be right back. [01:17:21.360 --> 01:17:49.360] We'll be right back. [01:17:49.360 --> 01:17:56.360] We'll be right back. [01:18:20.360 --> 01:18:43.360] How can I help Logos? [01:18:43.360 --> 01:18:44.360] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.360 --> 01:18:45.360] No. [01:18:45.360 --> 01:18:47.360] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.360 --> 01:18:48.360] No. [01:18:48.360 --> 01:18:49.360] Is this my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.360 --> 01:18:50.360] No. [01:18:50.360 --> 01:18:51.360] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.360 --> 01:18:52.360] Wow. [01:18:52.360 --> 01:18:54.360] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.360 --> 01:18:55.360] This is perfect. [01:18:55.360 --> 01:18:57.360] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.360 --> 01:18:58.360] You're welcome. [01:18:58.360 --> 01:19:00.360] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:19:00.360 --> 01:19:28.360] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:28.360 --> 01:19:47.360] Okay. [01:19:47.360 --> 01:19:48.360] We are back. [01:19:48.360 --> 01:19:50.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Mountain Rule of Law Radio, [01:19:50.360 --> 01:19:51.360] and we're talking to Mary. [01:19:51.360 --> 01:19:54.360] Mary, we do need to move on. [01:19:54.360 --> 01:19:57.360] Do you have anything else for us? [01:19:57.360 --> 01:20:07.360] I just want to say that Minukin does not have a signature. [01:20:07.360 --> 01:20:09.360] What does that mean? [01:20:09.360 --> 01:20:12.360] I was looking at my dollar bill today, [01:20:12.360 --> 01:20:14.360] and he prints his name out. [01:20:14.360 --> 01:20:17.360] He doesn't use cursive on our bills. [01:20:17.360 --> 01:20:20.360] He used to look at it with little printings. [01:20:20.360 --> 01:20:23.360] It's very odd looking. [01:20:23.360 --> 01:20:25.360] I'd like to look at that. [01:20:25.360 --> 01:20:29.360] I used to study handwriting analysis, [01:20:29.360 --> 01:20:31.360] and I looked at some handwriting [01:20:31.360 --> 01:20:37.360] from some really disturbed people in prison, [01:20:37.360 --> 01:20:43.360] and they tended to make their writing look like printing. [01:20:43.360 --> 01:20:48.360] Not just that they didn't use cursive. [01:20:48.360 --> 01:20:54.360] It was obsessionally precise. [01:20:54.360 --> 01:20:57.360] Everything was very small and separated, [01:20:57.360 --> 01:21:00.360] so none of the letters connected. [01:21:00.360 --> 01:21:02.360] I'll have to look at his signature [01:21:02.360 --> 01:21:04.360] and run an analysis on it. [01:21:04.360 --> 01:21:06.360] I haven't done that a long time. [01:21:06.360 --> 01:21:07.360] Okay. [01:21:07.360 --> 01:21:08.360] Anything else for us? [01:21:08.360 --> 01:21:10.360] Well, I wanted to ask you [01:21:10.360 --> 01:21:17.360] what you thought of the convention of states. [01:21:17.360 --> 01:21:18.360] What does that mean? [01:21:18.360 --> 01:21:23.360] I know you met one of the guys on the election debate, [01:21:23.360 --> 01:21:25.360] about three months ago, [01:21:25.360 --> 01:21:28.360] and they're saying something like Amendment 5, [01:21:28.360 --> 01:21:31.360] that the states can get together [01:21:31.360 --> 01:21:33.360] and disempower the federal government [01:21:33.360 --> 01:21:36.360] through some type of voting process. [01:21:36.360 --> 01:21:39.360] Are you talking about a constitutional convention? [01:21:39.360 --> 01:21:41.360] I think it's more complicated than that. [01:21:41.360 --> 01:21:44.360] Well, I'll go over that another time. [01:21:44.360 --> 01:21:47.360] And then the last question is your $400 million suit. [01:21:47.360 --> 01:21:49.360] Is that a private attorney general's suit? [01:21:49.360 --> 01:21:52.360] How did you get the number so high? [01:21:52.360 --> 01:21:57.360] I claimed an ongoing criminal conspiracy [01:21:57.360 --> 01:22:00.360] on the part of prosecutors in the state of Texas [01:22:00.360 --> 01:22:04.360] to deny anyone accused of crime and due process. [01:22:04.360 --> 01:22:06.360] They denied them a speedy trial. [01:22:06.360 --> 01:22:08.360] They denied them an examining trial [01:22:08.360 --> 01:22:12.360] so that they could hold them in jail as long as possible [01:22:12.360 --> 01:22:14.360] if they can't afford bail [01:22:14.360 --> 01:22:17.360] until they give up and make a deal [01:22:17.360 --> 01:22:19.360] or cause them to come to court every month [01:22:19.360 --> 01:22:22.360] and it costs them a day's work and a lot of inconvenience [01:22:22.360 --> 01:22:25.360] and they hold this thread over their head [01:22:25.360 --> 01:22:28.360] until the person finally gives up and makes a deal. [01:22:28.360 --> 01:22:30.360] And in doing that, [01:22:30.360 --> 01:22:33.360] they cost the counties in Texas last year [01:22:33.360 --> 01:22:42.360] $1.2 billion in pre-trial confinement. [01:22:42.360 --> 01:22:45.360] And a good portion of that was caused [01:22:45.360 --> 01:22:48.360] by this improper practices by prosecutors. [01:22:48.360 --> 01:22:51.360] And so since they're costing the state [01:22:51.360 --> 01:22:53.360] $1.2 billion a year [01:22:53.360 --> 01:22:57.360] so that they don't have to actually adjudicate cases, [01:22:57.360 --> 01:23:02.360] $400 million was not unreasonable. [01:23:02.360 --> 01:23:04.360] Is that a private attorney general? [01:23:04.360 --> 01:23:05.360] How would that... [01:23:05.360 --> 01:23:06.360] No. [01:23:06.360 --> 01:23:07.360] Why would you be the one... [01:23:07.360 --> 01:23:08.360] Yeah. [01:23:08.360 --> 01:23:09.360] Don't need to. [01:23:09.360 --> 01:23:15.360] They subjected me to that criminal conspiracy personally. [01:23:15.360 --> 01:23:19.360] So how can we use a private attorney general, basically? [01:23:19.360 --> 01:23:20.360] What is that? [01:23:20.360 --> 01:23:22.360] That's designed for... [01:23:22.360 --> 01:23:28.360] say you've got a city that has a speed trap [01:23:28.360 --> 01:23:30.360] that they stop everybody and write them tickets for speeding [01:23:30.360 --> 01:23:31.360] rather than a war or not. [01:23:31.360 --> 01:23:34.360] Because they know that 99% of the people [01:23:34.360 --> 01:23:40.360] will either write 73% or write a check. [01:23:40.360 --> 01:23:43.360] The other 27% will come to court [01:23:43.360 --> 01:23:47.360] and then 99% of those will make a deal. [01:23:47.360 --> 01:23:50.360] So they don't care if you're guilty or not. [01:23:50.360 --> 01:23:52.360] They'll just write the... [01:23:52.360 --> 01:23:55.360] It's economically feasible for them to write a ticket. [01:23:55.360 --> 01:24:01.360] And for a $300 ticket, [01:24:01.360 --> 01:24:03.360] it's not worth it to file a suit [01:24:03.360 --> 01:24:04.360] because it cost you a couple of grand [01:24:04.360 --> 01:24:08.360] just to get a retainer for the lawyer. [01:24:08.360 --> 01:24:10.360] So in those kinds of suits, [01:24:10.360 --> 01:24:14.360] they will allow an individual to sue in their benefit [01:24:14.360 --> 01:24:18.360] and in the benefit of all others similarly situated. [01:24:18.360 --> 01:24:23.360] So your potential return is high enough to pay for the suit. [01:24:23.360 --> 01:24:25.360] Does that make sense? [01:24:25.360 --> 01:24:26.360] Okay. [01:24:26.360 --> 01:24:27.360] Okay. [01:24:27.360 --> 01:24:32.360] In my case, I'm claiming an ongoing criminal conspiracy [01:24:32.360 --> 01:24:35.360] against me personally. [01:24:35.360 --> 01:24:37.360] And that gives me standing to sue them [01:24:37.360 --> 01:24:42.360] for the conspiracy that they're engaged in. [01:24:42.360 --> 01:24:44.360] So if I was working somewhere [01:24:44.360 --> 01:24:47.360] and there was a lot of pollution at that place, [01:24:47.360 --> 01:24:50.360] and that place exposes, like, [01:24:50.360 --> 01:24:53.360] millions of people a year to that pollution [01:24:53.360 --> 01:25:01.360] or that place exposes a lot of the police a year [01:25:01.360 --> 01:25:04.360] to, like, discriminatory actions [01:25:04.360 --> 01:25:08.360] or to harassing work environment [01:25:08.360 --> 01:25:10.360] or dangerous work environment. [01:25:10.360 --> 01:25:11.360] Hold on, hold on, hold on. [01:25:11.360 --> 01:25:14.360] That's a quiet damn action. [01:25:14.360 --> 01:25:20.360] Essentially, quiet damn a whistleblower suit. [01:25:20.360 --> 01:25:26.360] If you have inside information about wrongdoing, [01:25:26.360 --> 01:25:32.360] then you can file a suit to correct the wrongdoing. [01:25:32.360 --> 01:25:39.360] If the information involves any kind of government funds [01:25:39.360 --> 01:25:41.360] that becomes a whistleblower suit [01:25:41.360 --> 01:25:43.360] and falls under quiet damn, [01:25:43.360 --> 01:25:47.360] if subsequently you recover funds from, say, [01:25:47.360 --> 01:25:51.360] this company you're working for is getting government funds [01:25:51.360 --> 01:25:52.360] to do certain things [01:25:52.360 --> 01:25:56.360] and they're not doing what they're getting the funds to do, [01:25:56.360 --> 01:25:59.360] any of the funds that you recover through the suit, [01:25:59.360 --> 01:26:02.360] you get 25% off. [01:26:02.360 --> 01:26:04.360] I'm sorry. [01:26:04.360 --> 01:26:09.360] If the government does not intercede, [01:26:09.360 --> 01:26:11.360] you get all of it. [01:26:11.360 --> 01:26:14.360] If the government intercedes and takes over the suit [01:26:14.360 --> 01:26:15.360] and does it for you, [01:26:15.360 --> 01:26:19.360] you get 25% of whatever they recover. [01:26:19.360 --> 01:26:22.360] That's a quiet damn action. [01:26:22.360 --> 01:26:23.360] God, that's not all. [01:26:23.360 --> 01:26:25.360] Okay, how do you spell quiet damn? [01:26:25.360 --> 01:26:31.360] Q-U-I, Brett, is it just T-A-M? [01:26:31.360 --> 01:26:35.360] Yes, okay, U-I, T-A-M. [01:26:35.360 --> 01:26:36.360] Okay, thank you guys. [01:26:36.360 --> 01:26:37.360] I'll let y'all go. [01:26:37.360 --> 01:26:39.360] I appreciate y'all so much. [01:26:39.360 --> 01:26:40.360] God bless. [01:26:40.360 --> 01:26:42.360] Thank you, Mary. [01:26:42.360 --> 01:26:48.360] Okay, now we're going to go to Greg in California. [01:26:48.360 --> 01:26:51.360] Hello, Greg. [01:26:51.360 --> 01:26:53.360] Hello, how are you, Randy? [01:26:53.360 --> 01:26:54.360] I am good. [01:26:54.360 --> 01:26:57.360] What do you have for us today? [01:26:57.360 --> 01:27:00.360] Well, you brought up some real interesting topics [01:27:00.360 --> 01:27:03.360] and kind of dovetailed in with some of the things [01:27:03.360 --> 01:27:06.360] that were being discussed last night [01:27:06.360 --> 01:27:08.360] with our friends in Oregon. [01:27:08.360 --> 01:27:11.360] Here in California, [01:27:11.360 --> 01:27:16.360] we have the similar mask mandate [01:27:16.360 --> 01:27:23.360] and us up-and-coming law students here [01:27:23.360 --> 01:27:28.360] meaning only telegram where I'm on mask law. [01:27:28.360 --> 01:27:30.360] And actually, I know you and Brett. [01:27:30.360 --> 01:27:34.360] Brett, I've had a few interactions with you, actually, [01:27:34.360 --> 01:27:36.360] if you remember. [01:27:36.360 --> 01:27:42.360] But we don't believe that a county ordinance [01:27:42.360 --> 01:27:44.360] is equivalent to a law here, [01:27:44.360 --> 01:27:46.360] and at least I don't. [01:27:46.360 --> 01:27:50.360] And we also, I'm under the understanding [01:27:50.360 --> 01:27:55.360] that the public accommodation, which is any grocery store, [01:27:55.360 --> 01:27:59.360] any hardware store, any business that's open to the public, [01:27:59.360 --> 01:28:05.360] cannot require you to do something that would be unconstitutional [01:28:05.360 --> 01:28:11.360] to have free access to hinder your travel [01:28:11.360 --> 01:28:16.360] in and out of that public accommodation. [01:28:16.360 --> 01:28:19.360] What usually ends up happening here is... [01:28:19.360 --> 01:28:22.360] Okay, before we move away from this point, [01:28:22.360 --> 01:28:25.360] let me address travel. [01:28:25.360 --> 01:28:32.360] Travel in legal terms doesn't mean what it sounds like. [01:28:32.360 --> 01:28:39.360] Travel means travel from one state to another state. [01:28:39.360 --> 01:28:40.360] Okay. [01:28:40.360 --> 01:28:45.360] You might want to use locomotion. [01:28:45.360 --> 01:28:46.360] Well, in... [01:28:46.360 --> 01:28:48.360] Or just movement, maybe. [01:28:48.360 --> 01:28:52.360] In 42 U.S. Code 2000A, [01:28:52.360 --> 01:28:58.360] commerce, travel, ingress, and egress [01:28:58.360 --> 01:29:01.360] is all the same definition. [01:29:01.360 --> 01:29:04.360] Okay, so if you use the term travel, [01:29:04.360 --> 01:29:09.360] make sure you note that you're somewhere in your document, [01:29:09.360 --> 01:29:11.360] preferably in definitions, [01:29:11.360 --> 01:29:18.360] that you're using the term travel from 42 U.S. Code 2000A. [01:29:18.360 --> 01:29:19.360] Right. [01:29:19.360 --> 01:29:21.360] Just cite it. [01:29:21.360 --> 01:29:24.360] Okay, so as defined as that, [01:29:24.360 --> 01:29:29.360] I should be able to walk into any public accommodation [01:29:29.360 --> 01:29:32.360] without harassment from any store personnel. [01:29:32.360 --> 01:29:37.360] Now, under the understanding that if a store has a policy, [01:29:37.360 --> 01:29:42.360] the policy applies to the store personnel, not to the customer. [01:29:42.360 --> 01:29:47.360] They cannot require a customer to perform any action [01:29:47.360 --> 01:29:50.360] to act as good. [01:29:50.360 --> 01:29:54.360] It sounds like we're heading to the end, [01:29:54.360 --> 01:29:56.360] to the cliff here, pretty cliff. [01:30:01.360 --> 01:30:03.360] Sorry, soft drink lovers. [01:30:03.360 --> 01:30:05.360] Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.360 --> 01:30:07.360] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers [01:30:07.360 --> 01:30:10.360] gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:10.360 --> 01:30:12.360] I've got your camera at Albright, [01:30:12.360 --> 01:30:14.360] and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop [01:30:14.360 --> 01:30:16.360] on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.360 --> 01:30:18.360] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.360 --> 01:30:20.360] When you give up data about yourself, [01:30:20.360 --> 01:30:22.360] you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.360 --> 01:30:24.360] And once your privacy is gone, [01:30:24.360 --> 01:30:26.360] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.360 --> 01:30:28.360] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.360 --> 01:30:32.360] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.360 --> 01:30:34.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.360 --> 01:30:38.360] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.360 --> 01:30:42.360] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.360 --> 01:30:45.360] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.360 --> 01:30:49.360] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:49.360 --> 01:30:50.360] Wrong. [01:30:50.360 --> 01:30:52.360] Researchers at UT San Antonio [01:30:52.360 --> 01:30:55.360] followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.360 --> 01:30:58.360] They found that regularly drinking diet soda [01:30:58.360 --> 01:31:02.360] expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.360 --> 01:31:06.360] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:06.360 --> 01:31:09.360] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.360 --> 01:31:12.360] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, [01:31:12.360 --> 01:31:15.360] which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.360 --> 01:31:18.360] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:18.360 --> 01:31:20.360] and if you need to shed some pounds, [01:31:20.360 --> 01:31:23.360] avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:23.360 --> 01:31:25.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright. [01:31:25.360 --> 01:31:28.360] More news and information at CatherineAlbright.com. [01:31:28.360 --> 01:31:32.360] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [01:31:32.360 --> 01:31:34.360] that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:34.360 --> 01:31:36.360] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:36.360 --> 01:31:39.360] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded [01:31:39.360 --> 01:31:41.360] it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:41.360 --> 01:31:44.360] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:44.360 --> 01:31:47.360] And thousands of my fellow force respond is applying. [01:31:47.360 --> 01:31:48.360] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:48.360 --> 01:31:49.360] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:49.360 --> 01:31:50.360] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:50.360 --> 01:31:51.360] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:51.360 --> 01:31:53.360] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:53.360 --> 01:31:56.360] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:56.360 --> 01:31:59.360] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:26.360 --> 01:32:28.360] I'm Deputy A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule Law Radio, [01:32:28.360 --> 01:32:30.360] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:30.360 --> 01:32:33.360] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.360 --> 01:32:35.360] and how to hold reports to the rule of law. [01:32:35.360 --> 01:32:37.360] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:37.360 --> 01:32:40.360] by going to rulelawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.360 --> 01:32:42.360] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:42.360 --> 01:32:45.360] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:45.360 --> 01:32:47.360] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:47.360 --> 01:32:50.360] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.360 --> 01:32:52.360] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:52.360 --> 01:32:54.360] from rulelawradio.com. [01:32:54.360 --> 01:32:57.360] Order your copy today, and together we can have free society [01:32:57.360 --> 01:32:59.360] we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.360 --> 01:33:04.360] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.360 --> 01:33:05.360] You found it. [01:33:05.360 --> 01:33:25.360] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:35.360 --> 01:33:53.360] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:53.360 --> 01:33:55.360] Okay, we are back. [01:33:55.360 --> 01:33:57.360] Randy Kelton found Rule Law Radio, [01:33:57.360 --> 01:34:00.360] and we're talking to Greg in California. [01:34:00.360 --> 01:34:04.360] Okay, Greg, this is a difficult issue. [01:34:04.360 --> 01:34:07.360] It's a difficult issue, especially in California, [01:34:07.360 --> 01:34:13.360] because from what I can tell, there is no law in California. [01:34:13.360 --> 01:34:19.360] It is, in my opinion, by far the most corrupt state in the Union. [01:34:19.360 --> 01:34:30.360] Well, the judges are all bought and paid for. [01:34:30.360 --> 01:34:33.360] I hate to say that, but they're bought and paid for. [01:34:33.360 --> 01:34:38.360] Now, when you're in smaller issues, [01:34:38.360 --> 01:34:42.360] you may actually have an opportunity to get one to rule [01:34:42.360 --> 01:34:46.360] because nobody's paid him to rule against the law, [01:34:46.360 --> 01:34:50.360] so they might actually rule in favor of it. [01:34:50.360 --> 01:34:54.360] So back to the issue you were bringing. [01:34:54.360 --> 01:35:01.360] You were saying that they can't require you to wear a mask [01:35:01.360 --> 01:35:03.360] under federal law. [01:35:03.360 --> 01:35:07.360] Have you filed criminally against them with offense? [01:35:07.360 --> 01:35:10.360] Well, no, that was exactly my question. [01:35:10.360 --> 01:35:15.360] So the idea would be having listened to you many times [01:35:15.360 --> 01:35:20.360] to go into a store and then use the Randy Kelton method [01:35:20.360 --> 01:35:22.360] and call the police, and then have the police [01:35:22.360 --> 01:35:27.360] end up arresting me, and then I filed charges. [01:35:27.360 --> 01:35:34.360] I filed a 42 U.S. Code 1983 suit against the police [01:35:34.360 --> 01:35:40.360] using the 18 U.S. Code 241 and 242 [01:35:40.360 --> 01:35:44.360] because every single time, it's like clockwork. [01:35:44.360 --> 01:35:46.360] They just show up, they violate your rights, [01:35:46.360 --> 01:35:50.360] they have no idea what the law is or how it reads, [01:35:50.360 --> 01:35:54.360] and then I've been forced out of stores eight times. [01:35:54.360 --> 01:35:58.360] And now what I want to do is I want to go on the offense [01:35:58.360 --> 01:36:01.360] and go after them in a federal district court. [01:36:01.360 --> 01:36:05.360] Okay, so you set up your documents, you go down there, [01:36:05.360 --> 01:36:09.360] and when they tell you to leave, you leave immediately. [01:36:09.360 --> 01:36:14.360] When you get outside, you dial 911. [01:36:14.360 --> 01:36:17.360] You're clean, they have no claim against you. [01:36:17.360 --> 01:36:19.360] I see. [01:36:19.360 --> 01:36:23.360] You're left with a claim against them. [01:36:23.360 --> 01:36:29.360] And if they force you to leave with a security officer [01:36:29.360 --> 01:36:35.360] who has a pistol, that's aggravated assault. [01:36:35.360 --> 01:36:39.360] Or even something like a taser or a billy club [01:36:39.360 --> 01:36:43.360] or a baseball bat. [01:36:43.360 --> 01:36:45.360] That's a little bit. [01:36:45.360 --> 01:36:47.360] Okay, I'm not going to go there. [01:36:47.360 --> 01:36:49.360] Oh, ooh, boys. [01:36:49.360 --> 01:36:52.360] Yeah, that opens up your whole can worth there, Randy. [01:36:52.360 --> 01:36:55.360] No, actually, yes. [01:36:55.360 --> 01:37:00.360] If someone that's ordering you to leave [01:37:00.360 --> 01:37:03.360] picks up something that could be used as a deadly weapon, [01:37:03.360 --> 01:37:06.360] that's your claim. [01:37:06.360 --> 01:37:08.360] Then you get aggravated assault. [01:37:08.360 --> 01:37:11.360] They don't have to point it at you, they don't have to use it on you. [01:37:11.360 --> 01:37:14.360] They just have to secure it. [01:37:14.360 --> 01:37:16.360] They just have to have it. [01:37:16.360 --> 01:37:17.360] Yeah, exactly. [01:37:17.360 --> 01:37:21.360] The policeman, he has a loaded pistol on his hip. [01:37:21.360 --> 01:37:23.360] In Texas. [01:37:23.360 --> 01:37:28.360] Texas, when they put those loaded pistols on those police officer's hips, [01:37:28.360 --> 01:37:32.360] they put a serious responsibility on them. [01:37:32.360 --> 01:37:36.360] If they exert a purport to exert authority they don't have [01:37:36.360 --> 01:37:40.360] and commit simple assault while wearing that pistol, [01:37:40.360 --> 01:37:44.360] as simple as assault is, if you don't leave here, I'll arrest you. [01:37:44.360 --> 01:37:48.360] That's a first degree felony in Texas. [01:37:48.360 --> 01:37:53.360] Texas legislature was not kidding when they put those guns on their hips [01:37:53.360 --> 01:37:56.360] that they're to be real careful with them. [01:37:56.360 --> 01:37:59.360] So look, see what it is in California. [01:37:59.360 --> 01:38:05.360] You'll never get it completely adjudicated. [01:38:05.360 --> 01:38:07.360] Who cares? [01:38:07.360 --> 01:38:13.360] Let's just go in there and see how much grief we can cause them. [01:38:13.360 --> 01:38:23.360] Brett, is it illegal to cause public officials grief using statutorily supported meets? [01:38:23.360 --> 01:38:27.360] Ooh, if that's illegal, we're about to in trouble. [01:38:27.360 --> 01:38:29.360] Yes. [01:38:29.360 --> 01:38:33.360] So it's illegal for us to go in there and beat them up. [01:38:33.360 --> 01:38:38.360] Our goal is to get the system to follow law. [01:38:38.360 --> 01:38:46.360] Just because we know it won't doesn't mean we can't have that goal and that that goal is not laudable. [01:38:46.360 --> 01:38:51.360] But what these police officers like to do is they like to usher you out of the store [01:38:51.360 --> 01:38:56.360] and sometimes they get so close they look like they're going to chest bump you. [01:38:56.360 --> 01:38:59.360] Stop and let them bump you. [01:38:59.360 --> 01:39:09.360] And then fall down and they just holler out, oh, you hit me. [01:39:09.360 --> 01:39:12.360] Don't beat me anymore. [01:39:12.360 --> 01:39:17.360] They tell you that you're trespassed from the store and then they say they're speaking for the owner [01:39:17.360 --> 01:39:21.360] and they tell you not to come back anymore even or not the owner but the manager [01:39:21.360 --> 01:39:26.360] and they say that they have the right and the manager never told you that. [01:39:26.360 --> 01:39:30.360] The manager didn't say that. They said you have to wear a mask to come back in. [01:39:30.360 --> 01:39:34.360] They didn't, nobody trespassed you but the police then they... [01:39:34.360 --> 01:39:41.360] Try not to get to that, to the part where they usher you out of the store, usher yourself out of the store. [01:39:41.360 --> 01:39:43.360] Okay. [01:39:43.360 --> 01:39:45.360] Wait outside. [01:39:45.360 --> 01:39:50.360] Now there's no question about trespass. [01:39:50.360 --> 01:39:54.360] That claim they have is gone. [01:39:54.360 --> 01:39:57.360] Now you're the only one with a claim. [01:39:57.360 --> 01:40:02.360] And when the police don't act on your claim now you get to go after the police. [01:40:02.360 --> 01:40:06.360] The police are not going to like you suing them. [01:40:06.360 --> 01:40:10.360] They didn't commit a crime in their minds because all they did was make you leave the store. [01:40:10.360 --> 01:40:12.360] You don't care what their mind is. [01:40:12.360 --> 01:40:14.360] Think, think whatever they want to. [01:40:14.360 --> 01:40:16.360] All right. [01:40:16.360 --> 01:40:19.360] You got yourself off the hook by hurrying out of the store. [01:40:19.360 --> 01:40:23.360] Don't dawdle. Don't try to explain anything to anybody or teach them about the law. [01:40:23.360 --> 01:40:25.360] Don't try it well. [01:40:25.360 --> 01:40:29.360] I got to go to the bathroom first and somebody wanted to go to the bathroom before they left. [01:40:29.360 --> 01:40:31.360] And then they started getting in the fuss about that. [01:40:31.360 --> 01:40:33.360] Just get out. [01:40:33.360 --> 01:40:35.360] Get out. [01:40:35.360 --> 01:40:39.360] And say, oh my bad. I'm so sorry. [01:40:39.360 --> 01:40:40.360] Go outside. [01:40:40.360 --> 01:40:45.360] And the next thing they know they got the police talking to them because you called 911 on them. [01:40:45.360 --> 01:40:48.360] Surprise, surprise. [01:40:48.360 --> 01:40:51.360] Bushwack is so much fun. [01:40:51.360 --> 01:40:58.360] And when you bushwack them, what it's going to do is frighten them and frustrate them and anger them. [01:40:58.360 --> 01:41:03.360] And that's when they do really stupid stuff and say dumb things. [01:41:03.360 --> 01:41:07.360] Your note breath that I did not say dumb ain't us. [01:41:07.360 --> 01:41:09.360] We don't say that on the show. [01:41:09.360 --> 01:41:11.360] So I did not say it. [01:41:11.360 --> 01:41:16.360] Now, I do have a technical question. [01:41:16.360 --> 01:41:24.360] Now, it is true that in a public accommodation that you cannot be trespassed unless you've committed a crime. [01:41:24.360 --> 01:41:31.360] In other words, you have to be legally, you have to be a disturbance of some sort. [01:41:31.360 --> 01:41:34.360] Okay, that's great. That's great. What you can get them to do. [01:41:34.360 --> 01:41:39.360] What's going to happen when you file against them? [01:41:39.360 --> 01:41:45.360] The police are going to go talk to them and they're then going to file a trespass. [01:41:45.360 --> 01:41:48.360] They got to do something to protect themselves. [01:41:48.360 --> 01:41:53.360] So you set them up to file a trespass against you. [01:41:53.360 --> 01:42:01.360] When you left as soon as they told you to, then that becomes tampering with the government document. [01:42:01.360 --> 01:42:03.360] And a false report. [01:42:03.360 --> 01:42:08.360] Filing a false police report to the police. [01:42:08.360 --> 01:42:09.360] Set them up. [01:42:09.360 --> 01:42:15.360] Read your codes. Know what that code is. [01:42:15.360 --> 01:42:17.360] Witness tampering. [01:42:17.360 --> 01:42:23.360] If they threaten you, you tell the police that I'll charge you with a crime. [01:42:23.360 --> 01:42:29.360] That's witness tampering and obstruction. [01:42:29.360 --> 01:42:31.360] Aggravated assaults. [01:42:31.360 --> 01:42:34.360] They got anything that could look like it could be used as a weapon. [01:42:34.360 --> 01:42:45.360] If they accuse you of trespass after you left, when they ordered you to leave, you left like you were supposed to. [01:42:45.360 --> 01:42:49.360] You file against them and they want to retaliate to have something to use against you. [01:42:49.360 --> 01:42:51.360] So they charge you with trespass. [01:42:51.360 --> 01:42:53.360] Yes. [01:42:53.360 --> 01:42:56.360] Now you get to file against them for tampering with the government document. [01:42:56.360 --> 01:42:59.360] Aggravated perjury. [01:42:59.360 --> 01:43:01.360] Read your codes. [01:43:01.360 --> 01:43:04.360] Look up those. You'll find them in there and have them already. [01:43:04.360 --> 01:43:08.360] Make up a set of complaints before you ever go. [01:43:08.360 --> 01:43:10.360] And you just pull them out. [01:43:10.360 --> 01:43:13.360] Oh, they want to charge me with trespass? [01:43:13.360 --> 01:43:17.360] Oh, here's one for making a false police report. [01:43:17.360 --> 01:43:20.360] Let's ask guys. [01:43:20.360 --> 01:43:25.360] They will know that you played them like a cheap fiddle. [01:43:25.360 --> 01:43:27.360] Hang on. [01:43:27.360 --> 01:43:30.360] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:43:30.360 --> 01:43:34.360] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Blue Law Radio. [01:43:34.360 --> 01:43:37.360] Except I went to the sponsors too soon. [01:43:37.360 --> 01:43:41.360] You got 10 seconds. Say something real insightful in 10 seconds. [01:43:41.360 --> 01:43:46.360] What they do here is they solicit trespass from the manager. [01:43:46.360 --> 01:43:49.360] The police solicit trespass. [01:43:49.360 --> 01:43:51.360] That's even better. Hang on. [01:43:51.360 --> 01:44:00.360] Brett Felton, we'll be right back. 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[01:45:22.360 --> 01:45:27.360] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.360 --> 01:45:33.360] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.360 --> 01:45:38.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.360 --> 01:45:42.360] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.360 --> 01:45:49.360] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.360 --> 01:45:51.360] prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.360 --> 01:46:00.360] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.360 --> 01:46:27.360] Okay, we are back. [01:46:27.360 --> 01:46:30.360] Randy Kelton, Breton Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:46:30.360 --> 01:46:34.360] And Greg, I want to hire you as a consultant. [01:46:34.360 --> 01:46:41.360] I threw 10 seconds at you, and you landed right on 10 seconds. [01:46:41.360 --> 01:46:44.360] How did you do that? [01:46:44.360 --> 01:46:47.360] Yeah, you know, experience. [01:46:47.360 --> 01:46:51.360] I was trying to trip you up there like a new Brett. [01:46:51.360 --> 01:46:53.360] Okay. [01:46:53.360 --> 01:47:00.360] Well, listen, you stand outside of an electric store talking to two policemen. [01:47:00.360 --> 01:47:02.360] I don't get tripped up as easily anymore, Randy. [01:47:02.360 --> 01:47:04.360] I'm sorry. [01:47:04.360 --> 01:47:06.360] Wait, you don't get what? [01:47:06.360 --> 01:47:13.360] I don't get tripped up as easily anymore having to face two policemen outside of an electric store or grocery store. [01:47:13.360 --> 01:47:23.360] Oh, good. You won't get tripped up at all when you start pulling out pre-crafted criminal complaints. [01:47:23.360 --> 01:47:28.360] So all you got to do is sit down and run through the scenarios that you see happening, [01:47:28.360 --> 01:47:33.360] and make up a complaint for each of the primary scenarios, [01:47:33.360 --> 01:47:40.360] and leave the perpetrators blank, just pull it out and fill in their names. [01:47:40.360 --> 01:47:47.360] Victoria Texas. [01:47:47.360 --> 01:47:51.360] Victoria Texas. [01:47:51.360 --> 01:47:54.360] I told the prosecution attorney I want to see all documents collected, [01:47:54.360 --> 01:48:00.360] simply maintained by the department that are referenced to 17.30, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:48:00.360 --> 01:48:06.360] Well, Mr. Carlson, if you want those documents, you will have to provide a written request. [01:48:06.360 --> 01:48:12.360] I pulled out my folder, thumbed through a bunch of documents, pulled out this set that were stapled, [01:48:12.360 --> 01:48:16.360] paper clipped together and pulled the page off of it, put the rest back, [01:48:16.360 --> 01:48:25.360] put in the prosecutor's name at the top, and the date from date to signed it at the bottom handed it to him. [01:48:25.360 --> 01:48:27.360] It's three pages. [01:48:27.360 --> 01:48:32.360] He's reading it. He's standing up. I'm sitting down. He reads a little, and he looked down at me. [01:48:32.360 --> 01:48:38.360] He read a little more, looked down at me again, read a little more, looked down at me, and I said, [01:48:38.360 --> 01:48:42.360] and you thought this was my first rodeo. [01:48:42.360 --> 01:48:48.360] No, Mr. Kelker, somehow I get the idea this is not your first rodeo. [01:48:48.360 --> 01:48:51.360] That's what you want them to think. [01:48:51.360 --> 01:48:56.360] You want them to think, this guy just played me like a cheap fiddle, [01:48:56.360 --> 01:49:01.360] and that will intimidate the bejesus out of all of them. [01:49:01.360 --> 01:49:05.360] They're going to say, we're being set up here and they're not going to arrest you. [01:49:05.360 --> 01:49:10.360] They're going to get very polite and very professional. [01:49:10.360 --> 01:49:24.360] And these things do much better when we can encourage the policeman to get off their authoritarian high horse. [01:49:24.360 --> 01:49:27.360] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:49:27.360 --> 01:49:34.360] I do have a funny little story. When I learned these laws, I went down to my police department [01:49:34.360 --> 01:49:39.360] and I spoke to the sergeant on duty and I walked into that police department [01:49:39.360 --> 01:49:42.360] and I said, I'd like to speak to the sergeant on duty, please. [01:49:42.360 --> 01:49:47.360] And they said, well, okay, sir, but you need to wear a mask and said, actually, I don't. [01:49:47.360 --> 01:49:50.360] And so I went and sat down and they had tape. [01:49:50.360 --> 01:49:54.360] They had that police tape around the benches so you couldn't sit down. [01:49:54.360 --> 01:49:58.360] So I just sat down where the tape was anyway. [01:49:58.360 --> 01:50:04.360] And I waited and a woman looked at me and she yelled at me and she says, hey, you need to wear a mask. [01:50:04.360 --> 01:50:06.360] And I said, no, I don't. [01:50:06.360 --> 01:50:08.360] And she goes, yes, you do. [01:50:08.360 --> 01:50:10.360] And I said, no, I don't. [01:50:10.360 --> 01:50:16.360] And she said, all right, well, she called someone in the back and he came out and he said, sir, you need to wear a mask. [01:50:16.360 --> 01:50:19.360] And I said, no, I don't. [01:50:19.360 --> 01:50:25.360] Nobody did a damn thing. They just let me sit there waiting the entire time without a mask. [01:50:25.360 --> 01:50:31.360] In the police department, in the lobby, until I spoke to the sergeant who also said I needed to wear a mask. [01:50:31.360 --> 01:50:33.360] And I told him, no, I don't. [01:50:33.360 --> 01:50:36.360] And nobody enforced anything. They all let me do what I was going to do. [01:50:36.360 --> 01:50:39.360] All I tried to do was educate him a little bit. [01:50:39.360 --> 01:50:46.360] And you know how far I got with that one? [01:50:46.360 --> 01:50:50.360] About very far. [01:50:50.360 --> 01:50:52.360] Hello. [01:50:52.360 --> 01:50:53.360] You there, Randy? [01:50:53.360 --> 01:50:57.360] Oh, somebody muted my mic again. [01:50:57.360 --> 01:51:00.360] Don't try to reason with them. [01:51:00.360 --> 01:51:02.360] Just follow clearly against them. [01:51:02.360 --> 01:51:09.360] If they say you have to have to wear a mask, they got guns on. [01:51:09.360 --> 01:51:15.360] So you filed against them for violating 42 U.S. Code 2000 and A. [01:51:15.360 --> 01:51:18.360] Failed to give you reasonable accommodation. [01:51:18.360 --> 01:51:20.360] Doesn't matter. [01:51:20.360 --> 01:51:23.360] Doesn't matter if you have a good claim or not. Who cares? [01:51:23.360 --> 01:51:28.360] File it anyway. [01:51:28.360 --> 01:51:33.360] Let them come up with an affirmative defense if they want to. [01:51:33.360 --> 01:51:36.360] But what's going to happen when you try to file it? [01:51:36.360 --> 01:51:41.360] The magistrate you try to file it with is not going to take it. [01:51:41.360 --> 01:51:47.360] And then it doesn't make any difference whether the original complaint was sufficient or not. [01:51:47.360 --> 01:51:55.360] Now it becomes an issue, this dead bang, shielding from prosecutions. [01:51:55.360 --> 01:52:05.360] I've got a J.P. in Victoria, Texas that a couple weeks ago I took four complaints to him. [01:52:05.360 --> 01:52:07.360] He looked at him and he said, are you an attorney? [01:52:07.360 --> 01:52:11.360] Oh, no, no, no, sleep well at night and keep my hands on my own pockets. [01:52:11.360 --> 01:52:12.360] Thank you very much. [01:52:12.360 --> 01:52:13.360] Well, you're not an attorney. [01:52:13.360 --> 01:52:14.360] I'm not going to accept these. [01:52:14.360 --> 01:52:18.360] He threw them down and stomped out. [01:52:18.360 --> 01:52:21.360] So I picked up my phone, dialed 911. [01:52:21.360 --> 01:52:31.360] And the clerk, she listened in on my 911 conversation and ran back to the J.P. [01:52:31.360 --> 01:52:38.360] and tattled on me because I had a big argument with him. [01:52:38.360 --> 01:52:45.360] Finally they agreed to dispatch and I'm sitting right in the criminal complaint against the judge. [01:52:45.360 --> 01:52:49.360] And the judge come back out and he said, Mr. Captain, did you get an attorney? [01:52:49.360 --> 01:52:51.360] I said, no, no, no, stop, stop, stop. [01:52:51.360 --> 01:52:53.360] We can't have any conversation. [01:52:53.360 --> 01:52:58.360] I've called the police and they're coming and I'll give them a complete report when they get here. [01:52:58.360 --> 01:53:02.360] But since I'm going to be filing criminal charges against you, [01:53:02.360 --> 01:53:06.360] it would be inappropriate for us to have any further communication. [01:53:06.360 --> 01:53:10.360] It looked like I hit him with a bat. [01:53:10.360 --> 01:53:15.360] And I thought, Bubba, you should not play poker. [01:53:15.360 --> 01:53:20.360] He whirled around and scooted back into his office. [01:53:20.360 --> 01:53:23.360] Oh, you've got to try that once. [01:53:23.360 --> 01:53:27.360] It is so much fun. [01:53:27.360 --> 01:53:29.360] Anyway, that's what you want to do. [01:53:29.360 --> 01:53:34.360] You want to set them up and let them know they just got set up. [01:53:34.360 --> 01:53:37.360] That's intimidating. [01:53:37.360 --> 01:53:40.360] That's when the police get real cautious. [01:53:40.360 --> 01:53:42.360] You don't get arrested. [01:53:42.360 --> 01:53:46.360] You've heard these guys that do these First Amendment audits. [01:53:46.360 --> 01:53:49.360] They go in there and get an argument with the police. [01:53:49.360 --> 01:53:51.360] And I tried to talk to them. [01:53:51.360 --> 01:53:53.360] Man, don't get an argument with the police. [01:53:53.360 --> 01:53:54.360] Set them up. [01:53:54.360 --> 01:53:59.360] Get them to do what you know they're going to do and then call 911 immediately. [01:53:59.360 --> 01:54:03.360] And you get an argument with the 911 responder. [01:54:03.360 --> 01:54:10.360] He's the one you read the riot act to when you're telling to arrest that guy over there. [01:54:10.360 --> 01:54:15.360] And now you've got this 911 operator doing this little chicken dance [01:54:15.360 --> 01:54:21.360] where he's hitted from one foot to the other trying to find a way off this dime you just put him on. [01:54:21.360 --> 01:54:30.360] That is so much more fun and so much more effective. [01:54:30.360 --> 01:54:33.360] Didn't they realize how much power we got? [01:54:33.360 --> 01:54:34.360] Okay. [01:54:34.360 --> 01:54:35.360] Yeah. [01:54:35.360 --> 01:54:36.360] Yeah. [01:54:36.360 --> 01:54:38.360] Does that answer your questions? [01:54:38.360 --> 01:54:39.360] Yes, it does. [01:54:39.360 --> 01:54:40.360] Thank you, sir. [01:54:40.360 --> 01:54:42.360] Thank you. [01:54:42.360 --> 01:54:47.360] Okay, now we're going to go to what appears to be a new caller. [01:54:47.360 --> 01:54:58.360] If you are from Manhattan or Brooklyn, the 917 area code, give us a first name. [01:54:58.360 --> 01:54:59.360] Hello? [01:54:59.360 --> 01:55:00.360] Hello. [01:55:00.360 --> 01:55:01.360] Give us a first name. [01:55:01.360 --> 01:55:02.360] We know you're in. [01:55:02.360 --> 01:55:03.360] We think you're in New York. [01:55:03.360 --> 01:55:10.360] At least your area code is New York. [01:55:10.360 --> 01:55:13.360] Talk to us. [01:55:13.360 --> 01:55:14.360] Did we lose you? [01:55:14.360 --> 01:55:15.360] I am. [01:55:15.360 --> 01:55:17.360] I am talking to you. [01:55:17.360 --> 01:55:18.360] Okay. [01:55:18.360 --> 01:55:19.360] Good, good, good. [01:55:19.360 --> 01:55:31.360] And it's okay if you're from New York because I used to live up north, so I speak your strange foreign dialect. [01:55:31.360 --> 01:55:33.360] Hello? [01:55:33.360 --> 01:55:34.360] Hello. [01:55:34.360 --> 01:55:35.360] Are you there? [01:55:35.360 --> 01:55:39.360] We seem to have a connection issue. [01:55:39.360 --> 01:55:41.360] We're hearing you just fine. [01:55:41.360 --> 01:55:46.360] He was just asking, give us a first name so we can have something to call you. [01:55:46.360 --> 01:55:56.360] It doesn't have to be your real one if you don't want to. [01:55:56.360 --> 01:56:00.360] Okay, I think we're having a connection issue. [01:56:00.360 --> 01:56:07.360] If you will hang up and call back in, we will pick you up after the next caller. [01:56:07.360 --> 01:56:11.360] We're not getting any sound from you. [01:56:11.360 --> 01:56:13.360] Okay, that didn't work out so good. [01:56:13.360 --> 01:56:19.360] So we're going to go to, how do I pronounce that, Brett? [01:56:19.360 --> 01:56:20.360] Lameen? [01:56:20.360 --> 01:56:22.360] I believe so. [01:56:22.360 --> 01:56:28.360] Lameen in California. [01:56:28.360 --> 01:56:33.360] Hello? [01:56:33.360 --> 01:56:35.360] We are not having good luck today. [01:56:35.360 --> 01:56:40.360] If you are in the 818 area code, talk to us. [01:56:40.360 --> 01:56:42.360] Can you hear me? [01:56:42.360 --> 01:56:43.360] Hello, hello. [01:56:43.360 --> 01:56:44.360] Now I can hear you. [01:56:44.360 --> 01:56:45.360] Yes. [01:56:45.360 --> 01:56:50.360] What do you have for us today? [01:56:50.360 --> 01:56:53.360] Okay, you hear me, right? [01:56:53.360 --> 01:56:54.360] Yes. [01:56:54.360 --> 01:56:56.360] Okay, all right. [01:56:56.360 --> 01:57:00.360] You asked me to send over that case of my father. [01:57:00.360 --> 01:57:05.360] I don't know if it's time to take it out. [01:57:05.360 --> 01:57:08.360] The high interest law in there is charging them like less than 30% interest, something like that. [01:57:08.360 --> 01:57:10.360] Probably haven't looked over it today. [01:57:10.360 --> 01:57:18.360] I sent it to you and I did look over the case and the original creditor is from the [01:57:18.360 --> 01:57:19.360] operation that filed. [01:57:19.360 --> 01:57:24.360] So from my understanding from our last conversation, I could raise the subject, I mean, I could [01:57:24.360 --> 01:57:31.360] raise the jurisdictional challenge in order to get the... [01:57:31.360 --> 01:57:32.360] Okay, okay. [01:57:32.360 --> 01:57:35.360] Are you saying you emailed this to me? [01:57:35.360 --> 01:57:36.360] Yeah, yeah, I did. [01:57:36.360 --> 01:57:41.360] It took me some time to get the case and scan everything and express the file. [01:57:41.360 --> 01:57:43.360] Okay, what was the subject line? [01:57:43.360 --> 01:57:47.360] I don't remember seeing it. [01:57:47.360 --> 01:57:54.360] I think maybe high interest loan, okay? [01:57:54.360 --> 01:57:59.360] If you could type in my email address, my first name, L-A-M-I-N, that's the phone. [01:57:59.360 --> 01:58:02.360] When did you send it? [01:58:02.360 --> 01:58:06.360] I think a week ago, maybe. [01:58:06.360 --> 01:58:08.360] Wait, you're breaking up. [01:58:08.360 --> 01:58:11.360] I'm getting every other solvable. [01:58:11.360 --> 01:58:14.360] Yeah, yeah, I'm driving right now. [01:58:14.360 --> 01:58:19.360] I could be hitting a bad area signal, but yeah, I sent it about a week ago. [01:58:19.360 --> 01:58:20.360] Okay, wait, this is not working. [01:58:20.360 --> 01:58:21.360] I'm losing so much. [01:58:21.360 --> 01:58:23.360] I can't understand what you're saying. [01:58:23.360 --> 01:58:25.360] Can you try pulling over? [01:58:25.360 --> 01:58:27.360] All right, I will. [01:58:27.360 --> 01:58:32.360] And I think I hear the music as well, so probably get out again for the next time. [01:58:32.360 --> 01:58:33.360] Yeah. [01:58:33.360 --> 01:58:34.360] Okay, hang on. [01:58:34.360 --> 01:58:35.360] Just a few seconds. [01:58:35.360 --> 01:58:37.360] We'll be right back. [01:58:37.360 --> 01:58:39.360] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:58:39.360 --> 01:58:45.360] Hello, Lario. It looked like our Brooklyn caller, oh, she's still there. [01:58:45.360 --> 01:58:47.360] She needs to drop off and call back. [01:58:47.360 --> 01:58:48.360] She just came back. [01:58:48.360 --> 01:58:49.360] She didn't drop off. [01:58:49.360 --> 01:58:50.360] Good, good, good. [01:58:50.360 --> 01:58:51.360] Okay. [01:58:51.360 --> 01:58:56.360] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [01:58:56.360 --> 01:58:59.360] because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:59.360 --> 01:59:04.360] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [01:59:04.360 --> 01:59:07.360] the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:07.360 --> 01:59:09.360] Here are the recovery version. [01:59:09.360 --> 01:59:15.360] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [01:59:15.360 --> 01:59:18.360] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.360 --> 01:59:23.360] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [01:59:23.360 --> 01:59:28.360] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.360 --> 01:59:33.360] Bibles from America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.360 --> 01:59:43.360] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.360 --> 01:59:47.360] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.360 --> 02:00:03.360] That's freestudybible.com.