[00:00.000 --> 00:05.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.800 --> 00:09.440] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.440 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.860 --> 00:16.960] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.960 --> 00:18.560] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.560 --> 00:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.160 --> 00:26.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.920 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.680 --> 00:38.960] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.960 --> 00:42.520] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.520 --> 00:44.720] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.720 --> 00:47.800] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.800 --> 00:50.840] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.840 --> 00:54.480] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.480 --> 01:01.600] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.600 --> 01:02.960] and R for religion. [01:02.960 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:08.540] assembly, and religion. [01:08.540 --> 01:10.880] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.880 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.800] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.800 --> 01:22.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.720 --> 01:31.160] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.160 --> 01:34.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.840 --> 01:38.280] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.280 --> 01:39.760] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.760 --> 01:43.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.640 --> 01:46.800] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.800 --> 01:48.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.400 --> 01:52.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.000 --> 01:56.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.760 --> 02:01.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.800 --> 02:04.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.520 --> 02:08.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.800 --> 02:12.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.360 --> 02:15.920] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.920 --> 02:20.280] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.280 --> 02:22.360] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.360 --> 02:26.840] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.840 --> 02:30.680] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.680 --> 02:31.680] Get it? [02:31.680 --> 02:34.000] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.000 --> 02:37.600] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.600 --> 02:43.360] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.360 --> 02:47.480] government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America, [02:47.480 --> 02:50.520] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.520 --> 02:52.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.520 --> 03:22.160] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:52.520 --> 04:22.440] Okay, howdy, howdy, Red Kelton, Red Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [04:22.440 --> 04:36.920] On this, the 24th day of August 2023, our Thursday two hour show, and we will be taking [04:36.920 --> 04:38.080] your calls all night. [04:38.080 --> 04:40.400] I am turning the phone lines on. [04:40.400 --> 04:42.880] No, I'm not turning phone lines on. [04:42.880 --> 04:45.080] They're already on. [04:45.080 --> 04:52.960] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call or call in number 512-646-1984, [04:52.960 --> 04:58.920] and we're going to start out talking about fun and games in legal land. [04:58.920 --> 05:06.320] In legal land, I filed a suit against all of the highest level judges in the state of [05:06.320 --> 05:10.000] Texas on the criminal side. [05:10.000 --> 05:14.560] In Texas, we have two high courts. [05:14.560 --> 05:19.080] One court in Texas deals with civil suits. [05:19.080 --> 05:25.760] The Court of Criminal Appeals deals with criminal suit complaints, actions. [05:25.760 --> 05:34.440] Well, I sued all the judges in the Court of Criminal Appeals and all of the directors [05:34.440 --> 05:40.320] of the agencies that train public officials. [05:40.320 --> 05:53.240] I accused them of violating the federal constitution by engaging in ongoing criminal enterprise, [05:53.240 --> 06:04.240] wherein instead of doing what they were commanded to do and develop curriculum for the training [06:04.240 --> 06:11.120] of magistrates in the setting of bail and other duties, they conspired one with the [06:11.120 --> 06:19.720] other toward an ongoing criminal enterprise where they trained and directed public officials [06:19.720 --> 06:28.160] in practices and procedures that were in violation of federal law and the federal constitution. [06:28.160 --> 06:39.360] Now, I did it that way carefully and on purpose. [06:39.360 --> 06:54.360] The state has no power to immunize a state official against a suit alleging a violation [06:54.360 --> 06:59.080] of the federal constitution or federal laws. [06:59.080 --> 07:02.680] It goes to supremacy clause. [07:02.680 --> 07:08.620] The state cannot circumvent the supremacy of the federal government. [07:08.620 --> 07:14.560] So if they violate a federal law, the public officials can't be immunized. [07:14.560 --> 07:18.800] Okay, so I made the suit very careful. [07:18.800 --> 07:30.400] I accused them of acting outside the scope of their judicial capacity. [07:30.400 --> 07:39.000] In order to sue someone, a public official in the federal court under 42 U.S. Code 1983, [07:39.000 --> 07:52.180] you have to accuse them of violating a constitutional right, a federal statute, and in doing so [07:52.180 --> 07:56.160] outside the scope of their authority. [07:56.160 --> 08:03.960] So I did all those things, and then I got what I fully expected was a Rule 12B motion [08:03.960 --> 08:09.800] to dismiss for failure to state a claim of which a cover can be had. [08:09.800 --> 08:17.080] And they claimed that they had absolute and qualified immunity. [08:17.080 --> 08:28.440] Well, I carefully crafted the suit to get around absolute and qualified immunity. [08:28.440 --> 08:36.720] And then they got the attorney general to write a response form because they're judges [08:36.720 --> 08:43.160] and they're high-level public officials, so you don't expect them to pay for their [08:43.160 --> 08:47.040] own lawyers for crying out loud. [08:47.040 --> 08:53.360] They got the attorney general to do their job for them, do their legal work for them. [08:53.360 --> 09:03.440] Well, you know, when I looked at that, I used what I normally use to figure out where someone's [09:03.440 --> 09:05.160] doing something wrong. [09:05.160 --> 09:10.160] It's not always correct, but generally it's really close. [09:10.160 --> 09:16.320] And what I used was just simple logic and reason. [09:16.320 --> 09:23.960] If I accuse a public official of acting outside the scope of their authority and committing [09:23.960 --> 09:33.080] crimes against the state and the Fed, it is not reasonable to think that they would be [09:33.080 --> 09:43.200] able to get government lawyers to defend the suit. [09:43.200 --> 09:46.000] And so I did my research. [09:46.000 --> 09:56.120] And lo and behold, Brett, have you ever heard of Article 3, Section 51 of the Texas Constitution? [09:56.120 --> 10:01.080] Article 3, Section 51 doesn't ring a bell? [10:01.080 --> 10:09.680] Actually, we've got Article 3, Section 44, 51, 52, and 53. [10:09.680 --> 10:13.760] They all go to this issue. [10:13.760 --> 10:26.600] Once a public official has entered into a contract with the state and received remuneration [10:26.600 --> 10:31.880] because a contract's not a contract until something of value changes hands. [10:31.880 --> 10:44.200] Once they receive a check, their remuneration from the state is fixed, meaning that they [10:44.200 --> 10:54.240] cannot get anything else that's not specifically in that contract. [10:54.240 --> 11:04.440] And there is nothing in that contract that grants them the right to use government lawyers [11:04.440 --> 11:11.440] to defend them from suits in their personal capacity. [11:11.440 --> 11:16.960] If they're sued in their official capacity, there is something in the contract that grants [11:16.960 --> 11:20.160] them government lawyers. [11:20.160 --> 11:24.200] But I was careful not to sue them in their official capacity. [11:24.200 --> 11:28.280] I sued them in their personal capacity. [11:28.280 --> 11:35.040] At the end of the day, for this purpose, it does not matter what you can or cannot prove [11:35.040 --> 11:38.040] up. [11:38.040 --> 11:43.280] It goes to the nature of the claim that you made. [11:43.280 --> 11:47.640] And this is also how you address a Rule 12 motion. [11:47.640 --> 11:52.200] The Rule 12 motion does not go to what you can or cannot prove up. [11:52.200 --> 11:55.520] It goes to the nature of the claim that you made. [11:55.520 --> 12:04.120] In this case, I was real careful to make a claim that these public officials, while acting [12:04.120 --> 12:11.680] under the collar or pretense of an official capacity, exerted or purported to exert an [12:11.680 --> 12:15.760] authority they did not expressly have. [12:15.760 --> 12:25.840] But in the process of acting under the collar of an administrative requirement, wherein [12:25.840 --> 12:36.280] the legislature required the Office of Court Administration, in consultation with the Texas [12:36.280 --> 12:44.000] Court of Criminal Appeals, to develop curricula for the training of magistrates in the setting [12:44.000 --> 12:45.960] of bail and other duties. [12:45.960 --> 12:57.560] Now, those are not judicial functions as they involve no judicial determinations, no judicial [12:57.560 --> 12:58.560] discretion. [12:58.560 --> 13:04.660] They're akin to buying toilet paper. [13:04.660 --> 13:12.120] When the courts purchase toilet paper, that's not a judicial function. [13:12.120 --> 13:22.280] When they hire and pay their help, their assistants, the janitors, the clerks, the other people [13:22.280 --> 13:28.400] that work at the courthouse, those are not judicial functions over which the judge has [13:28.400 --> 13:31.760] judicial discretion. [13:31.760 --> 13:42.920] So if a judge acting as an administrator or in an administrative capacity takes an action [13:42.920 --> 13:50.840] or makes a determination, they don't have immunity for that. [13:50.840 --> 14:01.080] Now, if a director of an agency makes a determination, sometimes they can have immunity so that the [14:01.080 --> 14:06.000] directors of agencies can make determinations without having to worry about being sued every [14:06.000 --> 14:08.800] time they move. [14:08.800 --> 14:19.360] However, if they take an action that exceeds the confines of their contract. [14:19.360 --> 14:23.320] Then they're obviously outside of it. [14:23.320 --> 14:27.880] That is called ultra virase. [14:27.880 --> 14:32.360] Those are actions for which they have no immunity whatsoever. [14:32.360 --> 14:41.320] And it's not what you can prove in your initial pleadings that keeps you in court. [14:41.320 --> 14:45.480] It is the nature of the claim. [14:45.480 --> 14:54.360] So if you make the claim that the defendants acted outside the scope of their authority [14:54.360 --> 15:07.240] and you provide evidence that supports that claim, then if the evidence that you provided [15:07.240 --> 15:19.120] were accepted by the court as true, not as prima facie, but as true, would you have a [15:19.120 --> 15:24.240] claim against the defendants? [15:24.240 --> 15:28.520] If the answer is yes, you get passed rule 12. [15:28.520 --> 15:39.040] Also, if you have made your claim against the public officials alleging that they have [15:39.040 --> 15:49.560] violated federal law and or federal rights guaranteed by the federal constitution. [15:49.560 --> 15:58.960] The courts have ruled in the young doctrine that the states cannot immunize public officials [15:58.960 --> 16:08.760] against allegations of violations of federal requirements, goes to the supremacy clause. [16:08.760 --> 16:18.720] So a public official accused of acting outside the scope of his or her authority in the federal [16:18.720 --> 16:25.760] court is without state immunity and without federal immunity. [16:25.760 --> 16:29.760] So I was very careful to make my allegations in that regard. [16:29.760 --> 16:33.760] OK, now we get to the good part. [16:33.760 --> 16:34.760] I filed the suit. [16:34.760 --> 16:44.480] All of the court judges, the court of criminal appeals had the attorney general file a motion [16:44.480 --> 16:49.600] to dismiss under rule 12 v. 6 for failure of state claim in which the government can't [16:49.600 --> 16:50.600] be had. [16:50.600 --> 16:53.120] Well, they're just not very creative, are they? [16:53.120 --> 16:56.920] No, they are not. [16:56.920 --> 17:00.360] They claimed as rampant. [17:00.360 --> 17:05.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [17:05.040 --> 17:09.160] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.160 --> 17:13.480] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.480 --> 17:14.800] can win two. [17:14.800 --> 17:19.320] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.320 --> 17:25.200] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer [17:25.200 --> 17:29.720] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.720 --> 17:33.920] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.920 --> 17:39.040] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.040 --> 17:41.160] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.160 --> 17:46.720] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.720 --> 17:49.280] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.280 --> 17:58.720] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.720 --> 18:01.520] collectors now. [18:01.520 --> 18:05.920] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:05.920 --> 18:06.920] Word? [18:06.920 --> 18:12.040] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [18:12.040 --> 18:18.440] Talk where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.440 --> 18:22.960] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:22.960 --> 18:25.400] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.400 --> 18:29.360] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [18:29.360 --> 18:32.680] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.680 --> 18:37.320] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.320 --> 18:39.680] and Christian character development. [18:39.680 --> 18:44.200] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.200 --> 18:48.520] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.520 --> 18:50.800] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.800 --> 18:57.440] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.440 --> 19:04.440] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:27.440 --> 19:54.160] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Blue Blah Radio, and what I'm talking about [19:54.160 --> 20:04.720] here is what after 30 years has finally emerged as the methodology for making change. [20:04.720 --> 20:12.760] You and I, we're just two bit chump, ordinary pro se citizens. [20:12.760 --> 20:21.200] Who the heck are we going into court, ordering around all these high level public officials? [20:21.200 --> 20:35.880] Well, I'll tell you who we are, we're citizens in a republic and everybody answers to us. [20:35.880 --> 20:44.600] Nobody answers to lawyers, certainly nobody in government answers to lawyers. [20:44.600 --> 20:49.960] Lawyers aren't going to do anything that'll get a judge to frown at them. [20:49.960 --> 20:57.160] So they're very accustomed to being able to control what goes on in their court. [20:57.160 --> 21:05.520] They're very accustomed to be able to determine what kind of issues come before them and what [21:05.520 --> 21:08.920] they hear and what they don't hear. [21:08.920 --> 21:11.840] That's because they're used to lawyers. [21:11.840 --> 21:22.400] Well, I'm not a lawyer and I'm not coming into their court dangling by my bar card. [21:22.400 --> 21:32.760] They can be as upset at me as they want to because I really don't care what they do. [21:32.760 --> 21:38.520] I am only here to set the record for appeal. [21:38.520 --> 21:48.680] So Bubba, you just do whatever you want to, I don't care because in preparing my suit, [21:48.680 --> 21:59.160] I have tried to be very careful in that I am asking legal questions that they are never [21:59.160 --> 22:06.920] gonna want to get to the Court of Appeals, especially to the Supreme Court. [22:06.920 --> 22:13.600] So here's the question they're not gonna want asked. [22:13.600 --> 22:28.400] The question is, can I use the Attorney General as my lawyer when I am sued in my private [22:28.400 --> 22:35.040] capacity, my personal capacity? [22:35.040 --> 22:41.040] They had the Attorney General respond to their pleadings and file a Rule 12 motion to dismiss [22:41.040 --> 22:43.160] for failure state of claim. [22:43.160 --> 22:51.200] Well, they did such a poor job, I filed bar grievances against all of them and told them [22:51.200 --> 22:59.480] that they ought to be ashamed for filing such an adolescent pleading. [22:59.480 --> 23:05.240] You called it an adolescent? [23:05.240 --> 23:06.240] Yes, I did. [23:06.240 --> 23:09.200] Whoa, you're gonna hurt their feelings. [23:09.200 --> 23:11.440] It gets better. [23:11.440 --> 23:18.480] Consider this, I've got a bunch of judges here and I have accused these judges not of [23:18.480 --> 23:24.360] acting in accordance with the contract they entered into with the state when they swore [23:24.360 --> 23:33.840] on their oath, not of enforcing the law the way they swore they would and protecting [23:33.840 --> 23:36.560] the Constitution. [23:36.560 --> 23:42.880] But I accused them of acting outside the scope of their authority, and I accused them of [23:42.880 --> 23:52.680] costing the taxpayers of the state of Texas on the order of $11 billion a year. [23:52.680 --> 24:01.920] Is it reasonable that these officials who are accused of violating our law and costing [24:01.920 --> 24:10.280] us billions of dollars, is it reasonable that they should be able to use a lawyer paid by [24:10.280 --> 24:18.680] the taxpayers to defend them against allegations of defrauding the taxpayers? [24:18.680 --> 24:24.480] What is wrong with that picture? [24:24.480 --> 24:30.480] People call it the show and a lot of times you ask us questions that we really don't [24:30.480 --> 24:33.860] know the answer to. [24:33.860 --> 24:43.440] But after you've worked in this area for a while, it becomes clear that the law is really [24:43.440 --> 24:46.520] well constructed. [24:46.520 --> 24:54.440] And if it seems as though something is wrong or improper, it probably is. [24:54.440 --> 25:01.280] The difficulty sometimes is just finding the law that supports where it's wrong or improper. [25:01.280 --> 25:03.240] The law is extremely well written. [25:03.240 --> 25:11.000] Well, it did not seem right that I sue these judges in their personal capacity to accuse [25:11.000 --> 25:18.280] them of not doing their job, but of engaging in a criminal conspiracy to deny the citizen [25:18.280 --> 25:19.880] the due course of the laws. [25:19.880 --> 25:24.840] It didn't seem right that they could use my lawyer to defend themselves. [25:24.840 --> 25:25.840] Yeah. [25:25.840 --> 25:30.840] Well, it wasn't right. [25:30.840 --> 25:45.120] Article 3, section 44, 51, 52, Texas Constitution absolutely forbids it. [25:45.120 --> 25:53.800] What it says is that once a public officials enters into a contract with state and the [25:53.800 --> 25:56.880] contract becomes a contract. [25:56.880 --> 26:03.160] A contract is not a contract until something of value changes hands. [26:03.160 --> 26:08.040] They enter into your contract, they swear on their oath of office, and they receive [26:08.040 --> 26:09.040] a check. [26:09.040 --> 26:12.360] And now I know somebody's going to say, well, they don't have oaths of office. [26:12.360 --> 26:15.840] It don't make any difference. [26:15.840 --> 26:23.760] Once they accept a check in payment for their services, they accept that check on the condition [26:23.760 --> 26:29.920] of abiding by the oath of office, so they're bound to the oath of office whether they've [26:29.920 --> 26:33.280] signed it or not. [26:33.280 --> 26:43.320] Once they receive that first check, the amount they can receive from the government is fixed. [26:43.320 --> 26:46.440] It cannot change. [26:46.440 --> 26:52.360] There can be no special emoluments. [26:52.360 --> 26:56.360] They can receive no further benefit, period. [26:56.360 --> 27:07.560] No performance increases, no special incentives, no travel fees, nothing. [27:07.560 --> 27:16.580] If it's not in the contract, the legislature is forbidden to provide, the local authorities [27:16.580 --> 27:19.640] are forbidden to provide them with anything else. [27:19.640 --> 27:30.760] There is nothing in law that authorizes public lawyers to represent public officials when [27:30.760 --> 27:37.080] they are sued in their personal capacity. [27:37.080 --> 27:43.320] So we got all these highest level judges in the state that used the attorney general to [27:43.320 --> 27:48.560] file their Rule 12b6 motion. [27:48.560 --> 27:58.080] Now when I filed suit, they had until the Monday after the 20th day from the date they [27:58.080 --> 28:01.840] were served to file a response. [28:01.840 --> 28:11.640] If you file a Rule 12 motion, the Rule 12b6 motion, that tolls the time for filing a response. [28:11.640 --> 28:19.000] That's what the court says, if your pleading is insufficient on his face, then it would [28:19.000 --> 28:27.580] be inappropriate to force the defendant to prepare, to go to the cost and difficulty [28:27.580 --> 28:30.720] of preparing a response. [28:30.720 --> 28:37.960] So when the Rule 12b motion is filed, the 12b6 motion is filed, it tolls the time to [28:37.960 --> 28:39.960] file an answer. [28:39.960 --> 28:47.080] And everybody does that, so that it gives them plenty of time to write an answer. [28:47.080 --> 28:51.400] So they did that, problem. [28:51.400 --> 28:57.880] The state attorney general did that. [28:57.880 --> 29:03.540] But there's nothing in state law that authorizes the attorney general to act as a lawyer for [29:03.540 --> 29:07.320] a private citizen. [29:07.320 --> 29:14.960] So the attorney general did not have standing to file this motion. [29:14.960 --> 29:23.280] So I'm going to move to strike the pleadings as improperly filed, as they were filed by [29:23.280 --> 29:29.520] the attorney general, who had no standing to represent public official suit in their [29:29.520 --> 29:33.200] private capacity. [29:33.200 --> 29:42.760] And I'm going to ask for default judgment, because they didn't file an answer. [29:42.760 --> 29:46.720] These judges are going to be pooping their pants. [29:46.720 --> 30:02.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Reel of the Law Radio, we'll be right back. [30:02.000 --> 30:06.160] Please ask you for a lot of personal information, and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.160 --> 30:10.840] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.840 --> 30:11.840] secrets. [30:11.840 --> 30:16.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.040 --> 30:17.640] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.640 --> 30:21.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.240 --> 30:26.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:26.000 --> 30:31.560] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.560 --> 30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.760 --> 30:38.040] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:38.040 --> 30:41.600] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.600 --> 30:45.280] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.280 --> 30:50.040] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.040 --> 30:51.400] your personal information. [30:51.400 --> 30:54.480] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.480 --> 30:55.920] It's not an idle question. [30:55.920 --> 31:01.280] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.280 --> 31:03.720] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.720 --> 31:07.320] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [31:07.320 --> 31:12.200] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.200 --> 31:15.600] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.600 --> 31:16.600] to see. [31:16.600 --> 31:17.800] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.800 --> 31:21.240] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.240 --> 31:23.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.160 --> 31:30.920] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.920 --> 31:31.920] I lost my son. [31:31.920 --> 31:32.920] My nephew. [31:32.920 --> 31:33.920] My uncle. [31:33.920 --> 31:34.920] My son. [31:34.920 --> 31:35.920] On September 11th, 2001. [31:35.920 --> 31:39.160] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.160 --> 31:43.240] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.240 --> 31:49.160] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.160 --> 31:52.840] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.840 --> 31:54.400] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.400 --> 31:55.400] My uncle. [31:55.400 --> 31:56.400] My nephew. [31:56.400 --> 31:57.400] My son. [31:57.400 --> 31:58.400] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.400 --> 31:59.400] Why it fell. [31:59.400 --> 32:00.400] Why it matters. [32:00.400 --> 32:01.400] What it can do. [32:01.400 --> 32:05.400] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.400 --> 32:09.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [32:09.240 --> 32:13.200] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.200 --> 32:16.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.400 --> 32:20.080] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.080 --> 32:24.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.280 --> 32:25.680] our rights through due process. [32:25.680 --> 32:29.640] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.640 --> 32:33.400] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.400 --> 32:35.480] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.480 --> 32:39.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.800 --> 32:41.120] ordering your copy today. [32:41.120 --> 32:44.440] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.440 --> 32:48.880] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.880 --> 32:50.800] documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.800 --> 32:55.160] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.160 --> 33:02.160] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:25.160 --> 33:46.200] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brent Fountain, ruleoflawradio, and I am having way too much [33:46.200 --> 33:47.200] fun. [33:47.200 --> 33:52.720] You know, we say on the show that when you walk into the courthouse, you're the baddest [33:52.720 --> 33:56.320] motor scooter in the building. [33:56.320 --> 33:58.600] You really are. [33:58.600 --> 34:02.160] That's not hyperbole. [34:02.160 --> 34:07.400] You are the one person in that building that everybody answers to. [34:07.400 --> 34:14.360] I was coming into town last week and right behind the sheriff's deputy, and I'm in a [34:14.360 --> 34:19.200] little small town, but there's so many people moving in, traffic was backed up about a half [34:19.200 --> 34:20.200] a mile. [34:20.200 --> 34:26.240] The sheriff's deputy in front of me pulled over on the shoulder and he didn't just drive [34:26.240 --> 34:27.240] down the shoulder. [34:27.240 --> 34:32.200] He accelerated down the shoulder, and that kind of annoyed me because I know I'd have [34:32.200 --> 34:34.920] got a ticket for that. [34:34.920 --> 34:39.480] The light changed and I got to move up about a quarter mile and I stopped and I'm right [34:39.480 --> 34:46.320] in front of City Hall, and there's that cop's car sitting there, that sheriff's deputy's [34:46.320 --> 34:47.320] car. [34:47.320 --> 34:52.080] I sat down and looked at it for a while, finally it annoyed me and I just pulled in. [34:52.080 --> 34:55.800] I went over and asked him his name and he wouldn't tell me. [34:55.800 --> 34:59.680] I went inside and got a couple of sheriff's deputies out there and asked them to arrest [34:59.680 --> 35:05.760] him for reckless driving, and they laughed at me. [35:05.760 --> 35:08.760] They thought it was funny. [35:08.760 --> 35:12.600] I wonder if they're gonna continue to think it's funny as time goes on. [35:12.600 --> 35:17.800] Oh, I think they have already decided it wasn't very funny. [35:17.800 --> 35:18.800] Good. [35:18.800 --> 35:25.280] I sent an extensive email to the mayor, and the mayor knows me real well, and one thing [35:25.280 --> 35:30.880] the mayor does not want is me on his case. [35:30.880 --> 35:36.040] And I raked him over the coals, I accused him of hiring all these policemen, turned [35:36.040 --> 35:40.120] my town into a speed trap, and that's not gonna happen. [35:40.120 --> 35:47.280] You are not gonna use my town as a revenue source. [35:47.280 --> 35:53.280] And I wasn't gonna take this on because this is the town I live in, but I was ticketed [35:53.280 --> 35:59.760] in my town by one of these extra cops you guys have hired recently, we've got policemen [35:59.760 --> 36:03.440] all over the place in a tiny little town. [36:03.440 --> 36:10.800] So you kicked this soapbox up to my feet, and I told them that I tried to file criminal [36:10.800 --> 36:17.840] complaints against a sheriff's deputy for reckless driving, and two of your police officers [36:17.840 --> 36:20.600] laughed at me. [36:20.600 --> 36:30.160] They seemed to think it was funny that I would have the audacity to try to hold your police [36:30.160 --> 36:33.560] to the same law they hold us to. [36:33.560 --> 36:38.520] Well, frankly, I didn't find that very funny. [36:38.520 --> 36:42.960] And I suspect you're not gonna find it very funny either. [36:42.960 --> 36:49.760] By the time I get done with you, I've already sued all the highest judges in Texas for $485 [36:49.760 --> 36:55.240] million, and I'm planning a second suit here in Wise County. [36:55.240 --> 37:04.840] I was not planning on taking the city I live in with me, I planned on taking Rome, Texas. [37:04.840 --> 37:13.080] But since you guys decided to kick this soapbox up under my feet, I will be glad to stand [37:13.080 --> 37:15.960] squarely on it. [37:15.960 --> 37:22.440] And I told them exactly what I was gonna do, that I have already filed criminal complaints [37:22.440 --> 37:29.560] with your chief of police against these two deputies for not taking my criminal complaint [37:29.560 --> 37:33.120] against the sheriff's deputy. [37:33.120 --> 37:38.800] And when your chief of police does not give these criminal complaints to some magistrate [37:38.800 --> 37:55.160] in accordance with Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 3.13 paragraph C, then I'm gonna [37:55.160 --> 38:05.700] file criminal charges against him with your city municipal judge, Judge Anne Murrow. [38:05.700 --> 38:09.840] And she's gonna refuse to act on my criminal complaints, which she's already done several [38:09.840 --> 38:15.400] times when I filed criminal complaints against the sheriff with her. [38:15.400 --> 38:20.920] So she'll refuse to act on him in violation of 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [38:20.920 --> 38:27.640] And then I'll file against all of them with the local justice of the peace, Mandy Hayes, [38:27.640 --> 38:32.920] who has also refused when I filed criminal complaints against the governor and against [38:32.920 --> 38:36.960] the chief justice of the supreme. [38:36.960 --> 38:46.360] And then I'll file suit against the county naming you, and I'll file criminal complaints [38:46.360 --> 38:52.800] first with the district judge, who's also refused to take my complaints in the past. [38:52.800 --> 39:00.360] And we're all gonna go to the federal courts, and we will see how funny you guys think I [39:00.360 --> 39:03.760] am then. [39:03.760 --> 39:10.200] So I suspect these two officers have already had themselves a talking to, because I called [39:10.200 --> 39:17.120] the chief of police and asked him if he proceeded my complaints to some magistrate, and he said [39:17.120 --> 39:26.240] he gave them to the district attorney, and the district attorney refused to take them. [39:26.240 --> 39:32.000] I said, well, in that case, I'll be bringing you criminal allegations against the district [39:32.000 --> 39:40.280] attorney for shielding from prosecution in violation of 3805 Penal Code and impersonating [39:40.280 --> 39:47.360] a judicial officer in violation of 37.11 Texas Code Penal Code. [39:47.360 --> 39:55.880] And I would expect you to present those to some magistrate, and when you don't, I will [39:55.880 --> 40:03.600] sue all of you in the federal courts, and then we'll see how funny I am. [40:03.600 --> 40:11.840] Guys, you are the baddest motor scooter in the state. [40:11.840 --> 40:17.400] Nobody else can do that to the mayor and the chief of police and the high sheriff of the [40:17.400 --> 40:24.000] county and the district judge of the county, all the highest level officials in the county. [40:24.000 --> 40:31.960] Nobody else can walk all over them stomping their feet all the way, other than an ordinary [40:31.960 --> 40:33.120] citizen. [40:33.120 --> 40:38.400] And I hope that in doing this show, we've given you enough information that you can [40:38.400 --> 40:40.240] start doing that. [40:40.240 --> 40:46.360] And after all these years of researching and trying to find remedy, it has become clear [40:46.360 --> 40:56.200] the only way we're gonna get remedy is to go in and play these guys like a cheap fiddle. [40:56.200 --> 41:02.440] Ask them to do something we know they're not gonna do, and then when they don't do it, [41:02.440 --> 41:03.440] we sue them. [41:03.440 --> 41:07.440] But also, there's something that not only do they not want to, but the law requires [41:07.440 --> 41:09.440] them to do. [41:09.440 --> 41:10.440] Exactly. [41:10.440 --> 41:17.320] And when the law requires them to do a certain thing and they don't do it, that's a criminal [41:17.320 --> 41:19.840] act on their part. [41:19.840 --> 41:27.020] And it's also an act for which they have, where they have no discretion. [41:27.020 --> 41:30.880] Where they have no discretion, they have no immunity. [41:30.880 --> 41:32.120] Then we sue them. [41:32.120 --> 41:35.200] Okay, right now I've got all the highest judges in Texas. [41:35.200 --> 41:38.720] I sued them for $20 million a piece. [41:38.720 --> 41:44.960] And they're the highest judges in Texas, and they fear, well, they got all this immunity [41:44.960 --> 41:49.480] out the yin-yang. [41:49.480 --> 41:56.560] Problem is, is I carefully crafted that suit with immunity in mind. [41:56.560 --> 42:07.320] I looked at it and said, okay, how do I write a suit that steps around all of their immunities? [42:07.320 --> 42:09.160] It's taken me a long time to get it built. [42:09.160 --> 42:17.400] And if anybody wants to see it, you can go to the federal PACER and look up Count V Nordstrom. [42:17.400 --> 42:21.440] Or send me an email, I'll send it to you. [42:21.440 --> 42:25.120] This is how you walk around all their immunity. [42:25.120 --> 42:31.880] You sue them, you sue them in their personal capacity, and accuse them of violating a federal [42:31.880 --> 42:36.680] law or a federally protected right. [42:36.680 --> 42:40.620] The catch-all is due process. [42:40.620 --> 42:45.740] They fail to provide you with any of the rights in the state. [42:45.740 --> 42:47.440] That's a federal due process crime. [42:47.440 --> 42:50.560] It's kind of a catch-all. [42:50.560 --> 42:54.700] They have no immunity, period. [42:54.700 --> 43:03.480] So right now, this second filing I'm making is I'm saying to these judges, I already got [43:03.480 --> 43:07.880] their attention because I sued them for $20 million. [43:07.880 --> 43:13.560] Now I'm filing an action saying, you got the attorney general to file your response for [43:13.560 --> 43:14.560] you. [43:14.560 --> 43:19.680] That was improper, so that motion is not properly before the court. [43:19.680 --> 43:25.760] And because it was not properly before the court, it did not stop the clock on your 21 [43:25.760 --> 43:31.240] days to file an answer, and you didn't file one, now you don't have an answer. [43:31.240 --> 43:33.920] And I have a right to default judgment. [43:33.920 --> 43:42.240] They are gonna poop their pants and win, lose, and draw on it. [43:42.240 --> 43:47.800] They will start paying more attention to these new personal laws in the state of Texas that [43:47.800 --> 43:52.760] are clearly stipulated in the pleadings that I've filed. [43:52.760 --> 44:00.120] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fowler, you can write that. [44:00.120 --> 44:01.280] I love logos. [44:01.280 --> 44:04.440] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.440 --> 44:07.320] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.320 --> 44:08.320] I need my truth fixed. [44:08.320 --> 44:13.240] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.240 --> 44:17.000] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't [44:17.000 --> 44:20.360] have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [44:20.360 --> 44:21.800] How can I help logos? [44:21.800 --> 44:23.920] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.920 --> 44:26.720] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [44:26.720 --> 44:29.440] You can order them your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.440 --> 44:31.400] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.400 --> 44:37.560] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.560 --> 44:43.440] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.440 --> 44:44.440] Do I pay extra? [44:44.440 --> 44:45.440] No. [44:45.440 --> 44:47.080] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.080 --> 44:48.080] No. [44:48.080 --> 44:49.080] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.080 --> 44:50.080] No. [44:50.080 --> 44:51.080] I mean, yes. [44:51.080 --> 44:55.880] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [44:55.880 --> 44:56.880] Thank you so much. [44:56.880 --> 44:57.880] You're welcome. [44:57.880 --> 45:01.320] Happy holidays, logos. [45:01.320 --> 45:04.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.520 --> 45:11.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.240 --> 45:15.080] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.080 --> 45:19.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.040 --> 45:23.280] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.280 --> 45:28.080] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.080 --> 45:34.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.840 --> 45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.280 --> 45:43.680] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.680 --> 45:49.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.840 --> 45:56.560] pro se tactics, and much more, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.560 --> 46:20.760] or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:20.760 --> 46:48.560] If you could not wait, it ain't about too long, or would your purpose has been done? [46:48.560 --> 46:54.160] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Town and Rule of Law Radio, and I'm going through [46:54.160 --> 47:05.320] all this because I want everybody to kind of get the idea that you can take them on. [47:05.320 --> 47:12.760] You know, you hear about people filing suits, and especially with the federal government, [47:12.760 --> 47:19.760] you file a federal suit, and the judge is just dismissing it out of hand. [47:19.760 --> 47:26.320] Just like clockwork, well, that's okay, and if I get everybody to get that, these judges [47:26.320 --> 47:34.720] are so accustomed to pro se litigants filing documents, the judge throws the document out [47:34.720 --> 47:41.160] and the pro se goes away mumbling and grumbling about the inequity of it all. [47:41.160 --> 47:47.880] They are not accustomed to pro se litigants filing pleadings that they fully expect to [47:47.880 --> 47:50.640] be thrown out. [47:50.640 --> 47:52.720] Who cares? [47:52.720 --> 48:02.640] Go ahead, deny my pleading, rule against me all you want to, because I'm not here expecting [48:02.640 --> 48:06.800] to get a positive ruling in the trial court. [48:06.800 --> 48:15.200] I understand that the federal judges are bought and paid for. [48:15.200 --> 48:18.520] They're going to rule however they want to. [48:18.520 --> 48:25.920] So how do we get the defendant's attention? [48:25.920 --> 48:37.040] Well, one of the things that after my suit asking the courts to throw out their rule [48:37.040 --> 48:46.680] 12 motion and claim that the attorney general had no standing to file it, consider what's [48:46.680 --> 48:49.320] going to happen with that. [48:49.320 --> 48:56.320] We have very long standing constitutional law that forbids the attorney general from [48:56.320 --> 48:59.720] doing that. [48:59.720 --> 49:03.520] What's going to happen when I take this to the court of appeals? [49:03.520 --> 49:10.240] Now the state court pretty well do whatever it wants to, but the court of appeals is in [49:10.240 --> 49:12.800] a different position. [49:12.800 --> 49:21.080] When the court of appeals makes a ruling, it changes law, and if the court of appeals [49:21.080 --> 49:32.000] makes a ruling that violates constitution, then that goes to SCOTUS, the Supreme Court. [49:32.000 --> 49:38.120] And in this case I filed in the federal court, the rule is take the state to the fed, the [49:38.120 --> 49:40.920] fed to the state. [49:40.920 --> 49:44.560] So this is the state that took them to the fed. [49:44.560 --> 49:52.680] Now these judges, they're the highest judges in Texas, and no judge or lawyer in Texas [49:52.680 --> 49:56.000] will cross one of these guys. [49:56.000 --> 49:58.880] They are the elite. [49:58.880 --> 50:03.960] They are the epitome of the legal profession. [50:03.960 --> 50:08.760] And I filed a bar grievance against the attorney general and tell them that they all ought [50:08.760 --> 50:16.360] to be ashamed of themselves for the crappy quality of their responses. [50:16.360 --> 50:18.560] I hope I hurt your feelings. [50:18.560 --> 50:21.980] I imagine so. [50:21.980 --> 50:23.800] That is my intent. [50:23.800 --> 50:31.720] I wrote that suit and walked them through due process, front to back. [50:31.720 --> 50:37.400] And you know, my primary studies, not law, it's psychology. [50:37.400 --> 50:46.520] And I intended this suit to be written in such a way that it will stick in their mind. [50:46.520 --> 50:50.680] I pace the law that they know. [50:50.680 --> 50:58.040] I speak to the law they know, the way they know that law, and then I lead to a different [50:58.040 --> 51:00.360] place. [51:00.360 --> 51:06.560] So I'm pacing and leading, and there's a lot of tools that I'm using here to get their [51:06.560 --> 51:07.560] attention. [51:07.560 --> 51:16.680] By suing them personally, all of these guys are judges, and a lawyer's gonna write a response [51:16.680 --> 51:17.680] for them. [51:17.680 --> 51:18.680] Now consider this. [51:18.680 --> 51:27.880] If you're a professional mechanic, and let's say you have an appendicitis, at the same [51:27.880 --> 51:36.080] time your car breaks down and you send your car to a shop, are you just gonna sit back [51:36.080 --> 51:45.120] there and let that mechanic do anything he wants to, or are you gonna very closely look [51:45.120 --> 51:49.160] over his shoulder? [51:49.160 --> 51:51.840] A suit is judged in their personal capacity. [51:51.840 --> 52:01.320] They're gonna read this suit, because I'm claiming $20 million each, and claiming that [52:01.320 --> 52:06.080] they're costing the state $11 billion a year. [52:06.080 --> 52:13.040] So they gotta consider, what is a jury likely to think? [52:13.040 --> 52:18.120] Without regard to the right of things or the rule of law, at the end of the day, it all [52:18.120 --> 52:21.780] goes to what a jury's gonna think. [52:21.780 --> 52:27.400] So is this ugly enough that a jury's likely to rule against us? [52:27.400 --> 52:36.440] So we get their attention and they read it, and it was crafted so that we take the laws [52:36.440 --> 52:44.920] and constitutions and stitch them together in a way that all the pieces fit. [52:44.920 --> 52:47.840] It's kinda like Russell Mortland. [52:47.840 --> 52:56.000] I called Russell Mortland, he's about six foot four, 350 pounds, big guy. [52:56.000 --> 53:03.120] And he said, sorry it took me so long to answer, but I was in the shower. [53:03.120 --> 53:10.120] I said, God, Russell, tell me I'm not talking to you naked. [53:10.120 --> 53:17.960] He said, well, well, that created an image on the back of my eyeball that I couldn't [53:17.960 --> 53:22.760] scrape off with a putty knife. [53:22.760 --> 53:31.400] I was my intent that when I wrote this suit, that I would force them to read this code [53:31.400 --> 53:40.240] all stitched together in a logical sequence so that they can't scrape it off the backside [53:40.240 --> 53:43.520] of their mind's eye. [53:43.520 --> 53:48.000] Once it's in there, you can't get it out. [53:48.000 --> 53:50.680] So that was the original purpose of the suit. [53:50.680 --> 53:54.440] And I think I've got that accomplished. [53:54.440 --> 54:02.200] Now we need to get their attention and let them know we need business. [54:02.200 --> 54:10.720] And doing that with this, I filed the opposition to the rule 12 and was insulting to them because [54:10.720 --> 54:14.260] the rule 12 was so poorly done. [54:14.260 --> 54:23.500] They only argued immunity and I crafted the suit so it would get around all that immunity. [54:23.500 --> 54:25.540] So they really had no answer. [54:25.540 --> 54:29.760] And I told them, I filed bar grievances against them and told them they ought to be ashamed [54:29.760 --> 54:32.760] of themselves for filing such a crappy pleading. [54:32.760 --> 54:37.320] And now I'm just grinding salt in the wound. [54:37.320 --> 54:44.000] Next I'm going to file this motion that says they got to pay their own lawyer. [54:44.000 --> 54:51.080] And they have to look at the prospect of reaching in their own pocket and not only pay them. [54:51.080 --> 54:53.080] But I'm a judge. [54:53.080 --> 54:59.640] Yeah, I'm immune, but we'll see how that works out for you, bubba. [54:59.640 --> 55:06.840] But not only pay for their own lawyer, but if I get a ruling against them, the state [55:06.840 --> 55:11.320] cannot indemnify them. [55:11.320 --> 55:14.160] So what are they gonna do? [55:14.160 --> 55:20.080] They're gonna go to their lawyer and say, you better deal this guy out, deal him out [55:20.080 --> 55:23.540] before he gets a ruling. [55:23.540 --> 55:29.040] Because if they hadn't ruled against us yet, the state could pay the bill. [55:29.040 --> 55:33.960] But if you wait till he gets a ruling, I have to pay the bill. [55:33.960 --> 55:38.920] You'll lose all the judges in the Court of Criminal Appeals. [55:38.920 --> 55:43.320] I hope this shakes them to the core. [55:43.320 --> 55:46.240] Sure would be nice to have a video of what's happening. [55:46.240 --> 55:49.520] Watch the blood drain out of their face. [55:49.520 --> 55:52.280] Oh, you can't get that. [55:52.280 --> 55:55.840] I did get one thing one time. [55:55.840 --> 56:04.200] I had a friend whose son-in-law was a sergeant on the Sheriff's Department. [56:04.200 --> 56:07.000] And he got the grand jury duty in Tarrant County. [56:07.000 --> 56:13.880] And he came to Jim and asked Jim to ask me what my picture was doing hanging up in the [56:13.880 --> 56:23.040] grand jury room with a sign under it that said, if you see this man called security, [56:23.040 --> 56:26.720] they never tell you when you stick it to them. [56:26.720 --> 56:30.440] But that time I got a little gratification. [56:30.440 --> 56:34.800] Here we don't get direct gratification. [56:34.800 --> 56:39.760] I don't care if I win this suit or not, that's not why I filed it. [56:39.760 --> 56:48.920] The way I can tell if I win this suit or not is if the police start changing their behavior. [56:48.920 --> 56:51.440] And I can almost guarantee you they're going to do that. [56:51.440 --> 57:03.480] So they got one suit by one citizen in a state with 29 million. [57:03.480 --> 57:11.000] What happens if some of you guys start filing the same suit? [57:11.000 --> 57:22.280] They pay me off, I go away, then they get another one and another one and another one. [57:22.280 --> 57:24.880] We can change things. [57:24.880 --> 57:31.500] We have the power to force them to change and we may be the only ones in the state that [57:31.500 --> 57:36.080] have that power, lawyers certainly can't do it. [57:36.080 --> 57:40.440] They'll get their bar cards jerked in a heartbeat. [57:40.440 --> 57:43.600] Police can't do it, public officials can't do it. [57:43.600 --> 57:48.160] The only ones who can do it are the private citizens. [57:48.160 --> 57:54.680] We're the ones that can go in there and run a rough shot over all of them. [57:54.680 --> 58:02.240] And if they pay us a lot of money to beat them up, that wouldn't be a bad thing. [58:02.240 --> 58:13.120] If they offered me 1% of what I asked for to drop my suit, would I drop my suit in [58:13.120 --> 58:16.120] about two heartbeats? [58:16.120 --> 58:19.840] That would be 4.8 million. [58:19.840 --> 58:23.920] And then I'll take the suit and give it to somebody else and let them do the same things. [58:23.920 --> 58:30.560] We can change things and it's not as hard as we tend to think it is. [58:30.560 --> 58:35.520] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with our radio, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [58:35.520 --> 58:40.040] We're going to go to your callers when we come back. [58:40.040 --> 58:44.240] We've only got one caller on the board, so if you have a question or comment, give us [58:44.240 --> 58:50.400] a call and we'll be right back. [58:50.400 --> 58:55.800] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.800 --> 58:58.620] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.620 --> 59:04.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:04.000 --> 59:07.240] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.240 --> 59:09.040] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.040 --> 59:14.960] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.960 --> 59:18.680] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.680 --> 59:23.720] Beautiful and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.720 --> 59:28.400] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.400 --> 59:33.560] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.560 --> 59:44.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.000 --> 59:48.040] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.040 --> 01:00:02.440] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.440 --> 01:00:06.080] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:06.080 --> 01:00:09.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.560 --> 01:00:11.040] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.040 --> 01:00:14.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:14.920 --> 01:00:17.800] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.800 --> 01:00:19.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.400 --> 01:00:23.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:23.000 --> 01:00:27.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:00:27.760 --> 01:00:32.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.960 --> 01:00:35.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.520 --> 01:00:39.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:00:39.800 --> 01:00:43.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.360 --> 01:00:46.800] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:46.800 --> 01:00:50.760] When your mom and dad are getting ready for bed, they pull back the covers and find a [01:00:50.760 --> 01:00:52.240] third party there. [01:00:52.240 --> 01:00:55.440] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.440 --> 01:00:59.560] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment [01:00:59.560 --> 01:01:01.160] was designed to prevent. [01:01:01.160 --> 01:01:05.360] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in [01:01:05.360 --> 01:01:07.520] the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:07.520 --> 01:01:09.800] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.800 --> 01:01:13.640] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them [01:01:13.640 --> 01:01:17.280] to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.280 --> 01:01:19.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:01:19.000 --> 01:01:32.200] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.200 --> 01:01:35.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.880 --> 01:01:39.320] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.320 --> 01:01:40.800] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.800 --> 01:01:44.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:01:44.740 --> 01:01:47.720] one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.720 --> 01:01:49.320] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.320 --> 01:01:52.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.920 --> 01:01:57.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.680 --> 01:01:59.120] So protect your rights. [01:01:59.120 --> 01:02:02.880] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.880 --> 01:02:05.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.440 --> 01:02:09.740] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:02:09.740 --> 01:02:13.280] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.280 --> 01:02:17.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:17.000 --> 01:02:22.360] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.360 --> 01:02:26.820] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable [01:02:26.820 --> 01:02:28.320] search and seizure. [01:02:28.320 --> 01:02:30.680] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you? [01:02:30.680 --> 01:02:31.680] Get it? [01:02:31.680 --> 01:02:34.800] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of [01:02:34.800 --> 01:02:35.800] security. [01:02:35.800 --> 01:02:40.280] It's in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.280 --> 01:02:44.280] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say [01:02:44.280 --> 01:02:47.080] it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.080 --> 01:02:51.400] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly [01:02:51.400 --> 01:02:53.640] eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.640 --> 01:02:55.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.440 --> 01:03:20.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:20.240 --> 01:03:27.720] All right. [01:03:27.720 --> 01:03:35.960] Thank you. [01:03:35.960 --> 01:03:44.960] Chant for our words, just chant for our words [01:03:44.960 --> 01:03:47.960] All of them when me chant, when me see [01:03:47.960 --> 01:03:51.960] Say all man was created equally [01:03:51.960 --> 01:03:54.960] Chant down Babylon and do it daily [01:03:54.960 --> 01:03:58.960] And when night come, pray for everybody [01:03:58.960 --> 01:04:01.960] Say one by one me have to chant them on [01:04:01.960 --> 01:04:05.960] Me chant down Babylon because Babylon is wrong [01:04:05.960 --> 01:04:08.960] The only right man me say is the rest man [01:04:08.960 --> 01:04:12.960] We take me say Lord man devout young man [01:04:12.960 --> 01:04:15.960] To chant down Babylon now not later [01:04:15.960 --> 01:04:19.960] To let Babylon know say we getting greater [01:04:19.960 --> 01:04:22.960] We guide the donkey me say truth yella lee [01:04:22.960 --> 01:04:26.960] Say Jesus Christ shall rescue me [01:04:26.960 --> 01:04:29.960] Chant down Babylon [01:04:29.960 --> 01:04:31.960] We are back [01:04:31.960 --> 01:04:34.960] Randy Kelp, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio [01:04:34.960 --> 01:04:45.960] On this the 24th day of August 2023 [01:04:45.960 --> 01:04:48.960] Down here in Texas where it never gets hot [01:04:48.960 --> 01:04:51.960] The weather is always perfect [01:04:51.960 --> 01:04:54.960] Don't pay any attention to all that Yankee propaganda [01:04:54.960 --> 01:04:56.960] To the contrary [01:04:56.960 --> 01:05:01.960] These Texans would never lie about a thing like that [01:05:01.960 --> 01:05:09.960] Okay, and if I sound like I'm kind of getting excited about this [01:05:09.960 --> 01:05:12.960] It's because I am [01:05:12.960 --> 01:05:18.960] I took on the highest level guys I could find [01:05:18.960 --> 01:05:22.960] And they were chumps [01:05:22.960 --> 01:05:27.960] I mean I could have sued a local justice of the peace [01:05:27.960 --> 01:05:32.960] And would have got pleadings as well constructed as what I got [01:05:32.960 --> 01:05:35.960] From suing the highest level judges in Texas [01:05:35.960 --> 01:05:39.960] What in the heck is going on here? [01:05:39.960 --> 01:05:43.960] Are there no professionals anywhere? [01:05:43.960 --> 01:05:47.960] Guys, you can do this [01:05:47.960 --> 01:05:51.960] Anybody who's been jerked around by the state of Texas [01:05:51.960 --> 01:05:56.960] And wants to take them on, send me an email [01:05:56.960 --> 01:06:03.960] We need lawsuits coming at these guys from every direction [01:06:03.960 --> 01:06:10.960] We need to be suing them personally in their individual capacity [01:06:10.960 --> 01:06:16.960] So that they will get the idea that they need to get their house in order [01:06:16.960 --> 01:06:22.960] You cannot expect the legislature to do this for you [01:06:22.960 --> 01:06:29.960] You got all these legislators trying to get them all in the same directions like herding cats [01:06:29.960 --> 01:06:37.960] You can't expect the police to violate their policies [01:06:37.960 --> 01:06:40.960] The police know this is a mess [01:06:40.960 --> 01:06:48.960] I just got an email or a video about a city in Minnesota [01:06:48.960 --> 01:06:52.960] Where all the police quit because they're not paid enough [01:06:52.960 --> 01:06:58.960] And the article went on to talk about the fact that [01:06:58.960 --> 01:07:01.960] They're having trouble hiring policemen [01:07:01.960 --> 01:07:05.960] That I think four or five years ago in New York [01:07:05.960 --> 01:07:11.960] They had 14,000 people apply to the academy [01:07:11.960 --> 01:07:13.960] I think it was four years ago [01:07:13.960 --> 01:07:18.960] And then three years ago they had 2,000 [01:07:18.960 --> 01:07:23.960] And two years ago they had 1,000 [01:07:23.960 --> 01:07:27.960] That's incredible [01:07:27.960 --> 01:07:30.960] Nobody wants to be policemen right now [01:07:30.960 --> 01:07:37.960] The policemen have been brought into such ill repute [01:07:37.960 --> 01:07:40.960] That nobody wants to be a policeman [01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:46.960] I know a lot of policemen and all of them wanted to be good guys [01:07:46.960 --> 01:07:49.960] They wanted to help the public [01:07:49.960 --> 01:07:55.960] They wanted to be the one people came to when they were in trouble [01:07:55.960 --> 01:07:59.960] They didn't want to be thought of as the enemy [01:07:59.960 --> 01:08:05.960] And now they are and all the policemen I know are frustrated and disgusted [01:08:05.960 --> 01:08:10.960] I've had several tell me this is not what I signed up for [01:08:10.960 --> 01:08:15.960] So we owe it to the policemen to get them out of this spot [01:08:15.960 --> 01:08:17.960] They can't do it [01:08:17.960 --> 01:08:20.960] I've had three different sheriff's deputies come to me [01:08:20.960 --> 01:08:23.960] And ask me if I could do something to get rid of a deputy [01:08:23.960 --> 01:08:27.960] That was making them all look bad [01:08:27.960 --> 01:08:31.960] They were stuck inside the system so they couldn't fix it [01:08:31.960 --> 01:08:35.960] Lawyers are terrified [01:08:35.960 --> 01:08:39.960] They're not going to do anything that's going to annoy a judge [01:08:39.960 --> 01:08:43.960] We owe it to lawyers to give them plausible deniability [01:08:43.960 --> 01:08:49.960] Give them a way that they can actually do their jobs [01:08:49.960 --> 01:08:54.960] And we're the only ones who can do it [01:08:54.960 --> 01:08:57.960] They can't scare me [01:08:57.960 --> 01:09:02.960] They got nothing they can throw at me [01:09:02.960 --> 01:09:04.960] I'm an old guy [01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:08.960] My bills are paid, my house is paid for [01:09:08.960 --> 01:09:11.960] My kids are grown [01:09:11.960 --> 01:09:15.960] Nobody looks to me for their livelihood [01:09:15.960 --> 01:09:21.960] And you listeners out there, how many of you guys out there are like me? [01:09:21.960 --> 01:09:25.960] And we're old and we're cranky, we have to get up every three hours to pee [01:09:25.960 --> 01:09:28.960] So we're pee-old all the time [01:09:28.960 --> 01:09:32.960] And since we're old, we're not as worried about dying as we were once [01:09:32.960 --> 01:09:35.960] So you're not going to scare us [01:09:35.960 --> 01:09:38.960] We are a resource for liberty [01:09:38.960 --> 01:09:47.960] The worst thing that an enemy can have is 10,000 old guys charging at them [01:09:47.960 --> 01:09:49.960] Hell, they don't care [01:09:49.960 --> 01:09:54.960] Some guys, they worry about getting killed, but old guys, they don't care, they're pee-old [01:09:54.960 --> 01:09:58.960] We got you guys out there and I got the tools [01:09:58.960 --> 01:10:01.960] We're at night, we have the tools [01:10:01.960 --> 01:10:09.960] If you're interested in really taking them on and not just whining and complaining about the inequity of it all [01:10:09.960 --> 01:10:11.960] Yeah, we get a lot of that [01:10:11.960 --> 01:10:18.960] If you really want to make some change, we can do that [01:10:18.960 --> 01:10:23.960] If you have the tools available to do that, contact us, call us, send us emails [01:10:23.960 --> 01:10:26.960] We'll get you what you need, we'll start taking these guys on [01:10:26.960 --> 01:10:34.960] Mark in Florida, what do you have for us today? [01:10:34.960 --> 01:10:38.960] I just want to say, yet again, how inspiring your story is [01:10:38.960 --> 01:10:43.960] It's just amazing and it makes me want to keep going out with my piddly case [01:10:43.960 --> 01:10:47.960] So I can get through it, so I can do something useful like what you're doing [01:10:47.960 --> 01:10:53.960] You're in Florida, your turn [01:10:53.960 --> 01:10:56.960] Florida is as bad as everywhere else [01:10:56.960 --> 01:11:04.960] At Florida, they're like, their bar associations are like Australia [01:11:04.960 --> 01:11:07.960] And probably England the same way [01:11:07.960 --> 01:11:14.960] In Australia, the state bar covers insurance for their lawyers [01:11:14.960 --> 01:11:19.960] They've got this, all the lawyers pay into this pool [01:11:19.960 --> 01:11:26.960] And the bar has in Australia, it's called the Law Society [01:11:26.960 --> 01:11:29.960] The Law Society has this big pool of money [01:11:29.960 --> 01:11:33.960] And they get to do all kind of cool stuff with it, that's their play money [01:11:33.960 --> 01:11:42.960] If a lawyer gets sued and they have to dig into their play money to pay off a claim [01:11:42.960 --> 01:11:47.960] They are not going to be happy campers [01:11:47.960 --> 01:11:52.960] Florida is the same way, they've got their own pool for that [01:11:52.960 --> 01:11:57.960] We've got great tools, you can do the same thing in Florida [01:11:57.960 --> 01:12:02.960] We'll have to adjust the codes for Florida [01:12:02.960 --> 01:12:11.960] But you guys call us in and ask us questions about states from all over the union [01:12:11.960 --> 01:12:15.960] And you get the impression that Brett and I know everything [01:12:15.960 --> 01:12:19.960] We know all the laws for all the states in the fed [01:12:19.960 --> 01:12:23.960] No, we don't know that [01:12:23.960 --> 01:12:30.960] We know one set of laws generally [01:12:30.960 --> 01:12:34.960] And the laws that we know [01:12:34.960 --> 01:12:43.960] Evolve from English law, that evolve basically from Greek law [01:12:43.960 --> 01:12:49.960] Human beings are the same as they've always been [01:12:49.960 --> 01:12:57.960] And for 6,000 years, since Hanna-Rabe [01:12:57.960 --> 01:13:00.960] I think he was the first one that laid down the law [01:13:00.960 --> 01:13:06.960] Hanna-Rabe's law was laid down some 5,000 years ago [01:13:06.960 --> 01:13:10.960] And it was pretty much like we have today [01:13:10.960 --> 01:13:15.960] Because human beings have their frailties and their weaknesses [01:13:15.960 --> 01:13:18.960] And they're all the same [01:13:18.960 --> 01:13:23.960] So Brett and I, we don't have to know all the laws from all the states [01:13:23.960 --> 01:13:33.960] If something on a detached objective analysis seems to be wrong [01:13:33.960 --> 01:13:36.960] You can be pretty sure it is [01:13:36.960 --> 01:13:39.960] It'll be somewhere to be found [01:13:39.960 --> 01:13:42.960] Exactly, you just gotta go find the law [01:13:42.960 --> 01:13:47.960] Lightly organized differently in different places, but it's pretty similar [01:13:47.960 --> 01:13:53.960] Yeah, use that power God gave us all [01:13:53.960 --> 01:13:56.960] The power to divide [01:13:56.960 --> 01:14:00.960] Okay, Brett knows that I'm not a Christian [01:14:00.960 --> 01:14:04.960] And God hasn't touched my heart if he's out there [01:14:04.960 --> 01:14:08.960] But I do respect the knowledge base [01:14:08.960 --> 01:14:16.960] And if he created us, he gave us a special ability that no other creatures have [01:14:16.960 --> 01:14:23.960] We have the ability to define, to think, to figure things out [01:14:23.960 --> 01:14:29.960] And the whole nature of the human animal is the same everywhere [01:14:29.960 --> 01:14:34.960] No matter what culture, humans are all the same [01:14:34.960 --> 01:14:41.960] I put out a set of specs for some programming that I needed on one of these sites [01:14:41.960 --> 01:14:46.960] And I got a response from a 26-year-old kid in Mongolia [01:14:46.960 --> 01:14:48.960] He spoke English [01:14:48.960 --> 01:14:52.960] And so I had a really interesting conversation with him [01:14:52.960 --> 01:15:00.960] And I asked him, what is it that you find the most disconcerting, the most problematic? [01:15:00.960 --> 01:15:07.960] And he said, it is the schools, they're dumbing down the schools [01:15:07.960 --> 01:15:15.960] What? I said, you sound like a kid across the street [01:15:15.960 --> 01:15:25.960] The complaints that he had were exactly the same complaints we have here in the States [01:15:25.960 --> 01:15:28.960] We're all the same, the law is all the same [01:15:28.960 --> 01:15:32.960] Doesn't matter what state, doesn't matter what country [01:15:32.960 --> 01:15:41.960] What is right is right, and if you look at the law, you will find the law showing that it's right [01:15:41.960 --> 01:15:50.960] My point is, is be confident in your ability to define what is right, what is not [01:15:50.960 --> 01:15:55.960] If something doesn't seem right, then start looking in the law for that [01:15:55.960 --> 01:16:02.960] The law is a huge compilation of books and statutes and codes [01:16:02.960 --> 01:16:06.960] But for the most part, you don't care about all that [01:16:06.960 --> 01:16:10.960] You have an issue, it's a singular issue [01:16:10.960 --> 01:16:18.960] You can burrow right through all this complication and pull out the issue that you need [01:16:18.960 --> 01:16:21.960] It's not as hard as it seems [01:16:21.960 --> 01:16:27.960] The legal community wants us to believe that it's incredibly difficult and hard to do [01:16:27.960 --> 01:16:32.960] It is complex, but it's not difficult and hard to do [01:16:32.960 --> 01:16:36.960] It just takes a little focus, we can change everything [01:16:36.960 --> 01:16:43.960] I'm preaching the gospel according to Randy today, but I'm pretty excited about the way things are going [01:16:43.960 --> 01:16:48.960] And I cut you off, Mark, but I'll come back to you on the other side [01:16:48.960 --> 01:16:50.960] I'm having way too much fun today [01:16:50.960 --> 01:16:55.960] Randy Talbot, Brett Fountain, Room of Law Radio, you'll be right back [01:17:20.960 --> 01:17:23.960] If not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth [01:17:23.960 --> 01:17:27.960] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the book of Mark [01:17:27.960 --> 01:17:31.960] Where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message [01:17:31.960 --> 01:17:34.960] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week [01:17:34.960 --> 01:17:38.960] With discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development [01:17:38.960 --> 01:17:42.960] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [01:17:42.960 --> 01:17:49.960] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus [01:17:49.960 --> 01:17:53.960] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:17:53.960 --> 01:17:59.960] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures [01:17:59.960 --> 01:18:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:04.960 --> 01:18:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method [01:18:08.960 --> 01:18:14.960] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too [01:18:14.960 --> 01:18:20.960] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [01:18:20.960 --> 01:18:24.960] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons [01:18:24.960 --> 01:18:26.960] How to answer letters and phone calls [01:18:26.960 --> 01:18:28.960] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [01:18:28.960 --> 01:18:33.960] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [01:18:33.960 --> 01:18:38.960] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [01:18:38.960 --> 01:18:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well [01:18:40.960 --> 01:18:46.960] For more information please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:46.960 --> 01:18:49.960] Or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com [01:18:49.960 --> 01:18:51.960] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:18:51.960 --> 01:18:56.960] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:18:56.960 --> 01:18:59.960] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [01:18:59.960 --> 01:19:10.960] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network [01:19:30.960 --> 01:19:35.960] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:35.960 --> 01:19:40.960] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan [01:19:40.960 --> 01:19:45.960] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand [01:19:45.960 --> 01:19:50.960] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:50.960 --> 01:19:55.960] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan [01:19:55.960 --> 01:20:00.960] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand [01:20:00.960 --> 01:20:05.960] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:20:05.960 --> 01:20:10.960] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan [01:20:10.960 --> 01:20:15.960] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand [01:20:15.960 --> 01:20:20.960] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:20:46.960 --> 01:20:51.960] Maybe you'll get my wife to take that ringer off her phone for me [01:20:51.960 --> 01:20:53.960] Good luck [01:20:53.960 --> 01:20:57.960] Yeah, her ringer is a jackass ring [01:20:57.960 --> 01:21:01.960] Anyway, okay, go ahead, Mark [01:21:01.960 --> 01:21:10.960] So I'm immersed in writing an amended complaint, my first amended complaint under Rule 15 [01:21:10.960 --> 01:21:16.960] And I'm filing that a week from tomorrow [01:21:16.960 --> 01:21:21.960] Okay, hold on, what court are you in, state or federal? [01:21:21.960 --> 01:21:27.960] I'm in, I started in state court, happening all in New York where all the action happened [01:21:27.960 --> 01:21:30.960] That's the right jurisdiction, even though I live in Florida now [01:21:30.960 --> 01:21:39.960] Okay, I take it you have had the court rule against you so you're filing an amended pleading? [01:21:39.960 --> 01:21:48.960] No, I filed in state court in New York, the defendants were moved to federal court [01:21:48.960 --> 01:21:54.960] Okay, step back, something I want to touch on before we pass it [01:21:54.960 --> 01:22:04.960] Did you make allegations against the state in that suit that was removed to the Fed? [01:22:04.960 --> 01:22:06.960] No [01:22:06.960 --> 01:22:13.960] Okay, the reason I said that is if you make allegations against the state [01:22:13.960 --> 01:22:18.960] And you make allegations of federal violations [01:22:18.960 --> 01:22:29.960] And the state removes it to the Fed, they waive their 11th amendment in unity [01:22:29.960 --> 01:22:32.960] That should give you some ideas [01:22:32.960 --> 01:22:40.960] I'm preparing a second suit and I'm going to sue the county that I live in [01:22:40.960 --> 01:22:43.960] I'm going to sue the district judge and a whole bunch of them [01:22:43.960 --> 01:22:48.960] But I'm going to sue them this time in the state [01:22:48.960 --> 01:22:56.960] But I'm only going to make one claim and that's going to be a federal RICO claim [01:22:56.960 --> 01:23:01.960] I'm going to make a federal RICO claim and file it in the state [01:23:01.960 --> 01:23:07.960] And I'm going to make the claim against the state itself [01:23:07.960 --> 01:23:13.960] And if I read my local prosecutor right, he's really a putz [01:23:13.960 --> 01:23:18.960] He's going to look at that and say, oh, the only claim you have is a federal claim [01:23:18.960 --> 01:23:22.960] And he's going to remove it to the Fed [01:23:22.960 --> 01:23:31.960] And when he does, he'll waive the state's immunity under the 11th amendment [01:23:31.960 --> 01:23:36.960] I'm going to play him like a cheap fiddle [01:23:36.960 --> 01:23:45.960] Okay, so what is the nature of your claim in the state? [01:23:45.960 --> 01:23:54.960] So just to recap, because it's been a few weeks since I've been on the show, but I was employed in New York [01:23:54.960 --> 01:24:06.960] And I was put on unpaid leave and then terminated based on all the craziness a couple of years ago [01:24:06.960 --> 01:24:12.960] And I was on unpaid leave for a year and then they fired me a little less than a year ago [01:24:12.960 --> 01:24:22.960] About a year ago. So I filed claim, a tort claim, New York State tort claim [01:24:22.960 --> 01:24:30.960] In New York State Supreme Court against my employer and against my union [01:24:30.960 --> 01:24:35.960] Because my union basically colluded with my employer [01:24:35.960 --> 01:24:39.960] Not like these other unions that all went to bat with their employees [01:24:39.960 --> 01:24:44.960] Not my union, no, they just rolled over violently without telling anybody, too [01:24:44.960 --> 01:24:50.960] But anyway, they say all their lawyers removed it to federal court [01:24:50.960 --> 01:24:56.960] Because they say it's all preempted by the Labor Management Relations Act [01:24:56.960 --> 01:24:59.960] So now I'm in federal court [01:24:59.960 --> 01:25:06.960] So I filed my motion to remand, they filed their motion to dismiss 12b6 [01:25:06.960 --> 01:25:16.960] And instead of opposing their motion, I'm going to file an amended complaint [01:25:16.960 --> 01:25:21.960] Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on [01:25:21.960 --> 01:25:31.960] Since you're in the Fed, you might want to wait until you get a response from the Fed [01:25:31.960 --> 01:25:40.960] Because in the Fed, the Fed is going to, an order is not enough [01:25:40.960 --> 01:25:44.960] You get an order and a judgment [01:25:44.960 --> 01:25:50.960] A judgment is effectively finding to fact and conclusions at law [01:25:50.960 --> 01:25:56.960] And the Fed will tell you exactly what's wrong with your case [01:25:56.960 --> 01:26:00.960] And they will tell you exactly how to fix it [01:26:00.960 --> 01:26:04.960] They'll do the same thing to the other side [01:26:04.960 --> 01:26:08.960] So I filed this suit against these judges [01:26:08.960 --> 01:26:12.960] And they filed the Rule 12, blah, blah, blah [01:26:12.960 --> 01:26:17.960] And that's great for me [01:26:17.960 --> 01:26:22.960] Because I don't care if the court rules for me or against me when they rule [01:26:22.960 --> 01:26:26.960] They're going to give me a judgment [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:33.960] And that judgment is going to focus me on what I have to plead [01:26:33.960 --> 01:26:41.960] They're going to tell me exactly what's wrong with my case, exactly what I have to do to fix my case [01:26:41.960 --> 01:26:46.960] And when they tell me all of this, I don't have to pay attention to anything else [01:26:46.960 --> 01:26:49.960] This is what they're going to look at [01:26:49.960 --> 01:26:52.960] So they'll give me the focus that I need [01:26:52.960 --> 01:26:56.960] Now, they'll do that for the other side as well, but the other side are lawyers [01:26:56.960 --> 01:27:00.960] And they think they're smarter than the judges are [01:27:00.960 --> 01:27:02.960] But I don't [01:27:02.960 --> 01:27:05.960] I'm going to let the judges tell me how to fix my case [01:27:05.960 --> 01:27:08.960] Does that make sense, Mark? [01:27:08.960 --> 01:27:14.960] It does, but in that situation, you're talking about fixing it on appeal, correct? [01:27:14.960 --> 01:27:23.960] Oh, when you file a suit, never expect to win your case in the trial court [01:27:23.960 --> 01:27:31.960] Your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal [01:27:31.960 --> 01:27:36.960] If you win in the trial court, that's just an extra [01:27:36.960 --> 01:27:43.960] But you're going to go to the Court of Appeals anyway, because the other side is going to appeal [01:27:43.960 --> 01:27:56.960] So your focus should only be, how do I set the record for appeal? [01:27:56.960 --> 01:27:59.960] Have you done that? [01:27:59.960 --> 01:28:01.960] What? [01:28:01.960 --> 01:28:04.960] Have you set the record for appeal? [01:28:04.960 --> 01:28:09.960] I have been doing the best I can with what I got [01:28:09.960 --> 01:28:15.960] Okay, that was the best answer you could have gave me [01:28:15.960 --> 01:28:26.960] When I filed my suit, my whole purpose, the whole time I'm thinking, how do I set the record for appeal? [01:28:26.960 --> 01:28:35.960] In every argument that I created, I'm thinking, what is the appellate court going to think about this argument? [01:28:35.960 --> 01:28:40.960] I don't give a crap about the trial court, what's the appellate court going to think? [01:28:40.960 --> 01:28:42.960] Okay, go ahead, I'll shut up now [01:28:42.960 --> 01:28:49.960] No, no, I've tried to do that as much as I can [01:28:49.960 --> 01:28:55.960] Understanding that concept, that really is all about making sure that the trial court knows [01:28:55.960 --> 01:29:03.960] That you know that you're trying to set everything up for appeal [01:29:03.960 --> 01:29:15.960] But in the 12b6 motion, just like you said, the opposition gave me lots of great information about what was wrong with my complaint [01:29:15.960 --> 01:29:28.960] And not only is there quite a bit that I'm fixing, but also I've realized that I can and need to add some causes of action [01:29:28.960 --> 01:29:32.960] Get rid of one, add about three or four [01:29:32.960 --> 01:29:35.960] No, okay, don't worry about that yet [01:29:35.960 --> 01:29:42.960] Wait until the judge dismisses, and then you'll come back with an amended appeal [01:29:42.960 --> 01:29:49.960] Go ahead and bear down on the issues that are left [01:29:49.960 --> 01:30:02.960] Okay, hang on, Randy Kelton, Rhett Fowlton, Rudolph Law Radio, we'll be right back [01:30:02.960 --> 01:30:09.960] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing [01:30:09.960 --> 01:30:12.960] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list [01:30:12.960 --> 01:30:15.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment [01:30:15.960 --> 01:30:21.960] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [01:30:21.960 --> 01:30:26.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [01:30:26.960 --> 01:30:31.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself [01:30:31.960 --> 01:30:34.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [01:30:34.960 --> 01:30:41.960] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing [01:30:41.960 --> 01:30:45.960] Start over with Startpage [01:30:45.960 --> 01:30:48.960] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.960 --> 01:30:52.960] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart [01:30:52.960 --> 01:30:56.960] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain [01:30:56.960 --> 01:31:03.960] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems [01:31:03.960 --> 01:31:10.960] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex [01:31:10.960 --> 01:31:15.960] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions [01:31:15.960 --> 01:31:20.960] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack [01:31:20.960 --> 01:31:26.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine [01:31:30.960 --> 01:31:36.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11 [01:31:36.960 --> 01:31:43.960] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition [01:31:43.960 --> 01:31:46.960] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [01:31:46.960 --> 01:31:48.960] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying [01:31:48.960 --> 01:31:50.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist [01:31:50.960 --> 01:31:51.960] I'm a structural engineer [01:31:51.960 --> 01:31:52.960] I'm a New York City correction officer [01:31:52.960 --> 01:31:53.960] I'm an Air Force pilot [01:31:53.960 --> 01:31:55.960] I'm a father who lost his son [01:31:55.960 --> 01:31:57.960] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth [01:31:57.960 --> 01:32:00.960] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today [01:32:00.960 --> 01:32:04.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar [01:32:04.960 --> 01:32:07.960] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [01:32:07.960 --> 01:32:12.960] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights [01:32:12.960 --> 01:32:19.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law [01:32:19.960 --> 01:32:25.960] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [01:32:25.960 --> 01:32:35.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law [01:32:35.960 --> 01:32:40.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today [01:32:40.960 --> 01:32:50.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material [01:32:50.960 --> 01:33:00.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com, order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve [01:33:20.960 --> 01:33:26.960] Don't let them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, put a chip in your body [01:33:26.960 --> 01:33:31.960] And anyway you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody [01:33:31.960 --> 01:33:36.960] Chip in your mom, chip in your daddy, chip in your grandpa and the grammy [01:33:36.960 --> 01:33:41.960] Chip in your me, chip in your baby, chip in your family, whole family [01:33:41.960 --> 01:33:46.960] Chip in your dog and the cat around we, chip in the beef and you still go eat it [01:33:46.960 --> 01:33:50.960] Chip in the fish, them all in the sea, chip in the shark and the whale around me [01:33:50.960 --> 01:33:55.960] You know still mankind gone chip crazy, they're the kind of thing man they want to be [01:33:55.960 --> 01:34:00.960] Social security, them go tell me, number with them give me, them rip it up you see [01:34:00.960 --> 01:34:04.960] Chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, chip you all the dinner time [01:34:04.960 --> 01:34:09.960] Experiment on mankind, but man you know say them lie [01:34:09.960 --> 01:34:14.960] Well, we don't want no chip man, you have your body, freedom or something man, you fight for it [01:34:14.960 --> 01:34:19.960] Okay, we are back with Randy Kelton and Brent Fountain with our radio [01:34:19.960 --> 01:34:23.960] And we're talking to Mark in Florida [01:34:23.960 --> 01:34:29.960] Okay Mark, where were we? We were having fun on the break [01:34:29.960 --> 01:34:34.960] We were talking about hospital gowns [01:34:34.960 --> 01:34:41.960] It's kind of how these guys are [01:34:41.960 --> 01:34:46.960] Gives an image of what they're doing, they're standing in front of you [01:34:46.960 --> 01:34:50.960] And giving you this facade [01:34:50.960 --> 01:34:55.960] But when you walk around behind them, their butts are hanging out [01:34:55.960 --> 01:35:01.960] Okay, go ahead Mark [01:35:01.960 --> 01:35:06.960] So I've got some kind of like housekeeping questions [01:35:06.960 --> 01:35:13.960] Not all of them are super interesting, but I do have questions that I can't find the answers to anywhere [01:35:13.960 --> 01:35:18.960] Actually I really like housekeeping questions [01:35:18.960 --> 01:35:25.960] Because that's the thing that gets us really stable [01:35:25.960 --> 01:35:31.960] The minor details is what gets us clobbered [01:35:31.960 --> 01:35:38.960] I had a friend, came to me, he had two days to an eviction hearing [01:35:38.960 --> 01:35:42.960] Seven years later he's still in court [01:35:42.960 --> 01:35:47.960] And he missed a housekeeping issue [01:35:47.960 --> 01:35:50.960] They got him on procedure [01:35:50.960 --> 01:35:54.960] So yeah, let's talk about housekeeping issues [01:35:54.960 --> 01:36:01.960] Alright, so the 26th joint letter and the proposed case management plan [01:36:01.960 --> 01:36:10.960] Are due next Friday, which is the same day that I was planning to file my amended complaint [01:36:10.960 --> 01:36:16.960] But do I need to, I mean is there anything about filing an amended complaint [01:36:16.960 --> 01:36:20.960] And starting the process all over again as it were? [01:36:20.960 --> 01:36:27.960] Is there any issue with that, with the 16B conference? [01:36:27.960 --> 01:36:31.960] Are those just complete, are those unrelated really? [01:36:31.960 --> 01:36:34.960] They're technically unrelated [01:36:34.960 --> 01:36:43.960] But if you file the amended complaint then everything that's in process goes away [01:36:43.960 --> 01:36:45.960] Right [01:36:45.960 --> 01:36:51.960] Okay, now I'm the, not the judge, but the magistrate judge [01:36:51.960 --> 01:36:55.960] And I'm watching this case [01:36:55.960 --> 01:37:03.960] Let's say you move yourself from where you're at to the magistrate judge's position [01:37:03.960 --> 01:37:09.960] And you have this meeting coming up [01:37:09.960 --> 01:37:15.960] And one of the parties files an amended complete, amended petition [01:37:15.960 --> 01:37:18.960] How are you going to feel about that? [01:37:18.960 --> 01:37:25.960] That's why I'm asking, because I don't want to kick off the judge [01:37:25.960 --> 01:37:29.960] Yes, so that's exactly my point [01:37:29.960 --> 01:37:37.960] So I'm going to, just on the surface I'm going to suggest do this meeting [01:37:37.960 --> 01:37:42.960] And find a reason based on the meeting [01:37:42.960 --> 01:37:53.960] Ask the question you need to ask to give you a reason to file an amended pleading [01:37:53.960 --> 01:38:02.960] So that the other side doesn't think you're just, so that the magistrate judge doesn't think you're just screwing with them and wasting their time [01:38:02.960 --> 01:38:06.960] Say that again, I didn't understand what you said [01:38:06.960 --> 01:38:11.960] Okay, the magistrate judge is sitting there watching these things going on [01:38:11.960 --> 01:38:16.960] And you're going to have this meeting [01:38:16.960 --> 01:38:25.960] And before you have the meeting, you file an amended pleading, the magistrate judge is going to be annoyed [01:38:25.960 --> 01:38:30.960] Right, even though it's a week, he gets the paperwork a week before the meeting [01:38:30.960 --> 01:38:35.960] Yeah, it's about, it's about respect [01:38:35.960 --> 01:38:37.960] Right [01:38:37.960 --> 01:38:44.960] You set me up, you have me rearrange my schedule for this meeting [01:38:44.960 --> 01:38:53.960] And then you file an amended pleading and blow that off and you screw up my schedule [01:38:53.960 --> 01:39:01.960] Consider where the magistrate judge is at and what she's doing and how what you're going to do is going to affect her [01:39:01.960 --> 01:39:06.960] Now, none of that should really make any difference [01:39:06.960 --> 01:39:11.960] But we're human beings and it does make a difference [01:39:11.960 --> 01:39:30.960] Before you do something, you need to be able to show the magistrate judge that you're not just treating the opposing side and the magistrate with disregard [01:39:30.960 --> 01:39:35.960] That you, it's all about respect [01:39:35.960 --> 01:39:42.960] If the magistrate judge thinks that you're acting with respect, if you're going to file an amended pleading [01:39:42.960 --> 01:39:56.960] Then send the court a notice that you intend to file an amended pleading and ask the court to postpone whatever hearing they've got going [01:39:56.960 --> 01:39:58.960] Okay [01:39:58.960 --> 01:40:04.960] So, you know, think on their side, what would annoy you? [01:40:04.960 --> 01:40:07.960] Excuse me, I have a busy schedule [01:40:07.960 --> 01:40:11.960] I'm putting all these different pieces in place [01:40:11.960 --> 01:40:14.960] I got 10 lawyers coming before me [01:40:14.960 --> 01:40:17.960] They all got different issues [01:40:17.960 --> 01:40:20.960] Yours is in the middle [01:40:20.960 --> 01:40:22.960] And I've set aside time [01:40:22.960 --> 01:40:29.960] So I do one of these hearings and the next one and the next one and then I come to yours and I have to be prepared for it [01:40:29.960 --> 01:40:34.960] And then I get to yours and poof, all of a sudden it's cancelled [01:40:34.960 --> 01:40:37.960] I'm going to be annoyed [01:40:37.960 --> 01:40:40.960] Now I'm not supposed to be annoyed [01:40:40.960 --> 01:40:45.960] I should just take that as the way things go [01:40:45.960 --> 01:40:49.960] But that's not how human beings work [01:40:49.960 --> 01:40:56.960] So if you're going to file an amended pleading, give them prior notice that you're going to do that [01:40:56.960 --> 01:41:04.960] So that they don't set aside time for meetings or hearings that are not going to happen [01:41:04.960 --> 01:41:09.960] Right, right, okay [01:41:09.960 --> 01:41:12.960] Okay, moving forward [01:41:12.960 --> 01:41:19.960] Okay, so the next thing is for that 16B conference [01:41:19.960 --> 01:41:25.960] When do you tell the court what your initial disclosure request will be? [01:41:25.960 --> 01:41:30.960] Like the witnesses that you want to call and your initial disclosure request [01:41:30.960 --> 01:41:35.960] Wait, wait, wait, did you say missing a disclosure request? [01:41:35.960 --> 01:41:39.960] No, for your initial disclosure request [01:41:39.960 --> 01:41:41.960] Oh, initial? [01:41:41.960 --> 01:41:44.960] Yes [01:41:44.960 --> 01:41:50.960] Did you provide the required initial disclosures? [01:41:50.960 --> 01:41:53.960] I haven't provided them yet [01:41:53.960 --> 01:41:58.960] That's what the opposing, that's what I'm working on with the opposing people [01:41:58.960 --> 01:42:07.960] Is anything in the initial disclosures really relevant to you, do you think? [01:42:07.960 --> 01:42:11.960] Generally they're not [01:42:11.960 --> 01:42:20.960] You know, who are you, what's your address, what's your email, pretty basic stuff [01:42:20.960 --> 01:42:28.960] I filed a federal suit, I sued all the judges in Texas and we didn't do any initial disclosures [01:42:28.960 --> 01:42:36.960] The other side didn't care because there wasn't anything we needed to disclose that really amounted to anything [01:42:36.960 --> 01:42:42.960] Is there something that matters that needs to be disclosed that will make a difference? [01:42:42.960 --> 01:42:47.960] It's more about the initial discovery request [01:42:47.960 --> 01:42:59.960] About witnesses that I would call, about mostly the emails that I would like to see, access to business emails [01:42:59.960 --> 01:43:03.960] Okay, emails are not initial discovery [01:43:03.960 --> 01:43:06.960] Oh [01:43:06.960 --> 01:43:08.960] That'll be later [01:43:08.960 --> 01:43:10.960] Okay [01:43:10.960 --> 01:43:19.960] In initial discovery you're asking for things that the other side will have no standing to object to [01:43:19.960 --> 01:43:32.960] Who are you, what's your address, how do I contact you, all basic stuff that neither side will have reason to object to [01:43:32.960 --> 01:43:37.960] When you start asking for emails, that's a whole other hand [01:43:37.960 --> 01:43:40.960] Okay [01:43:40.960 --> 01:43:47.960] Okay, hang on, we'll pick this up on the other side, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Blue of Law Radio [01:43:47.960 --> 01:43:53.960] We've got an empty call for it today, so if you have a question or comment, give us a call [01:43:53.960 --> 01:43:59.960] Call at number 512-646-1984 [01:43:59.960 --> 01:44:02.960] Dang, cookies! Cookies? Me love cookies! [01:44:02.960 --> 01:44:05.960] Oh, hi Cookie Muncher! No, these are yucky cookies [01:44:05.960 --> 01:44:08.960] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies [01:44:08.960 --> 01:44:11.960] You can't even eat these cookies, these are cyber cookies [01:44:11.960 --> 01:44:13.960] No can't eat? [01:44:13.960 --> 01:44:16.960] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer [01:44:16.960 --> 01:44:17.960] These have apples [01:44:17.960 --> 01:44:20.960] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple [01:44:20.960 --> 01:44:22.960] Yummy apple [01:44:22.960 --> 01:44:26.960] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash [01:44:26.960 --> 01:44:32.960] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them [01:44:32.960 --> 01:44:34.960] Bye bye yucky cookies [01:44:34.960 --> 01:44:41.960] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, bookmark the link [01:44:41.960 --> 01:44:46.960] And I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies [01:44:46.960 --> 01:44:48.960] New cookies? For me? [01:44:48.960 --> 01:44:50.960] Consider it an early Christmas present [01:44:50.960 --> 01:44:56.960] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too [01:44:56.960 --> 01:44:57.960] C is for cookie [01:44:57.960 --> 01:44:59.960] C is for classified [01:44:59.960 --> 01:45:03.960] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.960 --> 01:45:06.960] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary [01:45:06.960 --> 01:45:14.960] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step [01:45:14.960 --> 01:45:18.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing [01:45:18.960 --> 01:45:22.960] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [01:45:22.960 --> 01:45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too [01:45:27.960 --> 01:45:33.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience [01:45:33.960 --> 01:45:42.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts [01:45:42.960 --> 01:45:51.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more [01:45:51.960 --> 01:46:13.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ [01:46:22.960 --> 01:46:26.960] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:46:26.960 --> 01:46:30.960] Some things I realize fully [01:46:30.960 --> 01:46:35.960] Somebody's gonna police that policeman [01:46:35.960 --> 01:46:39.960] Somebody's gonna police the police [01:46:39.960 --> 01:46:43.960] There's always a room at the top of the hill [01:46:43.960 --> 01:46:48.960] I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely left still [01:46:48.960 --> 01:46:52.960] They're wishing it was more than opposition that fails [01:46:52.960 --> 01:46:56.960] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will [01:46:56.960 --> 01:47:00.960] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:47:00.960 --> 01:47:04.960] Some things I realize fully [01:47:04.960 --> 01:47:19.960] Somebody's gonna police that policeman [01:47:34.960 --> 01:47:44.960] One of Brett's arguments and it was so irreverent that my sides are hurting [01:47:44.960 --> 01:47:50.960] Where were we, Mark? [01:47:50.960 --> 01:47:56.960] I'm going from mundane questions to slightly more interesting questions [01:47:56.960 --> 01:48:01.960] I have one more really mundane question I can't find an answer to [01:48:01.960 --> 01:48:08.960] So because my state case was removed, my state case was removed at federal court [01:48:08.960 --> 01:48:13.960] So now I'm in federal court, I'm amending my complaint [01:48:13.960 --> 01:48:24.960] Do I now gussy it up and dress it up as a file, I mean as a federal complaint, like do I file a civil cover sheet with it? [01:48:24.960 --> 01:48:31.960] No, okay hold on, no, that does adjust things [01:48:31.960 --> 01:48:35.960] You filed a state suit, they removed it to the fed [01:48:35.960 --> 01:48:42.960] So it's appropriate that you amend your pleading [01:48:42.960 --> 01:48:50.960] So that your pleading is presented from a federal context [01:48:50.960 --> 01:48:57.960] That makes it appropriate to file an amended pleading at this point [01:48:57.960 --> 01:49:10.960] But do I now treat it cosmetically like it's a federal complaint with the federal caption and the civil cover sheet? [01:49:10.960 --> 01:49:14.960] No, you don't need to do this cover sheet [01:49:14.960 --> 01:49:22.960] The cover sheet is only needed if the original petition is filed in the federal court [01:49:22.960 --> 01:49:30.960] If anything like a cover sheet was needed, whoever removed it to the fed would have to do that [01:49:30.960 --> 01:49:42.960] Okay, but I guess then maybe I should use the federal caption but have my state case number there as well as the federal case number, does that make sense? [01:49:42.960 --> 01:49:45.960] Well it says again [01:49:45.960 --> 01:49:53.960] Does it make sense to use the federal caption but also put my state case number on it as well as the federal case number? [01:49:53.960 --> 01:49:57.960] State case number is not relevant at this point [01:49:57.960 --> 01:49:59.960] Alright, okay [01:49:59.960 --> 01:50:11.960] Just use the fed, the state, if they need the state number they can find it within the, they can find it in the removal [01:50:11.960 --> 01:50:13.960] Right, okay [01:50:13.960 --> 01:50:19.960] Okay, great and the same thing, I'm amending my affidavit as well [01:50:19.960 --> 01:50:21.960] So I guess use the same [01:50:21.960 --> 01:50:27.960] Okay, let me make a comment here, you're asking these kinds of detailed questions [01:50:27.960 --> 01:50:31.960] Like you're concerned about them [01:50:31.960 --> 01:50:34.960] You don't have to spend much time on these [01:50:34.960 --> 01:50:44.960] If you do anything in this regard that the state doesn't like, I'm sorry, that the fed doesn't like, they'll tell you [01:50:44.960 --> 01:50:46.960] Yeah, yeah [01:50:46.960 --> 01:50:48.960] Yeah, there's no sudden death here [01:50:48.960 --> 01:50:57.960] They're not sitting here waiting for you to miss a tiny little administrative procedure so they can pass on you [01:50:57.960 --> 01:51:06.960] If you screw something up here, since you didn't file in the fed and you were dragged into the fed [01:51:06.960 --> 01:51:13.960] The fed will go to great lengths, especially since you are a pro se litigant [01:51:13.960 --> 01:51:17.960] They'll go to great lengths to give you all the information you need [01:51:17.960 --> 01:51:20.960] Alright, that's good enough, thank you [01:51:20.960 --> 01:51:22.960] Alright, sorry [01:51:22.960 --> 01:51:30.960] If you have any questions, contact the federal clerk [01:51:30.960 --> 01:51:39.960] The federal clerks are required to accommodate pro se litigants [01:51:39.960 --> 01:51:52.960] The one thing you want to do is schmooze the federal clerk a bit, get the federal clerk to do something that you like [01:51:52.960 --> 01:51:57.960] And then craft a letter to the judge, or to the magistrate judge [01:51:57.960 --> 01:52:08.960] Addressing your appreciation for the professionalism of the clerk [01:52:08.960 --> 01:52:11.960] They only hear complaints [01:52:11.960 --> 01:52:18.960] It's rare that they get a letter expressing their appreciation for their professionalism [01:52:18.960 --> 01:52:23.960] You've heard Tina Colbrook on this show [01:52:23.960 --> 01:52:31.960] She did that and the clerk after that bent over backwards to help her in every way she could [01:52:31.960 --> 01:52:36.960] We complain when they don't do it the way we think they should [01:52:36.960 --> 01:52:42.960] But when they do it right, we just think that's what they're supposed to do [01:52:42.960 --> 01:52:49.960] You should use every time they do something in your favor and do something proactive [01:52:49.960 --> 01:52:56.960] As an opportunity to send an accommodation letter [01:52:56.960 --> 01:53:03.960] Now, in the rule of law that should make no difference [01:53:03.960 --> 01:53:10.960] But in the real world, it makes a big difference [01:53:10.960 --> 01:53:18.960] Especially for a pro se litigant [01:53:18.960 --> 01:53:23.960] Lawyers expect these clerks to do things the way they do [01:53:23.960 --> 01:53:26.960] So the clerks never get accommodation letters [01:53:26.960 --> 01:53:35.960] You put an accommodation letter in a clerk's file and you have yourself a buddy [01:53:35.960 --> 01:53:45.960] At the end of the day, it's all politics [01:53:45.960 --> 01:54:00.960] One of my concerns is that if I end up staying in federal court [01:54:00.960 --> 01:54:05.960] I won't actually be able to get in front of the judge [01:54:05.960 --> 01:54:11.960] You do not ever want to stand in front of the judge [01:54:11.960 --> 01:54:16.960] No, you are a pro se litigant [01:54:16.960 --> 01:54:24.960] You do not want to stand toe to toe to a professional lawyer [01:54:24.960 --> 01:54:31.960] You are out of your league. Those guys will screw you over [01:54:31.960 --> 01:54:40.960] I always want to file an objection to oral argument [01:54:40.960 --> 01:54:45.960] Move the court to rule on the pleadings [01:54:45.960 --> 01:54:51.960] Do you really want to get in court and stand toe to toe with a professional lawyer [01:54:51.960 --> 01:54:56.960] Who does what he does all day every day [01:54:56.960 --> 01:55:02.960] And who spent all these years in college to learn how to kick your behind [01:55:02.960 --> 01:55:05.960] You want to stand toe to toe with him in court [01:55:05.960 --> 01:55:08.960] He will lie, he will misrepresent the truth [01:55:08.960 --> 01:55:10.960] He will twist everything he can [01:55:10.960 --> 01:55:16.960] You are out of your league [01:55:16.960 --> 01:55:20.960] And that's the exact argument I bring [01:55:20.960 --> 01:55:25.960] That it would be inappropriate to ask a pro se litigant [01:55:25.960 --> 01:55:32.960] To stand in court opposite a professional lawyer [01:55:32.960 --> 01:55:40.960] So you would be at an unreasonable disadvantage [01:55:40.960 --> 01:55:46.960] So you ask the court to make all these rulings on the pleading [01:55:46.960 --> 01:55:51.960] And in the federal court they do not want to have hearings [01:55:51.960 --> 01:55:55.960] They do not want to have to come down to the court and put on these robes [01:55:55.960 --> 01:56:02.960] And do all this huffing and puffing and legal mumbo jumbo [01:56:02.960 --> 01:56:10.960] They would rather sit in their own private office in their underwear and read your pleadings [01:56:10.960 --> 01:56:17.960] So ask them to do that and generally they will be more than pleased [01:56:17.960 --> 01:56:24.960] To not have you interfere with the time they want to be on the golf course [01:56:24.960 --> 01:56:31.960] Sitting down hearing one of these boring pleadings [01:56:31.960 --> 01:56:34.960] They do the same thing over and over and over all the time [01:56:34.960 --> 01:56:39.960] It gets boring [01:56:39.960 --> 01:56:46.960] And they have to listen to these arrogant smart mouth lawyers spouting the same crap over and over [01:56:46.960 --> 01:56:49.960] We had a district judge in the county I live in [01:56:49.960 --> 01:56:56.960] He used to sit there and put his head on his hand and everybody thought he was asleep but he wasn't [01:56:56.960 --> 01:57:05.960] Every once in a while somebody would object and he would say overruled or he had to grant the objection [01:57:05.960 --> 01:57:12.960] He was listening but he was bored to tears [01:57:12.960 --> 01:57:19.960] He got the judge here, he hears the same stuff over and over and over [01:57:19.960 --> 01:57:21.960] It gets boring [01:57:21.960 --> 01:57:28.960] When you're filing pleadings, keep in mind the judge is bored [01:57:28.960 --> 01:57:37.960] You need to go into court sometimes when the judge is holding a motion hearing [01:57:37.960 --> 01:57:42.960] I was sitting in the court in Austin and they're having motion hearings [01:57:42.960 --> 01:57:45.960] You've got about 20 lawyers lined up here [01:57:45.960 --> 01:57:50.960] When they come up and read your pleadings, blah blah blah, court rules [01:57:50.960 --> 01:57:56.960] Next one, court rules, about 10 or 15 seconds per motion [01:57:56.960 --> 01:58:03.960] Same crap every day, every time, over and over and over and over [01:58:03.960 --> 01:58:05.960] It gets boring [01:58:05.960 --> 01:58:10.960] Maybe get somebody coming in there saying things about hospital gown and they probably like it [01:58:10.960 --> 01:58:16.960] Yeah, give him something to break the boil [01:58:16.960 --> 01:58:21.960] Not always about law, it's about human beings and about politics [01:58:21.960 --> 01:58:27.960] We are out of time, if you have more, call us back tomorrow night [01:58:27.960 --> 01:58:30.960] You do have more [01:58:30.960 --> 01:58:34.960] So call us back tomorrow night, we'll go through this some more, this is a good conversation [01:58:34.960 --> 01:58:40.960] Thank you all for listening, we'll be back tomorrow night on our four hour info marathon [01:58:40.960 --> 01:58:46.960] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Pound, Brett who? Oh, Brett Pound [01:58:46.960 --> 01:59:08.960] We'll be right here, good night, push through the box [01:59:16.960 --> 01:59:20.960] Visit us online at bfa.org [01:59:20.960 --> 01:59:25.960] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references [01:59:25.960 --> 01:59:29.960] Plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible [01:59:29.960 --> 01:59:32.960] This is truly a Bible you can understand [01:59:32.960 --> 01:59:40.960] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102 [01:59:40.960 --> 01:59:48.960] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org