Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:03.000] Bad Boys, Bad Boys, Whatcha Gonna Do? [00:30.000 --> 00:32.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:32.000 --> 00:34.000] Bad boys, bad boys [00:34.000 --> 00:36.000] Whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do [00:36.000 --> 00:38.000] When they come for you? [00:38.000 --> 00:40.000] When you were eight and you had bad traits [00:40.000 --> 00:42.000] You go to school and learn the golden rule [00:42.000 --> 00:46.000] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [00:46.000 --> 00:48.000] If you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.000 --> 00:50.000] Bad boys, bad boys [00:50.000 --> 00:52.000] Whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do [00:52.000 --> 00:54.000] When they come for you? [00:54.000 --> 00:56.000] Bad boys, bad boys [00:56.000 --> 00:58.000] Whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do [00:58.000 --> 01:00.000] When they come for you? [01:00.000 --> 01:02.000] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [01:02.000 --> 01:06.000] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [01:28.000 --> 01:40.000] Okay, we are making headway [01:40.000 --> 01:44.000] Things are moving, we got the suit we filed worked [01:44.000 --> 01:52.000] Got the judges doing probable cause determinations [01:52.000 --> 01:54.000] They're not doing it right [01:54.000 --> 01:56.000] But they're doing it [01:56.000 --> 02:00.000] And even if we don't get any further [02:00.000 --> 02:04.000] Policemen now look at the prospect [02:04.000 --> 02:07.000] Of someone other than the prosecutor [02:07.000 --> 02:11.000] Looking at their probable cause statements [02:11.000 --> 02:13.000] Prosecutors never bothered to look at them [02:13.000 --> 02:15.000] They didn't care [02:15.000 --> 02:18.000] As long as they get lots of charges stacked up [02:18.000 --> 02:24.000] That they can use to coerce the individual into taking a deal [02:24.000 --> 02:26.000] They didn't care what was in the statement [02:26.000 --> 02:28.000] Nobody ever looked at it [02:28.000 --> 02:32.000] Police would say and do anything they wanted to and be supported [02:32.000 --> 02:38.000] Now they got judges looking who have been told [02:38.000 --> 02:41.000] They have to make a determination of probable cause [02:41.000 --> 02:46.000] Okay, they weren't told to do it exactly right [02:46.000 --> 02:48.000] We'll get there [02:48.000 --> 02:50.000] But they're doing it [02:50.000 --> 02:54.000] Yeah, and the justices of the peace who do this [02:54.000 --> 02:56.000] Whether they're doing it right or not [02:56.000 --> 02:59.000] These are elected officials [02:59.000 --> 03:03.000] So it's good to note from a policeman's standpoint [03:03.000 --> 03:08.000] This review, even though it's not happening properly yet [03:08.000 --> 03:13.000] This review is happening by somebody who's responsive to the electorate [03:13.000 --> 03:19.000] Not somebody who was hired by the same company as the cop [03:19.000 --> 03:25.000] To push all this through and get people to rake in the revenue [03:25.000 --> 03:32.000] The city has what they call a prosecutor, a city attorney [03:32.000 --> 03:39.000] And they're not elected, they're hired by the same city [03:39.000 --> 03:48.000] So the policeman has a sense that this city attorney is going to be biased [03:48.000 --> 03:50.000] What do you know? He is [03:50.000 --> 03:55.000] There's a technical phrase to describe that [03:55.000 --> 03:59.000] Conflict of interest? [03:59.000 --> 04:03.000] No, they've all got their snouts in the same trough [04:03.000 --> 04:06.000] Yes, that's the technical version [04:06.000 --> 04:08.000] Yeah, yep, yep [04:08.000 --> 04:13.000] But now they've got a magistrate in between [04:13.000 --> 04:17.000] And it doesn't, you know [04:17.000 --> 04:21.000] At the end of the day [04:21.000 --> 04:27.000] For the most part, the magistrates will rule in favor of the policeman [04:27.000 --> 04:30.000] If the policeman is acting in any way professional [04:30.000 --> 04:33.000] But I've been watching this Judge Flashman [04:33.000 --> 04:38.000] A flasher or flashman in Houston [04:38.000 --> 04:43.000] And he's actually doing probable cause determinations [04:43.000 --> 04:52.000] And he's looking at these and actually paying attention to what the policemen's claim [04:53.000 --> 05:00.000] And in one, a guy hit a mailbox in an apartment complex [05:00.000 --> 05:03.000] And it's two in the morning, nobody around [05:03.000 --> 05:05.000] He called his insurance company, they didn't show up [05:05.000 --> 05:08.000] So he went back to his house and went to bed [05:08.000 --> 05:11.000] He was going to get a hold of him the next morning [05:11.000 --> 05:15.000] And his cop sees the car that is damaged [05:15.000 --> 05:20.000] And goes in the house and the prosecutor's reading what he did [05:20.000 --> 05:23.000] Said he checked the garage, he wasn't there [05:23.000 --> 05:26.000] And the garage door was open to the house [05:26.000 --> 05:29.000] And he went to the house and the door wasn't locked [05:29.000 --> 05:33.000] And the judge said, whoa, whoa [05:33.000 --> 05:36.000] And the prosecutor went on, he went in [05:36.000 --> 05:39.000] And the guy was in bed and he woke the guy up [05:39.000 --> 05:43.000] And the judge is saying, whoa, whoa [05:43.000 --> 05:47.000] And the crux was, what were you doing? [05:47.000 --> 05:50.000] You can't go in this guy's house [05:50.000 --> 05:58.000] So the cop kind of felt like he's accustomed to doing anything he wants to, nobody questions [05:58.000 --> 06:05.000] All of a sudden he's got the judge's question, he throws everything out [06:05.000 --> 06:13.000] Now the cop has to explain to the prosecutor and his boss why his charges got thrown out [06:13.000 --> 06:20.000] All of a sudden there's consequences [06:20.000 --> 06:25.000] So while I don't like the way they're doing it, it's not perfect [06:25.000 --> 06:27.000] At least they're doing something [06:27.000 --> 06:31.000] Now we move ahead [06:31.000 --> 06:38.000] What I'm doing now is I'm going to try to get the state of Texas [06:38.000 --> 06:47.000] To issue a referendum or a statement of intent or legislation if I have to [06:47.000 --> 07:00.000] That would require the grand jury to hold their doors open for citizens at least one time a month [07:00.000 --> 07:04.000] Whether anybody shows up or not [07:04.000 --> 07:06.000] That's great [07:06.000 --> 07:08.000] Oh, they used to do that [07:08.000 --> 07:11.000] When I first moved to Texas, they did that in Fort Worth [07:11.000 --> 07:14.000] And then they stopped doing it because nobody showed up [07:14.000 --> 07:17.000] So I want to get that put back [07:17.000 --> 07:23.000] Well, what if you start with the presumption that they must be doing it right and we're just not getting notice [07:23.000 --> 07:27.000] So they need to more clearly give notice to the public [07:27.000 --> 07:30.000] Of where the times are that they're available to the public [07:30.000 --> 07:33.000] Oh, they're definitely blocking [07:34.000 --> 07:41.000] Well, you and I know that, but that's something that they might prefer to just sweep under the rug [07:41.000 --> 07:44.000] And say, oh yeah, we were doing it right, you just didn't have notice [07:44.000 --> 07:46.000] That's right, that's all we need to do [07:46.000 --> 07:48.000] And they might feel a little better about that [07:48.000 --> 07:52.000] Well, I'm going to go test it [07:52.000 --> 07:55.000] I'm going to go down to Tarrant County [07:55.000 --> 08:01.000] And I'll go to a JP and give him some criminal complaints [08:01.000 --> 08:05.000] I'll come up with some reason to give him some criminal complaints [08:05.000 --> 08:11.000] And the magistrate will refuse to issue a warrant, which is standard procedure [08:11.000 --> 08:13.000] Then I'll go down to the grand jury [08:13.000 --> 08:17.000] Well, my picture used to be hanging up in the grand jury room [08:17.000 --> 08:21.000] But it's not anymore, I don't think it is anyway [08:21.000 --> 08:28.000] So I'm going to go down there and tell the bailiff to instruct the foreman that I have business with the grand jury [08:28.000 --> 08:32.000] And he's going to tell me to go to the prosecuting attorney [08:32.000 --> 08:38.000] And I'm going to tell him, no, you instruct the foreman that I have business with the grand jury [08:38.000 --> 08:43.000] And he's going to refuse and I'm going to call 911 [08:43.000 --> 08:52.000] And make a charge against the bailiff for jury tampering [08:52.000 --> 08:56.000] Something, official oppression, I'll make up something for him [08:56.000 --> 08:59.000] For blocking my access to the grand jury [08:59.000 --> 09:03.000] It's probably official oppression, exerting authority he doesn't have [09:03.000 --> 09:10.000] It's acting to shield the accused from prosecution [09:10.000 --> 09:15.000] And that I will run through the state [09:15.000 --> 09:19.000] And then from the state I'll go to the Fed [09:19.000 --> 09:30.000] I have a contact in New Jersey who has just helped Cash Patel finish up a book that he was writing [09:30.000 --> 09:34.000] So this woman has a good contact with him [09:34.000 --> 09:41.000] I'm going to file criminal charges against the Fifth Circuit judges who dismissed my case [09:41.000 --> 09:46.000] And against a judge in Utah [09:46.000 --> 09:51.000] I'll send complaints to the grand jury in Utah [09:51.000 --> 09:55.000] And get Utah to shield them from the grand jury [09:55.000 --> 09:59.000] And hopefully get them to call me and threaten me and do all that kind of stuff [09:59.000 --> 10:04.000] And then I'll file against the Fifth Circuit here in Dallas [10:04.000 --> 10:08.000] In Fort Worth, they actually have a court in Fort Worth, so I'll go to Fort Worth [10:08.000 --> 10:16.000] And I've already called the FBI and was told by the FBI that they do not take complaints from private citizens [10:16.000 --> 10:22.000] So, since they can't do that, then the only place left is the grand jury [10:22.000 --> 10:27.000] So I'll go down to Fort Worth [10:27.000 --> 10:30.000] And do they have a grand jury in Fort Worth? [10:30.000 --> 10:32.000] Yes, they do [10:32.000 --> 10:33.000] Good [10:33.000 --> 10:38.000] I actually filed criminal complaints against the foreman one time [10:38.000 --> 10:46.000] Good, okay, I'll go down there and get the US Marshals to give me some crapola [10:46.000 --> 10:53.000] And then I'll call the state police and charge these guys with official oppression [10:53.000 --> 11:00.000] Because the US courthouse is not a federal enclave [11:00.000 --> 11:06.000] It does not belong, it has not been relinquished to the feds by the state [11:06.000 --> 11:11.000] So the US Marshals are in this state [11:11.000 --> 11:20.000] So I'll call an officer down and insist that he arrest these US Marshals [11:20.000 --> 11:23.000] That should get interesting [11:23.000 --> 11:31.000] But I'm hoping I've got some folks in the Fort Worth area who will come down there and end the videos [11:31.000 --> 11:36.000] So I'm not by myself so they don't beat me into unconsciousness [11:36.000 --> 11:44.000] And then I'll run those through the routine, get them to block me from the grand jury [11:44.000 --> 11:52.000] Once I get the US attorney to block me from the grand jury, then I'll file with our new attorney general in DC [11:52.000 --> 11:59.000] And see if I can get an audience with some of the higher-ups in the attorney general's office [11:59.000 --> 12:02.000] Because I want to try to convince them [12:02.000 --> 12:11.000] You open that grand jury, say once a month, to the general public [12:11.000 --> 12:20.000] Everything that's going wrong, all the shenanigans public officials are pulling, somebody knows about it [12:20.000 --> 12:27.000] But prosecutors have been shielding the grand jury from the public [12:27.000 --> 12:39.000] I'm going to argue when I sue the US attorney in DC for jury tampering, for blocking my access to the grand jury [12:39.000 --> 12:46.000] I will allege that they converted this republic into a democracy [12:46.000 --> 12:56.000] By blocking me from a grand jury, that eliminated a primary defense against bad law and bad government [12:56.000 --> 13:02.000] Yeah, and they're trying to take this, what's the fourth branch of government? [13:02.000 --> 13:06.000] They're trying to take that away and bundle it up under the prosecutor [13:07.000 --> 13:21.000] And since, who was it, the Montgomery v. State, the one that was murdered, the federal judge that was murdered, Scalia [13:21.000 --> 13:29.000] He's the one that said that the grand jury is essentially a fourth branch of government [13:29.000 --> 13:35.000] It's not a part of the judicial, executive, or the legislative [13:35.000 --> 13:45.000] So for the judicial to block me from a different branch of government, that's going to make a great issue to push to the Fed [13:45.000 --> 13:53.000] See if I can get them to open up the grand jury, that I believe will change everything [13:53.000 --> 13:57.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, we'll be right back [14:06.000 --> 14:13.000] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two [14:13.000 --> 14:19.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [14:19.000 --> 14:23.000] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons [14:23.000 --> 14:25.000] How to answer letters and phone calls [14:25.000 --> 14:28.000] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [14:28.000 --> 14:32.000] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [14:32.000 --> 14:37.000] The Michael Maris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [14:37.000 --> 14:39.000] Personal consultation is available as well [14:39.000 --> 14:45.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner [14:45.000 --> 14:48.000] Or email michaelmaris at yahoo.com [14:48.000 --> 14:50.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com [14:50.000 --> 14:56.000] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [14:56.000 --> 14:58.000] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [14:59.000 --> 15:03.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar [15:03.000 --> 15:06.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [15:06.000 --> 15:08.000] And if we the people are ever going to have a free society [15:08.000 --> 15:11.000] Then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights [15:11.000 --> 15:14.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [15:14.000 --> 15:15.000] The right to act in our own private capacity [15:15.000 --> 15:18.000] And most importantly, the right to due process of law [15:18.000 --> 15:24.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [15:24.000 --> 15:27.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio [15:27.000 --> 15:30.000] Has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [15:30.000 --> 15:32.000] That will help you understand what due process is [15:32.000 --> 15:34.000] And how to hold courts to the Rule of Law [15:34.000 --> 15:38.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [15:38.000 --> 15:39.000] And ordering your copy today [15:39.000 --> 15:41.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book [15:41.000 --> 15:44.000] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [15:44.000 --> 15:46.000] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [15:46.000 --> 15:49.000] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material [15:49.000 --> 15:53.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [15:53.000 --> 15:58.000] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve [16:23.000 --> 16:40.000] The world is spinning like it's out of control [16:40.000 --> 16:41.000] On the edge of a hole [16:41.000 --> 16:44.000] Hey, Randy Hilton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [16:44.000 --> 16:52.000] And we're planning a strategy to get grand juries back in place [16:52.000 --> 16:55.000] Now, I've done a lot of work on this in the past [16:55.000 --> 17:02.000] And I actually got to the grand jury in Johnson County [17:02.000 --> 17:05.000] That's down in Cleburne [17:05.000 --> 17:12.000] The grand jury, after they have voted, is required to come before the court [17:12.000 --> 17:14.000] With a quorum of the grand jury present [17:14.000 --> 17:17.000] Come before the court or the clerk [17:17.000 --> 17:19.000] With a quorum of the grand jury present [17:19.000 --> 17:21.000] And they did that [17:21.000 --> 17:25.000] And they came before the court, convened a hearing [17:25.000 --> 17:29.000] And I was sitting in here in the court [17:29.000 --> 17:32.000] Everybody's looking over me like, who is that? [17:32.000 --> 17:39.000] And the grand jury comes in, the foreman reads all the true bills onto the record [17:39.000 --> 17:42.000] The clerk makes notes in the minutes of the court [17:42.000 --> 17:47.000] When they finish, the judge said, does the grand jury have any further business? [17:47.000 --> 17:50.000] And the foreman said, no, Your Honor, we do not [17:50.000 --> 17:54.000] And I stood up in the courtroom and said, yes, you do [17:54.000 --> 17:57.000] The judge said, who are you? I'm Randy Hilton [17:57.000 --> 18:00.000] What business do you have with this grand jury? [18:00.000 --> 18:07.000] Well, the prosecutor district attorney and assistant district attorney were sitting there [18:07.000 --> 18:08.000] And they're ducking and dodging [18:08.000 --> 18:11.000] They know exactly what my business is [18:11.000 --> 18:14.000] I said, well, Your Honor, I have some criminal complaints [18:14.000 --> 18:17.000] To file against some public officials [18:17.000 --> 18:19.000] And which officials are those? [18:19.000 --> 18:24.000] Well, this prosecutor's assistant district attorney here [18:24.000 --> 18:27.000] And this district attorney here [18:27.000 --> 18:31.000] And you, Judge [18:31.000 --> 18:34.000] It was glorious [18:34.000 --> 18:38.000] The judge just froze in his tracks [18:38.000 --> 18:44.000] He's looking at me like, you just bushwhacked me in front of my own grand jury [18:44.000 --> 18:47.000] Yes, as a matter of fact, I did [18:47.000 --> 18:53.000] And they set a time to hear my complaints [18:53.000 --> 19:01.000] And I was called into the grand jury to present the district attorney to the grand jury [19:01.000 --> 19:08.000] And when I went down to the courthouse [19:08.000 --> 19:13.000] I had given them complaints [19:13.000 --> 19:16.000] And found out when the grand jury was going to meet [19:16.000 --> 19:21.000] I called the prosecutor that day and asked her when the grand jury was going to meet [19:21.000 --> 19:23.000] She said, oh, Mr. Kelton, you're too late [19:23.000 --> 19:25.000] They just met yesterday [19:25.000 --> 19:27.000] Lie your pants on fire [19:27.000 --> 19:29.000] I already talked to the clerk [19:29.000 --> 19:33.000] They were in the basement meeting as we were speaking [19:33.000 --> 19:39.000] And I said, oh, well, that's too bad [19:39.000 --> 19:43.000] And then a few hours later she's in a court hearing [19:43.000 --> 19:45.000] Talking to the judge [19:45.000 --> 19:49.000] And she turns around and there I am sitting in the court [19:49.000 --> 19:52.000] And she was just like something out of a cartoon [19:52.000 --> 19:54.000] She's turning [19:54.000 --> 20:00.000] And sees me and her emotions just ground to a halt [20:00.000 --> 20:06.000] She froze for a few seconds and then ran over to her assistant [20:06.000 --> 20:10.000] And jibber jabber jibber jabber and the assistant shot out of the courtroom [20:10.000 --> 20:13.000] I knew what they were doing [20:13.000 --> 20:17.000] They were taking my complaints that I gave them to give to the grand jury [20:17.000 --> 20:21.000] And taking it and giving it to the grand jury [20:21.000 --> 20:23.000] Too late [20:23.000 --> 20:25.000] Better hurry up [20:25.000 --> 20:27.000] I already did that [20:27.000 --> 20:29.000] You're a little late [20:29.000 --> 20:33.000] When I got there I went down to where the grand jury meets [20:33.000 --> 20:36.000] And told the foreman my name's Randy Kelton struck the foreman [20:36.000 --> 20:39.000] I have business with the grand jury [20:39.000 --> 20:42.000] Can I tell him the nature of the business? [20:42.000 --> 20:45.000] He knew exactly what the nature of the business was [20:45.000 --> 20:47.000] This bailiff really hated me [20:47.000 --> 20:50.000] I had to crawl down his throat a time or two [20:50.000 --> 20:52.000] I said yes you can give him this [20:52.000 --> 20:56.000] And I gave him a folder about two inches thick [20:56.000 --> 20:59.000] And he looked at the folder and he looked at me [20:59.000 --> 21:03.000] And looked at the folder and I said I know what you're thinking [21:03.000 --> 21:09.000] You're thinking I should go talk to the district attorney [21:09.000 --> 21:11.000] Bad idea [21:11.000 --> 21:15.000] These complaints are against the district attorney [21:15.000 --> 21:19.000] Well I'll just see what the foreman of the grand jury has to say [21:19.000 --> 21:21.000] Good idea [21:21.000 --> 21:23.000] So he goes in and gives it to him [21:23.000 --> 21:25.000] And I'm sitting there waiting [21:25.000 --> 21:30.000] And this little short guy had a prosecutor who was about five foot four [21:30.000 --> 21:34.000] He's always standing up on his tippy toes trying to look taller [21:34.000 --> 21:37.000] He come down and started to go into the jury room [21:37.000 --> 21:40.000] And I stood up and said hold on [21:40.000 --> 21:43.000] You do not want to go in there [21:43.000 --> 21:46.000] They're deliberating on charges against your boss [21:46.000 --> 21:48.000] You need to stay out of there [21:48.000 --> 21:50.000] I'm going to go talk to the grand jury [21:50.000 --> 21:52.000] Well before you do that [21:52.000 --> 21:54.000] You might want to go up to your office [21:54.000 --> 21:57.000] Get out your resume and dust it off [21:57.000 --> 21:59.000] Because you're going to need it [21:59.000 --> 22:02.000] He just goes on into the grand jury room [22:02.000 --> 22:04.000] So they no-billed him [22:04.000 --> 22:06.000] Well they called me in [22:06.000 --> 22:10.000] And clearly the foreman was furious [22:10.000 --> 22:14.000] Mr. Kelton what do you have against the district attorney? [22:14.000 --> 22:16.000] Oh I don't have anything against him [22:16.000 --> 22:18.000] He never prosecuted me [22:18.000 --> 22:20.000] He never prosecuted anybody I know [22:20.000 --> 22:22.000] I don't have any problem with him at all [22:22.000 --> 22:24.000] Then why are you here? [22:24.000 --> 22:28.000] Well he violated some law [22:28.000 --> 22:32.000] That's why I'm here but I don't want him prosecuted [22:32.000 --> 22:35.000] Well if you don't want him prosecuted why are you here? [22:35.000 --> 22:39.000] Well because I'm here [22:39.000 --> 22:42.000] And he's out there [22:42.000 --> 22:46.000] Wondering if you're going to end his career tomorrow [22:46.000 --> 22:48.000] That's all I need [22:48.000 --> 22:51.000] I'm glad I'm not in your shoes [22:51.000 --> 22:55.000] You have to decide whether or not I've given you enough information to believe [22:55.000 --> 22:58.000] A crime has been committed and that he committed it [22:58.000 --> 23:00.000] I'm glad I don't have to do that [23:00.000 --> 23:02.000] Oh boy he was furious [23:02.000 --> 23:06.000] So they no-billed him [23:06.000 --> 23:10.000] Then he finds out his assistant DA went in there [23:10.000 --> 23:14.000] Talked to the grand jury while they were deliberating [23:14.000 --> 23:18.000] Deliberating on complaints against him [23:18.000 --> 23:22.000] I come back two days later and this guy's gone [23:22.000 --> 23:27.000] So after I talked to the grand jury I went upstairs [23:27.000 --> 23:29.000] I'm waiting to see what they rule [23:29.000 --> 23:34.000] And I went and sat down in the courtroom and that's when the prosecutor saw me [23:34.000 --> 23:36.000] Oh crap [23:36.000 --> 23:38.000] She's going to run down with these complaints [23:38.000 --> 23:40.000] It's too late for that [23:40.000 --> 23:44.000] And then I go out in the hall and there's a sergeant out there [23:44.000 --> 23:46.000] And he was a pretty good guy [23:46.000 --> 23:48.000] I got along with him really well [23:48.000 --> 23:50.000] He knew how to handle me [23:50.000 --> 23:52.000] He didn't cop an attitude [23:52.000 --> 23:54.000] He dealt with me like a human being [23:54.000 --> 23:56.000] Never had any problem with me [23:56.000 --> 24:01.000] And he said Mr. Kelton you seem like a personable individual [24:01.000 --> 24:03.000] I said well I try to be [24:03.000 --> 24:06.000] He said you mind if I give you a little advice [24:06.000 --> 24:07.000] Well sure [24:07.000 --> 24:11.000] When you come down here poking the bear the way you do [24:11.000 --> 24:13.000] You really need to be careful [24:13.000 --> 24:15.000] Oh don't worry sergeant [24:15.000 --> 24:17.000] I am always very careful [24:17.000 --> 24:21.000] Besides you don't understand [24:21.000 --> 24:24.000] I am the bear [24:24.000 --> 24:27.000] And he kind of chuckled and he said [24:27.000 --> 24:32.000] Yes Mr. Kelton today you are the bear [24:32.000 --> 24:35.000] About five years later [24:35.000 --> 24:37.000] I had somebody contact me [24:37.000 --> 24:39.000] He's in a foreclosure issue [24:39.000 --> 24:41.000] I helped him with some documents [24:41.000 --> 24:45.000] He took him down to Philo and the clerk wouldn't file the documents [24:45.000 --> 24:48.000] He called me all upset about it [24:48.000 --> 24:50.000] And I said well go to the sheriff's office [24:50.000 --> 24:52.000] And file charges against her [24:52.000 --> 24:54.000] Oh they won't do anything [24:54.000 --> 24:56.000] I said no guys this is Randall County [24:56.000 --> 24:58.000] They'll do something [24:58.000 --> 25:00.000] He goes down and tells the sheriff that he [25:00.000 --> 25:04.000] Tried to file these motions in his case [25:04.000 --> 25:08.000] And the clerk refused to accept him [25:08.000 --> 25:11.000] The clerk they had got him this captain [25:11.000 --> 25:13.000] The captain said are you in a hurry [25:13.000 --> 25:15.000] He said no I'm not [25:15.000 --> 25:19.000] If you'll wait here I'll go check this out [25:19.000 --> 25:22.000] He's gone about 30 minutes he comes back [25:22.000 --> 25:25.000] And he said the clerk said if you will [25:25.000 --> 25:28.000] That there was a mistake if you will come down in the morning [25:28.000 --> 25:31.000] He will take your filings [25:31.000 --> 25:33.000] They had already closed [25:33.000 --> 25:35.000] He went down the next day and said they were [25:35.000 --> 25:38.000] Bending over backwards to be nice to him [25:38.000 --> 25:40.000] Yeah how about that [25:40.000 --> 25:43.000] That district attorney told them [25:43.000 --> 25:47.000] If you get a complaint against a public official [25:47.000 --> 25:49.000] You bring that to me [25:49.000 --> 25:51.000] Do not screw with it [25:51.000 --> 25:54.000] I'm not going here again [25:54.000 --> 25:57.000] So it works [25:57.000 --> 26:01.000] We step in the middle of them it works [26:01.000 --> 26:05.000] We sued all the highest judges in Texas [26:05.000 --> 26:09.000] They got another corrupt judge set of judges to throw it out [26:09.000 --> 26:14.000] But to keep me from suing them again [26:14.000 --> 26:17.000] They changed the bench book [26:17.000 --> 26:20.000] We can do this [26:20.000 --> 26:23.000] So now got that part in [26:23.000 --> 26:27.000] Now we pry open the door to the grand jury [26:27.000 --> 26:30.000] And if we get people that will [26:30.000 --> 26:33.000] Actually go to the grand jury [26:33.000 --> 26:36.000] And ripe, raise cane [26:36.000 --> 26:39.000] Jump up and down and rail in righteous indignation [26:39.000 --> 26:42.000] Whether we get these guys indicted or not [26:42.000 --> 26:47.000] We're going to scare them with Jesus out of them [26:47.000 --> 26:49.000] Let's start getting our acts straight [26:49.000 --> 26:52.000] That's my story and I'm sticking to it [26:52.000 --> 26:54.000] We've got some callers, Tina [26:54.000 --> 26:56.000] We'll pick you up on the other side [26:56.000 --> 26:58.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain [26:58.000 --> 27:00.000] We'll be right back [27:02.000 --> 27:05.000] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work [27:05.000 --> 27:07.000] But have they negatively affected our health? [27:07.000 --> 27:09.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [27:09.000 --> 27:11.000] And I'll be back in just a moment with new findings [27:11.000 --> 27:15.000] About how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry [27:15.000 --> 27:17.000] Privacy is under attack [27:17.000 --> 27:19.000] When you give up data about yourself [27:19.000 --> 27:21.000] You'll never get it back again [27:21.000 --> 27:24.000] If you keep on, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [27:24.000 --> 27:26.000] So protect your rights [27:26.000 --> 27:29.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [27:29.000 --> 27:32.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [27:32.000 --> 27:35.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com [27:35.000 --> 27:39.000] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing [27:39.000 --> 27:42.000] Start over with Startpage [27:43.000 --> 27:46.000] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy [27:46.000 --> 27:47.000] It's a fact [27:47.000 --> 27:49.000] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone [27:49.000 --> 27:52.000] This kind of radiation near your head has been disputed [27:52.000 --> 27:54.000] Some have blamed it for brain tumors [27:54.000 --> 27:56.000] While cell phone companies have downplayed concerns [27:56.000 --> 27:59.000] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association [27:59.000 --> 28:02.000] Is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry [28:02.000 --> 28:06.000] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism [28:06.000 --> 28:09.000] In the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna [28:09.000 --> 28:11.000] Increases when the cell phone is on [28:11.000 --> 28:14.000] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage [28:14.000 --> 28:16.000] I'm not taking any chances [28:16.000 --> 28:18.000] I always keep the phone far from my body [28:18.000 --> 28:20.000] I use a corded headset [28:20.000 --> 28:21.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [28:21.000 --> 28:24.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [28:48.000 --> 28:52.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [28:52.000 --> 28:54.000] And a better understanding of His Word? [28:54.000 --> 28:57.000] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays [28:57.000 --> 29:00.000] From 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripure Talk [29:00.000 --> 29:03.000] Where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [29:03.000 --> 29:05.000] In accord with 2 Timothy 2.15 [29:05.000 --> 29:07.000] Study to find out more about the Bible [29:07.000 --> 29:09.000] And how to read the Bible [29:09.000 --> 29:11.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:11.000 --> 29:13.000] For more information [29:13.000 --> 29:15.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:15.000 --> 29:17.000] For more information [29:17.000 --> 29:19.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:19.000 --> 29:21.000] For more information [29:21.000 --> 29:23.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:23.000 --> 29:25.000] For more information [29:25.000 --> 29:27.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:27.000 --> 29:29.000] For more information [29:29.000 --> 29:31.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:31.000 --> 29:33.000] For more information [29:33.000 --> 29:35.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:35.000 --> 29:37.000] For more information [29:37.000 --> 29:39.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:39.000 --> 29:41.000] For more information [29:41.000 --> 29:43.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:43.000 --> 29:45.000] For more information [29:45.000 --> 29:47.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:47.000 --> 29:49.000] For more information [29:49.000 --> 29:51.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:51.000 --> 29:53.000] For more information [29:53.000 --> 29:55.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:55.000 --> 29:57.000] For more information [29:57.000 --> 29:59.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [29:59.000 --> 30:01.000] For more information [30:01.000 --> 30:03.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [30:03.000 --> 30:05.000] For more information [30:05.000 --> 30:07.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [30:07.000 --> 30:09.000] For more information [30:09.000 --> 30:11.000] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com [30:11.000 --> 30:13.000] For more information [30:13.000 --> 30:15.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:15.000 --> 30:17.000] For more information [30:17.000 --> 30:19.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:19.000 --> 30:21.000] For more information [30:21.000 --> 30:23.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:23.000 --> 30:25.000] For more information [30:25.000 --> 30:27.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:27.000 --> 30:29.000] For more information [30:29.000 --> 30:31.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:31.000 --> 30:33.000] For more information [30:33.000 --> 30:35.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:35.000 --> 30:37.000] For more information [30:37.000 --> 30:39.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:39.000 --> 30:41.000] For more information [30:41.000 --> 30:43.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:43.000 --> 30:45.000] For more information [30:45.000 --> 30:47.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:47.000 --> 30:49.000] For more information [30:49.000 --> 30:51.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:51.000 --> 30:53.000] For more information [30:53.000 --> 30:55.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:55.000 --> 30:57.000] For more information [30:57.000 --> 30:59.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [30:59.000 --> 31:01.000] For more information [31:01.000 --> 31:05.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:05.000 --> 31:07.000] For more information [31:07.000 --> 31:09.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:09.000 --> 31:11.000] For more information [31:11.000 --> 31:13.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:13.000 --> 31:15.000] For more information [31:15.000 --> 31:17.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:17.000 --> 31:19.000] For more information [31:19.000 --> 31:21.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:21.000 --> 31:23.000] For more information [31:23.000 --> 31:25.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:25.000 --> 31:27.000] For more information [31:27.000 --> 31:29.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:29.000 --> 31:31.000] For more information [31:31.000 --> 31:33.000] Visit Logos RadioNetwork.com [31:33.000 --> 31:35.000] For more information [31:35.000 --> 31:38.440] You told us yesterday you had some crowing to do. [31:38.440 --> 31:45.840] Just a little crowing, but you know every step is a step in the right direction. [31:45.840 --> 31:54.000] And this is in relation to the consignment store that defrauded more than 70 people where [31:54.000 --> 32:00.520] I had filed an adversary proceeding and actually won that adversary proceeding after a four-year [32:00.520 --> 32:11.440] battle, which is 99% of Chapter 7s go through without a hitch within a few months. [32:11.440 --> 32:14.920] This lasted four years and it was denied. [32:14.920 --> 32:16.560] We got a judgment. [32:16.560 --> 32:22.600] The judges filed a Chapter 13 three days after the judgment was ordered. [32:22.600 --> 32:28.920] So I fought that and the judge said, well, they're trying their best. [32:29.160 --> 32:30.680] They're doing better. [32:30.680 --> 32:33.280] They're trying to make a plan. [32:33.280 --> 32:35.400] Well, no, really. [32:35.400 --> 32:41.120] If they really wanted to make a plan and attempt to pay all the debt as fairly as they stated [32:41.120 --> 32:47.520] in their papers, they would never have tried to file the Chapter 7 to dismiss all that debt. [32:47.520 --> 32:48.800] Exactly. [32:48.800 --> 32:53.400] Yeah, one would like to give their fellow man the benefit of the doubt and imagine that [32:53.400 --> 32:54.400] they're doing their best. [32:54.400 --> 32:59.320] However, the fruits of their actions are clear. [32:59.320 --> 33:08.560] So I filed an appeal to, because I asked for at least her to be dismissed from the bankruptcy [33:08.560 --> 33:11.680] after she was convicted of the felony embezzlement. [33:11.680 --> 33:19.160] And we were awarded restitution, which is you can never discharge in bankruptcy and [33:19.160 --> 33:21.480] neither can our civil judgment. [33:21.480 --> 33:28.480] But anyway, they suddenly, after I filed the appeal and I put all this in the appeal, [33:28.480 --> 33:31.240] I really think I did a pretty good job. [33:31.240 --> 33:36.720] If I say so myself, because I called out the attorney, I called out them. [33:36.720 --> 33:42.400] And all of a sudden, they voluntarily dismissed their Chapter 13. [33:42.400 --> 33:43.880] Now, isn't that odd? [33:43.880 --> 33:46.720] They were in protection. [33:46.800 --> 33:54.320] Now, I'm thinking that their attorney decided he was going to need about $10,000 to answer [33:54.320 --> 34:01.920] the appeal, because appeals are very expensive to, you know, if you hire an attorney to fire [34:01.920 --> 34:06.240] one, they will insist on $10,000 to start. [34:06.240 --> 34:13.160] And so that is my presumption that they did that, but I'm not sure exactly. [34:13.160 --> 34:20.120] So right now, I've hired a collection agency to go to try and attach at least one of their [34:20.120 --> 34:21.560] wages. [34:21.560 --> 34:25.600] But in the meantime, it actually happened on my birthday. [34:25.600 --> 34:38.160] I got a check from the, you know, our county's probation department in the grand sum of $48.93 [34:38.160 --> 34:41.640] as part of the first part of my restitution payment. [34:41.640 --> 34:48.640] And then I got a second check, I think, three weeks later for the same amount, you know. [34:48.640 --> 34:56.000] And she's only paid $200 in the last seven months towards this criminal restitution. [34:56.000 --> 34:58.120] But at least I got two checks. [34:58.120 --> 35:04.040] And the probation department said, nobody ever, you know, goes as far as you guys did. [35:04.040 --> 35:09.920] They just don't, they give up because they run into all these hurdles. [35:10.720 --> 35:13.720] And they said, I never give up. [35:13.720 --> 35:19.360] And so I, you know, they transferred it down to Los Angeles County and I said, well, we [35:19.360 --> 35:23.120] don't want it transferred down there because they're overworked, understaffed, and we'll [35:23.120 --> 35:25.000] never get through to them. [35:25.000 --> 35:29.040] But I did manage to get through to them today and found out, well, if the judge orders it [35:29.040 --> 35:32.760] transferred, then it has to go that way. [35:32.760 --> 35:37.380] But then one of them said, well, we only do the supervision of the probation. [35:37.380 --> 35:41.660] We don't do the financials because we have to send it back to your county for distribution. [35:41.660 --> 35:48.460] So my next thing after talking to the supervisor is I may be writing to the judge asking her [35:48.460 --> 35:54.660] to keep jurisdiction over the financial part because we at least get to talk to the probation [35:54.660 --> 35:55.660] department here. [35:55.660 --> 35:56.660] They actually answer the phone. [35:56.660 --> 36:01.460] But two checks, I know I have a long way to go because my judgment in the criminal was [36:01.460 --> 36:06.940] 150,500, but hey, it's better than a kick in the teeth. [36:06.940 --> 36:10.900] So it's a little bit of a win. [36:10.900 --> 36:14.260] Wonderful. [36:14.260 --> 36:16.780] Now you're getting rich. [36:16.780 --> 36:22.940] Yeah, you got $48 twice. [36:22.940 --> 36:28.700] Yeah, that's a miracle. [36:28.700 --> 36:29.700] That is wonderful. [36:29.900 --> 36:38.060] For those of you who haven't followed this all the way, Tina have really worked on this. [36:38.060 --> 36:45.060] And she kind of is a mascot we need to get for Tina, an English bulldog. [36:45.060 --> 36:46.060] Yes. [36:46.060 --> 36:53.580] I think there's another little bit about it. [36:53.580 --> 37:00.780] One of her attorneys in the adversary proceeding was a guy named David Lally who lived in New [37:00.780 --> 37:06.300] York but had practiced in California and kept his license, and he represented them. [37:06.300 --> 37:12.020] And it turns out that, you know, long story, but he'd represented someone that had gone [37:12.020 --> 37:14.300] against me in a bankruptcy. [37:14.300 --> 37:20.420] And once I rebutted their argument, he never contacted me again. [37:20.660 --> 37:28.580] But he told the other debtor, Kevin, the creditor, who called him up and he said, is that other [37:28.580 --> 37:30.580] — what did he use the word? [37:30.580 --> 37:31.580] Like a bulldog. [37:31.580 --> 37:35.380] It was actually, I think that was his, is she still with you? [37:35.380 --> 37:38.260] And he said, oh yeah, she is instrumental in this. [37:38.260 --> 37:40.540] He said, well, I have to give a credit. [37:40.540 --> 37:41.540] She never gave up. [37:41.540 --> 37:42.540] None of you did. [37:42.540 --> 37:44.540] And he said, nobody does this. [37:44.540 --> 37:47.540] He said, you know, they deserve what they're getting. [37:47.660 --> 37:50.660] And he said, you know, they lied to me. [37:50.660 --> 37:53.660] He said, they're just consummate liars, these two. [37:53.660 --> 37:58.660] And he, you know, he gave him a little bit of background, but he said, I really admire [37:58.660 --> 38:01.660] you all for sticking to it like you did. [38:01.660 --> 38:04.660] All right. [38:04.660 --> 38:10.860] And he quit and said, he actually put in the papers, I'm tired of babysitting. [38:10.860 --> 38:12.340] They don't follow my orders. [38:12.340 --> 38:13.940] They don't follow my suggestions. [38:14.340 --> 38:16.340] They refused to give discovery. [38:16.340 --> 38:18.340] And I want out of this case. [38:25.340 --> 38:30.340] So if she doesn't cover the restitution, does she go back to jail? [38:32.340 --> 38:39.900] Well, she's only served, had to serve one day in jail, but she — out of the 25th, [38:40.860 --> 38:47.860] she will be in violation of her probation in terms of making payments to the restitution. [38:47.860 --> 38:52.860] And that's what I'm going to put in my letter to the court if the supervisor thinks [38:52.860 --> 38:53.860] it's right to do that. [38:53.860 --> 38:54.860] She told me to hold off. [38:54.860 --> 38:55.860] She suggested it. [38:55.860 --> 39:00.860] And then once I found this information out from L.A., she said, hold off until I talk [39:00.860 --> 39:01.860] to them. [39:01.860 --> 39:03.860] But I'll be asking that. [39:03.860 --> 39:07.860] I'll be saying, this person has no intention of paying us. [39:08.820 --> 39:11.820] She's clearly lying about her income and expenses. [39:11.820 --> 39:13.820] And I'll give you proof of that. [39:13.820 --> 39:17.820] And I'm going to ask her if she'll put her in jail. [39:17.820 --> 39:22.820] But yes, they can jail her if she's in violation. [39:22.820 --> 39:23.820] Will they? [39:23.820 --> 39:24.820] I'm not sure. [39:27.820 --> 39:32.820] Well, at least she has the threat of jail hanging over her. [39:33.780 --> 39:44.780] Also, since you are in California, you're near Los Angeles, aren't you, San Luis Obispo? [39:44.780 --> 39:47.780] Yeah, I'm three hours away from L.A. [39:49.780 --> 39:56.780] What is the temperament of Californians right now? [39:57.740 --> 40:06.740] They are sick to death of the mayor of L.A. and Governor Newscombe. [40:06.740 --> 40:08.740] Oh, really? [40:08.740 --> 40:10.740] Yeah, there's been quite a turn. [40:10.740 --> 40:13.740] They're asking for his resignation. [40:13.740 --> 40:15.740] It's been a total mismanagement. [40:15.740 --> 40:21.740] One of the main reservoirs near the Pasadena fire was empty and has been empty for months [40:21.740 --> 40:23.740] and not repaired. [40:24.700 --> 40:30.700] The mayor of L.A., right as these warnings were coming in about the winds, flew off to [40:30.700 --> 40:33.700] Ghana to some inauguration. [40:33.700 --> 40:36.700] So she abandoned her people. [40:36.700 --> 40:38.700] It's not looking good for them. [40:38.700 --> 40:40.700] People are sick. [40:41.700 --> 40:42.700] Good. [40:42.700 --> 40:46.700] That's what I wanted to hear because, you know, we're outside California, so we're [40:46.700 --> 40:50.700] not hearing what's going on actually inside. [40:51.660 --> 40:54.660] I'm hoping that the next interim election, California turns red. [40:54.660 --> 40:55.660] Hang on. [40:55.660 --> 40:57.660] We'll be right back. [40:59.660 --> 41:02.660] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [41:02.660 --> 41:06.660] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [41:06.660 --> 41:10.660] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [41:10.660 --> 41:15.660] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan [41:15.660 --> 41:17.660] by lowering the claims cost? [41:18.620 --> 41:23.620] The CHANT Plan is a Section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides [41:23.620 --> 41:30.620] your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero [41:30.620 --> 41:32.620] cost with zero copay. [41:32.620 --> 41:38.620] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [41:38.620 --> 41:44.620] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [41:45.580 --> 41:50.580] The CHANT Plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. [41:50.580 --> 41:58.580] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [41:59.580 --> 42:02.580] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [42:02.580 --> 42:06.580] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [42:06.580 --> 42:12.580] The affordable, easy to understand, 4 CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [42:12.580 --> 42:14.580] step by step. [42:15.540 --> 42:18.540] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [42:18.540 --> 42:22.540] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [42:22.540 --> 42:27.540] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [42:27.540 --> 42:33.540] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [42:33.540 --> 42:38.540] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [42:38.540 --> 42:42.540] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [42:43.500 --> 42:48.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [42:48.500 --> 42:51.500] pro se tactics, and much more. 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[43:13.500 --> 43:16.500] Whoa whoa whoa whoa [43:19.500 --> 43:22.500] Whoa whoa whoa whoa [43:23.500 --> 43:28.500] Always I must be careful what I'm wishing for [43:29.500 --> 43:34.500] When I'm hungry I like to know just what I'm fishing for [43:34.500 --> 43:39.500] I ain't asking for much I ain't trying to be no glutton [43:40.460 --> 43:45.460] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons [43:45.460 --> 43:51.460] I give my message out to anyone in shot and distance [43:51.460 --> 43:57.460] I vote for bravery and against slavery showing resistance [43:57.460 --> 44:02.460] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting [44:02.460 --> 44:08.460] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelvin, Fountain Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Tina in California [44:09.420 --> 44:11.420] And I was talking to Brad on the break [44:11.420 --> 44:18.420] They have, I saw one deal where they had these super scooper firefighting planes [44:18.420 --> 44:21.420] The one using it, it was in a museum [44:21.420 --> 44:26.420] In a lake, but they had it as a museum piece [44:26.420 --> 44:31.420] Canada brought some down and was helping with the fire [44:31.420 --> 44:37.420] The airplanes that California had weren't using, Canada come down and brought them [44:38.380 --> 44:43.380] And I watched these guys fighting that fire with big jets [44:43.380 --> 44:46.380] Man, that is insane [44:50.380 --> 44:53.380] Well I'm a pilot and if you've never flown an airplane [44:53.380 --> 44:57.380] They don't maneuver like cars do [44:57.380 --> 45:00.380] In a car you turn the wheel, the car turns [45:00.380 --> 45:03.380] Not so in an airplane [45:04.340 --> 45:07.340] In an airplane you put pressure on the controls [45:07.340 --> 45:11.340] And those pressure, the controls put pressure on the air [45:11.340 --> 45:14.340] And then the aircraft responds [45:14.340 --> 45:17.340] There's a delay [45:17.340 --> 45:20.340] In small airplanes like I flew, there wasn't much delay [45:20.340 --> 45:22.340] But there was a noticeable delay [45:22.340 --> 45:25.340] As the airplane gets bigger [45:25.340 --> 45:28.340] There's much much more delay [45:28.340 --> 45:31.340] And I was watching, they're filming this [45:32.300 --> 45:35.300] Airplane dropping down, just barely cleared a ridge [45:35.300 --> 45:38.300] And dumped the water and then had to climb out [45:38.300 --> 45:41.300] To keep from hitting one on the other side [45:41.300 --> 45:44.300] And I'm looking at this thinking [45:44.300 --> 45:47.300] When he dove in over the first edge [45:47.300 --> 45:50.300] He had to already be pulling back on the stick [45:50.300 --> 45:53.300] Because the delay in his controls [45:53.300 --> 45:56.300] If he's not already pulling back on the stick [45:56.300 --> 45:59.300] He's going to hit that other side [46:00.260 --> 46:03.260] Those were gutsy guys [46:03.260 --> 46:06.260] And you're flying close to the ground [46:06.260 --> 46:09.260] That big airplane with air currents moving around [46:09.260 --> 46:12.260] These guys are risking their lives [46:12.260 --> 46:15.260] And their airplanes [46:15.260 --> 46:18.260] Remember too that they're facing [46:18.260 --> 46:21.260] 60 to 80 mile an hour wind gusts [46:21.260 --> 46:24.260] The winds were that bad [46:24.260 --> 46:27.260] They're the highest winds that they've seen [46:28.220 --> 46:31.220] And Oregon sent down some fire engines [46:31.220 --> 46:34.220] But they were stopped in Sacramento [46:34.220 --> 46:37.220] Because they didn't have some emissions [46:37.220 --> 46:40.220] California emissions [46:40.220 --> 46:43.220] I'm watching these guys on these YouTube channels [46:43.220 --> 46:46.220] And they keep saying [46:46.220 --> 46:49.220] You can't make this stuff up [46:49.220 --> 46:52.220] Oregon sends fire trucks down [46:52.220 --> 46:55.220] And the whole city's burning [46:56.180 --> 46:59.180] And they want to do smog tests on them [46:59.180 --> 47:02.180] What? [47:02.180 --> 47:05.180] Yeah, they delayed them [47:05.180 --> 47:08.180] Because it's only registered and tested [47:08.180 --> 47:11.180] For the levels that are okay in Oregon [47:11.180 --> 47:14.180] Not in California, so they're more strict [47:14.180 --> 47:17.180] And they can't let the trucks in [47:17.180 --> 47:20.180] Unbelievable [47:20.180 --> 47:23.180] How insane can he get [47:24.140 --> 47:27.140] You see what happened [47:27.140 --> 47:30.140] The fire department had apparently requested [47:30.140 --> 47:33.140] A budget to increase personnel [47:33.140 --> 47:36.140] And to repair fire trucks and do everything [47:36.140 --> 47:39.140] Well, the mayor instead reduced their budget [47:39.140 --> 47:42.140] And put it towards ostensibly DEI hires [47:42.140 --> 47:45.140] And Gavin Newsom [47:45.140 --> 47:48.140] And his demonic rat crew [47:48.140 --> 47:51.140] They approved millions of dollars [47:51.140 --> 47:54.140] To Trump-proof California [47:54.140 --> 47:57.140] And some of the celebrities are coming out [47:57.140 --> 48:00.140] Saying Trump-proof, why don't you fire-proof it [48:00.140 --> 48:03.140] Spend the money to fire-proof, not Trump-proof it [48:03.140 --> 48:06.140] Because when you've got people in the Pacific [48:06.140 --> 48:09.140] Palisades and Malibu are celebrity enclaves [48:09.140 --> 48:12.140] And many, many, many of these [48:12.140 --> 48:15.140] So-called celebrities have lost [48:15.140 --> 48:18.140] Multi-million dollar homes, raised to ashes [48:18.140 --> 48:21.140] And they're actually starting to turn around a little [48:21.140 --> 48:24.140] Now you've still got some hardcore Democrats [48:24.140 --> 48:27.140] Who say, no, he's doing the best he can [48:27.140 --> 48:30.140] And this was nature that did this [48:30.140 --> 48:33.140] But it's not, this was this poor management [48:33.140 --> 48:36.140] If we had a fire like that in Dallas [48:36.140 --> 48:39.140] Yeah, we'd say nature did that [48:39.140 --> 48:42.140] Because that doesn't happen in Dallas [48:42.140 --> 48:45.140] That happens in California [48:46.140 --> 48:49.140] Every year [48:49.140 --> 48:52.140] Every year [48:52.140 --> 48:55.140] I mean, it's not a question of whether you're going to have these fires [48:55.140 --> 48:58.140] You are going to have these fires [48:58.140 --> 49:01.140] I don't get it [49:01.140 --> 49:04.140] But I think I'm relatively certain [49:04.140 --> 49:07.140] At the next interim election [49:07.140 --> 49:10.140] California will be about as red as it can get [49:10.140 --> 49:13.140] Well, it's already [49:13.140 --> 49:16.140] Parts of California have turned really red [49:16.140 --> 49:19.140] And I think after this more parts will [49:19.140 --> 49:22.140] And it turns out that apparently Trump years ago [49:22.140 --> 49:25.140] Told Newsom that he needed to get [49:25.140 --> 49:28.140] Control of the brush and start [49:28.140 --> 49:31.140] Cleaning that [49:31.140 --> 49:34.140] No, Tina, it wasn't years ago, it was two months ago [49:34.140 --> 49:37.140] No, he actually did it years ago [49:37.140 --> 49:40.140] Two months ago he warned about this [49:41.140 --> 49:44.140] And then two months later, boom, it happens [49:44.140 --> 49:47.140] Yeah, and it was incredible [49:47.140 --> 49:50.140] I know personally of four people [49:50.140 --> 49:53.140] That lost their homes [49:53.140 --> 49:56.140] And at least six or eight that I know personally [49:56.140 --> 49:59.140] Were evacuated and what this has done [49:59.140 --> 50:02.140] We already have a bad homeless problem [50:02.140 --> 50:05.140] Where are these people going to go? [50:05.140 --> 50:08.140] There is not enough housing to house all these people [50:09.140 --> 50:12.140] So [50:12.140 --> 50:15.140] That's a big problem [50:15.140 --> 50:18.140] While this is a horrible thing that happened [50:18.140 --> 50:21.140] It may actually turn California [50:21.140 --> 50:24.140] Back into a sane state [50:24.140 --> 50:27.140] If that's possible [50:27.140 --> 50:30.140] But you're looking at people who've lost their businesses [50:30.140 --> 50:33.140] People who, the housekeepers, grand keepers [50:33.140 --> 50:36.140] All those people who work for these celebrities [50:36.140 --> 50:39.140] And for the restaurants that have been shut down [50:39.140 --> 50:42.140] They've now lost their jobs and there's no one to [50:42.140 --> 50:45.140] They can't get hired anywhere because [50:45.140 --> 50:48.140] Everybody's going to try to be rebuilding [50:48.140 --> 50:51.140] It's really, really sad [50:51.140 --> 50:54.140] It's just a disaster, an absolute unmitigated disaster [50:57.140 --> 51:00.140] It's horrible this happened [51:00.140 --> 51:03.140] But I hope they learn from it [51:03.140 --> 51:06.140] Often [51:06.140 --> 51:09.140] Hoping that idiots learn from their experiences [51:09.140 --> 51:12.140] Often a fool's gamble [51:12.140 --> 51:15.140] Okay, we are proud of you, Tina [51:15.140 --> 51:18.140] Thank you [51:18.140 --> 51:21.140] I think you'll be getting a lot more people coming to Texas now [51:21.140 --> 51:24.140] We're getting too many now [51:24.140 --> 51:27.140] I'm in a small town [51:27.140 --> 51:30.140] And I pulled up to the main road [51:30.140 --> 51:33.140] I pulled out and this guy charged up [51:33.140 --> 51:36.140] To block me, shove me off on the shoulder [51:36.140 --> 51:39.140] And there's no other cars on the road [51:39.140 --> 51:42.140] And go back to California [51:42.140 --> 51:45.140] We don't generally drive that way here in Texas [51:48.140 --> 51:51.140] It's getting to where I can't use my blinker [51:51.140 --> 51:54.140] If I turn on my blinker to change lanes [51:54.140 --> 51:57.140] We have so many people from California [51:57.140 --> 52:00.140] And New York and Chicago [52:00.140 --> 52:03.140] They'll run up and block you [52:03.140 --> 52:06.140] Just last week I was [52:06.140 --> 52:09.140] In traffic and I put on my blinker [52:09.140 --> 52:12.140] This guy's way back there and he stomped on the gas [52:12.140 --> 52:15.140] I turned in front of him and I was about 30 degrees [52:15.140 --> 52:18.140] And I stopped in the highway [52:18.140 --> 52:21.140] Looked over my shoulder at him [52:21.140 --> 52:24.140] He's sitting there stopped in the roadway [52:24.140 --> 52:27.140] He looked like he thought I was going to get out [52:27.140 --> 52:30.140] And rip him out of his window [52:33.140 --> 52:36.140] We were proposing to put a sign [52:36.140 --> 52:39.140] At the New Mexico border [52:39.140 --> 52:42.140] Welcoming people from California [52:42.140 --> 52:45.140] But asking them not to stop [52:45.140 --> 52:48.140] Until they passed Orange [52:49.140 --> 52:52.140] Orange is about 10 miles from [52:52.140 --> 52:55.140] Louisiana [52:55.140 --> 52:58.140] I don't blame you [52:58.140 --> 53:01.140] You don't mind people coming in [53:01.140 --> 53:04.140] But leave that California attitude at home [53:04.140 --> 53:07.140] When I first came down here [53:07.140 --> 53:10.140] If you broke down on the side of the highway [53:10.140 --> 53:13.140] In five minutes somebody would have pulled over [53:13.140 --> 53:16.140] I never broke down [53:16.140 --> 53:19.140] I have a number more people stopping to help me [53:19.140 --> 53:22.140] Than I could use and they often got in the way [53:22.140 --> 53:25.140] Because I had to explain to them [53:25.140 --> 53:28.140] I didn't need their help but more people than I could get to [53:28.140 --> 53:31.140] And [53:31.140 --> 53:34.140] A guy shoots his girlfriend [53:34.140 --> 53:37.140] At the Valley View Mall [53:37.140 --> 53:40.140] He chased her down the sidewalk outside the mall [53:40.140 --> 53:43.140] And shot her in the back of the head [53:43.140 --> 53:46.140] And somebody blew out his femoral artery [53:46.140 --> 53:49.140] He bled out six blocks away [53:49.140 --> 53:52.140] It's Texas [53:52.140 --> 53:55.140] You don't mess with women in Texas [53:55.140 --> 53:58.140] Somebody will beat you up [53:58.140 --> 54:01.140] The police asked for two weeks for whoever did this [54:01.140 --> 54:04.140] To come in and bring in your weapon [54:04.140 --> 54:07.140] The Xerox salesman shows up [54:07.140 --> 54:10.140] 44 Mag, when I heard the story [54:10.140 --> 54:13.140] He came out of the car [54:13.140 --> 54:16.140] But didn't account for acceleration [54:16.140 --> 54:19.140] He hesitated and the car moved out from front of his weapon [54:19.140 --> 54:22.140] And he blew a hole through the door [54:22.140 --> 54:25.140] And blew out this guy's femoral artery [54:25.140 --> 54:28.140] So they take the gun [54:28.140 --> 54:31.140] They go back and check it and they come back and said [54:31.140 --> 54:34.140] Yep, that's the one that killed him alright [54:34.140 --> 54:37.140] Gave it back to him and sent him home [54:37.140 --> 54:40.140] You have the right to protect your property [54:40.140 --> 54:43.140] And your person, you have the right to use force [54:43.140 --> 54:46.140] You have the right to use deadly force [54:46.140 --> 54:49.140] You also have the right [54:49.140 --> 54:52.140] To protect the property and the person of another [54:52.140 --> 54:55.140] As if it were your own [54:55.140 --> 54:58.140] And we have [54:58.140 --> 55:01.140] Good Samaritan law [55:01.140 --> 55:04.140] If I try to help you and do everything wrong [55:04.140 --> 55:07.140] You absolutely cannot be sued [55:07.140 --> 55:10.140] Period [55:10.140 --> 55:13.140] So you're safe to try to help people [55:13.140 --> 55:16.140] In Texas [55:16.140 --> 55:19.140] Unlike it was in Chicago, hang on Randy Kelton [55:19.140 --> 55:22.140] A little bit earlier [55:22.140 --> 55:25.140] I came back from Vietnam [55:25.140 --> 55:28.140] I was back in country two days [55:28.140 --> 55:31.140] Downtown Chicago, state Madison [55:31.140 --> 55:34.140] And I looked around and thinking [55:34.140 --> 55:37.140] This is the scariest place on earth [55:37.140 --> 55:40.140] I could fall down here and die [55:40.140 --> 55:43.140] And these people step over me [55:43.140 --> 55:46.140] The worst part is it would break their hearts [55:46.140 --> 55:49.140] They'd be afraid to try to help me [55:49.140 --> 55:52.140] That's why I came to Texas [55:52.140 --> 55:55.140] We'll be right back [56:01.140 --> 56:04.140] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today [56:04.140 --> 56:07.140] It's an accurate translation [56:07.140 --> 56:10.140] And it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God [56:10.140 --> 56:13.140] And to know the meaning of life [56:13.140 --> 56:16.140] The free books are a three volume set called [56:16.140 --> 56:19.140] Basic Elements of the Christian Life [56:19.140 --> 56:22.140] Chapter by chapter Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents [56:22.140 --> 56:25.140] God's plan of salvation [56:25.140 --> 56:28.140] Growing in Christ and how to build up the church [56:28.140 --> 56:31.140] The New Testament Recovery Version [56:31.140 --> 56:34.140] And Basic Elements of the Christian Life [56:34.140 --> 56:37.140] Call Bibles for America toll free [56:37.140 --> 56:40.140] At 888-551-0102 [56:40.140 --> 56:43.140] That's 888-551-0102 [56:43.140 --> 56:46.140] Or visit us online [56:46.140 --> 56:49.140] At bfa.org [56:59.140 --> 57:02.140] The Bill of Rights contains [57:02.140 --> 57:05.140] The first ten amendments of our Constitution [57:05.140 --> 57:08.140] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect [57:08.140 --> 57:11.140] Our liberty depends on it [57:11.140 --> 57:14.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [57:14.140 --> 57:17.140] To remember one of your constitutional rights [57:17.140 --> 57:20.140] Privacy is under attack [57:20.140 --> 57:23.140] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again [57:23.140 --> 57:26.140] And once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [57:26.140 --> 57:29.140] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance [57:29.140 --> 57:32.140] And keep your information to yourself [57:32.140 --> 57:35.140] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [57:35.140 --> 57:38.140] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com [57:38.140 --> 57:41.140] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bin [57:41.140 --> 57:44.140] Start over with Startpage [57:44.140 --> 57:47.140] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed [57:47.140 --> 57:50.140] They pull back the covers and find a third party there [57:50.140 --> 57:53.140] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight [57:53.140 --> 57:56.140] That shocking image of a third party in my parent's bed [57:56.140 --> 57:59.140] Reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent [57:59.140 --> 58:02.140] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers [58:02.140 --> 58:05.140] A common demand in the days of our founding fathers [58:05.140 --> 58:08.140] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [58:08.140 --> 58:11.140] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging [58:11.140 --> 58:14.140] Tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights [58:14.140 --> 58:17.140] And re-read the Third Amendment [58:17.140 --> 58:20.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [58:23.140 --> 58:26.140] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution [58:26.140 --> 58:29.140] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect [58:29.140 --> 58:32.140] Our liberty depends on it [58:32.140 --> 58:35.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [58:35.140 --> 58:38.140] To remember one of your constitutional rights [58:38.140 --> 58:41.140] Privacy is under attack [58:41.140 --> 58:44.140] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [58:44.140 --> 58:47.140] And once your privacy is gone, you'll never get it back again [58:47.140 --> 58:50.140] And once your privacy is gone, you'll never get it back again [58:50.140 --> 58:53.140] And once your privacy is gone, you'll never get it back again [58:53.140 --> 58:56.140] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [58:56.140 --> 58:59.140] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance [58:59.140 --> 59:02.140] And keep your information to yourself [59:02.140 --> 59:05.140] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [59:05.140 --> 59:08.140] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com [59:08.140 --> 59:11.140] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing [59:11.140 --> 59:14.140] Start over with StartPage [59:14.140 --> 59:17.140] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars [59:17.140 --> 59:20.140] A magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles [59:20.140 --> 59:23.140] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans [59:23.140 --> 59:26.140] Freedom from unreasonable search and seizure [59:26.140 --> 59:29.140] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [59:29.140 --> 59:32.140] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [59:32.140 --> 59:35.140] In the name of security [59:35.140 --> 59:38.140] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing [59:38.140 --> 59:41.140] When government employees demand a peep at your privates [59:41.140 --> 59:44.140] Without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells [59:45.140 --> 59:48.140] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [59:48.140 --> 59:51.140] And use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth [59:51.140 --> 59:54.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [59:54.140 --> 59:57.140] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:00:14.140 --> 01:00:17.140] Okay, we are back [01:00:17.140 --> 01:00:20.140] Randy Kelton, Barrett Fountain, VoodooVlog Radio [01:00:20.140 --> 01:00:23.140] And we're talking to Tina [01:00:23.140 --> 01:00:26.140] Tina, are we about done with you? [01:00:26.140 --> 01:00:29.140] Yeah, we're about done with you [01:00:29.140 --> 01:00:32.140] Okay, we're about done with you [01:00:32.140 --> 01:00:35.140] Okay, we're about done with you [01:00:35.140 --> 01:00:38.140] Okay, we're about done with you [01:00:38.140 --> 01:00:41.140] Okay, we're about done with you [01:00:41.140 --> 01:00:44.140] We're talking to Tina [01:00:44.140 --> 01:00:47.140] Tina, are we about done with you? [01:00:47.140 --> 01:00:50.140] Yes, I just wanted to mention one thing [01:00:50.140 --> 01:00:53.140] I'm in the midst of writing a motion to the bankruptcy court [01:00:53.140 --> 01:00:56.140] To ask them if they will bar these debtors [01:00:56.140 --> 01:00:59.140] From ever filing another bankruptcy for at least 10 years [01:00:59.140 --> 01:01:02.140] I don't know if it'll go through [01:01:02.140 --> 01:01:05.140] But I'm just saying they've abused the bankruptcy system [01:01:05.140 --> 01:01:08.140] And I'm going to write it anyway and see what happens [01:01:08.140 --> 01:01:11.140] Good [01:01:11.140 --> 01:01:14.140] And I don't ever want you after me [01:01:14.140 --> 01:01:17.140] Well, same goes here [01:01:17.140 --> 01:01:20.140] I don't want you after me, Albrecht [01:01:20.140 --> 01:01:23.140] Tenacious [01:01:23.140 --> 01:01:26.140] Okay, thank you, tenacious Tina [01:01:26.140 --> 01:01:29.140] Okay, now we're going to go to Alex in California [01:01:29.140 --> 01:01:32.140] Hello, Alex [01:01:32.140 --> 01:01:35.140] What do you have for us today? [01:01:35.140 --> 01:01:38.140] Okay, so I was thinking [01:01:38.140 --> 01:01:41.140] Okay, so I was thinking [01:01:41.140 --> 01:01:44.140] To avoid or to better manage [01:01:44.140 --> 01:01:47.140] To avoid or to better manage [01:01:47.140 --> 01:01:50.140] With my action against the judges [01:01:50.140 --> 01:01:53.140] With my action against the judges [01:01:53.140 --> 01:01:56.140] To overcome all these unlawful immunity doctrines [01:01:56.140 --> 01:01:59.140] To overcome all these unlawful immunity doctrines [01:01:59.140 --> 01:02:02.140] And whatever else they have [01:02:02.140 --> 01:02:05.140] Because I've been looking into [01:02:05.140 --> 01:02:08.140] Common law, common law claims versus [01:02:08.140 --> 01:02:11.140] Civil law [01:02:11.140 --> 01:02:14.140] And I came across [01:02:14.140 --> 01:02:17.140] And I've only like gathered a little bit about it [01:02:17.140 --> 01:02:20.140] And I just wanted to present that [01:02:20.140 --> 01:02:23.140] To you guys and see if you have any input [01:02:23.140 --> 01:02:26.140] And basically my intent is [01:02:26.140 --> 01:02:29.140] And basically my intent is [01:02:29.140 --> 01:02:32.140] If I make the 42, 1983 [01:02:32.140 --> 01:02:35.140] A cause of action [01:02:35.140 --> 01:02:38.140] Then they will have all their case law [01:02:38.140 --> 01:02:41.140] That they will try to apply [01:02:41.140 --> 01:02:44.140] That will bulldoze me just like [01:02:44.140 --> 01:02:47.140] They do with you guys and other people [01:02:47.140 --> 01:02:50.140] And if I [01:02:50.140 --> 01:02:53.140] If I prevent them [01:02:53.140 --> 01:02:56.140] From application of it [01:02:56.140 --> 01:02:59.140] Then they actually would have to assess my claims [01:02:59.140 --> 01:03:02.140] Hopefully through the eyes of [01:03:02.140 --> 01:03:05.140] The constitution [01:03:05.140 --> 01:03:08.140] So for example, there is a common law [01:03:08.140 --> 01:03:11.140] Trespass on the case claim [01:03:11.140 --> 01:03:14.140] Which would be an injury without violence [01:03:14.140 --> 01:03:17.140] So that common law trespass on the case [01:03:17.140 --> 01:03:20.140] And if I would [01:03:20.140 --> 01:03:23.140] Where do you find this common law [01:03:23.140 --> 01:03:26.140] You're breaking up [01:03:33.140 --> 01:03:36.140] You're breaking up [01:03:42.140 --> 01:03:45.140] Alex, we're not able to hear you very well [01:03:45.140 --> 01:03:48.140] We're only hearing one syllable out of every two words [01:03:48.140 --> 01:03:51.140] If you can make some adjustments [01:03:51.140 --> 01:03:54.140] On your network there [01:03:54.140 --> 01:03:57.140] I know that sounds broad, but [01:03:57.140 --> 01:04:00.140] It seems like a lot of packet loss [01:04:00.140 --> 01:04:03.140] Do you have a lot of devices streaming video near you [01:04:03.140 --> 01:04:06.140] Or something where you can [01:04:06.140 --> 01:04:09.140] Either shut those down or get on your own link [01:04:09.140 --> 01:04:12.140] Because we're not able to hear you [01:04:12.140 --> 01:04:15.140] I have a suggestion [01:04:15.140 --> 01:04:18.140] Hold on [01:04:18.140 --> 01:04:21.140] Stand on your head and just walk in like a chicken [01:04:21.140 --> 01:04:24.140] It might not work, but it'd be entertaining [01:04:24.140 --> 01:04:27.140] Sorry, what was that? [01:04:27.140 --> 01:04:30.140] What was that? [01:04:30.140 --> 01:04:33.140] That's better, that's better [01:04:33.140 --> 01:04:36.140] That's better, thank you [01:04:36.140 --> 01:04:39.140] See, just stand on your head and just walk in like a chicken's working [01:04:39.140 --> 01:04:42.140] Okay, is it still better [01:04:42.140 --> 01:04:45.140] Because then I'll stay here [01:04:45.140 --> 01:04:48.140] Okay [01:04:48.140 --> 01:04:51.140] So should I [01:04:51.140 --> 01:04:54.140] Repeat everything or [01:04:54.140 --> 01:04:57.140] Yes, whatever you were saying [01:04:57.140 --> 01:05:00.140] We couldn't make sense of it [01:05:00.140 --> 01:05:03.140] We were asking where this common law is at [01:05:03.140 --> 01:05:06.140] No, I wasn't [01:05:06.140 --> 01:05:09.140] Okay, so basically [01:05:09.140 --> 01:05:12.140] I want to present you guys with current knowledge [01:05:12.140 --> 01:05:15.140] And see if you happen to have any more inputs [01:05:15.140 --> 01:05:18.140] And what I'm trying to do is [01:05:18.140 --> 01:05:21.140] To prevent them [01:05:21.140 --> 01:05:24.140] Because I filed in 1983 against judges [01:05:24.140 --> 01:05:27.140] So they obviously come back with judicial immunity [01:05:27.140 --> 01:05:30.140] And there's so much case law on this [01:05:30.140 --> 01:05:33.140] On this unlawful doctrine [01:05:33.140 --> 01:05:36.140] So I'm trying to prevent them to be able [01:05:36.140 --> 01:05:39.140] To even use all this [01:05:39.140 --> 01:05:42.140] From what I see [01:05:42.140 --> 01:05:45.140] From what you guys tried [01:05:45.140 --> 01:05:48.140] And what other people tried [01:05:48.140 --> 01:05:51.140] They just bulldozed us with their stupid doctrines [01:05:51.140 --> 01:05:54.140] And we [01:05:54.140 --> 01:05:57.140] To get them to be accountable [01:05:57.140 --> 01:06:00.140] And to answer to their actions [01:06:00.140 --> 01:06:03.140] So I'm trying to use a strategy [01:06:03.140 --> 01:06:06.140] So I was looking into the differences between [01:06:06.140 --> 01:06:09.140] Okay [01:06:09.140 --> 01:06:12.140] Where are you finding [01:06:12.140 --> 01:06:15.140] Information on a common law action [01:06:21.140 --> 01:06:24.140] Hold on [01:06:27.140 --> 01:06:30.140] Problem is [01:06:30.140 --> 01:06:33.140] I've been doing this for over 30 years [01:06:33.140 --> 01:06:36.140] I have never ever [01:06:36.140 --> 01:06:39.140] Been able to find common law [01:06:39.140 --> 01:06:42.140] So [01:06:42.140 --> 01:06:45.140] Can you find it? I haven't [01:06:45.140 --> 01:06:48.140] Okay [01:06:48.140 --> 01:06:51.140] So basically I started with [01:06:56.140 --> 01:06:59.140] You're breaking up again [01:06:59.140 --> 01:07:02.140] Okay let me [01:07:02.140 --> 01:07:05.140] Let me put in the headset [01:07:13.140 --> 01:07:16.140] Is this any different? [01:07:16.140 --> 01:07:19.140] It's a little more muffled [01:07:19.140 --> 01:07:22.140] The headset's not likely to help you with losing packets [01:07:22.140 --> 01:07:25.140] But go ahead [01:07:25.140 --> 01:07:28.140] Okay [01:07:28.140 --> 01:07:31.140] So [01:07:31.140 --> 01:07:34.140] The difference between the common [01:07:34.140 --> 01:07:37.140] And the civil law is actually [01:07:37.140 --> 01:07:40.140] In the constitution in multiple places [01:07:40.140 --> 01:07:43.140] Where they distinguish [01:07:43.140 --> 01:07:46.140] A case in law [01:07:46.140 --> 01:07:49.140] And in equity [01:07:49.140 --> 01:07:52.140] So equity is that civil statutory realm [01:07:52.140 --> 01:07:55.140] And common law is the common law [01:07:55.140 --> 01:07:58.140] No no no common law is the common law [01:07:58.140 --> 01:08:01.140] I get all these people telling me about the common law [01:08:01.140 --> 01:08:04.140] I can't come into court with something [01:08:04.140 --> 01:08:07.140] I just pulled out of the thin air [01:08:07.140 --> 01:08:10.140] Where is common law and how does it [01:08:10.140 --> 01:08:13.140] Get authority [01:08:16.140 --> 01:08:19.140] I stole what I found out [01:08:19.140 --> 01:08:22.140] So our common law comes from through the Magna Carta [01:08:22.140 --> 01:08:25.140] Basically [01:08:25.140 --> 01:08:28.140] Let's talk about the Magna Carta [01:08:28.140 --> 01:08:31.140] The Magna Carta [01:08:31.140 --> 01:08:34.140] 1215 AD [01:08:34.140 --> 01:08:37.140] We had a number of dukes [01:08:37.140 --> 01:08:40.140] Who were essentially sovereign over the lands [01:08:40.140 --> 01:08:43.140] They could protect [01:08:43.140 --> 01:08:46.140] And they had a set of law [01:08:46.140 --> 01:08:49.140] That was the general law [01:08:49.140 --> 01:08:52.140] The general customs [01:08:52.140 --> 01:08:55.140] Methods that everyone [01:08:55.140 --> 01:08:58.140] Tended to agree to [01:08:58.140 --> 01:09:01.140] That was the common law [01:09:01.140 --> 01:09:04.140] It wasn't a written law [01:09:04.140 --> 01:09:07.140] It was what everyone did [01:09:07.140 --> 01:09:10.140] It started out with a good example [01:09:10.140 --> 01:09:13.140] Of the vikings [01:09:13.140 --> 01:09:16.140] In one of these series on vikings [01:09:16.140 --> 01:09:19.140] He attacks this place [01:09:19.140 --> 01:09:22.140] And the other clansman's brother [01:09:22.140 --> 01:09:25.140] Ahead of it tried to rape [01:09:25.140 --> 01:09:28.140] The main guy's wife and she killed him [01:09:28.140 --> 01:09:31.140] He's concerned for her [01:09:31.140 --> 01:09:34.140] So he claims he killed him [01:09:34.140 --> 01:09:37.140] And they bring him before the entire clan [01:09:37.140 --> 01:09:40.140] Both sides make their case [01:09:40.140 --> 01:09:43.140] And the clan decides [01:09:43.140 --> 01:09:46.140] What will be done based on [01:09:46.140 --> 01:09:49.140] Their beliefs and their traditions [01:09:49.140 --> 01:09:52.140] That's the common law [01:09:52.140 --> 01:09:55.140] And then we got the Magna Carta [01:09:55.140 --> 01:09:58.140] The Magna Carta referenced [01:09:58.140 --> 01:10:01.140] The common law that all these dukes [01:10:01.140 --> 01:10:04.140] Used what the people believed was right [01:10:04.140 --> 01:10:07.140] That's what the common law was [01:10:07.140 --> 01:10:10.140] And in the Magna Carta it says [01:10:10.140 --> 01:10:13.140] That the magistrates [01:10:13.140 --> 01:10:16.140] Not the king, the aristocracy [01:10:16.140 --> 01:10:19.140] Passes an edict [01:10:19.140 --> 01:10:22.140] And it is offensive to the common law [01:10:22.140 --> 01:10:25.140] The magistrates may not enforce it [01:10:25.140 --> 01:10:28.140] That's where I think they're getting [01:10:28.140 --> 01:10:31.140] This claim of common law [01:10:31.140 --> 01:10:34.140] The common law was laid down in the Magna Carta [01:10:34.140 --> 01:10:37.140] And the charter of the forest [01:10:37.140 --> 01:10:40.140] The charter of the forest really laid down [01:10:40.140 --> 01:10:43.140] But when we came to the US [01:10:43.140 --> 01:10:46.140] We adopted a constitution [01:10:46.140 --> 01:10:49.140] And the constitution [01:10:49.140 --> 01:10:52.140] Created a legislature for us [01:10:52.140 --> 01:10:55.140] It was our legislature empowered by us [01:10:55.140 --> 01:10:58.140] And we had our legislature [01:10:58.140 --> 01:11:01.140] Write laws for us [01:11:01.140 --> 01:11:04.140] And then we had our legislature [01:11:04.140 --> 01:11:07.140] Create courts [01:11:07.140 --> 01:11:10.140] And those courts were empowered [01:11:10.140 --> 01:11:13.140] To enforce our law for us [01:11:15.140 --> 01:11:18.140] Now we have somebody saying [01:11:18.140 --> 01:11:21.140] There's this common law out there [01:11:21.140 --> 01:11:24.140] It's not written down anywhere [01:11:24.140 --> 01:11:27.140] It's just whatever I pull out of the [01:11:27.140 --> 01:11:30.140] Clear blue sky and call common law [01:11:30.140 --> 01:11:33.140] I expect you to treat that as if [01:11:33.140 --> 01:11:36.140] It is law [01:11:36.140 --> 01:11:39.140] I'm not buying that story [01:11:39.140 --> 01:11:42.140] The only thing that approaches [01:11:42.140 --> 01:11:45.140] What is left over of the common law [01:11:45.140 --> 01:11:48.140] Is the Magna Carta [01:11:48.140 --> 01:11:51.140] Instead of bringing an issue [01:11:51.140 --> 01:11:54.140] In controversy to the whole clan [01:11:54.140 --> 01:11:57.140] They selected representative [01:11:57.140 --> 01:12:00.140] Members of the clan [01:12:00.140 --> 01:12:03.140] To hear the controversy [01:12:03.140 --> 01:12:06.140] And what this group ruled [01:12:06.140 --> 01:12:09.140] What they decided ruled [01:12:12.140 --> 01:12:15.140] The king could not overrule [01:12:15.140 --> 01:12:18.140] Common law jury [01:12:18.140 --> 01:12:21.140] And as we developed [01:12:21.140 --> 01:12:24.140] We kept the jury [01:12:24.140 --> 01:12:27.140] Jefferson said [01:12:27.140 --> 01:12:30.140] The primary defense against bad law [01:12:30.140 --> 01:12:33.140] Is a jury who will not enforce law [01:12:33.140 --> 01:12:36.140] The courts want to say [01:12:36.140 --> 01:12:39.140] That the jury determines the fact [01:12:39.140 --> 01:12:42.140] And the court determines the law [01:12:42.140 --> 01:12:45.140] No, they don't [01:12:45.140 --> 01:12:48.140] The court can notice the jury [01:12:48.140 --> 01:12:51.140] Of what the law is [01:12:51.140 --> 01:12:54.140] But the jury can do whatever [01:12:54.140 --> 01:12:57.140] It chooses [01:12:57.140 --> 01:12:59.140] That is the remnant that's left over from the common law [01:12:59.140 --> 01:13:02.140] It's what the jury decides [01:13:02.140 --> 01:13:05.140] Not what the judges decide [01:13:05.140 --> 01:13:08.140] So if there's anything that is common law [01:13:08.140 --> 01:13:11.140] It's determinations by juries [01:13:11.140 --> 01:13:14.140] But as to common law courts [01:13:14.140 --> 01:13:17.140] And common law juries [01:13:17.140 --> 01:13:20.140] There is nothing in law anywhere [01:13:20.140 --> 01:13:23.140] In American law that establishes [01:13:23.140 --> 01:13:26.140] Common law courts and common law juries [01:13:26.140 --> 01:13:29.140] So I can't go into a court and say [01:13:29.140 --> 01:13:32.140] You have to follow this [01:13:32.140 --> 01:13:35.140] Now, got guys that have common law rulings [01:13:35.140 --> 01:13:38.140] That the courts are upholding [01:13:38.140 --> 01:13:41.140] And I'm trying to figure out how that happens [01:13:41.140 --> 01:13:44.140] Because nobody can tell me how to convene [01:13:44.140 --> 01:13:47.140] Common law court [01:13:47.140 --> 01:13:50.140] How to impanel a common law jury [01:13:50.140 --> 01:13:53.140] And how to get a ruling from one [01:13:53.140 --> 01:13:56.140] Been working on it 30 years, ain't found it yet [01:13:56.140 --> 01:13:59.140] We'll be right back [01:14:23.140 --> 01:14:26.140] How to answer letters and phone calls [01:14:26.140 --> 01:14:29.140] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [01:14:29.140 --> 01:14:32.140] How to turn the financial tables on them [01:14:32.140 --> 01:14:35.140] And make them pay you to go away [01:14:35.140 --> 01:14:38.140] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution [01:14:38.140 --> 01:14:41.140] For how to stop debt collectors [01:14:41.140 --> 01:14:44.140] Personal consultation is available as well [01:14:44.140 --> 01:14:47.140] For more information please visit [01:14:47.140 --> 01:14:50.140] And click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:14:50.140 --> 01:14:53.140] Or email [01:14:56.140 --> 01:14:59.140] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [01:14:59.140 --> 01:15:02.140] I love logos, without the shows on this network [01:15:02.140 --> 01:15:05.140] I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends [01:15:05.140 --> 01:15:08.140] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back [01:15:08.140 --> 01:15:11.140] I need my truth fixed, I'd be lost without logos [01:15:11.140 --> 01:15:14.140] And I really want to help keep this network on the air [01:15:14.140 --> 01:15:17.140] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite [01:15:17.140 --> 01:15:20.140] I give because I spend it all on supplements [01:15:20.140 --> 01:15:23.140] How can I help logos? [01:15:23.140 --> 01:15:26.140] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon [01:15:26.140 --> 01:15:29.140] You can help logos. You can order your supplies or holiday gifts [01:15:29.140 --> 01:15:32.140] First thing you do is clear your cookies [01:15:32.140 --> 01:15:35.140] Now go to logosradionetwork.com [01:15:35.140 --> 01:15:38.140] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it [01:15:38.140 --> 01:15:41.140] Now when you order anything from Amazon [01:15:41.140 --> 01:15:44.140] You use that link and logos gets a few pesos [01:15:44.140 --> 01:15:46.140] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:15:46.140 --> 01:15:47.140] No! [01:15:47.140 --> 01:15:48.140] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:15:48.140 --> 01:15:50.140] No! I mean yes! [01:15:50.140 --> 01:15:53.140] Wow! Giving without doing anything or spending any money [01:15:53.140 --> 01:15:56.140] This is perfect! Thank you so much! [01:15:56.140 --> 01:15:57.140] We are welcome! [01:15:57.140 --> 01:15:59.140] Happy Holidays Logos! [01:16:14.140 --> 01:16:19.140] Ain't gonna blind me [01:16:19.140 --> 01:16:26.140] Don't bore me [01:16:26.140 --> 01:16:30.140] Well [01:16:30.140 --> 01:16:35.140] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:16:35.140 --> 01:16:40.140] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan [01:16:40.140 --> 01:16:43.140] You put the fear in my pocket [01:16:43.140 --> 01:16:45.140] Stook the money from my hand [01:16:45.140 --> 01:16:50.140] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:16:50.140 --> 01:16:55.140] I ain't gonna fool me [01:16:55.140 --> 01:16:58.140] Okay! We are back! [01:16:58.140 --> 01:17:01.140] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheelabla Radio [01:17:01.140 --> 01:17:08.140] On this Friday, the 17th day of January 2025 [01:17:08.140 --> 01:17:12.140] And we're talking to Alex in California [01:17:12.140 --> 01:17:15.140] And Alex, I didn't mean to take that over [01:17:15.140 --> 01:17:19.140] But when you're speaking to the common law [01:17:19.140 --> 01:17:23.140] You're speaking to one of our pet peeves [01:17:23.140 --> 01:17:30.140] It is my opinion that feds put out this notion of common law [01:17:30.140 --> 01:17:36.140] To discredit the legal reform community [01:17:36.140 --> 01:17:40.140] And they did a really good job [01:17:40.140 --> 01:17:44.140] I have been called all over the country to get people out of jail [01:17:44.140 --> 01:17:49.140] For following the common law [01:17:49.140 --> 01:17:54.140] If you try to do that, you're gonna have problems [01:17:54.140 --> 01:18:01.140] So then I'm not fully, I'm actually not fully following [01:18:01.140 --> 01:18:09.140] Because, for example, the common law is mentioned a lot in rulings [01:18:09.140 --> 01:18:14.140] And I agree, I'm not really sure how to convene a common law court [01:18:14.140 --> 01:18:16.140] I don't know that either yet [01:18:16.140 --> 01:18:18.140] And I don't know if it's any different [01:18:18.140 --> 01:18:21.140] But that's not what I'm trying to do [01:18:21.140 --> 01:18:25.140] But to go back to what I wanted to say [01:18:25.140 --> 01:18:30.140] Common law is referenced in a lot of doctrines [01:18:30.140 --> 01:18:33.140] Especially in the immunity doctrine [01:18:33.140 --> 01:18:38.140] It is titled as common law immunity [01:18:38.140 --> 01:18:41.140] That's literally what it says, common law immunity [01:18:41.140 --> 01:18:50.140] And this is where the, I think this is where only the judges' absolute immunity comes from [01:18:50.140 --> 01:18:56.140] Not the qualified immunity, but the judicial immunity does have [01:18:56.140 --> 01:19:02.140] In their language, common law, derived from the common law [01:19:02.140 --> 01:19:07.140] That's because the legislature never spoke to immunity [01:19:07.140 --> 01:19:14.140] And this notion of common law immunity, they should talk to King John about that [01:19:14.140 --> 01:19:19.140] No, the court, in their rulings, in their... [01:19:19.140 --> 01:19:23.140] They were gonna cut King John's head off [01:19:23.140 --> 01:19:31.140] Randy's saying that these judges who pretend to be immune ought to see what King John thought about that [01:19:31.140 --> 01:19:33.140] They were gonna cut his head off [01:19:33.140 --> 01:19:36.140] So much for immunity and the common law [01:19:36.140 --> 01:19:39.140] There wasn't any, never has been any [01:19:39.140 --> 01:19:46.140] The immunity they're calling common law is immunity created by judges [01:19:46.140 --> 01:19:48.140] Yes, exactly [01:19:48.140 --> 01:19:59.140] We just had a federal judge in Mississippi rule that there is no immunity known to federal law [01:19:59.140 --> 01:20:05.140] No, he said there is no basis in law for qualified immunity [01:20:05.140 --> 01:20:11.140] I got your email, I think I know which suit you're talking about, but that was for qualified immunity [01:20:11.140 --> 01:20:15.140] That was not for judicial immunity [01:20:16.140 --> 01:20:27.140] There's nothing, there's nothing in law other than judicial determinations that address judicial immunity [01:20:27.140 --> 01:20:29.140] Nothing [01:20:29.140 --> 01:20:31.140] Judges made it up [01:20:31.140 --> 01:20:33.140] Yeah, yeah, exactly [01:20:33.140 --> 01:20:39.140] So my point is, because you said that common law isn't mentioned anywhere [01:20:39.140 --> 01:20:45.140] And I wanted to say that it is mentioned when they invent these doctrines [01:20:45.140 --> 01:20:48.140] So they do recognize the common law [01:20:48.140 --> 01:20:59.140] And also it was actually mentioned when you follow the 42 USC 1983 [01:20:59.140 --> 01:21:05.140] And it was worded differently, there was the notwithstanding clause in it [01:21:05.140 --> 01:21:15.140] And then it was taken out and the notwithstanding clause had the language of custom and usage [01:21:15.140 --> 01:21:21.140] And custom and usage is basically common law, that's what that stood for [01:21:21.140 --> 01:21:26.140] So it is recognized, that's my point [01:21:26.140 --> 01:21:32.140] It's not that it's not out there, it is actually there [01:21:32.140 --> 01:21:38.140] Yeah, well there are references to it there [01:21:38.140 --> 01:21:43.140] But I can't find it actually being there [01:21:43.140 --> 01:21:51.140] These judges are referencing common law, but they're calling common law decisions that they make [01:21:51.140 --> 01:21:53.140] And that's not common law [01:21:53.140 --> 01:21:57.140] Yeah, yeah, I got it [01:21:57.140 --> 01:22:00.140] Okay, so let me formulate my question [01:22:00.140 --> 01:22:10.140] What would happen if I would amend my complaint, I would take out all statutes [01:22:10.140 --> 01:22:17.140] And I would just say that this is a common law, trespass on the case claim [01:22:17.140 --> 01:22:29.140] And that I am one of the people of the United States of America and of the state that I'm residing in [01:22:29.140 --> 01:22:42.140] And that I claim that these two men and these two women have done something that they weren't authorized to do [01:22:42.140 --> 01:22:50.140] And then I would describe that and then I would claim that they didn't have permission to do what they did [01:22:50.140 --> 01:22:56.140] And that they also were bound to act differently through their oath [01:22:56.140 --> 01:23:00.140] Okay, hold on, there's a problem with that [01:23:00.140 --> 01:23:01.140] Okay [01:23:01.140 --> 01:23:07.140] You're saying they did things that they were not authorized to do, who says? [01:23:07.140 --> 01:23:12.140] I say that, I claim that [01:23:12.140 --> 01:23:25.140] Okay, Walker V. Packer says a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts [01:23:25.140 --> 01:23:34.140] That the judge's only duty in trial court is to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence [01:23:34.140 --> 01:23:39.140] Then apply the laws that comes to him to the facts in the case, that's his job [01:23:39.140 --> 01:23:51.140] If you go to the court and you give him no specific facts or give him facts and you don't give him specific law that addresses those facts [01:23:51.140 --> 01:23:55.140] He doesn't have anything he can rule on [01:23:55.140 --> 01:24:05.140] So if you're going to come in there with the common law, you have to give him specification as to what is the common law [01:24:05.140 --> 01:24:16.140] And how he is to address, apply the facts to that law or that law to the facts [01:24:16.140 --> 01:24:21.140] But I can't find any common law, it's just some ethereal thing [01:24:21.140 --> 01:24:28.140] That each person makes up to fit their own particular circumstance [01:24:28.140 --> 01:24:35.140] So I would come in, I would present their oath for the constitution, I would present the constitution [01:24:35.140 --> 01:24:46.140] I would present myself as one of the people that invested these men and women with those specific limited powers [01:24:46.140 --> 01:24:51.140] And I would claim that he didn't have the power to do what he did [01:24:51.140 --> 01:24:54.140] There's another problem with that [01:24:54.140 --> 01:25:02.140] These people you're referring to have authorized the judge to do what he's doing [01:25:02.140 --> 01:25:11.140] They have authorized our legislature to create law and they have authorized our judges to enforce that law [01:25:11.140 --> 01:25:22.140] So by you coming in and claiming that you decide common law based on your personal preferences or prerogatives [01:25:22.140 --> 01:25:29.140] You essentially nullify all of us [01:25:29.140 --> 01:25:35.140] And so in that regard everybody would get to make up their own law to suit their own fancy [01:25:35.140 --> 01:25:42.140] I can't see that working well and I can't see the courts enforcing that [01:25:42.140 --> 01:26:00.140] I don't agree with, well what I don't agree with is that we the people invested the judges with the power to act contrary to the constitution [01:26:00.140 --> 01:26:02.140] We did not do that [01:26:02.140 --> 01:26:04.140] No we did not do that [01:26:04.140 --> 01:26:06.140] That's correct [01:26:06.140 --> 01:26:09.140] And that's what I would be claiming [01:26:09.140 --> 01:26:13.140] Let's not start juxtaposing issues [01:26:13.140 --> 01:26:24.140] We're saying that we empowered our legislature to write law and we empowered our judicial to enforce that law [01:26:24.140 --> 01:26:26.140] Correct [01:26:26.140 --> 01:26:28.140] We did that through our constitution [01:26:28.140 --> 01:26:30.140] Yes [01:26:30.140 --> 01:26:37.140] So you can't come back now and say oh all that stuff doesn't apply because I don't want it to [01:26:37.140 --> 01:26:39.140] I didn't say that [01:26:39.140 --> 01:26:43.140] What are you saying? It is what I say it is [01:26:43.140 --> 01:26:47.140] So if I say it this way, none of that other stuff matters [01:26:47.140 --> 01:26:52.140] You can't enforce that other law against me because I came in and made up my own [01:26:52.140 --> 01:26:55.140] No I'm not saying that [01:26:55.140 --> 01:26:58.140] Okay hang on, be right back [01:27:07.140 --> 01:27:10.140] Privacy is under attack [01:27:10.140 --> 01:27:14.140] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again [01:27:14.140 --> 01:27:19.140] And once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [01:27:19.140 --> 01:27:24.140] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [01:27:24.140 --> 01:27:27.140] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [01:27:27.140 --> 01:27:31.140] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com [01:27:32.140 --> 01:27:37.140] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong [01:27:37.140 --> 01:27:42.140] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade [01:27:42.140 --> 01:27:49.140] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda in the world [01:27:49.140 --> 01:27:56.140] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda in the world [01:27:56.140 --> 01:28:02.140] Regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all [01:28:02.140 --> 01:28:05.140] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite [01:28:05.140 --> 01:28:09.140] But unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it [01:28:09.140 --> 01:28:15.140] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake [01:28:15.140 --> 01:28:18.140] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight [01:28:18.140 --> 01:28:23.140] And if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead [01:28:23.140 --> 01:28:28.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:28:29.140 --> 01:28:35.140] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11 [01:28:35.140 --> 01:28:37.140] The government says that fire brought it down [01:28:37.140 --> 01:28:42.140] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition [01:28:42.140 --> 01:28:45.140] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [01:28:45.140 --> 01:28:47.140] But thousands of my fellow first responders are dying [01:28:47.140 --> 01:28:49.140] I'm not a conspiracy theorist [01:28:49.140 --> 01:28:50.140] I'm a structural engineer [01:28:50.140 --> 01:28:51.140] I'm a New York City correction officer [01:28:51.140 --> 01:28:52.140] I'm an Air Force pilot [01:28:52.140 --> 01:28:53.140] I'm a father who lost his son [01:28:53.140 --> 01:28:56.140] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth [01:28:56.140 --> 01:28:59.140] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today [01:29:23.140 --> 01:29:27.140] The former Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio [01:29:27.140 --> 01:29:30.140] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:29:30.140 --> 01:29:32.140] that will help you understand what due process is [01:29:32.140 --> 01:29:34.140] and how to hold courts to the rule of law [01:29:34.140 --> 01:29:38.140] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:29:38.140 --> 01:29:39.140] and ordering your copy today [01:29:39.140 --> 01:29:41.140] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book [01:29:41.140 --> 01:29:44.140] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [01:29:44.140 --> 01:29:46.140] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [01:29:46.140 --> 01:29:49.140] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material [01:29:49.140 --> 01:29:53.140] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:29:53.140 --> 01:29:57.140] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve [01:30:01.140 --> 01:30:04.140] Looking for some truth? You found it! [01:30:04.140 --> 01:30:07.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:19.140 --> 01:30:21.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:21.140 --> 01:30:23.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:23.140 --> 01:30:25.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:25.140 --> 01:30:27.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:27.140 --> 01:30:29.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:29.140 --> 01:30:31.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:31.140 --> 01:30:33.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:33.140 --> 01:30:35.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:35.140 --> 01:30:37.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:37.140 --> 01:30:39.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:39.140 --> 01:30:41.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:41.140 --> 01:30:43.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:43.140 --> 01:30:45.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:45.140 --> 01:30:47.140] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:30:47.140 --> 01:30:49.140] Pl asleep [01:30:49.140 --> 01:30:53.560] Wild [01:30:53.560 --> 01:30:55.560] Wild [01:30:55.560 --> 01:31:01.560] Wild [01:31:01.560 --> 01:31:05.560] Wild [01:31:05.560 --> 01:31:07.560] Wild [01:31:07.560 --> 01:31:11.560] Event [01:31:11.560 --> 01:31:13.560] Event [01:31:13.560 --> 01:31:15.560] Event [01:31:15.560 --> 01:31:16.560] Event [01:31:16.560 --> 01:31:23.920] define it. I think it could be helpful to note that common law is not something, America [01:31:23.920 --> 01:31:30.320] didn't come up with common law. This is something common to man, common to people, and something [01:31:30.320 --> 01:31:39.440] that was just generally recognized. And we have codified that to the best of our ability [01:31:40.000 --> 01:31:49.360] legislatures have codified that and made an attempt to say, okay, this is a crime. Yes, [01:31:49.360 --> 01:31:54.800] we're going to prosecute this and it has these elements in it. And once it's been [01:31:58.480 --> 01:32:06.240] presented in that way, then to prosecute it in a common law way is more fuzzy. And they say, [01:32:06.240 --> 01:32:11.520] well, we're not going to do the fuzzy prosecutions. That's why we see comments [01:32:14.160 --> 01:32:22.720] by legislatures saying the common law prosecutions are abolished because they figure they've covered [01:32:22.720 --> 01:32:32.560] the bases well enough with codifying crimes that would have otherwise been just understood. [01:32:36.560 --> 01:32:45.360] I mean, even Black's law even defines a court of record as a court that proceeds according [01:32:45.360 --> 01:32:49.040] to the common law. This is literally out of Black's law. [01:32:50.000 --> 01:32:57.520] What does the common law mean? Are they using common law there as a noun or as a transitive verb? [01:32:57.520 --> 01:33:07.120] Are they using it as the common law as a noun or the law common to [01:33:08.320 --> 01:33:12.960] the people? And that's the law that we've codified into code. [01:33:15.680 --> 01:33:16.560] Yeah, I don't disagree. [01:33:16.560 --> 01:33:22.480] I don't know. Are you looking at a Black that has some references to show [01:33:23.120 --> 01:33:26.000] which case law they got that idea from, that definition? [01:33:28.480 --> 01:33:32.320] I could look in the fourth edition because that has a lot of case law. [01:33:33.280 --> 01:33:36.000] Right, that could be useful to help clarify. [01:33:38.480 --> 01:33:44.240] A dictionary definition that has no case, especially a legal dictionary definition that [01:33:44.240 --> 01:33:49.200] does not base its definition on specific case law is meaningless. [01:33:49.200 --> 01:34:01.680] We have tried to take the common law and codified it into a code that everybody could read [01:34:01.680 --> 01:34:12.480] and understand. And now we have people trying to make a distinction between this common law, [01:34:12.480 --> 01:34:15.200] this law that's common to everybody and everybody knows it. [01:34:16.080 --> 01:34:23.120] As opposed to that portion of the common law, we've tried to specify and lay down so everyone [01:34:23.120 --> 01:34:31.760] would treat the application of the law consistently. So I will give you a very good example that comes [01:34:31.760 --> 01:34:40.400] out of the statute of 42 USC 1983. And that had the mentioning of common law in it, [01:34:40.400 --> 01:34:50.080] and then they took it out. And those were the 16 words that they took out where in the middle [01:34:50.080 --> 01:35:00.720] of the language of the 1983 statute, it said notwithstanding to ordinance, blah, blah, [01:35:00.720 --> 01:35:07.520] and then custom and usage. And custom and usage is the term describing common law. And there is [01:35:08.240 --> 01:35:14.880] a amicus brief going to the Supreme Court from the Institute of Justice that talks about this, [01:35:15.440 --> 01:35:21.680] about the removing of the words and what that means. And then there's the Supreme Court ruling [01:35:23.520 --> 01:35:29.440] that- Wait a minute, what words were removed? [01:35:31.440 --> 01:35:37.200] Yeah, I'd like to speak to that just briefly when you get you finished there. [01:35:37.200 --> 01:35:38.240] Yeah, yeah. [01:35:42.800 --> 01:35:52.400] Okay, so she was talking about notwithstanding ordinances, customs or usage and interpreting [01:35:52.400 --> 01:36:01.760] that to mean common law. And I read that a little differently. When I've seen that phrase, it looks [01:36:01.760 --> 01:36:11.600] to me like it's saying that you can sue a state actor for depriving you of your protected rights, [01:36:11.600 --> 01:36:20.960] even if a state ordinance or a state custom or a state usage, de facto, this is the way we do [01:36:20.960 --> 01:36:29.360] things around here. Even if some of that contradicts your protected right, you can still sue that state [01:36:29.360 --> 01:36:35.760] actor because your right is still protected by the constitution, even if there is some [01:36:36.320 --> 01:36:43.040] custom or usage. I don't think it's referring to common law in the way that you're drawing that [01:36:43.040 --> 01:36:52.480] distinction as law that is common to all men versus law that has been codified. I don't think that's [01:36:52.480 --> 01:36:58.320] what it's referencing there. I think it's just guaranteeing you that you can sue these state [01:36:58.320 --> 01:37:05.040] actors for violating your protected rights. Yeah, I just sent you on Telegram. I sent you [01:37:05.040 --> 01:37:13.040] the amicus brief of the Institute for Justice, and they went over the meaning of those 16 words [01:37:13.040 --> 01:37:19.440] and then the removal from the statute. And they reference the common law many, many times. And [01:37:19.440 --> 01:37:26.240] this is where I got it out. Okay, cool. Amongst other things. But then there's also the Supreme [01:37:26.240 --> 01:37:36.080] Court ruling that did not rule favorable to them. But still, this is a reference to what this means [01:37:39.840 --> 01:37:46.640] and explains that removal of these 16 words, basically, out of that statute. [01:37:47.600 --> 01:37:54.560] So I feel like that there is a lot of reference to common law in the case law, actually. [01:37:55.280 --> 01:38:04.560] And I don't... The point of all bringing this up here is not... I don't want to convince anyone [01:38:04.560 --> 01:38:13.120] that there is common law. My intent for this phone call tonight was rather to see if you guys would [01:38:13.680 --> 01:38:24.160] have a suspicion of what would happen if I reword my complaint into what I said, [01:38:25.120 --> 01:38:34.240] leaving out all these statutes. If I just word it as that I claim that I am one of the people [01:38:35.040 --> 01:38:40.400] that granted the government limited powers, and I'm here and I'm claiming that [01:38:40.720 --> 01:38:51.920] there was a trespass on the case. Basically, that's a term that I got from another filing [01:38:51.920 --> 01:38:57.920] common law claim papers that I read. And that I claim that these men and women didn't have [01:38:57.920 --> 01:39:04.240] the right to do what they did. And so I cite the Constitution. I cite the oaths that they swore. [01:39:04.320 --> 01:39:11.360] So I make it very simple. I don't mention statutes. And I'm just wondering [01:39:12.480 --> 01:39:17.520] what would happen, because I believe everything that I claim I could support with evidence. [01:39:19.120 --> 01:39:28.720] Yes, with evidence that's good enough for you. But how do you take something fuzzy like common law, [01:39:29.680 --> 01:39:38.880] which is the way I look at it? Everybody defines common law so many different ways. [01:39:39.600 --> 01:39:45.280] And I think that's because you can't go to check out a book and find, here's the book that says [01:39:45.280 --> 01:39:50.640] the common law, and here it is from A to Z. You can't go read it. It doesn't exist. Some [01:39:50.640 --> 01:39:56.480] lawyers even try to say that it includes case law, which is nothing but judicial opinions. [01:39:59.200 --> 01:40:05.280] Honestly, the way I think it is, is the golden rule. Do unto others as you would have them do [01:40:05.280 --> 01:40:13.680] unto you. And it's that simple, but it got spread out into so many splinters because [01:40:14.720 --> 01:40:22.160] people should treat each other well. And here are a lot of different ways that we commonly see [01:40:22.160 --> 01:40:30.320] people not treating each other well. And they even get names like fraud and deprivation of [01:40:30.320 --> 01:40:37.920] this right or that. And then we have causes of action and those causes end up getting codified [01:40:37.920 --> 01:40:44.240] with essential elements. If you want to walk into court without a cause of action that points to a [01:40:44.240 --> 01:40:51.360] statute or to at least to a constitutional provision, how are you going to have essential [01:40:51.360 --> 01:41:00.640] elements? How can you produce facts that go to those elements? Do you have a business with [01:41:00.640 --> 01:41:05.920] five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA [01:41:05.920 --> 01:41:11.280] taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? Or how would you [01:41:11.280 --> 01:41:17.920] like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the claims cost? 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If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [01:42:19.840 --> 01:42:25.920] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you [01:42:25.920 --> 01:42:32.960] can too. JurisDictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:42:33.600 --> 01:42:39.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [01:42:39.120 --> 01:42:44.640] and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, [01:42:44.640 --> 01:42:52.160] video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit [01:42:52.160 --> 01:42:59.200] ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:43:22.160 --> 01:43:44.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. And I'm having a concern here, [01:43:44.800 --> 01:43:51.120] and this is a concern I've had for a long time. That's why we're spending so much time on this. [01:43:52.320 --> 01:44:01.040] I'm listening to you speak to common law and you're using the word common, [01:44:02.400 --> 01:44:09.920] actually the phrase common law, in what appears to be at one point you're using it as a noun [01:44:10.640 --> 01:44:13.840] and then the next time you're using it as a verb or an adjective. [01:44:13.920 --> 01:44:18.640] And we're mixing these two uses of it together. [01:44:20.320 --> 01:44:25.200] I know that probably doesn't make any sense, but the problem with the argument is the argument [01:44:25.200 --> 01:44:32.800] doesn't make sense. Our legislature took what was considered to be the common law [01:44:34.000 --> 01:44:42.240] and carefully analyzed and defined it and said, this is what the law of fraud is. [01:44:43.120 --> 01:44:48.720] So we have common law fraud. Okay, how do I prove common law fraud? [01:44:49.840 --> 01:44:55.760] Well, he told me I was fat and ugly, and I'm not fat and ugly. Well, [01:44:57.120 --> 01:45:03.520] you may look at me and say, yeah, you are fat and ugly. So the belief is common to who? [01:45:05.200 --> 01:45:11.920] The law is common to who? So the legislature said, okay, let's take this common law and let's [01:45:12.800 --> 01:45:22.000] specify it. Let's add all of the pieces to it that are required in order to establish fraud [01:45:23.440 --> 01:45:31.040] as opposed to other potential claims. Let's come up with a way to specifically define it. [01:45:32.720 --> 01:45:39.120] It did not stop being part of the common law because the legislature carefully defined it. [01:45:39.120 --> 01:45:50.400] But it just became more clear. So you're using common law and not being using it with enough [01:45:50.400 --> 01:45:59.360] specificity for me to get sentences straightened out. I'm struggling to try to figure out how to [01:45:59.360 --> 01:46:05.520] say something that's been bothering me for a very long time. Am I making any sense at all [01:46:05.520 --> 01:46:21.440] or am I just rambling? So I would say that, like I said, I don't wanna prove what common law is. [01:46:21.440 --> 01:46:30.080] I know it exists because Supreme Court rulings have it in their language. [01:46:31.040 --> 01:46:35.040] No, wait a minute. Yeah, but you're saying our common law exists. Are you saying [01:46:35.840 --> 01:46:43.840] law that is common exists? Or are you saying the noun common law, the proper noun common law [01:46:43.840 --> 01:46:52.160] exists? The noun common law exists. That term exists. It's in many, many opinions. [01:46:52.240 --> 01:47:00.000] What gives it, what is it then if it's a noun, it's a thing? Where do I find it? [01:47:01.280 --> 01:47:05.840] I can only tell you what I understand. But as I said, I didn't wanna [01:47:07.120 --> 01:47:11.200] prove to you what exactly it is because I'm not an expert on it. [01:47:12.640 --> 01:47:18.560] We can't talk about it because you're saying the word common law and I'm sure it means something [01:47:18.560 --> 01:47:24.640] to you. I'm not having the same meaning. [01:47:25.760 --> 01:47:34.640] Okay, so to me, common law is defined as custom and usage unwritten. It's unwritten. That means [01:47:34.640 --> 01:47:44.960] that what people do, what society does, you walk on the street, you meet someone that you know, [01:47:44.960 --> 01:47:49.280] you will say hi. That's not a law. That's just common. It's just common practice. [01:47:50.960 --> 01:48:00.480] It's unwritten. So basically what I understand, a common law proceeding in courts, and that's [01:48:00.480 --> 01:48:07.840] also what I wanted to mention is the jury would determine the verdict, basically, would determine [01:48:07.840 --> 01:48:12.320] what it is. The judge would just- Well, but here's the tricky part with that. [01:48:13.280 --> 01:48:19.920] When you get a jury, you have to hand them, here's exactly what this person is charged with [01:48:19.920 --> 01:48:27.200] and here are the elements of that. So you hand them like pattern jury charges or [01:48:27.200 --> 01:48:31.600] standard jury instructions, they might be called. But it has a little checklist [01:48:32.480 --> 01:48:41.440] that each juror can look at that list. There might be five check boxes. And so as they listen to the [01:48:41.440 --> 01:48:51.280] witnesses coming up to testify, and they look at the evidence that's admitted, they can check [01:48:51.280 --> 01:48:59.280] the boxes off and say, yes, there were facts sufficient and adequate to support a finding of [01:48:59.280 --> 01:49:07.440] facts that supports this element. And if all those elements get supported, then you would have a [01:49:07.440 --> 01:49:15.360] guilty. But without elements, if you have no elements, everything's just fuzzy. [01:49:15.360 --> 01:49:22.000] Well, I believe he did wrong. Well, what's wrong? How do you punish somebody for what's [01:49:22.000 --> 01:49:29.520] wrongness? It's general and fuzzy. I believe this guy committed child abuse by having sex with a [01:49:30.240 --> 01:49:36.880] 14 year old girl. That depends on what country you're in, because in some countries in Africa, [01:49:36.880 --> 01:49:44.800] it's the job of the uncle to teach the niece how to have sex. [01:49:44.800 --> 01:49:51.840] So when she gets married, they will have a good relationship. Now in that culture, [01:49:51.840 --> 01:49:57.360] that was perfectly fine. That was common law. Yep, not perfectly fine in this culture. [01:49:58.240 --> 01:50:06.640] I was the movie pilot where this guy goes to Japan back in the time of the samurai. [01:50:06.640 --> 01:50:13.200] The samurai kills this older guy, this servant, does something they didn't like. And the samurai [01:50:13.200 --> 01:50:22.400] cut his head off. The pilot was just aghast. And the woman who was there to help him, she said, [01:50:22.400 --> 01:50:27.600] no, you don't understand. Famine is rampant in Japan. [01:50:29.680 --> 01:50:37.280] The samurai gave this man, who otherwise would likely die of starvation in old age, [01:50:37.280 --> 01:50:42.800] gave him an honorable death. And because he gave this man an honorable death, [01:50:42.800 --> 01:50:47.440] someone else won't starve to death. That's their common law. [01:50:47.600 --> 01:50:54.480] Yeah, right. So, yeah, common law is not so common. And our legislatures and our courts said, [01:50:54.480 --> 01:50:59.760] well, the legislature said, okay, let's take the common beliefs of the people. [01:51:00.560 --> 01:51:05.040] Yeah, which were largely from England at the time. They got everything mainly from England. [01:51:06.240 --> 01:51:13.680] And let's specify it. So it doesn't change with the day. It doesn't change with the season. [01:51:13.840 --> 01:51:22.240] It doesn't change with the season. The law now becomes consistent. So how is this not the common [01:51:22.240 --> 01:51:32.880] law? Just because it's specified and defined. Okay, now maybe we can get back to her question [01:51:32.880 --> 01:51:40.720] with that that you've just said. Maybe we can link back to her question about what if she were to [01:51:40.800 --> 01:51:46.800] take out everything in her pleadings that refers to a statute. What if she were to simply reference [01:51:47.680 --> 01:51:54.880] common law in a general and vague way and say, hey, I'm one of the people you're responsible to [01:51:54.880 --> 01:52:00.640] do according to your oath. You're not authorized to do this. And so this is a common law action [01:52:00.640 --> 01:52:10.640] against you. What if? And I would say you lost your teeth. It lost its teeth. It lost its ability [01:52:10.800 --> 01:52:17.200] to have a punishment that goes with it. Something that's codified that this kind of wrongdoing [01:52:17.920 --> 01:52:23.840] has these elements that would, this is how you prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. [01:52:24.560 --> 01:52:31.120] And if somebody does that, it has, what do you know? It's a third degree felony. It's a whatever. [01:52:31.840 --> 01:52:35.520] It has this punishment associated with it. You lose all that. [01:52:35.520 --> 01:52:44.480] But would I, so the punishment, I mean, that would come with the jury. The jury at the end would, [01:52:44.480 --> 01:52:51.600] I guess, decide the punishment. But my main goal is to not get my case dismissed with prejudice, [01:52:51.600 --> 01:52:57.920] which will likely happen because that's what they keep apparently doing. That's from what I'm reading [01:52:57.920 --> 01:53:02.240] all the other cases. So if I look out their immunity. [01:53:02.240 --> 01:53:09.680] Okay. That's a better question. I think that we can be more helpful with is how do we take [01:53:11.280 --> 01:53:20.400] a pleading and get past their immunity? I think that we can work with a lot more easily. [01:53:21.360 --> 01:53:28.400] I've gotten past the immunity question in the Fed. And I think Randy did with your [01:53:29.520 --> 01:53:33.440] recent one, you got past immunity, right? They weren't claiming immunity at the end, were they? [01:53:34.000 --> 01:53:34.800] No, they did not. [01:53:34.800 --> 01:53:38.560] I think they started that way. But then when you show them that they don't have any, [01:53:38.560 --> 01:53:40.640] they kind of shut up and start talking about other things. [01:53:42.400 --> 01:53:48.080] What I did was I backed them into a corner. I asked them to do something they couldn't do. [01:53:48.080 --> 01:53:56.080] I asked them for $485 million. And I asked for that from each of these judges individually. Well, [01:53:56.080 --> 01:54:01.600] that's not gonna happen. So they didn't dismiss my case on its merits. [01:54:03.200 --> 01:54:09.360] They didn't dismiss my case because I failed to state a claim. [01:54:09.360 --> 01:54:13.600] They didn't dismiss my case because the judges had immunity. [01:54:13.600 --> 01:54:18.880] They dismissed it because it was frivolous, because they wanted to. [01:54:19.840 --> 01:54:26.640] So that's gonna happen. And there's some things, there's no magic here. [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:35.440] There's no incantation that you can do that will magically make people do the right thing. [01:54:36.000 --> 01:54:39.680] Right. It's just hard work holding them accountable when they don't. [01:54:40.400 --> 01:54:46.880] And if you rewrite the pleading, I sat as a mock judge in a mock trial in Massachusetts. [01:54:47.680 --> 01:54:54.000] And these guys were getting up there talking about all this patriot theory. [01:54:54.880 --> 01:54:57.920] And I sat there and listened to them, and I'm sitting here as the judge. [01:54:57.920 --> 01:55:03.360] Okay, it is my job to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence [01:55:03.360 --> 01:55:06.160] and apply the laws that comes to me to the facts of the case. [01:55:06.160 --> 01:55:08.880] And I'm sitting here and say, okay, give me some facts. [01:55:09.680 --> 01:55:12.320] And now give me some law as it goes to those facts. [01:55:13.840 --> 01:55:20.240] They're not doing any of that stuff. And I'm thinking, I got nothing I can use here. [01:55:20.960 --> 01:55:27.360] I have not given me anything I can rule on. If you do that, if you take out all the facts and stuff [01:55:27.360 --> 01:55:32.080] and just tell them what you believe the common law is, the judge may agree with you. [01:55:33.040 --> 01:55:38.640] But you haven't given the judge anything he can rule on. It's his job to [01:55:39.440 --> 01:55:41.520] determine the facts and apply the law to the facts. [01:55:42.160 --> 01:55:46.000] Without that, you haven't asked the judge to do anything. We'll be right back. [01:55:49.280 --> 01:55:52.400] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:55:52.960 --> 01:55:56.720] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:55:57.360 --> 01:56:00.880] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text. [01:56:00.880 --> 01:56:05.040] But in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:56:06.000 --> 01:56:12.480] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [01:56:12.480 --> 01:56:16.640] But the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. 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I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:57:11.440 --> 01:57:15.600] and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [01:57:15.600 --> 01:57:21.120] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:57:21.120 --> 01:57:25.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:57:25.920 --> 01:57:31.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:57:31.200 --> 01:57:35.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [01:57:35.840 --> 01:57:41.360] startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:57:41.360 --> 01:57:43.280] Start over with StartPage. [01:57:44.080 --> 01:57:49.520] Spar, it's what fighters do. It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [01:57:49.520 --> 01:57:52.480] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [01:57:52.480 --> 01:58:01.200] SPAR with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:58:01.200 --> 01:58:06.720] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:58:06.720 --> 01:58:12.720] But petition for redress is another matter. We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:58:13.680 --> 01:58:18.080] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out the reasons [01:58:18.080 --> 01:58:20.400] without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:58:20.400 --> 01:58:24.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:58:30.240 --> 01:58:33.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:58:33.920 --> 01:58:39.040] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:58:39.040 --> 01:58:44.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:58:45.520 --> 01:58:51.040] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:58:51.040 --> 01:58:55.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:58:55.840 --> 01:59:01.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:59:01.120 --> 01:59:07.200] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:59:07.200 --> 01:59:13.120] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:59:14.960 --> 01:59:21.360] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [01:59:21.360 --> 01:59:25.760] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [01:59:25.760 --> 01:59:29.760] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [01:59:29.760 --> 01:59:33.040] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [01:59:33.040 --> 01:59:37.920] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well when he said, [01:59:37.920 --> 01:59:42.800] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [01:59:42.800 --> 01:59:46.800] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, [01:59:46.800 --> 01:59:50.240] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [01:59:50.240 --> 01:59:54.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:00:03.040 --> 02:00:18.880] I received my remedy today. [02:00:20.560 --> 02:00:28.640] Game in the box, just like they say. I accept it for value right away, if not sooner, [02:00:29.280 --> 02:00:37.280] not later. We are originators, and the pathway seems to get straighter every day. [02:00:38.960 --> 02:00:44.480] And I can take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use. [02:00:46.080 --> 02:00:51.280] What I was good for, the gander, is gonna work for the goose. [02:00:51.280 --> 02:01:05.680] Okay, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue Le Blanc radio. And this time, finally, Brett told me [02:01:05.680 --> 02:01:14.800] what year it was. But he told me he's wrong. That's elder abuse. [02:01:15.680 --> 02:01:26.560] Okay, this is January the 17th, 2025. Thank you very much, Brett. Okay, Teresa, this has been a [02:01:26.560 --> 02:01:35.600] good conversation because this has always been a very difficult problem. Brett and I have dealt [02:01:35.600 --> 02:01:41.760] with this common law issues. We get people coming on with common law stuff, and they bring out the [02:01:41.760 --> 02:01:48.800] absolute craziest stuff you can imagine. And then they wind up going to jail, [02:01:49.680 --> 02:01:57.600] and they don't understand, they're flabbergasted. And every time somebody mentions common law, [02:01:57.600 --> 02:02:05.200] we tense up. Because what you're doing is rational and reasonable. [02:02:06.800 --> 02:02:11.360] I'm gonna say it's not gonna work, but you're taking a rational and reasonable approach to it. [02:02:11.760 --> 02:02:19.840] But these guys do the absolute nutsiest stuff. And then when they get in jail, they call us to [02:02:19.840 --> 02:02:28.560] get them out. And it really gets frustrating for us. So this was a good conversation, trying to [02:02:28.560 --> 02:02:35.520] figure out how to address this to these guys. Because I really think the feds put this out here [02:02:36.400 --> 02:02:40.000] to nullify the legal reform community. [02:02:41.760 --> 02:02:48.720] And they've done a really good job of it. You don't see it much on our show because [02:02:48.720 --> 02:02:54.080] we have those guys come on and we send them packing. They do the same things, all of them [02:02:54.080 --> 02:02:59.440] do exactly the same thing. They will state something that's preposterous. And when you [02:02:59.440 --> 02:03:04.720] demonstrate how it's preposterous, yeah, but what about this? And they'll jump to something else, [02:03:04.720 --> 02:03:09.200] totally different justice preposterous. And you shoot down that one, oh, what about this? [02:03:09.200 --> 02:03:13.760] And they jump to something else and something else and something else. All of them do that [02:03:13.760 --> 02:03:19.200] exact same thing. I don't know where that comes from. I don't know who teaches that. [02:03:20.880 --> 02:03:27.360] But they all tell the same preposterous story, same way. And if you challenge them, [02:03:28.160 --> 02:03:33.200] their method of response is insulting and dismissive. [02:03:34.960 --> 02:03:39.360] It's really rude what they do, but all of them do that the same way. [02:03:42.320 --> 02:03:44.000] Who is teaching that stuff? [02:03:44.000 --> 02:03:50.000] I mean, there's so many people that teach, I guess, what you talk about, [02:03:50.000 --> 02:03:57.920] the patriot mythology and stuff. And the thing is, I think they are mixing [02:03:58.320 --> 02:04:06.000] the actual common law, which did exist. And I sent you that as well, Randy, on Telegram. [02:04:06.720 --> 02:04:12.560] It does exist in the judicial realm still, because they reference it, they respond to it. [02:04:13.120 --> 02:04:20.880] I can't exactly tell you the definition, because I'm really not educated enough about it. But I [02:04:20.880 --> 02:04:30.560] know that it exists, because it is referenced in a multitude of legal opinions, and it's there. [02:04:32.880 --> 02:04:36.800] I've been 30 years telling these people, I would love to find this. [02:04:37.920 --> 02:04:44.960] This would be a great tool to use. But Winston Shroud, he's one of the originals. [02:04:45.600 --> 02:04:52.320] Sam Kennedy, Winston Shroud, George, not George Gordon, Tim Turner. [02:04:54.160 --> 02:04:56.960] What's the one that's dying of cancer right now, Brett? [02:04:59.280 --> 02:04:59.760] I don't know. [02:05:00.560 --> 02:05:05.600] Oh, the lesson. But all of these guys are teaching the same spiel. [02:05:05.600 --> 02:05:14.800] And I never could get it. They all do the same things exactly the same way. [02:05:15.360 --> 02:05:22.880] They're even insulting and dismissive in exactly the same way. What the heck is going on here? [02:05:24.080 --> 02:05:25.760] What do you think about George Gordon? [02:05:28.160 --> 02:05:32.240] He was, George Gordon was, I learned from George Gordon. [02:05:32.880 --> 02:05:39.440] George Gordon was a creature of statute. He didn't do everything the way I did it, [02:05:39.440 --> 02:05:45.920] but he did everything by law. He didn't do any, go ahead. [02:05:49.440 --> 02:05:56.720] He didn't do any patriot mythology. This is my problem with Winston Shroud. I said, [02:05:57.520 --> 02:06:00.480] Winston, he's telling me about all the bankruptcy and all this stuff. [02:06:01.360 --> 02:06:04.560] I said, Winston, where did you come up with all this stuff? [02:06:06.160 --> 02:06:12.560] He said, well, I ask him first, where is the law supporting what you're saying? [02:06:13.200 --> 02:06:19.840] He said, well, I don't think you'll find any. Well, where did you come up with this? Said, [02:06:20.640 --> 02:06:31.520] I figured it out. So essentially, you made it up. Long pause, and I weren't live on the air. [02:06:31.520 --> 02:06:35.120] Long pause, and he said, well, yeah, I guess I did. [02:06:36.640 --> 02:06:41.920] Said, Winston, I'm a creature of statute. I can't go into court without made it up. [02:06:42.080 --> 02:06:50.480] I have to give the court facts and law. And whatever we think of the common law, when we're [02:06:50.480 --> 02:07:01.760] in court, the only thing he can pay attention to is facts and law as it's codified by the legislature [02:07:02.400 --> 02:07:07.120] and applied by the courts. That's the only thing he can see. [02:07:07.120 --> 02:07:13.440] He could agree with you. I said in this mock court, and I agreed with these guys. [02:07:13.440 --> 02:07:20.960] What he did was, while it was improperly unethical, it wasn't illegal. [02:07:22.080 --> 02:07:24.480] It was a loophole in the law. They hadn't closed. [02:07:26.560 --> 02:07:30.720] But he's not arguing that. He's arguing all this patriot stuff. [02:07:31.280 --> 02:07:37.600] And I'm saying, I can't use that. Give me facts and law. Show how [02:07:39.760 --> 02:07:45.280] what they're filing these liens against public officials is right there in the code. [02:07:45.280 --> 02:07:52.720] It says you can do that. Now, he used it in a way that it wasn't intended to be used. [02:07:53.840 --> 02:07:59.360] But it was right there in the code. So to stop all that, they had to pass new law. [02:08:00.320 --> 02:08:04.400] If George Gordon, he would argue the law. He would say exactly, [02:08:05.040 --> 02:08:08.560] this is where the code allows me to write a lien. [02:08:11.680 --> 02:08:17.680] Yeah, and George Gordon taught common law. This is what his school was named. [02:08:19.840 --> 02:08:28.000] I never, okay, I didn't study George Gordon deep enough to get into his common law arguments. I've [02:08:28.000 --> 02:08:36.560] never seen any of his common law arguments. I would like to, because that guy was, he did his homework. [02:08:37.920 --> 02:08:38.880] Yeah, I think so. [02:08:40.320 --> 02:08:44.080] I'll see if you can find some of George Gordon's work on common law. [02:08:44.880 --> 02:08:46.320] I would love to be able to use it. [02:08:47.680 --> 02:08:52.800] Yeah, I mean, I listened to all his YouTube videos that are still on YouTube. [02:08:52.800 --> 02:09:00.080] There's, I mean, he basically, he argued the same thing that I'm arguing. He argued that there's [02:09:00.080 --> 02:09:06.000] the Constitution, the people gave the government the power, it's limited. The government doesn't [02:09:06.000 --> 02:09:12.160] have the power to tell us to wear seat belts or that we need a license for private purposes [02:09:12.160 --> 02:09:19.920] or any such stuff. That's the same coming from the same angle, basically. And that's where I take- [02:09:20.160 --> 02:09:29.520] No, that's a different issue. Where the government, if he's talking the traffic issue, [02:09:29.520 --> 02:09:34.320] that's a separate issue. The government does have the power to do that in Arizona. [02:09:35.680 --> 02:09:42.160] Because in Arizona, they passed the traffic laws into the general statutes. In Texas, [02:09:42.560 --> 02:09:46.880] they didn't pass the traffic law into the general statutes. [02:09:48.080 --> 02:09:54.240] So they can pass all these traffic laws they want to, but they don't apply to me. [02:09:56.480 --> 02:09:58.880] Because I've got plates on that say deadheading. [02:10:00.800 --> 02:10:10.240] That says I'm not in commerce. And if you say that I have to display license plates, [02:10:10.240 --> 02:10:17.280] and this is exactly what I said to the GPS officer. So you're saying that the public [02:10:17.280 --> 02:10:24.080] roadways are no longer public, but they can only be used for commercial purposes. [02:10:26.160 --> 02:10:31.680] And he took a step back, physically he took a step back. He had nothing he could say. [02:10:31.680 --> 02:10:41.040] That's right. You can pass, you can tell me I have to wear a seatbelt, [02:10:41.040 --> 02:10:46.240] but if I'm not in commerce, that doesn't apply to me, so you can't tell me that. [02:10:47.360 --> 02:10:52.880] The legislature, if they pass laws that are not pugnitor constitution, [02:10:53.360 --> 02:11:03.040] they can pass any law they want to. We authorize them to do that with our constitution. [02:11:06.400 --> 02:11:07.840] And essentially- [02:11:07.840 --> 02:11:11.040] Well, they can pass any law that they want to. They can only [02:11:11.040 --> 02:11:15.600] exercise power that they have been given and that- [02:11:15.600 --> 02:11:22.400] Yeah, they can pass any law they want to within the scope of that constitution. [02:11:23.200 --> 02:11:27.760] Right, and it's not big. It's actually very small, but they- [02:11:27.760 --> 02:11:33.040] They can pass laws as long as it doesn't step on a constitutional right. [02:11:34.000 --> 02:11:36.720] Yeah. We authorized them to do that. [02:11:39.440 --> 02:11:50.320] So with what you're purporting to do, the problem I have with it is you're not moving the court to [02:11:50.320 --> 02:11:59.280] do something. You're just telling them what your opinion is, like these guys in that mock court. [02:11:59.280 --> 02:12:05.920] I called a recess and they actually picked a jury off the street, these people to participate, [02:12:05.920 --> 02:12:10.640] and they had this common law jury in there too. I'm sorry, mock jury. [02:12:11.520 --> 02:12:16.480] And I called a recess and I told him, told this guy, this guy over here helping you, [02:12:16.640 --> 02:12:22.320] if he gets up and says anything else, you have my permission to shoot him. [02:12:23.840 --> 02:12:29.680] He's gonna get you put in prison, because they spent two and a half hours [02:12:30.400 --> 02:12:38.160] going through every bit of patriot mythology you could imagine. Not one bit of it based on [02:12:38.960 --> 02:12:45.680] any law whatsoever. They just pulled all this stuff [02:12:46.480 --> 02:12:58.560] out of nowhere. They started out with a 1863 treaty that created the United States as a [02:12:58.560 --> 02:13:12.640] corporation. Probably heard of that. I read it. When they said use the word corporation, [02:13:12.640 --> 02:13:21.680] they used it as a transitive verb, not as a noun. They said we have 10 municipalities [02:13:21.680 --> 02:13:30.000] in this 10 square miles. They straddle the line between Virginia and Rhode Island. [02:13:33.600 --> 02:13:38.640] And so we're gonna incorporate all of these into one jurisdiction. [02:13:38.640 --> 02:13:45.440] They used incorporate as a verb, not as a noun. [02:13:46.640 --> 02:13:50.400] And then the patriots come along and said, it's a corporation. [02:13:51.120 --> 02:13:58.160] To know it's incorporated into one thing. And from that they went crazy. Hang on, we'll be right back. [02:14:08.640 --> 02:14:13.440] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [02:14:13.440 --> 02:14:18.240] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [02:14:18.240 --> 02:14:24.080] civil rights statutes. What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. How to answer [02:14:24.080 --> 02:14:29.120] letters and phone calls. How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. How to turn the financial [02:14:29.120 --> 02:14:35.600] tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution [02:14:35.600 --> 02:14:40.320] for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more [02:14:40.320 --> 02:14:46.240] information please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email [02:14:46.240 --> 02:14:56.160] michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [02:14:56.160 --> 02:15:02.880] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law [02:15:02.960 --> 02:15:06.960] Traffic Seminar. In today's America we live in an us against them society and if we the people [02:15:06.960 --> 02:15:11.360] are ever going to have a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [02:15:11.360 --> 02:15:15.040] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own [02:15:15.040 --> 02:15:19.440] private capacity, and most importantly the right to due process of law. 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Learn how to fight for [02:15:50.000 --> 02:15:54.240] your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and [02:15:54.240 --> 02:15:57.200] together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [02:16:24.240 --> 02:16:28.000] My friend, and all of your children, come on. [02:16:54.240 --> 02:17:08.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Alex in [02:17:10.480 --> 02:17:13.440] California, and we have spent a lot of time on this, but [02:17:15.440 --> 02:17:21.840] this is one of my favorite subjects, and it's been a thorny issue, so I appreciate [02:17:22.720 --> 02:17:30.720] getting the time to take this apart. I'm trying to find a really effective way [02:17:31.760 --> 02:17:38.640] to address this so people don't take these patriot notions and go get themselves in trouble. [02:17:40.960 --> 02:17:46.160] Did you know, Randy, that in this document that I sent you last week about [02:17:46.880 --> 02:17:55.520] what they published for the court to overcome the sovereign citizen movement, [02:17:56.480 --> 02:17:59.440] in that document they actually mentioned George Gordon. [02:18:04.720 --> 02:18:10.800] I understand them wanting to mention George Gordon because he's probably someone who gave him a fit. [02:18:11.520 --> 02:18:18.000] Tim Turner and Sam Kennedy and Winston Shroud, they were not a problem [02:18:20.000 --> 02:18:22.240] because they didn't do any law. George Gordon, [02:18:22.960 --> 02:18:27.600] he took the law to him, so I can see him not being happy with him. [02:18:30.560 --> 02:18:35.840] Yeah, I was actually trying to find cases of George Gordon. I only found one where he lost. [02:18:35.840 --> 02:18:41.040] I didn't find all the other ones. Maybe they scrubbed him from the internet. I don't know, [02:18:41.040 --> 02:18:43.840] but I would love to read them. Can't find them. [02:18:46.480 --> 02:18:55.360] His institute is still up and running, as I understand. His wife or his son or somebody is. [02:18:56.800 --> 02:18:57.760] His wife, I think. [02:18:58.720 --> 02:19:07.680] But yeah, I'll try to find them. But I found that, I think, I find it kind of alarming that they [02:19:08.560 --> 02:19:15.520] smush together the really crazy ones that you're referring to and the actual people who go by what's [02:19:15.520 --> 02:19:22.400] on what we actually have as laws. We're the ones that are the problem. [02:19:24.080 --> 02:19:26.640] These patriot mythologists, they're easy to handle. [02:19:28.720 --> 02:19:34.560] But when was the last time the Chief Justice of the Supreme got played like a cheap fiddle then [02:19:34.560 --> 02:19:41.440] sued for $20 billion in his personal capacity to the federal court? That makes them real unhappy. [02:19:42.720 --> 02:19:46.400] They are gonna want to find a way to neutralize Brett and I. [02:19:48.720 --> 02:19:53.680] We're taking these guys to task and they are not happy about it. [02:19:53.680 --> 02:19:56.400] The patriot mythologists, heck, they were a piece of cake. [02:20:00.320 --> 02:20:07.760] George Gordon Institute of TAFE. Technical and Further Education. [02:20:10.160 --> 02:20:21.440] So apparently still around. You can go into PACER and do a search for George Gordon. [02:20:22.320 --> 02:20:26.720] She did get a hit. He was out of Oklahoma. [02:20:31.200 --> 02:20:32.480] I thought he was in Oklahoma. [02:20:33.680 --> 02:20:38.000] Well, when he talked, he was always talking about Ada County and Idaho. [02:20:38.880 --> 02:20:40.800] Oh, okay. That's right. [02:20:41.920 --> 02:20:43.200] Ada County, Idaho. [02:20:43.200 --> 02:20:56.160] So you go into PACER and you do a search for the Idaho federal court [02:20:56.880 --> 02:21:01.680] and then do a search for George Gordon. She did get cases that hit. [02:21:03.200 --> 02:21:06.080] Yeah, I'll have to make an account. Just a quick- [02:21:06.080 --> 02:21:07.840] Oh, wait a minute. Wait a minute. [02:21:07.840 --> 02:21:08.340] Yeah. [02:21:08.420 --> 02:21:18.340] Charles George Gordon, this says. No, maybe that's somebody else. [02:21:22.020 --> 02:21:29.700] It says General Charles Gordon, George Gordon. That must be one of his ancestors. [02:21:38.900 --> 02:21:47.940] This is saying this George Gordon Institute started in 1885. [02:21:49.060 --> 02:21:56.740] Gordon Institute of TAFE. That's just to be the wrong one. Okay, I'll try to pick up George Gordon. [02:21:59.620 --> 02:22:05.620] Because he said he won over 30 cases and he said that in the 80s when he was talking. [02:22:05.620 --> 02:22:11.940] So I was trying to find those cases. But yeah, I'll have to make a PACER account. I haven't done [02:22:11.940 --> 02:22:19.220] that yet. Okay, so we need to go on. [02:22:22.580 --> 02:22:28.100] Can I just one quick question, Brett? Did they claim judicial immunity, Brett, [02:22:28.100 --> 02:22:34.740] in your case and how did you overcome that? In mine, I wasn't suing a judge. [02:22:35.620 --> 02:22:40.420] I was suing a prosecutor. So they were going after her prosecutorial immunity, [02:22:40.420 --> 02:22:47.140] hoping they could grasp at that straw. And then when I showed them they don't get to have that straw, [02:22:48.180 --> 02:22:52.980] well, they started going at other straws and seeing what else they could. [02:22:54.340 --> 02:23:01.300] But they didn't come back to that. Okay, in my case, they claim judicial immunity [02:23:01.300 --> 02:23:11.140] under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code 104.001. [02:23:13.780 --> 02:23:23.060] What that one says is the state shall indemnify a public official sued in his official capacity. [02:23:24.020 --> 02:23:31.060] Oh yeah, indemnify. Immunity is not in there anywhere. And that was what I argued. [02:23:32.820 --> 02:23:38.260] Why didn't they claim judicial immunity? And that's what they always do, like the actual doctrine. [02:23:39.940 --> 02:23:44.420] Well, they couldn't because I did not sue them for a judicial act. [02:23:47.540 --> 02:23:51.220] But they could have claimed, no, that was a judicial act or something. [02:23:53.060 --> 02:23:58.980] They could, but I sued the state actors in the federal courts. [02:24:01.540 --> 02:24:10.020] There's no way for the state to immunize its officials so that they're [02:24:13.220 --> 02:24:19.060] without impunity to just deprive you of your federally protected rights. [02:24:20.020 --> 02:24:22.580] The state can't do that. [02:24:23.940 --> 02:24:28.660] That would violate the supremacy clause. That's what the case law says. [02:24:30.580 --> 02:24:33.540] But at the end of the day, I'm going to suggest you stay with [02:24:34.340 --> 02:24:39.940] the statute and case law that the courts use. If you go to something they don't use, [02:24:39.940 --> 02:24:44.100] they're just going to blow you away. Or do whatever they want. [02:24:44.100 --> 02:24:51.140] Did they claim 11th Amendment immunity? No. [02:24:53.540 --> 02:25:00.580] Interesting. Wow. Okay. All right. I know you have to move on and we talked so long. [02:25:00.580 --> 02:25:03.460] And thank you so much for your time, both of you. [02:25:04.500 --> 02:25:10.500] Okay. Thank you, Alex. Okay. Now we're going to Teresa in California. Hello, Teresa. [02:25:11.140 --> 02:25:13.140] What do you have for us today? [02:25:15.140 --> 02:25:24.900] Okay. So I was walking down the street about four or five months ago, and I was [02:25:24.900 --> 02:25:32.020] ambushed by three sheriff's deputies that claimed I fit the description of a [02:25:32.020 --> 02:25:36.900] suspect that had just robbed a local store. Oh, my. [02:25:36.980 --> 02:25:44.420] Hi. Yeah. And I invoked my first amendment right to remain silent and demanded an attorney. [02:25:45.140 --> 02:25:51.300] And immediately I had some guy who was groping me. I was thrown in cuffs and then thrown, [02:25:51.300 --> 02:26:01.380] strapped into the police, the sheriff's vehicle. So I requested a copy of the incident report [02:26:01.940 --> 02:26:12.260] of the burglary and a copy of the description of the suspect. And they just, can I? [02:26:12.260 --> 02:26:22.260] Smart. Yeah. This is a question I want to ask you guys. So they are claiming that both the incident [02:26:22.260 --> 02:26:29.220] report and a description of the suspect are exempt from disclosure. [02:26:30.740 --> 02:26:42.660] And claiming what? She said exempt from disclosure. Now, what they might be saying is if it's [02:26:42.660 --> 02:26:49.860] requested as a public records request, but we'll help you get that translated into a discovery [02:26:49.860 --> 02:26:55.540] request and they can't have anything to walk about. We'll be right back after these sponsors. [02:26:56.900 --> 02:27:04.260] Hold on. Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, but you might not know that the way [02:27:04.260 --> 02:27:08.900] you walk could predict how long you're going to live. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be [02:27:08.900 --> 02:27:15.620] back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you [02:27:15.620 --> 02:27:20.660] give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [02:27:20.660 --> 02:27:26.580] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance [02:27:26.580 --> 02:27:32.340] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service [02:27:32.340 --> 02:27:37.620] announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [02:27:37.620 --> 02:27:45.060] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with startpage. New research shows how fast you walk could [02:27:45.060 --> 02:27:49.220] predict how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association [02:27:49.220 --> 02:27:54.820] reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [02:27:54.820 --> 02:27:59.300] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [02:27:59.300 --> 02:28:04.020] A senior's age, gender and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy [02:28:04.020 --> 02:28:09.300] as more traditional statistical measures. Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [02:28:09.300 --> 02:28:13.620] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, [02:28:13.620 --> 02:28:18.100] some space to walk in a few minutes. Researchers say it could help doctors identify [02:28:18.100 --> 02:28:21.940] older patients who need special care. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:28:21.940 --> 02:28:24.820] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:28:34.100 --> 02:28:37.700] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [02:28:37.700 --> 02:28:41.860] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [02:28:41.860 --> 02:28:45.780] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [02:28:45.780 --> 02:28:50.980] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to [02:28:50.980 --> 02:28:56.900] the story. Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. [02:28:56.900 --> 02:28:59.460] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [02:29:00.180 --> 02:29:05.860] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his word? [02:29:05.860 --> 02:29:11.060] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time for [02:29:11.060 --> 02:29:16.820] scripture talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2 15. [02:29:17.460 --> 02:29:22.020] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needed not to be ashamed, [02:29:22.020 --> 02:29:27.140] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [02:29:27.140 --> 02:29:31.860] Book of Mark where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [02:29:31.860 --> 02:29:36.820] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and [02:29:36.820 --> 02:29:41.860] Christian character development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all [02:29:41.860 --> 02:29:47.380] those with a hearing ear. Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into [02:29:47.380 --> 02:29:53.780] the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [02:29:53.780 --> 02:29:58.980] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [02:30:01.540 --> 02:30:05.620] Live free speech radio logosradionetwork.com [02:30:54.020 --> 02:30:58.900] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Radio and we're talking to Teresa in California. [02:31:01.060 --> 02:31:04.020] Teresa, did they take you to a magistrate? [02:31:05.620 --> 02:31:11.300] Well, what wound up happening was after they strapped me in the car, [02:31:12.100 --> 02:31:18.020] I said, okay, I'll give you my last name. You have to take me out of the cuffs in the car first, [02:31:18.980 --> 02:31:24.980] uh, which they did. Then I gave them my last name and then they wanted my date of birth. [02:31:25.540 --> 02:31:29.860] So, and, and I told them, I'm not going to give you my date of birth. You'll have to put me back [02:31:29.860 --> 02:31:38.180] in the car and take me to jail, which they didn't do. So I walked away. But the, the question is, [02:31:39.140 --> 02:31:44.580] am I entitled to that record if that's the reason that I was handcuffed? [02:31:44.580 --> 02:31:48.740] Okay. Hold on. Hold on. Were you charged with this offense? [02:31:51.220 --> 02:31:56.100] Pardon me? Were you charged and prosecuted for this offense? [02:31:57.140 --> 02:32:00.100] No. They just let you walk. [02:32:01.220 --> 02:32:04.900] They didn't give you a summons to show up in court and defend yourself about anything? [02:32:06.180 --> 02:32:08.340] Uh, no, because I went to. Okay. [02:32:09.220 --> 02:32:15.940] If there is no case in no, in controversy, it's open records. [02:32:16.820 --> 02:32:24.820] Yep. So what I suggest is, is what, what we're doing here is instead of going in there and [02:32:24.820 --> 02:32:29.060] fighting with these guys, trying to get them to do the right thing. Cause you're in California. [02:32:29.940 --> 02:32:36.740] Yes. Yeah. We have people calling in and say, oh, my county is the most corrupt county in the nation. [02:32:37.700 --> 02:32:41.780] And now I tell them, not if you're not in California, it ain't. [02:32:44.900 --> 02:32:50.100] California has a really great body of law. There's nobody follows it. So, [02:32:51.700 --> 02:33:02.260] uh, these guys want to fight. Let's take it to them. I went to a judge here in Texas and [02:33:02.260 --> 02:33:06.020] gave him a criminal complaint against the sheriff. [02:33:07.860 --> 02:33:17.060] And the law says that when I, a complaint is presented forwarded to a judge and is complete [02:33:17.060 --> 02:33:22.900] in accordance with 1505, the judge shall forth with issue a warrant. He didn't force it with [02:33:22.900 --> 02:33:30.900] issue a warrant. I went down to the JP court and sued him in the JP court for $19,000 in his [02:33:30.900 --> 02:33:38.020] personal capacity. How's that work for you, Bubba? So this, you have asked for these records. [02:33:39.220 --> 02:33:48.420] The prosecutor didn't give them to you. Make up a small claims court case. In Texas, it costs like [02:33:48.420 --> 02:34:00.100] $54 and sue him in his personal capacity in the federal court or in the, in the small claims court. [02:34:01.860 --> 02:34:08.020] Because if these were open records, he had a duty to give those to you. He denied you [02:34:08.020 --> 02:34:13.940] full and free access to or enjoyment of a right and committed the act of official misconduct. [02:34:14.500 --> 02:34:21.140] And criminal acts are not within scope. And since they're not within scope, he has no immunity. [02:34:22.260 --> 02:34:26.100] Let him argue immunity in the small claims court. [02:34:26.100 --> 02:34:32.260] Well, it wasn't the prosecutor. It was the sheriff's department refused- [02:34:32.260 --> 02:34:34.100] That'll do. Yeah, whoever it is. [02:34:34.100 --> 02:34:34.660] Doesn't matter. [02:34:35.220 --> 02:34:36.340] Let's start suing him. [02:34:36.900 --> 02:34:38.100] It doesn't matter, yeah. [02:34:38.100 --> 02:34:40.420] Yeah, it don't matter if we win or not. [02:34:41.460 --> 02:34:48.020] Hold the top dog accountable. I like to go for the man or woman that's standing in your face. [02:34:48.900 --> 02:34:55.860] Whoever that man or woman, pick that name and then draw a line all the way up the org chart [02:34:55.860 --> 02:35:02.500] to the highest head of that whole agency or entity. Because they're the one who's [02:35:02.500 --> 02:35:08.020] responsible for the proper training. And so the man or woman who's standing in front of you, [02:35:08.020 --> 02:35:15.860] doing you wrong, stepping all over your rights is doing it as an agent of that top dog. [02:35:15.860 --> 02:35:17.860] So I name those two. [02:35:18.820 --> 02:35:24.420] Let me tell you what started me on this direction. I've been trying to figure out a way to fix this [02:35:24.420 --> 02:35:32.580] system for a long time. And then I hear about this kid in Colorado Springs. He's across the [02:35:32.580 --> 02:35:39.140] street from the sheriff's department videotaping the police department. He's videotaping them. [02:35:40.340 --> 02:35:46.100] They come over and arrest him and hold him for 14 hours and turn him loose. No charges. [02:35:46.340 --> 02:35:54.980] He sues them for 70 something thousand. In four months, they settled for $17,000. [02:35:59.700 --> 02:36:04.980] Would you spend 14 hours in jail for $17,000? [02:36:04.980 --> 02:36:07.700] No. [02:36:09.940 --> 02:36:17.300] I would. I spent more time in that in jail for less than that. But to keep this from happening, [02:36:17.860 --> 02:36:22.180] you were arrested. They cuffed you and put you in the patrol car. [02:36:23.220 --> 02:36:23.460] Right. [02:36:23.460 --> 02:36:28.100] That's false imprisonment. And for a charge of false imprisonment, [02:36:28.660 --> 02:36:35.220] that is one of the only things for which the state waives its sovereign immunity. [02:36:37.860 --> 02:36:41.620] You sue for false imprisonment, they got no immunity. [02:36:42.980 --> 02:36:50.180] Okay. Can I read you guys the code that he cited in order to claim that these two records were [02:36:50.180 --> 02:36:52.740] exempt from disclosure? Yes. [02:36:53.540 --> 02:37:02.180] It's short. Okay. It's 7923.600. This division does not require the disclosure of records of [02:37:02.180 --> 02:37:10.740] complaints or investigations conducted by records intelligence security procedures of any estate or [02:37:10.740 --> 02:37:20.100] local police agency or any investigatory or security files. So, I mean, they said that the [02:37:20.740 --> 02:37:28.820] investigation is still open, but it seems to me to kind of defy logic that if I was arrested, [02:37:28.820 --> 02:37:34.820] because I fit the description of the suspect, that that should be disposable to me under the [02:37:34.820 --> 02:37:38.340] California Public Records Act. Or am I going to have to get- [02:37:38.340 --> 02:37:42.660] No, no, no, no, no. Not Public Records Act. Discovery. [02:37:44.420 --> 02:37:48.580] Yeah. You could get at it via discovery if they were coming after you. [02:37:49.540 --> 02:37:55.380] But if they are legitimately still trying to find that criminal, then you don't get to, [02:37:55.380 --> 02:38:02.020] you as part of the public, don't get to access that record while they're doing their investigation. [02:38:03.380 --> 02:38:10.340] You can only get it once they've finished investigating. Then you can take a look at, [02:38:10.340 --> 02:38:14.660] here's all the stuff that they were told, and here's who told them and when, and [02:38:15.220 --> 02:38:17.220] here's who forwarded an email to whom. [02:38:17.220 --> 02:38:20.100] You can look at all that stuff, but not while they're investigating. [02:38:20.740 --> 02:38:23.540] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. This is a done deal. [02:38:25.940 --> 02:38:31.700] No. They cuffed you and then they released you without charge. [02:38:32.340 --> 02:38:35.380] Yeah, that part is the unlawful restraint is over. [02:38:35.940 --> 02:38:36.900] That is a done deal. [02:38:36.900 --> 02:38:41.140] You can go after them about that. But she would have to sue them in order to have discovery. [02:38:41.380 --> 02:38:45.700] But yes, what I'm saying, sue them in the small claims court. [02:38:46.260 --> 02:38:50.500] It only costs you a few bucks. And then you can do discovery. [02:38:51.220 --> 02:38:56.260] Yeah. So if you sue them, then you get access to those records, not by public records, [02:38:57.540 --> 02:39:04.100] not by whatever the California has for public records laws, but by discovery, court discovery. [02:39:04.100 --> 02:39:09.780] You go into court and you compel them to disclose those records. [02:39:10.740 --> 02:39:15.620] Okay. So in other words, I can get discovery if I file a small claim suit. [02:39:16.980 --> 02:39:21.380] Yes. Oh, I didn't know that. Okay. [02:39:22.900 --> 02:39:26.260] It will make them so crazy if you start suing them. [02:39:27.220 --> 02:39:31.060] They will so hate you. They won't send you any Christmas cards. [02:39:33.380 --> 02:39:36.100] That's a serious drawback. You have to consider that part. [02:39:37.060 --> 02:39:39.460] But they also won't pull you over anymore. [02:39:41.540 --> 02:39:47.060] They pull up your name and they'll get this red line, diagonal line across it that says, [02:39:47.620 --> 02:39:49.220] do not detain. [02:39:50.820 --> 02:39:54.740] That has happened to me twice in the past six months. Yeah. [02:39:56.020 --> 02:40:00.340] That you've been stopped this way? Sue both of them. [02:40:01.300 --> 02:40:04.260] I'm I'm going to, I'm going to. [02:40:06.180 --> 02:40:10.820] With the California highway patrol, when I back my car into a ditch [02:40:12.100 --> 02:40:18.100] and they were harassing me for about 13 minutes and I refused to give them, well, [02:40:18.100 --> 02:40:21.540] he grabbed the license out of my hand, but I'm not going to get into that. [02:40:21.540 --> 02:40:27.860] The other time was when these guys cuffed me and then they ran my name and then they let me go. [02:40:28.820 --> 02:40:32.020] Oh, cops cuss you. Oh, wonderful. [02:40:33.780 --> 02:40:39.540] Yeah. Pardon me. The shaft that you said. Oh, wonderful. Just sue him. [02:40:40.740 --> 02:40:44.740] Okay. This will make this is how we're going to get control of our system. [02:40:45.460 --> 02:40:50.660] Of all the things I've done, nothing worked until I sued them. [02:40:51.380 --> 02:40:55.620] Hang on. We'll be right back. [02:40:59.140 --> 02:41:04.260] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds [02:41:04.260 --> 02:41:09.460] of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford [02:41:09.460 --> 02:41:16.420] to be on or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering [02:41:16.420 --> 02:41:23.300] the claims cost? 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If you [02:42:14.980 --> 02:42:20.500] have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you [02:42:20.500 --> 02:42:26.580] should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [02:42:27.140 --> 02:42:33.060] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [02:42:33.700 --> 02:42:39.220] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [02:42:39.220 --> 02:42:45.940] and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [02:42:45.940 --> 02:42:54.340] tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [02:42:54.340 --> 02:42:59.620] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [02:43:25.300 --> 02:43:31.940] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to [02:43:33.780 --> 02:43:40.260] Teresa in California. Okay, this is, when 30 years trying to [02:43:41.780 --> 02:43:48.420] figure out how to fix this system, I have filed more criminal complaints that I can count. [02:43:49.940 --> 02:43:53.460] Been beat up, thrown in jail more times than I remember. [02:43:54.740 --> 02:44:00.980] Three dislocated ribs, two broken collarbones, tipped elbow, and a tooth knocked out. [02:44:02.820 --> 02:44:09.460] And none of that did any good until I sued them. And in Brett sued them. [02:44:11.300 --> 02:44:16.900] And Glenn Willingham sued them. That makes them nuts. [02:44:17.540 --> 02:44:23.940] So I like the idea of suing them for bull crap. [02:44:26.420 --> 02:44:33.140] What I was doing with criminal complaints is I would go in and get them to do something so I [02:44:33.140 --> 02:44:37.220] could file criminal charges against them. Well, that worked pretty good. That really got their [02:44:37.220 --> 02:44:44.100] attention. But when I sent a criminal complaint to the Chief Justice of the Supreme against the [02:44:44.180 --> 02:44:52.020] governor and demanded that he issue warrants, and when he didn't, since the law commanded him to do [02:44:52.020 --> 02:44:59.140] it, that made it an ministerial duty for which he had no immunity. I sued him in the federal [02:44:59.140 --> 02:45:06.900] court for $20 million. And it was clear to him later that I played him like a cheap fiddle. [02:45:06.900 --> 02:45:13.060] And that's what made him the most angry is that I played him. [02:45:14.180 --> 02:45:22.340] So you get these guys to stop you and sue them the next day. We have a guy in San Antonio [02:45:22.980 --> 02:45:31.620] went in and to a JP and filed a criminal complaints against a municipal judge. [02:45:32.580 --> 02:45:39.620] And the JP refused to issue a warrant. When he told the bailiff to arrest the judge, [02:45:39.620 --> 02:45:41.700] the judge had the bailiff throw him out of the building. [02:45:42.900 --> 02:45:48.100] So he went to the next JP and within, what did he say, Brett, 36 minutes? [02:45:50.580 --> 02:45:54.100] 36 minutes. Yeah, I don't know exactly, but yeah, it was pretty quick. [02:45:55.380 --> 02:46:00.500] After he was thrown out of this JP refused to issue a warrant and threw him out of the [02:46:00.500 --> 02:46:06.740] courthouse. He went to the next courthouse and sued him within 36 minutes. [02:46:08.740 --> 02:46:13.700] And you know, as soon as he left the JP's office, this JP called the one he sued. [02:46:14.500 --> 02:46:21.540] So the guy knew. This guy came and did that to me and had that suit in his hand. [02:46:23.220 --> 02:46:28.500] Played me like a cheap fiddle. Nobody likes to be played. [02:46:30.820 --> 02:46:35.140] If we start doing that to them, they're going to start getting really careful. [02:46:36.660 --> 02:46:37.860] What do you think, Theresa? [02:46:39.300 --> 02:46:46.180] Well, I've called in to you guys before and I was in the, when they arrested me, [02:46:46.980 --> 02:46:55.460] I had a multi-million dollar lawsuit filed against Monterey County. So I've found that. [02:46:55.460 --> 02:46:57.700] I knew I liked you for some reason. [02:46:58.420 --> 02:47:01.620] Yeah, I'm the lady that got arrested on the beach. Remember? [02:47:02.180 --> 02:47:05.620] Oh, okay. You won that one, didn't you? [02:47:06.580 --> 02:47:16.660] No. He, let's see, despite the fact that I've been reporting all of the rules of [02:47:16.660 --> 02:47:22.740] discovery that they violated and all this evidence that they destroyed when I had [02:47:22.740 --> 02:47:29.300] requested it prior to litigation and told them to preserve it. And they destroyed like 70% of it [02:47:29.300 --> 02:47:34.820] anyway. And I'm also the woman that found that the attorney had been practicing law [02:47:34.820 --> 02:47:38.740] outside jurisdiction. Is this ringing a bell for you guys? [02:47:39.380 --> 02:47:41.460] Yes. Oh, I know exactly who you are now. [02:47:42.900 --> 02:47:52.100] Okay. And then the judge wound up dismissing my case because I didn't comply with discovery. [02:47:52.980 --> 02:47:58.820] And he never acknowledged all that destruction. But he did wind up. [02:48:00.820 --> 02:48:06.980] I had three, through my research, I didn't do it. Through my research, I had three attorneys [02:48:07.780 --> 02:48:14.660] sanctioned. One lost his 20-year partnership in the firm. He's been referred over to the [02:48:14.660 --> 02:48:19.540] professional standards committee. What is it? Standards committee on professional conduct. [02:48:20.260 --> 02:48:22.580] And his entire firm was as well. [02:48:23.780 --> 02:48:30.340] Have you sued him? Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [02:48:31.700 --> 02:48:37.060] You're like you when you get in an accident. You're driving along and somebody bashes into [02:48:37.060 --> 02:48:41.860] you and blames you for it. And you swear on a stack of Bibles it wasn't your fault and [02:48:41.860 --> 02:48:45.940] your insurance company don't care. They're gonna pay the claim. [02:48:45.940 --> 02:48:56.420] I had a lawyer tell me that if somebody sues me, I want the insurance company just to pay them, [02:48:56.420 --> 02:49:03.940] get it off my plate. So I'm going to other things. So you sue the lawyer, the insurance [02:49:03.940 --> 02:49:08.260] carrier takes over the suit. I think in this case, it's California, it'll be the bar. [02:49:08.260 --> 02:49:18.500] Okay. And they're likely to write you a check to keep it from costing them more for litigation [02:49:18.500 --> 02:49:26.500] because their lawyers cost a couple hundred bucks an hour. Yeah. So you sue them for a lot and then [02:49:27.220 --> 02:49:31.780] offer to settle for a little. They write you a check and you go out and get them to screw [02:49:31.780 --> 02:49:41.700] something up so you can sue them again. But if you got him sanctioned, suing him is dead bang. [02:49:43.940 --> 02:49:50.260] Okay. So I want to go back to what Brett was saying before. I think both of you guys were [02:49:50.260 --> 02:49:58.820] saying before to sue them in small claims. Am I suing the custodian of records for not disclosing [02:49:58.820 --> 02:50:05.780] those two records or am I suing the deputies because you can't appeal a small claim suit [02:50:05.780 --> 02:50:12.340] in California? You can't appeal a small claims? [02:50:13.700 --> 02:50:21.060] No, you can't appeal. How much does it cost to sue them in the county court? [02:50:21.060 --> 02:50:30.820] I can't remember. There's two different tiers, one for [02:50:31.540 --> 02:50:38.420] limited civil liability and then for unlimited. And maybe the one is $75 and I don't remember [02:50:38.420 --> 02:50:44.820] what the other one is. That's not bad. Last time I sued in the county court in Texas, [02:50:44.820 --> 02:50:53.220] it cost me just over 400 bucks. That was too much. That's why I was doing small claims. [02:50:56.420 --> 02:51:00.420] Okay, but if I do it in the state court, then I would be able to appeal. [02:51:00.980 --> 02:51:08.740] Okay. And then I could get the discovery because what happened was they knew that the woman's name [02:51:08.740 --> 02:51:16.420] was Sophia, the suspect that robbed the store. And as soon as they approached me, they said, [02:51:16.420 --> 02:51:26.180] is your name Teresa? So they knew that I didn't even have the name of the suspect. And what these [02:51:26.180 --> 02:51:34.660] adults did, they put in their police report. She immediately became defensive and refused to [02:51:34.660 --> 02:51:41.300] identify herself. She requested an attorney and wanted to invoke her rights to remain silent [02:51:41.300 --> 02:51:47.140] while also threatening to sue the Monterey County Sheriff's Office. Bacola boasted she was involved [02:51:47.140 --> 02:51:51.860] in multiple multimillion dollar lawsuits against various entities of Monterey County. [02:51:56.340 --> 02:51:58.900] Wow. They just went ahead and put it right in there. [02:51:58.900 --> 02:52:09.060] Okay. Yes. So yeah, who am I suing? Am I suing? Oh, you said, okay, it's the state court. Okay. [02:52:09.060 --> 02:52:19.620] The other question I have is, do you have to identify if they are looking for a thief in the area? [02:52:20.020 --> 02:52:26.980] No. No. But wait, don't get past this part of, you have these other things and they said they know [02:52:26.980 --> 02:52:31.940] that you have these other things going on because that means that when you do sue them, [02:52:32.900 --> 02:52:39.300] you get to ring them up not only for this unlawful restraint, false arrest, or whatever California [02:52:39.300 --> 02:52:49.540] calls it, you get to also ring them up for the witness intimidation. And I think that's [02:52:50.260 --> 02:52:56.260] the retaliation and obstruction of justice and witness intimidation that's involved with [02:52:56.980 --> 02:53:04.020] going after you because you're going after them. That's retaliation. Yeah. [02:53:04.900 --> 02:53:07.540] They're trying to shut you up because you're a potential witness. [02:53:08.420 --> 02:53:12.580] Yeah. If they're trying to shut you up, that's tampering with witness. [02:53:12.580 --> 02:53:27.380] Yes. Okay. Yeah, because he also tried a gander at my last name. He said, [02:53:28.500 --> 02:53:35.700] I mean, they clearly knew who I was. No, pardon me. He didn't. He didn't have my last name correct. [02:53:35.700 --> 02:53:42.340] He said, are you Teresa Bungalow? And that's not my last name. So clearly, [02:53:42.980 --> 02:53:48.980] I did not fit the description of the suspect. And I went to talk to the woman that got robbed [02:53:48.980 --> 02:53:56.740] and she said, you don't look anything like her. She has long frizzy brown hair and a big butt. [02:53:58.340 --> 02:54:03.380] And she's shorter. If I remember your picture, you did not have a big butt. [02:54:03.940 --> 02:54:08.340] I don't think I've ever had a picture of my butt online, but. [02:54:09.780 --> 02:54:15.380] Well, your general structure, you were rather petite, as I recall. [02:54:15.940 --> 02:54:20.820] Back out of it, Randy. I am squealing in reverse. [02:54:25.780 --> 02:54:27.860] Open mouth, insert foot. [02:54:27.860 --> 02:54:36.580] We do not have to identify if they are investigating a crime. [02:54:39.860 --> 02:54:44.900] No. They can investigate all they want to, but that doesn't mean you are compelled to [02:54:44.900 --> 02:54:51.380] give them evidence. They can investigate. These guys are doing these audits. [02:54:52.100 --> 02:54:57.460] The cop says they're investigating. He said, well, I have no duty to help you investigate. [02:54:57.460 --> 02:55:03.780] So go investigate. Don't bother me. Right. And if he wants to investigate, [02:55:03.780 --> 02:55:10.660] and let's say he's trying to look inside some box and you're getting in blocking and [02:55:10.660 --> 02:55:15.860] physically preventing him from looking in that box, now you're obstructing him. [02:55:17.220 --> 02:55:23.540] But if all you're doing is you're being silent because you refuse to be compelled to give [02:55:23.540 --> 02:55:28.180] evidence, well, that's not, you're not bothering his investigation. [02:55:30.260 --> 02:55:35.380] Okay, great. And then they can't threaten me and from, I mean, it was really scary. [02:55:37.300 --> 02:55:43.780] Of course. And well, you're saying what they can do, and there's what they may and what they [02:55:43.780 --> 02:55:47.860] do, two different things. But hold that thought. We'll be right back. [02:55:54.020 --> 02:55:59.940] America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [02:55:59.940 --> 02:56:05.140] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [02:56:05.140 --> 02:56:09.700] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to [02:56:09.700 --> 02:56:15.540] know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three volume set called basic [02:56:15.540 --> 02:56:20.500] elements of the Christian life. Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life [02:56:20.500 --> 02:56:26.900] clearly presents God's plan of salvation growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [02:56:26.900 --> 02:56:32.420] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, [02:56:32.900 --> 02:56:39.540] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [02:56:39.540 --> 02:56:48.180] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [02:56:48.900 --> 02:56:57.380] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [02:57:01.140 --> 02:57:04.820] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. [02:57:04.820 --> 02:57:09.540] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on [02:57:09.540 --> 02:57:14.100] it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of [02:57:14.180 --> 02:57:19.940] your constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, [02:57:19.940 --> 02:57:25.060] you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will [02:57:25.060 --> 02:57:30.900] start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to [02:57:30.900 --> 02:57:36.420] yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service announcement is brought to you by [02:57:36.420 --> 02:57:43.060] startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with [02:57:43.060 --> 02:57:49.620] startpage. Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find [02:57:49.620 --> 02:57:54.340] a third party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. That [02:57:54.340 --> 02:57:59.060] shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the third amendment was designed [02:57:59.060 --> 02:58:04.260] to prevent. It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in [02:58:04.260 --> 02:58:09.540] the days of our founding fathers. Third party, third amendment, get it? So if you answer a knock [02:58:09.540 --> 02:58:14.100] at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the bill of [02:58:14.100 --> 02:58:19.140] rights and reread the third amendment. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at [02:58:19.140 --> 02:58:34.900] CatherineAlbrecht.com. The bill of rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. They [02:58:34.900 --> 02:58:39.780] guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [02:58:39.780 --> 02:58:44.260] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [02:58:44.260 --> 02:58:50.500] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never [02:58:50.500 --> 02:58:56.500] get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [02:58:56.500 --> 02:59:02.660] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [02:59:02.660 --> 02:59:07.860] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [02:59:07.860 --> 02:59:13.860] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [02:59:15.540 --> 02:59:19.940] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [02:59:19.940 --> 02:59:24.980] x-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the fourth amendment guarantees Americans freedom [02:59:24.980 --> 02:59:30.260] from unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [02:59:30.260 --> 02:59:34.500] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our fourth amendment rights in the name of security. [02:59:34.500 --> 02:59:40.100] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. When government employees [02:59:40.100 --> 02:59:45.140] demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional [02:59:45.140 --> 02:59:49.940] alarm bells. Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their [02:59:49.940 --> 02:59:55.620] googly eyes to take a gander at the fourth. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [02:59:55.620 --> 02:59:58.980] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:00:25.620 --> 03:00:54.580] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brat Fountain Rula Radio on this [03:00:55.620 --> 03:01:03.300] Friday, the 17th day of January 2025. And we're talking to Teresa in California. [03:01:04.260 --> 03:01:10.180] And Teresa has been beating him up big deal. You know big time, you know Bob in California, [03:01:10.180 --> 03:01:11.300] don't you? I do. [03:01:13.300 --> 03:01:23.540] That guy sent me a picture of his humanoid operation. That is just wrong. [03:01:24.340 --> 03:01:28.820] I will never get that image scraped off the back of my eyeball. [03:01:32.580 --> 03:01:36.020] Yeah, I think we went through this on the last time I called in. [03:01:38.820 --> 03:01:42.340] Okay, yeah, I know who you are now. I remember seeing a picture of you. [03:01:44.340 --> 03:01:48.580] Yeah, okay, so I want to read you a few of the other things that they wrote in the report. [03:01:49.140 --> 03:01:56.740] I conducted, these guys are so dumb. I conducted the pat search of her outer clothing [03:01:56.740 --> 03:02:02.500] and placed Teresa in the backseat of my patrol vehicle. I advised her once more she was not [03:02:02.500 --> 03:02:08.100] under arrest, but she was still detained until we could determine her identity. She stated she [03:02:08.100 --> 03:02:13.140] refused to identify herself because she wanted her attorney present. There they go again, [03:02:13.780 --> 03:02:19.700] admitting that I was invoking my six-minute right, for she believed she was being placed under [03:02:19.700 --> 03:02:27.940] arrest for suspicion of burglary. Deputy Bradford advised Teresa she was mandated by law to provide [03:02:27.940 --> 03:02:34.420] her identifying information while being lawfully detained by law enforcement. She still refused to [03:02:34.420 --> 03:02:40.660] identify herself. Oh, he has, so he's admitted in his statement. [03:02:44.100 --> 03:02:45.940] That he lied to you. [03:02:48.740 --> 03:02:54.020] He was, he admitted you were being detained. He didn't, he said lawfully, but that don't mean [03:02:54.020 --> 03:03:01.540] it was lawfully. Right. Well, it's also interesting that if he's, if he's saying that you've got all [03:03:01.540 --> 03:03:07.860] these actions against the city and county and whatever, well then clearly he knows your name. [03:03:07.860 --> 03:03:16.260] Well, it was, no, what wound up happening was before they threw the cuffs on, I said, you know, [03:03:16.260 --> 03:03:20.580] you guys should probably call somebody to find out who I am first because I already have a [03:03:20.580 --> 03:03:26.740] multi-million dollar lawsuit against the county. And I think it was Bradford who kind of rolled [03:03:26.740 --> 03:03:33.940] his eyes and he said something like, yeah, lawsuits, sure. Cause they probably thought I was [03:03:33.940 --> 03:03:40.820] blown smoke. And I don't, you know, and I, and actually right before I walked away, I said, [03:03:40.820 --> 03:03:44.980] yeah, I'm going to be in action in the federal court in San Jose on Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock [03:03:44.980 --> 03:03:50.420] if you guys want to come, because we had a hearing. So no, I wasn't blown, I wasn't blown [03:03:50.420 --> 03:03:57.780] smoke up their ass. Now it's their turn. He admitted they arrested you. [03:03:57.780 --> 03:04:06.020] He said it was lawful. That doesn't mean it was lawful. He patted you down. [03:04:08.340 --> 03:04:10.340] You interpret that as fondling. [03:04:12.980 --> 03:04:15.700] It is fondling. He had his hands all over my butt. [03:04:19.860 --> 03:04:22.820] Well, I saw your picture. That was no big deal. [03:04:23.220 --> 03:04:28.100] I'm recovering, Brett. I'm recovering. Did you just stick the other foot in there? [03:04:28.100 --> 03:04:35.060] No, no, no. I'm saying she didn't have a big butt. Trying to recover from earlier. [03:04:39.780 --> 03:04:46.260] She's one of those tiny women like my wife. Those tiny women are mean, mean, mean. [03:04:46.420 --> 03:04:51.220] Those tiny women are mean, mean, mean. Okay, anyway. [03:04:53.540 --> 03:04:56.100] So I'm thinking of what you could sue him for. [03:04:57.780 --> 03:05:00.020] Doesn't matter what you can prove up. Who cares? [03:05:01.140 --> 03:05:04.100] Well, they already wrote it in their stupid report. [03:05:06.500 --> 03:05:09.140] So sue him in the small claims court. [03:05:09.140 --> 03:05:18.820] Let them try to bring up any claims they want to. That's false imprisonment. False imprisonment, [03:05:19.460 --> 03:05:26.980] no immunity. Or sue him in that county court that costs like 75 bucks. [03:05:28.260 --> 03:05:33.860] So you've got the ability to appeal it out. So they're not going to want you to do that. [03:05:34.820 --> 03:05:38.020] So they're likely to write you a check just to get you to leave them alone. [03:05:38.820 --> 03:05:45.460] Since you have a history of suing them, they'll know you like it. And if you can force them to [03:05:45.460 --> 03:05:51.700] make a deal, then that looks good for you. Okay. Okay. [03:05:51.700 --> 03:05:55.380] They can complain about you suing a whole lot if you lose them all. [03:05:56.740 --> 03:06:01.700] But if you deal them out, then they don't get to complain about it. That means you're outstanding. [03:06:01.700 --> 03:06:12.420] Well, I just filed a notes of appeal on the other case. And I was just, [03:06:13.540 --> 03:06:20.020] I want to tell you guys that in the report, they have, I didn't give them any of this. [03:06:20.020 --> 03:06:28.500] They have my date of birth, my driver's license, my address. They shouldn't, I mean, isn't that a [03:06:28.500 --> 03:06:32.260] violation of my fourth amendment, right? Because I didn't give them all that stuff. [03:06:34.980 --> 03:06:42.420] I mean, if they were able to pull it from public records, where did they get that? [03:06:44.180 --> 03:06:49.540] Well, like I said, I've been taken there twice already, which is the reason I was suing the [03:06:49.540 --> 03:06:55.220] county. What I mean, did they recognize you and they just remembered that that was you or [03:06:56.180 --> 03:07:00.420] were you, did you have a car that had a registration, the plates, [03:07:01.940 --> 03:07:06.260] you look up the plates and it leads back to you? What was the, how did they get [03:07:07.700 --> 03:07:11.220] from pretending like they need to know who you are, but they already know who you are? [03:07:12.340 --> 03:07:18.500] Well, it only came out in their report later. And no, I wasn't in my car. I was just walking. [03:07:19.220 --> 03:07:25.460] And so I assume that they got all of that information from their jail [03:07:25.460 --> 03:07:28.980] system because I'm in the book there. I have been booked. [03:07:30.660 --> 03:07:36.580] But is that, I mean, do they have a right to access all those files because I just gave them my name? [03:07:38.580 --> 03:07:45.060] Yes, the police can. If they're doing an investigation, they can. [03:07:45.460 --> 03:07:53.140] No, they would have to have a search warrant. And the search warrant would have to be established [03:07:53.140 --> 03:07:58.180] based on probable cause. There'd have to be a crime. They'd have to go to the judge and say, [03:07:58.180 --> 03:08:03.620] hey, this lady fits the description, whatever, and convince the judge to sign a search warrant [03:08:03.620 --> 03:08:07.620] and let them do some, otherwise it's just a phishing expedition. [03:08:08.180 --> 03:08:13.940] Not to do a once in warrants. They can do a once in warrants without. [03:08:14.020 --> 03:08:15.220] Yeah, but they didn't have her name. [03:08:16.900 --> 03:08:18.180] No, I gave them my name. [03:08:20.260 --> 03:08:23.540] Oh, I thought you said you only gave them your last name. [03:08:25.140 --> 03:08:30.100] No, my first and last name so that they wouldn't take me to jail and they would [03:08:30.100 --> 03:08:36.180] take me out of the handcuffs and out of the car. Okay. Well, you need to get clear on what [03:08:36.260 --> 03:08:45.300] specifically California requires for, is California one of these stop and identify states? [03:08:45.860 --> 03:08:46.660] No, it is not. [03:08:47.540 --> 03:08:52.900] Okay. And you need to get clear on what constitutes an identification [03:08:53.940 --> 03:08:58.820] because they might demand certain things that you don't have to give them. You might, [03:08:58.820 --> 03:09:04.900] for example, need to only give them your name, address and date of birth, but they'll ask for [03:09:04.900 --> 03:09:12.180] more, you know, so just get clear on what those items are. But yeah, once they have [03:09:12.180 --> 03:09:22.340] a little bit, they can look up the rest. Okay. Okay. All right, gentlemen, I think that's it [03:09:22.340 --> 03:09:26.980] for me. Okay. All right. Well, thanks for calling. [03:09:28.020 --> 03:09:34.020] Thank you. Keep up the good work. I will. I will. All right. Good night. [03:09:34.980 --> 03:09:38.340] Okay. Now we're going to Eric in Massachusetts. Hello, Eric. [03:09:39.460 --> 03:09:42.740] You were going to explain to us the common law. [03:09:43.620 --> 03:09:47.460] I'll explain it to you. It's not that hard. It really isn't. It does, you know, [03:09:47.460 --> 03:09:51.460] sort of take a little bit to wrap your head around, but it's not that complicated. [03:09:51.460 --> 03:09:57.220] So let's start with the patriot. This will only take a few minutes. So let's start with the [03:09:57.220 --> 03:10:06.180] patriot mythos guys, right? So for example, if you went to an insane asylum, right? And would you [03:10:06.180 --> 03:10:11.620] expect to be able to explain the lot, logically explain what these people thought? Of course not [03:10:11.620 --> 03:10:17.780] because they're insane. Now, patriot mythos people are, as all three of us would agree, [03:10:17.780 --> 03:10:23.860] they're undereducated. They don't know what they're talking about. So we can't expect them [03:10:23.860 --> 03:10:30.500] to understand what common law is. We can't expect them to have a grasp of the law system at all. [03:10:30.500 --> 03:10:34.820] So what these people are doing, which we're all sort of guilty of at some point, [03:10:35.940 --> 03:10:43.060] is we're trying to grasp a magic wand, a magic word that will open up the gate [03:10:43.700 --> 03:10:50.500] to the law that we think we deserve, right? Right, right. It's the, this is how they get you. [03:10:51.460 --> 03:10:56.820] If you just say this or just hold your tongue right, sign at an angle. Now they can't get you. [03:10:58.100 --> 03:11:03.940] Right. Exactly. Because we, in sort of the common law, common sense, we think, well, [03:11:03.940 --> 03:11:08.820] this is the way it's supposed to be. So there's this magic wand. Now, Randy, have you ever seen [03:11:08.820 --> 03:11:16.260] the movie Fantasia? Are you a little bit older than that movie? In that movie, in that movie, [03:11:16.820 --> 03:11:22.340] Mickey Mouse picks up the magic wand, but that didn't make him a magician, did it? [03:11:23.060 --> 03:11:30.500] What did it do? It caused a lot of problems, a big giant mess until the actual magician came along [03:11:30.500 --> 03:11:36.260] and had to unwind everything that Mickey Mouse was doing. So all these Patriot mythos guys, [03:11:36.260 --> 03:11:42.340] they pick up the magic wand and create a big giant problem. So everything that they do, [03:11:42.980 --> 03:11:48.180] you can't make it logical and you can't rationalize it and you just have to discount it [03:11:48.180 --> 03:11:51.540] because they're looking for the magic wand. All right. So that's the Patriot mythos. [03:11:52.820 --> 03:11:58.980] If you read through common, through a lot of stuff, you see common law, they use the term [03:11:58.980 --> 03:12:07.860] common law. Common law is both sort of logic, what we as Western society Christians, Christian based [03:12:07.860 --> 03:12:17.380] law system, as this makes sense to us, and what is case law. So case law is common law, but not [03:12:17.380 --> 03:12:25.460] all common law is necessarily case law. You can still sort of plead something as common law, [03:12:25.460 --> 03:12:32.820] but as your inclination is to believe, it's not going to be easy because you're in the realm of [03:12:33.780 --> 03:12:43.460] equity. The courts, especially the higher courts, will look at things sort of in an equitable manner, [03:12:43.460 --> 03:12:53.540] which is not hard facts. There's a little bit of room there. And Alexis, our friend Alexis, [03:12:53.540 --> 03:12:59.140] he found a case, which is probably a good example. I'm assuming it exists. I didn't see it myself. [03:12:59.220 --> 03:13:06.260] So Dr. Kevorkian. So he went up in trial three times in Michigan. The first two times, [03:13:06.260 --> 03:13:12.180] they tried to take him, as I understand it, as I remember, they tried to take him under law. [03:13:13.380 --> 03:13:19.540] But there is no law. There was no law for assisted suicide. He's not doing the work. [03:13:20.500 --> 03:13:26.260] He's just letting the other guy do the work. But the Michigan attorney general, supposedly, [03:13:26.900 --> 03:13:32.820] brought him a third time under common law. And what would that make? What would that be? [03:13:32.820 --> 03:13:38.180] The common law would be, well, you help somebody kill somebody. You help somebody kill themselves. [03:13:39.540 --> 03:13:45.060] That's common law. You can't help somebody kill themselves. Does that make sense? [03:13:46.500 --> 03:13:52.180] No, I'm more confused now than when you started. No, not at all. [03:13:52.180 --> 03:13:58.180] Okay, let's get it on the other side. Randy Calvert, Fountain. [03:14:52.180 --> 03:15:04.180] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so [03:15:04.180 --> 03:15:08.820] addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fixed. I'd be lost without [03:15:08.820 --> 03:15:13.460] logos. And I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a [03:15:13.460 --> 03:15:17.860] show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I [03:15:17.860 --> 03:15:23.380] spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you [03:15:23.380 --> 03:15:28.340] order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [03:15:28.340 --> 03:15:35.700] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo [03:15:35.700 --> 03:15:41.620] and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few [03:15:41.620 --> 03:15:47.220] pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have to do anything different when I order? No. Can I use [03:15:47.220 --> 03:15:53.300] my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [03:15:53.300 --> 03:15:59.220] This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are welcome. Happy holidays, logos. [03:16:48.180 --> 03:16:53.300] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, beautiful radio. And it may be Eric, [03:16:53.300 --> 03:17:00.500] you're talking faster than I can listen. Luckily, we record the program so you can listen to it a [03:17:00.500 --> 03:17:13.060] bunch of times. I'll give you another one. Tort law, I'm guessing, is essentially common law [03:17:13.060 --> 03:17:18.820] because there's no laws that say you can't slander somebody, right? I could be wrong, [03:17:18.820 --> 03:17:24.500] but a lot of- Yeah, there are. Well, there's not laws that say you can't slander. There are [03:17:24.500 --> 03:17:32.420] laws that say that if you do slander, you are subject to being- Yeah, the flandery has a cause [03:17:32.420 --> 03:17:42.980] of action. Right, but again, correct me. I haven't researched it fully, but that's all from case law [03:17:43.060 --> 03:17:52.340] law, right? There's not- Yes, yes. As a matter of fact, it is. Yes. I don't know. I think it [03:17:52.340 --> 03:17:58.820] goes way back before that too, for America, straight out of the Bible. Slander is a cause [03:17:58.820 --> 03:18:09.700] of action. So it's from the common law, but it has been codified into a cause of action. [03:18:10.660 --> 03:18:17.460] Exactly. Right. But all of the common law has been, for the most part, the common law has been [03:18:17.460 --> 03:18:24.020] codified into either civil causes of action or criminal statutes. [03:18:27.140 --> 03:18:33.940] Okay. At least my understanding of it. Yeah, criminal causes of action would be crimes, [03:18:33.940 --> 03:18:47.620] so criminal offenses. But there's lots of torts that I think are strictly from case law. And again, [03:18:47.620 --> 03:18:55.620] I could be wrong, but- Yeah, I'm sure the truth there are. Well, I think when you get into some [03:18:55.620 --> 03:19:02.980] of the newer things, then you'll find that to be more and more true. Because as the society develops [03:19:02.980 --> 03:19:11.220] more, then it needs more things like, yeah, they violated, there was a copyright infringement. [03:19:11.860 --> 03:19:19.060] They stepped on my trademark or something. And then those start to become more and more distant [03:19:19.060 --> 03:19:25.620] from common law. People treat each other how you want to be treated. It starts to become more [03:19:25.620 --> 03:19:33.460] distant from what is innately the right and wrong way to be to each other. [03:19:35.780 --> 03:19:40.660] That's philosophically what common law is. I'm more interested in common law [03:19:41.460 --> 03:19:48.500] as in terms of how it's used. And looked at a court case where the judge said they couldn't touch [03:19:48.500 --> 03:19:55.940] this case because it was cited in a common law court. What is a common law court? Convene one. [03:19:55.940 --> 03:20:03.300] What are the rules? What are the structures? I think Alex is correct, and you have to look at [03:20:03.300 --> 03:20:10.740] black law. But from what I've seen a lot of times when the courts are referencing common law, [03:20:11.460 --> 03:20:15.300] they're referencing case law. And I made a post. [03:20:15.300 --> 03:20:21.060] I don't think so. I think they're referencing principles. [03:20:21.060 --> 03:20:33.540] The courts, they want us to think that their case law is common law. It's not. [03:20:33.700 --> 03:20:43.700] But what common law, in case law, is case law. Case law is judicial decisions based on applications [03:20:43.700 --> 03:20:51.620] of statutory law. Statutory law is the sovereign's law, not the common law. They made that distinct, [03:20:51.700 --> 03:21:03.220] common law. They made that distinct, what do you call it, Brett? Agnacarta libertatum made that [03:21:03.220 --> 03:21:13.380] distinction that if the sovereign issued an order or edict and it was not compatible with [03:21:13.380 --> 03:21:20.340] the common law, the magistrates were forbidden to enforce sovereign's edict. So the common law [03:21:20.340 --> 03:21:33.460] was different. Rather, our statutory law is a problem with words. It is the sovereign law, [03:21:33.460 --> 03:21:39.620] but we're the sovereign. So just for the sovereign, we're the common people. [03:21:40.740 --> 03:21:47.620] It's our law. It's not like we have a king who can issue ediction. So [03:21:47.620 --> 03:22:00.100] all law, I look at it as common law. It's just our legislature has taken common law and defined it, [03:22:01.860 --> 03:22:02.580] specified it. [03:22:02.580 --> 03:22:09.620] Common law is defined as unwritten law. I think Alex said that, and I agree with that. [03:22:09.620 --> 03:22:15.140] It's unwritten law is not law. That's a contradiction of terms. [03:22:16.100 --> 03:22:19.460] It's unstated. There's no statute to it. [03:22:21.780 --> 03:22:28.740] And it has no, it's not law, it's custom. And that's what Agnacarta said it was. [03:22:30.100 --> 03:22:30.600] Okay. [03:22:33.060 --> 03:22:36.020] It was the customs of people. That was the common law. [03:22:36.020 --> 03:22:45.220] But all the little we have done as the commoners and the sovereign is we took that common law [03:22:45.860 --> 03:22:51.860] and ask our legislators and legislators and our judges, [03:22:53.220 --> 03:22:56.180] legislatures first to take this common law. [03:22:57.140 --> 03:23:02.980] Murder was a common law crime. Take that crime and define it, specify it. [03:23:03.940 --> 03:23:08.580] So we can be more accurate in wielding the common law. [03:23:09.940 --> 03:23:15.780] But at this point, these guys come in and they're going to use a common law court. [03:23:16.740 --> 03:23:22.340] Okay, just exactly how do you convene a common law court? [03:23:23.380 --> 03:23:24.580] Right, great question. [03:23:26.340 --> 03:23:28.420] This is what we've always been looking for. [03:23:28.420 --> 03:23:32.820] Then I get this song and dance and seltzer down your pants. [03:23:34.020 --> 03:23:37.060] Again, I think you're trying to rationalize uneducated people's [03:23:37.060 --> 03:23:42.020] opinion on our common law court. 800 years ago might have been a jury. [03:23:42.740 --> 03:23:48.180] And that's what they considered a common law court, which is kind of what Alex said. [03:23:49.460 --> 03:23:50.260] So I can see. [03:23:50.260 --> 03:23:55.940] Yeah. Well, the way I explained it, I did some research on it recently, [03:23:56.260 --> 03:24:04.260] is like the older cultures, when someone did something wrong, they brought up people. [03:24:05.780 --> 03:24:13.300] And they made their arguments before the people and the people ruled. They decided what to do. [03:24:14.500 --> 03:24:20.340] If it was dunking the witch 50 times or burning them at the stake or whatever, [03:24:21.300 --> 03:24:23.380] people decided it was the common law. [03:24:24.900 --> 03:24:32.260] But as we became more sophisticated, then we had more people doing bad things and [03:24:32.820 --> 03:24:37.380] couldn't get the whole community together all at once. So we started picking groups [03:24:38.180 --> 03:24:47.540] of people from the common people, your peers. And that turned into a jury of our peers. [03:24:48.260 --> 03:24:51.620] Here, I have a, go ahead. [03:24:51.620 --> 03:24:57.620] If anything is common law, that's it. Thomas Jefferson said, [03:24:58.420 --> 03:25:04.580] best remedy to bad law is a jury who cannot enforce it. Judges want to say, [03:25:06.020 --> 03:25:10.580] jury determines the facts, judge determines the law. [03:25:10.580 --> 03:25:14.580] Horse manure, jury determines both of them. [03:25:16.260 --> 03:25:23.220] They, the judges want to take control of the law, take it away from the common law. [03:25:23.220 --> 03:25:30.980] And common law is still the jury. And it's still in law, the jury determines the facts and the law. [03:25:33.940 --> 03:25:38.660] Judges are trying to take that, and that's one of the fights I wanna get to, but just not yet. [03:25:38.660 --> 03:25:41.940] So if we have common law, it's the jury's. [03:25:44.500 --> 03:25:45.220] Don't have any- [03:25:45.220 --> 03:25:54.740] Let's see here about this, the Black's law dictionary that we were trying to hear about earlier [03:25:55.460 --> 03:26:02.340] and the cases that support this definition. There's a piece of it here that looks particularly [03:26:02.340 --> 03:26:11.540] salient. It says, as distinguished from law created by the enactment of legislatures, [03:26:13.220 --> 03:26:23.300] the common law, common please law, comprises the body of those principles and rules of action [03:26:24.260 --> 03:26:28.020] relating to the government and security of persons and property, [03:26:28.980 --> 03:26:37.300] which derive their authority solely from usages and customs of immemorial antiquity, [03:26:38.740 --> 03:26:44.180] or from the judgments and decrees of courts recognizing, affirming, and enforcing such [03:26:44.740 --> 03:26:55.380] usages and customs. Now that, to me, that I think encapsulates it very well, [03:26:55.380 --> 03:26:57.380] and it references a whole string of- [03:27:00.580 --> 03:27:06.420] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, [03:27:06.420 --> 03:27:10.660] the hackers will come, and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. 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By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [03:29:43.140 --> 03:29:47.700] Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [03:29:47.700 --> 03:29:51.620] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your [03:29:51.620 --> 03:29:55.540] rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, [03:29:55.540 --> 03:29:58.660] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [03:29:58.660 --> 03:30:06.180] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [03:30:28.660 --> 03:30:43.140] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking [03:30:43.140 --> 03:30:48.820] to Eric in Massachusetts, and I've kind of come to the conclusion that we can't figure out what [03:30:48.820 --> 03:30:57.220] common law really is. But I'm also to the conclusion that we don't have any kind of definition of a [03:30:57.220 --> 03:31:05.060] common law court. So we're how to invoke one or how to convert one that you've been dragged into, [03:31:05.060 --> 03:31:09.940] and people say, oh, well, once you've been dragged in there, you just say this and it converts it to [03:31:09.940 --> 03:31:23.060] a common law court. I don't see where that can happen. Okay, anything else, Eric? Yeah, I have [03:31:23.060 --> 03:31:27.380] a couple of simple questions. Quick, where does common law court ever get mentioned anywhere? [03:31:27.380 --> 03:31:36.420] Like where is it? It's not in Article 1 court, Article 3 court, Marine court or whatever that is. [03:31:37.620 --> 03:31:43.220] Maritime, yeah. Maritime court. I don't know. Where's the common law court mentioned anywhere? [03:31:44.340 --> 03:31:50.980] Good point. Exactly. All right, so my simple question. This is a yes or no question. Can you [03:31:50.980 --> 03:31:57.700] still do, if you have a case going on, can you still do a FOIA or whatever it is at the state level [03:31:58.340 --> 03:32:06.740] or do you only have to do discovery? No. Once you file a case, you no longer have access [03:32:06.740 --> 03:32:12.580] to open records, at least it's that way in Texas. Some open records will be available to you and [03:32:12.580 --> 03:32:20.100] others won't. You won't have access to open records that would be records that would be [03:32:20.100 --> 03:32:26.500] subject to discovery. Exactly. So most of the things that you would think of that are going [03:32:26.500 --> 03:32:32.420] to be exculpatory evidence, that's going to be tied up in your specific case and that's [03:32:32.420 --> 03:32:37.220] actually that's available via discovery and so then it's not available via public records request. [03:32:38.500 --> 03:32:47.300] However, your buddy, your sister-in-law, your neighbor can make those public records requests [03:32:47.620 --> 03:32:53.380] and you can also do those same requests via discovery. [03:32:54.180 --> 03:32:59.860] So can I say there's more than one way to skin a cat or would that be insensitive? [03:33:02.900 --> 03:33:05.460] It's only an expression. Hopefully you're not actually skinning a cat. [03:33:06.420 --> 03:33:11.940] Okay, so I won't. I'll say there's more than one way to skin a dog. Okay. [03:33:12.900 --> 03:33:19.300] Next question, simple question. Here's an interesting one. So I filed a lawsuit against [03:33:19.300 --> 03:33:24.980] the Board of Health in their personal capacity because they were operating outside of scope, [03:33:24.980 --> 03:33:32.580] but the city keeps involving itself, keeps financially defending using their attorneys [03:33:32.580 --> 03:33:41.380] to defend this Board of Health and I motioned the court to not allow that and they denied [03:33:41.380 --> 03:33:46.740] my motion and that lawyers keep defending, but I was thinking, well, wait a minute, [03:33:46.740 --> 03:33:53.380] that's an interesting way to let's say you don't file two months in advance to file a lawsuit [03:33:53.380 --> 03:34:03.860] against somebody, a municipality or government or whatever, and if the city is involving itself, [03:34:04.820 --> 03:34:11.060] well, then I don't have to give them notice, right? I mean, basically they've involved themselves, [03:34:11.060 --> 03:34:16.740] so now they're already kind of an interesting little trick. [03:34:18.740 --> 03:34:29.140] So then let's say I went against the board, right? Does the town have to pay me? [03:34:31.780 --> 03:34:37.540] Are you talking about adding the board as an entity, a fictional entity of itself as its own [03:34:37.540 --> 03:34:44.100] defendant? Well, you know, so I basically sued the Board of Health and I named every individual [03:34:44.100 --> 03:34:49.460] and I named them, I said, I'm suing these people in their individual capacity. They operated outside [03:34:49.460 --> 03:34:56.020] of scope. Right, because they're criminals. Right. But the town is still defending them, [03:34:56.020 --> 03:35:06.340] the town is still utilizing their lawyers and their money and the judge didn't allow, [03:35:06.340 --> 03:35:14.740] this allowed me to exclude their lawyers. So that is an issue that you need to take before [03:35:14.740 --> 03:35:26.100] another judge. What I would do is disqualify that judge. He's either incompetent or he's insane or [03:35:26.100 --> 03:35:31.140] he's intentionally criminal. I don't care which he's not, he can't sit on this case. He needs to [03:35:31.140 --> 03:35:39.300] get thumped off. And I want to take this matter of his ruling that the public has to pay for [03:35:40.740 --> 03:35:46.260] the judge's buddy to get defense. That can come out of the public coffers. [03:35:47.700 --> 03:35:54.980] No. So take that ruling of him throwing your motion to strike pleadings, take that ruling [03:35:54.980 --> 03:36:02.020] and make an interlocutory appeal. You petition the appellate court for an interlocutory order [03:36:02.020 --> 03:36:14.580] to that effect. Yeah. Okay. But, but so, which I agree with, but does that now put the, [03:36:14.580 --> 03:36:21.460] the city on the hook? So let's say I do win the case. Does the town have to pay for that? [03:36:21.460 --> 03:36:28.980] Like I don't. No, I don't think so because the town is not properly a defendant. [03:36:29.780 --> 03:36:35.140] The town's money is being sucked up inappropriately to pay for these criminals [03:36:36.260 --> 03:36:42.420] to have some legal defense. But that doesn't mean that the town is properly named and properly [03:36:43.300 --> 03:36:51.140] charged with anything. You don't have a count in your causes of action. You don't have a count [03:36:51.140 --> 03:36:59.940] that says that the city as an entity did this. Here's the list of facts that go to essential [03:36:59.940 --> 03:37:07.460] elements for some cause of action that the city did. You don't have that. So no, the city is not [03:37:08.340 --> 03:37:15.140] on the hook. Okay. But you think I should take it to the appeals court, which is interesting. [03:37:15.620 --> 03:37:21.540] So as I'm, as I'm doing this. Yeah. And I would also, not just that, I would make sure that in [03:37:21.540 --> 03:37:28.340] the trial court, you file an exception, raise an exception to the judicial error. So that's, [03:37:28.340 --> 03:37:33.220] you're preserving it as best you can in the trial court. And you're petitioning the appellate court [03:37:33.220 --> 03:37:41.620] to review and reverse it. You could also at the same time, in parallel track, you could be filing [03:37:41.620 --> 03:37:52.340] a judicial misconduct complaint because this judge allows some publicly paid attorney to defend [03:37:53.140 --> 03:38:00.660] criminals of his choosing. He wouldn't do that if it was you. He wouldn't hire the city attorneys [03:38:00.660 --> 03:38:04.820] to be your defenders. Yeah. [03:38:10.900 --> 03:38:18.820] So what, what's interesting is just real quick. What's interesting is the town solicitor, the [03:38:18.820 --> 03:38:27.700] lawyer explained in part of his motion and his reply motion or opposition motion that the board [03:38:27.700 --> 03:38:34.420] of health is actually not a board of health and is operating somehow differently than the state [03:38:34.420 --> 03:38:48.260] law allows. Okay. Like based on ordinances. So they, they, they wrote ordinances that allow this, [03:38:48.260 --> 03:38:55.380] which, you know, we have a home rule and we have a strong, a very strong sort of home rule. So [03:38:55.380 --> 03:39:02.500] all legislature cannot be overwritten by state ordinance. So our home rule, I guess our home rule [03:39:02.500 --> 03:39:08.580] is weak. It's not strong. So they can't do that. And I'm like, I can't believe this guy just sent [03:39:08.580 --> 03:39:14.660] this to me, which, you know, only supports that these people are operating outside of the code [03:39:14.660 --> 03:39:18.100] because they're, they're not even a board of health. So call themselves a board of health, [03:39:18.100 --> 03:39:23.060] but they're not a board of health. So I'm glad I asked that question because you brought a whole [03:39:23.060 --> 03:39:29.140] new dimension to it that I didn't even think about. So, so if you wish to move on, you can. [03:39:30.420 --> 03:39:39.860] Oh, cool. I'm glad that was helpful. You have someone else waiting. Yes, we do. Okay. I'll let [03:39:39.860 --> 03:39:47.620] you go on then. Thank you so much. All right. Thanks for calling Eric. Yep. All right. And next up [03:39:48.580 --> 03:39:53.620] we've got Steve in Georgia. Good evening, Steve. What's on your mind? [03:39:55.220 --> 03:40:01.380] Hey, good evening, guys. Hey, did you guys get a chance to take notice and review [03:40:02.100 --> 03:40:04.980] of that case law, Betterman versus Montana? [03:40:07.300 --> 03:40:07.800] No. [03:40:10.180 --> 03:40:10.900] No. [03:40:10.900 --> 03:40:12.740] Did we have a chance to do a what? [03:40:12.740 --> 03:40:18.340] A, a citizen. I don't remember seeing your email [03:40:21.460 --> 03:40:26.500] or I would have looked at it, but I don't remember seeing anything from here. [03:40:28.740 --> 03:40:31.300] That doesn't mean I didn't. They couldn't, we could have missed it. [03:40:35.380 --> 03:40:39.300] Yeah, it's nice. It came to you guys two weeks ago over the air. [03:40:39.300 --> 03:40:42.500] Is that a reading assignment? [03:40:45.700 --> 03:40:49.460] No, it wasn't an email. Okay. What was it? Betterman? [03:40:51.220 --> 03:40:58.340] Yeah. Betterman versus Montana. Oh, Betterman. Okay. Yeah. Oh, 578 U.S. [03:40:59.140 --> 03:41:04.420] Do you have a business with five employees or more? 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[03:41:51.140 --> 03:41:59.060] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [03:42:02.580 --> 03:42:07.460] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney [03:42:07.460 --> 03:42:13.460] with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, four CD course that will show you [03:42:13.460 --> 03:42:20.740] how in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [03:42:20.740 --> 03:42:26.020] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our [03:42:26.020 --> 03:42:31.940] step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed [03:42:31.940 --> 03:42:38.580] attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn [03:42:38.580 --> 03:42:43.460] what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our [03:42:43.460 --> 03:42:51.140] American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [03:42:51.140 --> 03:42:57.940] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [03:42:57.940 --> 03:43:01.780] or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [03:43:51.140 --> 03:44:17.540] Okay, we are back. This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountains, [03:44:17.620 --> 03:44:25.940] and we are talking with Steve in Georgia. All right, Steve, you had just mentioned, [03:44:25.940 --> 03:44:32.980] right before we went to the sponsors, you had mentioned a reference to a case, Betterman [03:44:33.620 --> 03:44:42.820] versus Montana. I don't know if this is the one you're talking about. I found a 578 US 437 [03:44:43.700 --> 03:44:50.820] in 2016 that's talking about Speedy Trial. Is that what you had on your mind? [03:44:52.100 --> 03:44:57.060] Yes, that's the one I was referring to, United States Constitutional right to a Speedy Trial. [03:44:58.660 --> 03:45:01.620] Yes. Well, what's your question about that? [03:45:03.780 --> 03:45:05.300] Did you guys ever review it? [03:45:07.460 --> 03:45:12.500] Well, no, I haven't until just now. When we went to sponsors, I just kind of skimmed through it [03:45:13.220 --> 03:45:19.620] right now. Well, as I bring it to everybody's attention, if they're ever [03:45:19.620 --> 03:45:24.180] arrested again, I mean, I think you guys have been arrested, I'm sure a few others, [03:45:25.620 --> 03:45:31.620] that in a criminal proceeding, which under Betterman, this Sixth Amendment United States [03:45:31.620 --> 03:45:38.900] Constitutional right, it shields the accused upon an arrest or a formal accusation before [03:45:38.900 --> 03:45:48.580] a conviction, meaning it's already 30 days. And if you're arrested, that means the moving party, [03:45:48.580 --> 03:45:53.860] which would be the cop that arrests you and the prosecutor, on their misdemeanor, they have to [03:45:53.860 --> 03:46:00.180] bring you, you have a right to a trial within 30 days and a felony, it would be 70 days [03:46:00.740 --> 03:46:07.300] under Betterman. And it's a United States Supreme Court case that protects the accused, [03:46:07.300 --> 03:46:17.940] the opinion, it was unanimous, it was written by Ginsburg, and Thomas and Alito agreed. So it was [03:46:17.940 --> 03:46:27.300] a unanimous decision that it will trump Barker versus Wingo if a prosecutor tries to use Barker [03:46:27.300 --> 03:46:34.660] versus Wingo where the accused has to prove, no, it's already asserted there for you. And once the [03:46:34.660 --> 03:46:40.100] cop puts your hands on you and he arrests you without going to the state first, would it be [03:46:40.100 --> 03:46:47.540] the prosecutor to ask him about preferring charges? Well, that triggered the arrest, [03:46:47.540 --> 03:46:52.500] meaning the clock starts ticking right there. The cop put his hands on you, he arrested you, [03:46:53.060 --> 03:47:00.420] put you in jail, wherever picked up off a warrant. Well, they got 30 days to bring you before [03:47:00.420 --> 03:47:06.020] an impartial jury trial. And when they don't, they violate it. And under Betterman, [03:47:06.660 --> 03:47:11.860] violation of the United States Constitution right to the Sixth Amendment Speedy Trial Clause [03:47:12.580 --> 03:47:20.580] is dismissal of the charges. Everybody should have that written down if they're ever falsely arrested [03:47:20.580 --> 03:47:27.300] or one of the authorities put their hands on you and falsely arrest you. You don't let them [03:47:27.940 --> 03:47:32.420] take months and months like they normally do before they take... [03:47:32.420 --> 03:47:38.500] Yeah, they do normally try that. That's handy. That's good because it specifies days here. [03:47:38.500 --> 03:47:44.580] And this is federal, so that's pretty cool. It specifies 30 days between arrest and indictment. [03:47:45.700 --> 03:47:51.620] And of course, you know, when they're trying to have, a lot of times they're wanting to go ahead [03:47:51.620 --> 03:47:55.140] and skip the indictment and just jump to the part where you say you're guilty of something. [03:47:56.100 --> 03:48:04.900] But yeah, once 30 days passes, then that time's up. That's their chance. That's it. [03:48:06.420 --> 03:48:14.660] Right. That's just misdemeanors. The felonies is 70 days. And this is only for criminal proceedings, [03:48:14.660 --> 03:48:20.260] and you can't be convicted. I mean, you have to be not convicted of it yet for it to apply. [03:48:21.060 --> 03:48:27.060] Under Betteman, he pled guilty because he bail jumped and failed to appear. [03:48:28.100 --> 03:48:35.620] So it did apply for him, but it will apply for a person that hasn't been convicted but arrested. [03:48:35.620 --> 03:48:42.020] So that triggers the start. It starts ticking. That 30 days, if it's a misdemeanor, [03:48:42.020 --> 03:48:46.980] they got to bring you before an impartial jury trial. And if they don't, [03:48:47.940 --> 03:48:53.780] under that 90th State Supreme Court case, Justice Ginsburg delivered, [03:48:54.740 --> 03:49:02.580] and she also goes on with an excellent opinion on this. If I can read some, it says, let's see. [03:49:07.060 --> 03:49:13.380] Ultimately found to be innocent, the major evils protected against the speedy trial guarantees [03:49:13.380 --> 03:49:19.140] we observe. Arrest is a public act that may seriously interfere with the defendant's liberty, [03:49:19.140 --> 03:49:25.220] whether he is free on bail or not, and that may disrupt his employment, drain his financial [03:49:25.220 --> 03:49:32.420] resources, curtail his associations, subject him to public ability, and create anxiety in him, [03:49:32.420 --> 03:49:38.420] his family, and his friends. We acknowledge in Marion that even a pre-arrest, a stage at [03:49:38.420 --> 03:49:45.060] which the right to a speedy trial does not arise, the passage of time may impair memories, cause [03:49:45.060 --> 03:49:50.580] evidence to be lost, deprive the defendant of witnesses, and otherwise interfere with his [03:49:50.580 --> 03:49:58.180] ability to defend himself. So, nevertheless, this possibility of presence at trial is not [03:49:58.180 --> 03:50:04.820] itself sufficient reason to wrench the Sixth Amendment from its proper arrest or charge [03:50:04.820 --> 03:50:12.420] triggered. So, she wrote, Justice Ginsburg, I mean, that is a real good case law, and she [03:50:12.420 --> 03:50:23.380] detects the accused. Yeah, I think you're right. That is pretty strong. Yeah, so if they ever try [03:50:23.380 --> 03:50:30.100] to bring up Boxer versus Wingo, that you got to prove, you don't have to prove nothing on [03:50:30.100 --> 03:50:35.300] the betterment. So, I'll register it for you and cite that case law. Oh, wait a minute. [03:50:36.580 --> 03:50:41.620] Betterment after Wingo? So, does it distinguish Wingo? [03:50:43.700 --> 03:50:50.180] No. I don't see a mention of Wingo. This is 2016, and I don't see a mention of Wingo. [03:50:51.620 --> 03:50:55.140] That would still have the effect of distinguishing it. [03:50:55.140 --> 03:51:02.180] Oh, yes, it does mention Barker v. Wingo. Good. Okay, where it's going, I must have missed that. [03:51:04.820 --> 03:51:16.500] Yeah. Where it says it, let's see, it's, that's at 442 is where it says that. [03:51:17.060 --> 03:51:26.100] Yeah, but this is what I'm saying. It trumps Wingo, meaning Wingo under Barker v. Wingo, [03:51:27.140 --> 03:51:30.740] it wants the accused to prove how he was dilated. [03:51:32.420 --> 03:51:43.380] That was the objection I had to it, that the officials sworn his oath he would do this thing. [03:51:44.180 --> 03:51:50.660] He didn't swear on his oath he would do this thing only if I demanded that he do this thing. [03:51:51.700 --> 03:51:55.380] Yeah. He swore on his oath as a condition of the contract. [03:51:55.380 --> 03:52:02.180] Yeah, that's what he's going to do. Yeah, Barker v. Wingo was in 1972, [03:52:03.380 --> 03:52:08.100] and this betterment v. Montana is in 2016. [03:52:08.100 --> 03:52:15.300] So that's nice and recent. Yeah, and it mentions Barker v. Wingo, [03:52:15.300 --> 03:52:17.060] so they're taking that into account. [03:52:20.180 --> 03:52:26.580] And it trumps it. I mean, it trumps Barker v. Wingo. So you don't have to prove it. It's already [03:52:26.580 --> 03:52:32.020] there. It's been asserted for you. And you just make sure when they violate you like that, [03:52:32.100 --> 03:52:38.660] I mean, the prosecutor in the state gets to put you through a bunch of mental anguish and anxiety. [03:52:38.660 --> 03:52:43.860] It takes them six, seven months to get you to trial. Well, that's a deprivation right there. [03:52:43.860 --> 03:52:50.260] And that's what Justice Greenberg was saying. So you will win. Even if the crooked courts [03:52:50.260 --> 03:52:54.100] convict you, you still would probably win on appeal to take it to the U.S. Supreme Court. [03:52:54.100 --> 03:53:00.820] They've already spoken, and it was a humane decision. Yeah, and then here's a reflection [03:53:00.820 --> 03:53:07.380] back to common law, like we were talking about earlier. So many things have come up about that [03:53:07.380 --> 03:53:11.700] tonight. But it says, our reading, this is in Betterman, our reading comports with the [03:53:11.700 --> 03:53:18.900] historical understanding. The Speedy Trial right has its roots at the very foundation of our English [03:53:18.900 --> 03:53:24.820] law heritage. Its first articulation in modern jurisprudence appears to have been made in Magna [03:53:24.820 --> 03:53:31.060] Carta. And then they cite a couple of cases and say, regarding the framers comprehension of the [03:53:31.060 --> 03:53:37.460] right, as it existed at the founding, we've cited Sir Edward Coke's Institute of the Laws of England. [03:53:39.380 --> 03:53:42.580] And Coke wrote that the innocent shall not be worn and wasted [03:53:43.300 --> 03:53:50.900] by long imprisonment, but speedily come to trial. So that's kind of cool. There's a reference in [03:53:50.900 --> 03:53:54.820] there in this Betterman case, a reference to some common law principles. [03:53:56.980 --> 03:54:02.740] Yeah, see the state, unfortunately, that's the cops go out there and arrest people. I mean, [03:54:02.740 --> 03:54:07.220] if they witness a crime, that's one thing. They witnessed it, they got person firsthand knowledge. [03:54:07.220 --> 03:54:08.660] Exactly. That's different. [03:54:08.660 --> 03:54:12.900] If they're just abusing people and arrest them because they want to arrest them, [03:54:12.900 --> 03:54:18.100] well, if the prosecutor ain't ready because they got about 20,000 cases, well, that's their problem. [03:54:18.260 --> 03:54:23.380] Don't let your cops go out there and commit UPL, unpracticed law, because they're not [03:54:23.380 --> 03:54:30.180] state licensed attorney. And that's what the cops do. And therefore there's a backlog in the system [03:54:30.180 --> 03:54:37.060] where the poor accuser who's innocent or could be innocent, he's got to wait seven, eight months [03:54:37.620 --> 03:54:42.020] for the prosecution to get ready. No, that damages that person. I mean, evidence- [03:54:42.020 --> 03:54:48.420] Yeah. And make him attend like half a dozen, take off work to go to the courthouse half [03:54:48.420 --> 03:54:54.100] a dozen times. Yeah. And God forbid it's something about his driver's license, [03:54:54.100 --> 03:54:57.780] because then he can't drive it and he has to take Uber or get somebody else to drive him there. [03:55:00.100 --> 03:55:03.140] Do you have to talk about wearing out his resources? That's right. [03:55:04.660 --> 03:55:10.340] So thanks to the United States Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg and its unanimous decision, [03:55:10.980 --> 03:55:14.180] we got a protection here. So I'm just letting everybody know out here, [03:55:15.620 --> 03:55:19.460] when they put their hands on you and call to arrest you, you hold them to betterment versus [03:55:19.460 --> 03:55:25.140] Montana. They got 30 days to amnesty and not violate that fifth amendment. [03:55:25.860 --> 03:55:29.460] Yeah, very good. I'm glad you called in. You waited a long time to get on, [03:55:31.060 --> 03:55:34.740] see you were on the board for a good long while and you were patient. I appreciate you bringing [03:55:34.740 --> 03:55:39.620] that up to us tonight. I think that can be helpful to a lot of people. Well, all right, [03:55:39.620 --> 03:55:44.340] we are to the end of the evening. It's been a really good one. I'm glad everybody was able [03:55:44.340 --> 03:55:49.140] to call in and we'll talk to you again next week. Good night.