Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:02.740] ["Bad Boys' Bad Boys' Bad Boys' Bad Boys"] [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 --> 00:35.000] Whatcha gonna do? [00:35.000 --> 00:37.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:37.000 --> 00:40.000] When you were eight and you had bad traits [00:40.000 --> 00:43.000] You go to school and learn the golden rule [00:43.000 --> 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 --> 00:51.000] Whatcha gonna do? [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:54.000 --> 00:55.000] Bad boys, bad boys [00:55.000 --> 00:57.000] Whatcha gonna do? [00:57.000 --> 00:59.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:59.000 --> 01:01.000] You chuck it on that one [01:01.000 --> 01:02.000] You chuck it on this one [01:02.000 --> 01:05.000] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [01:05.000 --> 01:07.000] You chuck it on your brother [01:30.000 --> 01:37.000] You know, I keep saying that you never expect to win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side [01:37.000 --> 01:44.000] You expect to win your case if you have the politics on your side and all politics is local [01:44.000 --> 01:53.000] So, yesterday I sent a criminal complaint against the Fifth Circuit judges [01:53.000 --> 02:03.000] Three judges who dismissed my 150 page civil suit with one sentence [02:03.000 --> 02:07.000] This case is frivolous, dismissed with prejudice [02:07.000 --> 02:11.000] And I say, is that a fact, Jack? [02:11.000 --> 02:15.000] I got Walker v. Packer [02:15.000 --> 02:24.000] Walker v. Packer says a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts [02:24.000 --> 02:28.000] Failure to do so is an abuse of discretion [02:28.000 --> 02:34.000] Now, the way I see it, if someone abuses their discretion [02:34.000 --> 02:43.000] And in the process denies me the full free access to or enjoyment of my right to petition the court for redress of grievance [02:43.000 --> 02:45.000] Well, that's a criminal act [02:45.000 --> 02:50.000] And if they act in concert and collusion with another to deny me in a right [02:50.000 --> 02:57.000] That's a violation of 18 U.S. Code 241 and it is a felony in the face [02:57.000 --> 03:05.000] So I filed a criminal complaint against three judges [03:05.000 --> 03:12.000] Against the trial judge and against the magistrate judge in the case that Carabelle and I filed [03:12.000 --> 03:15.000] That they threw out [03:15.000 --> 03:23.000] So I'm sending that to the grand jury, federal grand jury in Fort Worth [03:23.000 --> 03:27.000] And I added a cover letter to it [03:27.000 --> 03:36.000] And that cover letter asks the foreman of the grand jury to return that document to me [03:36.000 --> 03:42.000] Initialist document and return it to me and the included stamp self-address envelope [03:42.000 --> 03:50.000] But don't sign it just initially because the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it [03:50.000 --> 03:57.000] That he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments [03:57.000 --> 04:08.000] Now, with that cover letter there, the likelihood of that getting to the grand jury is going to be somewhere between little and none [04:08.000 --> 04:11.000] At least that's the idea [04:11.000 --> 04:16.000] So I just turned the phone lines on, so if you have a question or comment, give us a call [04:16.000 --> 04:28.000] So the idea is to get the U.S. attorney to secret my criminal complaint from the grand jury [04:28.000 --> 04:42.000] Now, in U.S. v. Williams, Scalia said that the grand jury is essentially a separate form of government [04:42.000 --> 04:54.000] While the federal court impanels the grand jury, once they're impaneled, then the federal court has nothing more to do with them [04:54.000 --> 05:01.000] It has nothing more to do with them [05:01.000 --> 05:09.000] And the prosecutor, he doesn't really have anything to do with them [05:09.000 --> 05:19.000] He's part of the executive branch, the judge is part of the judicial branch, the grand jury is part of neither one of those [05:19.000 --> 05:28.000] That the prosecutor can come before the grand jury, but he doesn't control the grand jury because they're essentially a separate branch of government [05:28.000 --> 05:37.000] Well, prosecutors don't like that idea, because they're the ones that have to prosecute these cases [05:37.000 --> 05:46.000] And they feel like, since they're the learned counsel and the grand jury's not, they have to prosecute the case [05:46.000 --> 05:55.000] That they should be the ones to make a determination as to whether or not there is sufficient cause to believe that a crime's been committed [05:55.000 --> 05:58.000] And that the name person committed that crime [05:58.000 --> 06:06.000] Well, our founders understood that position and they absolutely forbade it [06:06.000 --> 06:12.000] Absolutely not, they knew that was a horrible idea [06:12.000 --> 06:21.000] Because we would have prosecutors taking over the judicial system and doing whatever they wanted to [06:21.000 --> 06:23.000] Sound familiar? [06:23.000 --> 06:26.000] That is exactly what's going on [06:26.000 --> 06:35.000] So, I will make the claim if the U.S. attorney does not give my complaint to the grand jury [06:35.000 --> 06:42.000] And I don't get that document back issued by the foreman [06:42.000 --> 06:50.000] Then I will file a criminal complaint against the U.S. attorney with Pam Bondi, attorney general [06:51.000 --> 06:58.000] And I'm going to ask her to direct all U.S. attorneys in the country [06:58.000 --> 07:07.000] That what I'll do, first I'll file a complaint with her, same way, with same cover letter on it [07:07.000 --> 07:11.000] And ask her to direct all U.S. attorneys in the country [07:11.000 --> 07:18.000] That when they get a criminal complaint by a citizen in a republic [07:18.000 --> 07:23.000] That alleges a felony crime against a public official [07:23.000 --> 07:31.000] That the U.S. attorney is to give that to the grand jury and have no input [07:31.000 --> 07:39.000] Is in no case to secret that from the grand jury and make a determination probable cause on his own [07:39.000 --> 07:47.000] If Pam Bondi doesn't respond, then I'll sue the president [07:47.000 --> 07:52.000] As respondee at superior for the attorney general [07:52.000 --> 07:57.000] Think that'll get their attention? [07:57.000 --> 08:07.000] All I really want to do is to make the argument to them, say look you're trying to find fraud, waste and abuse [08:07.000 --> 08:11.000] Look no further than the grand jury [08:11.000 --> 08:15.000] If there's some bad boys out there doing dirty rotten stuff [08:15.000 --> 08:19.000] Then somebody knows about it [08:19.000 --> 08:26.000] And while if you're an employee of, say, the CIA [08:26.000 --> 08:29.000] Can't say anything [08:29.000 --> 08:36.000] What you can do is send a criminal complaint to a grand jury without your name on it [08:36.000 --> 08:42.000] And just give notice to a grand jury that this crime had been committed [08:42.000 --> 08:47.000] And then it's up to the grand jury to examine into the sufficiency of your allegation [08:47.000 --> 08:52.000] And you have nothing more to do with it [08:52.000 --> 08:55.000] So you can do that anonymously [08:55.000 --> 08:59.000] Or not anonymously if you wanted to [08:59.000 --> 09:06.000] But the point is, is you're filing it with a grand jury and not a member of the executive branch [09:06.000 --> 09:09.000] Not a politician [09:09.000 --> 09:21.000] So now these officials who would think of doing the kind of stuff that Tom Kiley was just talking about on his show [09:21.000 --> 09:34.000] About trying to interfere with the Albanian elections using USAID funds after the president ordered them not to [09:34.000 --> 09:39.000] Somebody knows about that, who works there or has something to do with it [09:39.000 --> 09:45.000] They give a complaint to a grand jury, you're likely to get hammered [09:45.000 --> 09:55.000] It takes control of this out of the hands of the government and puts it back in the hands of the citizens in a republic [09:55.000 --> 09:58.000] That's what I'm going to ask them to do [09:58.000 --> 10:05.000] And this procedure should get me in front of them [10:05.000 --> 10:14.000] Worst thing that could happen is that the US attorney actually gives my complaint to the grand jury [10:14.000 --> 10:24.000] Because they'll no-bill these judges, the likelihood of the grand jury true-billing these judges is somewhere between little and none [10:24.000 --> 10:27.000] So that would ruin everything [10:27.000 --> 10:36.000] It goes to my other rule, never ask a public official to do anything you actually want to do [10:36.000 --> 10:42.000] So that's my plan, that's what I'm working on [10:42.000 --> 10:53.000] I also have a rather large lawsuit I tend to file in Victoria County [10:53.000 --> 11:04.000] I also sent a criminal complaint to Utah, against a judge in Utah, I was helping a guy with a federal suit up there [11:04.000 --> 11:12.000] And this apartment complex, they kind of jerked him around [11:12.000 --> 11:19.000] He came down there out of Utah, and she was in Texas, his ex-wife [11:19.000 --> 11:28.000] And they attacked him, caused him a lot of grief, so that gave us diversity jurisdiction [11:28.000 --> 11:38.000] And we filed that in Utah, the apartment complex did not respond at all [11:38.000 --> 11:49.000] He filed for a default judgment, the clerk refused to sign it, even though I think his rule 51 says he must sign it [11:49.000 --> 11:58.000] And she refused, so filed a motion with the judge to sign the default [11:58.000 --> 12:04.000] He refused to sign the default and dismissed the case with prejudice [12:04.000 --> 12:08.000] But the other side didn't even file, didn't even answer [12:08.000 --> 12:12.000] So I filed criminal charges against him too [12:12.000 --> 12:20.000] So one of these two is going to get intercepted [12:20.000 --> 12:27.000] The one in Fort Worth gets to the judges, I'm relatively certain the one in Utah won't [12:27.000 --> 12:40.000] I tried to use the special agent to charge the FBI, but I couldn't find one in Utah [12:40.000 --> 12:47.000] There was one five years ago, but he got put in prison for taking bribes [12:47.000 --> 12:49.000] Oh my goodness [12:49.000 --> 12:53.000] Yeah, now I can't find one at all, they don't have one listed [12:53.000 --> 12:57.000] So maybe they just became more secret [12:57.000 --> 13:01.000] Maybe [13:01.000 --> 13:08.000] But I hope, one of those, I'm not going to get the letter back from one of those, almost for certain [13:08.000 --> 13:14.000] That'll get me to Pam Bondi, get to put this in front of her [13:14.000 --> 13:23.000] And when she doesn't respond, if I sue the president, then as respondeat superior for her [13:23.000 --> 13:26.000] I think I'll get him to read it [13:26.000 --> 13:32.000] I can get him to agree that this is a good idea [13:32.000 --> 13:39.000] To help them sort out this not wasted abuse, it's the fraud [13:39.000 --> 13:45.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue of La Radio, our call in lines are open [13:45.000 --> 13:50.000] Call in number 512-646-1984 [13:50.000 --> 13:55.000] Be taking your calls all night, he'll be right back [13:57.000 --> 14:04.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [14:04.000 --> 14:08.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method [14:08.000 --> 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 --> 14:40.000] Personal consultation is available as well [14:40.000 --> 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 --> 14:59.000] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [15:00.000 --> 15:05.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [15:05.000 --> 15:11.000] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk [15:11.000 --> 15:16.000] Where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15 [15:16.000 --> 15:23.000] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth [15:23.000 --> 15:27.000] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark [15:27.000 --> 15:31.000] Where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message [15:31.000 --> 15:38.000] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development [15:38.000 --> 15:42.000] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [15:42.000 --> 15:49.000] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus [15:49.000 --> 15:55.000] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [15:55.000 --> 15:59.000] To inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures [16:12.000 --> 16:14.000] Look what we've got [16:14.000 --> 16:16.000] Who reacts to Christians [16:16.000 --> 16:18.000] Wonder what they hide [16:18.000 --> 16:20.000] They don't have the answer [16:20.000 --> 16:22.000] Open up eyes [16:22.000 --> 16:24.000] Who reacts to Christians [16:24.000 --> 16:26.000] Look what we've got [16:26.000 --> 16:28.000] They don't have the answer [16:28.000 --> 16:30.000] Open up eyes [16:30.000 --> 16:32.000] Who reacts to Christians [16:32.000 --> 16:34.000] Look what we've got [16:34.000 --> 16:36.000] They don't have the answer [16:36.000 --> 16:38.000] Open up eyes [16:38.000 --> 16:40.000] Look what we've got [16:40.000 --> 16:42.000] They don't have the answer [16:42.000 --> 16:44.000] Open up eyes [16:44.000 --> 16:48.000] They talk about issues, but see Lord how they want we take it easy [16:48.000 --> 16:53.000] They talk way too politically and they get mad and angry [16:53.000 --> 16:58.000] But they're not standing up and fight and fight for the freedom and be free [16:58.000 --> 17:02.000] On the light they love slavery and get handouts from the government [17:02.000 --> 17:04.000] Look what we've got [17:04.000 --> 17:06.000] They don't have the answer [17:06.000 --> 17:08.000] Open up eyes [17:08.000 --> 17:10.000] They don't have the answer [17:10.000 --> 17:12.000] Open up eyes [17:12.000 --> 17:14.000] Who reacts to Christians [17:14.000 --> 17:16.000] Look what we've got [17:16.000 --> 17:18.000] They don't have the answer [17:18.000 --> 17:20.000] Open up the slightest [17:20.000 --> 17:24.160] Tyranny dem me tear [17:24.160 --> 17:28.000] They me tear you, people dem me tear me Lord Dem me tear the country [17:28.000 --> 17:30.000] Tyranny dem me tear me [17:30.000 --> 17:32.000] Dem me tear you and people dem me tear the country [17:32.000 --> 17:35.280] Dem not tear up the Constitution [17:35.280 --> 17:37.680] Dem rippity treat dem give dem bounty [17:37.680 --> 18:04.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, and a while back, you [18:04.080 --> 18:09.920] call me about this DPS officer that you're having so much trouble with in Wood County, [18:09.920 --> 18:16.400] the one that told you that after you file criminal charges against him and the director of the DPS, [18:16.960 --> 18:25.680] he told you that he knew where you lived. Oh yeah, that guy. Yeah, that was a pretty [18:25.680 --> 18:32.560] unusual comment coming from a cop, right? You expect cops to be interested in peace and so forth, [18:32.560 --> 18:37.920] being peace officers. We don't expect them to make threats against you and your family, [18:37.920 --> 18:44.400] but that's how that came out. Didn't he just stop your wife recently? [18:45.200 --> 18:51.760] He did. And I was actually in the passenger seat. She was driving, it was her car. And [18:55.200 --> 18:57.520] so yeah, he pulled her over and he said, [18:58.400 --> 19:02.160] uh, did you know that one of your headlights is out? [19:04.160 --> 19:14.880] And she's got two on each side and one of them was out. Well, if he knew his rules, [19:14.880 --> 19:20.240] he would realize that you just have to have one on each side. So don't bother this person, [19:20.240 --> 19:25.360] but whatever. He went ahead and pulled her over and he asked her, do you know that you have one [19:25.360 --> 19:32.320] headlight out? And she says, Oh my goodness. No, I don't know what to do about that. [19:33.280 --> 19:42.480] Whatever she was telling him. And, uh, he, he bent over and kind of looked down where he could [19:42.480 --> 19:47.920] look over and see me. And then he says, well, I'm just going to give you a warning. [19:47.920 --> 19:54.880] And wonder, wonder why he did that. [19:56.560 --> 20:01.840] I recognized him right away without him bending over, but she didn't. And, [20:03.120 --> 20:09.040] and she said, I'm really glad I didn't because, uh, if she had recognized him in the moment, [20:09.840 --> 20:15.440] it would have freaked her out. She was really scared. She went, when he first made the threat, [20:16.400 --> 20:21.920] um, it was, I don't know, well over a week, maybe two weeks that she was having trouble [20:21.920 --> 20:28.080] sleeping at night. Every time she would see a headlights coming around in the area, then she [20:28.080 --> 20:36.720] would be, uh, she was traumatized by the idea of this guy having made such a threat. And, [20:38.400 --> 20:44.000] and of course, when he took it to the next level and he invented a crime that didn't even exist [20:44.080 --> 20:48.000] and used it, he recreated his own warrant. [20:51.040 --> 20:55.680] Like warrants are supposed to come from judges, right? Well, I apparently was the first one to [20:55.680 --> 21:04.560] tell him of such a thing. He thought he could create his own and he created a warrant and he [21:04.560 --> 21:14.240] wrote on there, uh, that I had an expired CDL commercial driver's license. [21:15.920 --> 21:21.840] Well, that's not true. I didn't have an expired CDL. I've never had a CDL in my life. [21:23.920 --> 21:31.600] And the site that he put, he, he cited Texas transportation code, uh, in an area that wasn't [21:31.600 --> 21:39.680] talking about crimes. It was just saying that, uh, definitions of the CDL, if you get this kind, [21:39.680 --> 21:44.240] then it lasts for eight years. And if you're this or that, then it only lasts for four or five years. [21:44.240 --> 21:49.200] And here's when this one expires. It wasn't even anything about a crime. It's just different kinds [21:49.200 --> 21:57.040] of definitions of commercial driver's licenses. So that's what he put on his warrant. When he [21:57.040 --> 22:02.480] invented all of this and he, you know, he was definitely trying to cause trouble. [22:04.080 --> 22:08.320] Absolutely. No question about it. There's no way that anybody in their right mind could get that [22:08.320 --> 22:18.480] many things wrong and screwed up that bad. And so yeah, my wife was understandably traumatized. [22:20.400 --> 22:24.560] Um, and so she said, you know, when he gave her that warning, she was really glad [22:25.520 --> 22:33.040] that she didn't realize until afterwards who that man was. He's the one that was stirring up [22:33.040 --> 22:39.680] all this trouble and creating problems out of peace. He's the one that actually arrested you [22:39.680 --> 22:47.120] on that nonsense charge. Exactly. And he's the one that refused to take me before our magistrate. [22:48.880 --> 22:53.920] He said, that's according to your book. And I said, no, sir, that's actually your book. [22:55.520 --> 23:02.000] And I cited him the chapter and verse, but he wasn't impressed. He decided what he was [23:02.000 --> 23:07.120] going to do and he didn't care what the law said. So have you sued him yet? [23:08.240 --> 23:15.040] I have filed criminal complaints and TECO complaints. I haven't sued him yet. [23:15.040 --> 23:19.360] Did the judge with whom you filed the criminal complaints issue warrants? [23:19.360 --> 23:24.000] Yes. No, he did not. You know what that means? [23:24.640 --> 23:32.720] Yeah, I do. You need to go to prosafefromhell.com and download that template [23:34.480 --> 23:42.080] because it's got a header across the top of it that says www.prosafefromhell.com [23:42.800 --> 23:48.720] slash templates. And I gave one of those to a judge in Lake Worth. [23:49.760 --> 23:57.200] He gave it to him in a red envelope and he pulls it out of the envelope and his eyes like radar [23:57.200 --> 24:07.120] went right to that top line. If you're all out there, the federal court, if you pull a [24:07.440 --> 24:14.400] federal document down off a pacer, it has a blue header across the top, [24:14.960 --> 24:20.880] right up at the very top of the page, a blue header saying what the document is, [24:20.880 --> 24:28.480] what the case number is and all of this date and stuff. So I put a blue header across the top of [24:28.480 --> 24:37.200] this one, except I've faded out the ink 50%. So it's up there, but you really got to look at it [24:37.200 --> 24:47.600] to read it. JP pulled that thing out, his eyes, bang. You just faded that out because you wanted [24:47.600 --> 24:56.560] to watch him squint. Yes. If I had put it where you could read it easy, you probably would have [24:56.560 --> 25:03.520] ignored it. But since it was faded, he had to see what it says. And he said, are you this [25:03.520 --> 25:09.520] pro se from hell? Oh no, no, no. That's just a website I downloaded the template from. [25:11.200 --> 25:19.760] Okay. I lied a little bit. Yeah, yeah, it was. He loved that. Oh, he was on his tippy toes. [25:21.840 --> 25:24.480] This is what all of us need to start doing. [25:24.480 --> 25:28.480] This is how we get their attention. [25:31.600 --> 25:37.520] Got a guy in San Antonio, goes to a municipal court. They jerk him around. He goes to the JP [25:37.520 --> 25:43.520] court, gives the JP some complaints against the municipal judge. The municipal judge refuses [25:43.520 --> 25:53.440] to issue warrants. He walks out of there, goes to the JP, next JP and sues the first JP within 45 [25:54.640 --> 26:03.920] minutes. So JP had to know that he had that suit in his hand. Yeah, the suit was already written [26:03.920 --> 26:10.800] expecting the lawlessness that he knew would happen. Played him like a cheap fiddle. How's it [26:10.800 --> 26:18.080] feel, Bubba? Yep. And I already had, I told you, I did a whole boatload of criminal complaints and [26:19.040 --> 26:25.040] T. Cole. Well, those criminal complaints were, like you said, mostly pre-written. [26:26.400 --> 26:30.080] Most of those criminal complaints, because these kinds of things have happened before. [26:30.080 --> 26:33.600] Not this exact thing. Of course, you have to change things like the date and the [26:35.120 --> 26:42.080] which specific facts, but- Just for yucks, put the www.prosefromhell.com slash template. [26:42.640 --> 26:49.600] Well, on the other side, let me tell you about what happened after I filed these complaints, [26:50.320 --> 26:55.920] because apparently there were some fireworks. All right, we'll be right back. [27:00.480 --> 27:05.200] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, [27:05.200 --> 27:09.760] but it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [27:09.760 --> 27:16.400] secrets. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. Privacy is under attack. [27:16.400 --> 27:21.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [27:21.840 --> 27:27.760] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance [27:27.760 --> 27:33.520] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service [27:33.520 --> 27:38.800] announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [27:38.800 --> 27:47.120] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. Data privacy is a big deal. So nearly every company [27:47.120 --> 27:51.680] has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. But what happens if it [27:51.680 --> 27:58.080] escapes their control? It's not an idle question. According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of [27:58.080 --> 28:03.840] US companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. That's one more reason [28:03.840 --> 28:09.200] you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't [28:09.200 --> 28:14.160] store any data on you. They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for [28:14.160 --> 28:19.680] criminals to see. The cupboard would be bare. Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same [28:19.680 --> 28:25.040] way. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [28:25.040 --> 28:35.840] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11th, 2001. Most people don't know that [28:35.840 --> 28:42.080] a third tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a [28:42.080 --> 28:48.240] plane. Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [28:48.240 --> 28:52.640] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. Bring justice [28:52.640 --> 28:58.800] to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, [28:58.800 --> 29:05.120] and what you can do. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. In today's [29:05.120 --> 29:08.880] America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free [29:08.880 --> 29:13.040] society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are [29:13.040 --> 29:16.640] the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [29:16.640 --> 29:21.200] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive [29:21.200 --> 29:25.600] opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's [29:25.600 --> 29:29.600] Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [29:29.600 --> 29:33.440] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold [29:33.440 --> 29:37.360] courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to [29:37.360 --> 29:41.920] ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [29:41.920 --> 29:46.640] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 [29:46.640 --> 29:50.880] seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for [29:50.880 --> 29:55.120] your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and [29:55.120 --> 30:03.920] together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. Live, free speech radio, [30:03.920 --> 30:05.920] logosradionetwork.com. [30:21.440 --> 30:27.440] I don't understand. [30:34.000 --> 30:39.440] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [30:39.440 --> 30:44.960] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [30:45.040 --> 30:50.560] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [30:50.560 --> 30:55.840] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [30:55.840 --> 31:00.640] So please Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse their power. [31:02.640 --> 31:04.480] Okay, we are back. [31:06.320 --> 31:10.800] Wrap out Rule of Law Radio and we were just getting to the fireworks. [31:11.440 --> 31:19.120] Well, yeah, these might have been some silent fireworks or at least I didn't see any signs of [31:19.120 --> 31:28.240] it myself. It was probably loud in some conference rooms somewhere, but after I set off these [31:28.240 --> 31:33.360] criminal complaints, well first let me clarify one thing. The criminal complaints and the T-call, [31:33.360 --> 31:40.480] this was not only against the officer. It was against the officer, but every one of them had [31:40.480 --> 31:47.760] a mirror image criminal complaint against the executive director of the DPS, Stephen McRaw, [31:48.800 --> 31:54.080] because I figure he's responsible. Everything that this guy on the low end of the totem pole [31:54.080 --> 31:58.960] does wrong, that commits a crime, he's doing according to his training. [32:02.400 --> 32:10.080] Yeah, that's McRaw's fault, especially since I have already been there with McRaw. [32:11.440 --> 32:19.040] A couple years prior, I highlighted to McRaw in a nice executive summary. I laid it all out very [32:19.040 --> 32:26.480] well. We had good conversations on the phone and he had me talking to his people under him [32:27.680 --> 32:34.320] and people that are liaison to the legislature. And he says they'll be able to talk with you a [32:34.320 --> 32:42.240] lot more easily about what the law actually is and due process and all that. So he put me in [32:42.240 --> 32:51.040] touch with them. We had good conversations. They couldn't be made to agree with the fact that [32:51.040 --> 32:56.880] the law says this or that. They kept on having this cognitive dissonance that you have referenced [32:56.880 --> 33:02.320] before. Like you said, well, what are you telling me that all these years I've been doing it wrong [33:03.280 --> 33:09.040] and you're the only one that's figured it out? That's where they got stuck. But anyway, [33:09.040 --> 33:16.640] I've been there with McRaw. He has zero excuses. So I held him accountable this time, [33:17.600 --> 33:23.520] not just the officer. The officer, Waterman, he committed a whole bunch of crimes. [33:23.520 --> 33:30.000] He should have known better. However, McRaw is his ultimate superior [33:31.360 --> 33:37.280] and he should have trained that guy better. Or certainly after I confronted McRaw about [33:37.280 --> 33:46.480] the previous officer and I warned McRaw about the potential danger that these officers, these are [33:46.480 --> 33:53.680] fine men and women out here in unnecessarily precarious positions because you've trained [33:53.680 --> 34:01.600] them to break the law. And after I filed those criminal complaints this time around [34:03.040 --> 34:11.840] in 2024, so it was about, I don't know, three weeks, maybe a month after that. [34:12.800 --> 34:26.960] I was in a waiting room waiting for my wife and we saw up on the TV there, [34:26.960 --> 34:32.480] I don't have a TV at home, but we were just looking at the news. And what do you know, [34:32.480 --> 34:40.080] McRaw is resigning. He's been the executive director of the Texas [34:40.640 --> 34:46.400] Department of Public Safety for all these years, 15 years or something, and he announces his [34:46.400 --> 34:53.040] resignation. And I have to wonder. You hope you have something to do with that. [34:54.240 --> 35:01.120] You know, it's possible that he just, that's just a coincidence of timing. That's possible. [35:02.560 --> 35:13.280] But I just have to wonder. It seems pretty unusual that there would be [35:14.720 --> 35:19.840] all of these criminal complaints and then all of a sudden the resignation. Now, if he resigned [35:19.840 --> 35:24.720] thinking that if he just slips out of there quietly, maybe he won't get sued, [35:26.320 --> 35:32.000] then he's going to be surprised. Unfortunately, that's not the way this is going to happen. [35:32.480 --> 35:41.040] Got a new guy. Yeah. I haven't talked to him yet. [35:42.800 --> 35:46.960] I was wondering if you, I'm going to be talking to him pretty soon. [35:51.360 --> 35:52.720] Do you know this new guy's name? [35:54.640 --> 35:57.680] Don't remember it, but I looked him up. I'll look him up again. [35:58.320 --> 36:03.120] Okay. Yeah. When his resignation was announced, there wasn't any new guy [36:05.680 --> 36:08.960] being mentioned yet, but yeah, I'll take a look and see. [36:09.920 --> 36:16.160] Maybe we need to introduce ourselves and see what his perspective is on [36:17.440 --> 36:19.200] DPS officers committing crimes. [36:19.200 --> 36:30.080] Well, this time it's saying it's still Steven McCraw, but I looked it up [36:31.360 --> 36:33.280] a couple of days ago and got a different one. [36:38.000 --> 36:40.320] Well, I guess we'll find out. [36:40.320 --> 36:44.640] It's still saying McCraw, but I got another guy. So they've appointed somebody else. [36:45.440 --> 36:49.360] These, apparently these websites aren't upgraded. [36:53.200 --> 36:57.360] Well, we don't have any callers yet. If anybody has any questions, [36:57.360 --> 37:04.080] feel free to call us. It's 512-646-1984. We'll take your call. [37:05.200 --> 37:10.560] Any questions you have and deal with it right now on the air, be happy to. [37:10.560 --> 37:16.960] 512-646-1984. Randy, I ran into a guy the other day. [37:18.480 --> 37:24.480] I was just minding my own affairs and sitting down eating some lunch. [37:24.480 --> 37:31.840] And I saw across the way that there were a couple of police cruisers that were coming [37:31.840 --> 37:38.800] and swarming around this guy with an old beat up car. And what are they doing with him? [37:40.720 --> 37:48.000] Just curious. And so I kept on watching. And after a while, they got him out of his car, [37:48.000 --> 37:51.120] put him in handcuffs and stuck him in the back of one of the cruisers. [37:52.800 --> 37:57.840] Then they came back and they proceeded to rifle through his car for what seemed like a very long [37:57.840 --> 38:03.920] time. I pretty much finished up my lunch. They were just continuing to go through his car, [38:04.640 --> 38:11.440] just turning it inside out. And eventually they brought him back to his, [38:12.160 --> 38:14.400] they got him out of the cruiser and they let him go. [38:17.200 --> 38:25.120] So then I thought, well, was there, there was no ticket? What did they do anything? So I just, [38:25.440 --> 38:29.840] I went over there and I waited until [38:31.520 --> 38:35.840] everything cleared away. And, and I talked to the guy [38:38.160 --> 38:43.360] trying to get a, a feel for what had happened and what he would like to do about it. [38:44.560 --> 38:51.520] He said they issued him a warning and it was a warning about his blinker. [38:52.480 --> 38:59.520] He apparently hadn't used his blinker when he turned into the McDonald's parking lot. So when [39:01.200 --> 39:05.680] he pulled in there, he said, they've been following me for a long time. [39:06.800 --> 39:14.320] And, and I knew my blinker wasn't going to work, but I just, I just decided I was, [39:14.320 --> 39:19.440] had to shoot in here and be done driving because they've been following me all this time. And I [39:19.440 --> 39:26.080] knew they were trying to cause me trouble. So apparently that was the last, you know, [39:27.120 --> 39:31.680] if they, if they, if he hadn't done that, they would have just waited until he [39:31.680 --> 39:34.480] was speeding or his wheels went over a line or something. [39:36.080 --> 39:39.280] Anyway, he, he tells me they've been doing this to him a lot, [39:40.480 --> 39:46.480] just continue to follow him. He said, it feels like harassment. I said, it sounds like harassment. [39:46.880 --> 39:54.880] So he wanted to know, what can I do about this? I said, well, glad you asked. [39:57.120 --> 40:03.280] So I did tell him to call in one of these evenings, but also we had a good conversation about [40:04.320 --> 40:09.280] how these things are supposed to work and what some of the possibilities are for [40:10.160 --> 40:16.160] dealing with these kinds of people. And his girlfriend came [40:17.680 --> 40:20.160] and she got to hear a little bit of this and she was saying, [40:21.600 --> 40:25.600] I just got pulled over for no insurance. Is that, can they do that? [40:27.600 --> 40:30.080] And I said, well, as a matter of fact, no, they can't. That's, [40:30.880 --> 40:36.880] insurance is over in subtitle D. They're only authorized to pull you over for something in [40:36.880 --> 40:46.160] subtitle C. So that was an interesting, a little detour as well. It's good for people to know [40:47.440 --> 40:52.080] before they get pulled over, what are the legitimate reasons to be pulled over, right? [40:53.120 --> 40:57.920] Okay. Well, we're just about to go to our sponsors. 512-646-1984. [40:59.120 --> 41:04.400] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds of [41:04.400 --> 41:09.920] thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be [41:09.920 --> 41:16.560] on or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the [41:16.560 --> 41:24.320] claims cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides [41:24.320 --> 41:31.920] your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero [41:31.920 --> 41:38.560] co-pay. If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less than FICA taxes. [41:38.560 --> 41:44.960] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. 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[42:33.680 --> 42:39.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [42:39.200 --> 42:45.920] and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [42:45.920 --> 42:54.320] tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [42:54.320 --> 42:59.440] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [43:16.720 --> 43:22.080] Where are you going to look for one? If you could not wage any battle, [43:22.880 --> 43:28.720] would your purpose has been done? Such a symptom and a soldier, a warrior of love, [43:28.720 --> 43:36.400] scuffling to keep the peace. All they're taking is a misunderstanding and somebody calls the police. [44:16.480 --> 44:23.200] After a while, it's not your moral standard, it's your patience that's on track. [44:29.520 --> 44:36.400] Watching the sparks fly, watching the sparks fly, [44:41.200 --> 44:42.400] watching the sparks fly. [44:45.920 --> 45:01.920] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and it's time we started going [45:01.920 --> 45:11.840] after them. These two people, did they seem like they were interested in doing something to stop [45:12.720 --> 45:14.800] this apparent harassment? [45:20.960 --> 45:25.520] I'm sorry, I didn't understand the question. These two people you talked to, did they seem [45:25.520 --> 45:30.160] like they wanted, they were prepared to do something to stop this harassment? [45:31.920 --> 45:38.000] Yes, I will say that at the beginning, it seemed to me like, oh, maybe these people are going to be [45:38.000 --> 45:48.240] too scared. They're not really confident enough that it's okay to hold our public servants [45:48.240 --> 45:54.720] accountable. It might be dangerous, oh no, what if they get mad and just shoot us? [45:57.280 --> 46:03.200] The beginning of the conversation had that tone and I think by the end of our conversation, [46:04.000 --> 46:14.240] there was more of a desire to hold them accountable and a desire to figure out how to be free. [46:15.040 --> 46:21.840] Like, how do I get to the point that they don't want to mess with me and they'd rather just leave [46:21.840 --> 46:30.240] me alone because it's bad for them to mess with me? I got a little taste of that, [46:30.240 --> 46:38.800] got a little taste of that idea and I think they're interested in pursuing that, [46:39.840 --> 46:41.520] toward the end of the conversation anyway. [46:43.760 --> 46:51.760] I guess I need to get my questionnaire up because it's really designed for that. [46:52.560 --> 47:03.440] I was working on it today and I'm doing one, the local county court, [47:03.440 --> 47:07.440] I know the judge real well, and he's willing to try out my questionnaire. [47:09.120 --> 47:12.400] The first thing I start with with the questionnaire is first contact [47:14.000 --> 47:16.400] and I start asking questions like, [47:16.880 --> 47:22.160] if you were first contacted by the police, was the contact related to a traffic stop? [47:23.200 --> 47:26.240] You say yes, then it jumps over to a different questionnaire, [47:27.600 --> 47:34.320] but the biggest questionnaire I have actually is the one for traffic. It jumps to a different file. [47:34.320 --> 47:40.080] You say no, did the officer claim to have observed you during the commission of a crime? [47:40.080 --> 47:50.160] During the commission of a crime. For each one of these this time, I would write a note. [47:50.960 --> 47:57.440] When you go to the questionnaire online, move the mouse over the question, it's got a pop-up box [47:58.080 --> 48:06.800] that'll explain to you why we asked that question. So part of doing this is we craft questions [48:07.120 --> 48:19.200] or pop-up box, stuff we want them to know. So we ask a question, when the officer arrested you, [48:19.200 --> 48:25.200] did he take you directly to your magistrate? We know what that answer is going to be, [48:26.960 --> 48:33.600] but we ask them that question because we want them to think, what, magistrate, what about, [48:33.680 --> 48:38.960] I don't know anything about a magistrate. You get this pop-up box and explains it. [48:39.760 --> 48:43.440] So we get to instruct them while we're asking the questions. [48:45.280 --> 48:54.000] I have been writing in those notations, and this time I took a different tack. I went to chat GTP, [48:54.000 --> 49:08.160] and asked it to explain, like here, explain when a policeman can arrest you for an [49:08.160 --> 49:14.880] online, on-site offense. Get it? And it gave me a really nice presentation. [49:15.840 --> 49:19.680] So for every question that I asked, I did that with chat GTP. [49:19.760 --> 49:24.800] It came out a really nice piece of work. [49:28.400 --> 49:31.360] We needed to do this one designed [49:33.520 --> 49:42.480] extensively to extract information about a particular situation, but really ask questions [49:43.120 --> 49:47.840] to teach them what they need to know. [49:52.160 --> 49:57.600] I've got most of it through this chat GTP. I've been working on this particular questionnaire. [50:00.240 --> 50:03.120] With the chat GTP, I was able to just walk right through it. [50:04.880 --> 50:11.600] I will have this thing in a couple of days. I'll have it ready for prime time. I'm going to take [50:11.600 --> 50:17.840] it down to the judge to get it set up and get the judge to try it out for people that's been [50:17.840 --> 50:24.640] arrested. Last time I was in there talking to him, he reminded me of that. So he's interested in it. [50:26.640 --> 50:28.560] Sorry, he reminded you of what? [50:28.560 --> 50:33.520] Reminded me of the questionnaire for him. He's concerned about court appointed counsel. [50:34.080 --> 50:35.920] Oh, cool. That means it's on his mind. [50:36.560 --> 50:45.280] His mind. And I've known him for some years and we have a mutual respect. [50:47.600 --> 50:55.120] Trying to get him to talk to the district judge so that I can get Wise County to adjust what [50:55.120 --> 51:04.640] they're doing so that I can take them down to DC or down to Travis County and to the Senate [51:04.640 --> 51:09.520] Subcommittee on Criminal Justice. Get them to explain how it should be done. [51:13.040 --> 51:19.760] The county judge was reluctant. He wants to stay in the background, but each time I talk to him [51:19.760 --> 51:29.360] about it, he's warming up to it. And the guy's a really nice guy. He's just a nice individual. [51:29.360 --> 51:34.080] He was telling me what he does with people when they come before him. They don't have an attorney [51:34.080 --> 51:41.280] or stuff. And he said about making a statement. He said, I tell him, you can make a statement, [51:42.080 --> 51:50.640] but you have to understand that a prosecutor might not know everything that happened. [51:51.760 --> 51:58.880] You do. So if you make a statement, you might tell the prosecutor something he didn't know. [51:59.200 --> 52:02.320] And it could turn out bad for you. [52:04.560 --> 52:09.280] I would really like, I'm trying to get this guy to videotape his hearings. [52:12.720 --> 52:18.880] We need to see judges. We go into traffic court and judges are really jerks. [52:19.920 --> 52:22.160] But you get in the higher courts and he's just not that one. [52:22.800 --> 52:26.720] And I had one in Tennessee. [52:26.720 --> 52:31.120] They still might not follow the law, but at least they're more professional about it. [52:31.120 --> 52:37.680] Yeah, and they're more civil. I was in Tennessee, real small town, West Tennessee. [52:39.360 --> 52:43.360] I'm kin to the whole neighborhood. My daughter went down to stay with my [52:44.000 --> 52:51.520] mother when she's 13 for the summer. And I told her, if you're driving around in West Tennessee [52:51.520 --> 53:01.040] with mom and somebody waves, everybody, or your kin, ask mother, she'll tell you how. [53:02.000 --> 53:09.680] When she come back, she reminded me of that and said, dad, you were right. She knew everybody. [53:11.360 --> 53:15.760] I go into this, go down to the jail and they've got this, they're having this hearing. [53:15.760 --> 53:24.400] And the first one that comes out, this older woman, and the judge that looks up is Snelda. [53:25.840 --> 53:32.800] You again? He said, how many times have you been arrested for not paying that traffic check? [53:33.680 --> 53:41.120] Oh, a couple. And he looked at his records. Three, this is the third time? Well, yeah. [53:42.080 --> 53:50.000] He said, Snelda, I am not a debt collector for the state. I'm gonna convert this [53:50.640 --> 53:55.920] traffic fine to a civil fine. You don't have to worry about paying it. [53:55.920 --> 54:01.360] And you won't ever have to be put in jail again. No, she just thanked him all over the left. [54:02.480 --> 54:09.360] Next one they brought in was a real hillbilly, had a big, had an attitude. [54:10.320 --> 54:13.360] And the judge very quickly tore his attitude off. [54:15.200 --> 54:20.800] And then everybody else, he treated them with absolute dignity and respect. [54:23.600 --> 54:29.920] Everybody should see this guy doing that. Not all the judges are jerks. [54:32.320 --> 54:38.800] The only time we ever see that kind of stuff is when they're being pretty miserable and we [54:38.800 --> 54:41.600] get the impression all of them are that way. And it's just not the case. [54:44.640 --> 54:49.520] Part of what I'm trying to do is get the perspective changed. And I'm not doing it. [54:49.520 --> 54:55.680] I don't want to do that for the judge's benefit. I want to do it for the individual's benefit so [54:55.680 --> 55:03.600] you'll understand. You can stand up for yourself. You don't have to go in there and get miserable [55:03.600 --> 55:09.200] and start a fight. You can talk to these higher level judges like they're human beings [55:09.920 --> 55:17.520] and they'll return the favor. It's not as bad as you tend to think it is. [55:18.720 --> 55:23.920] If you just kind of learn what we're doing a little bit. I'm hoping I can use this questionnaire [55:24.720 --> 55:30.400] to kind of start instructing people on things they can do. And the questionnaire itself, [55:31.120 --> 55:36.560] if you answer the question a certain way, it'll spit out the document you need to address the issue. [55:38.080 --> 55:43.040] Almost got it ready. We'll be right back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruevlo Radio. [55:43.040 --> 55:46.240] Deborah's working on the phones. We'll have them up shortly. Right back. [55:49.200 --> 55:52.880] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [55:52.880 --> 55:56.640] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [55:57.360 --> 56:03.200] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the [56:03.200 --> 56:10.000] profound meaning of the scripture. Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation [56:10.000 --> 56:16.560] is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [56:17.200 --> 56:23.040] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the [56:23.040 --> 56:28.400] riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. Bibles for America would [56:28.400 --> 56:34.160] like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. This comprehensive yet compact [56:34.160 --> 56:44.400] study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online [56:44.400 --> 56:48.960] at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [56:52.000 --> 56:58.160] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [57:01.280 --> 57:05.600] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee [57:05.600 --> 57:10.480] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [57:10.480 --> 57:14.480] Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [57:14.480 --> 57:20.400] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll [57:20.400 --> 57:25.440] never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start [57:25.440 --> 57:31.920] to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [57:31.920 --> 57:36.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [57:36.560 --> 57:44.000] Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [57:45.360 --> 57:50.240] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third [57:50.240 --> 57:55.200] party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. That shocking image [57:55.200 --> 58:00.000] of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [58:00.000 --> 58:04.720] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days [58:04.720 --> 58:09.680] of our founding fathers. Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? So if you answer a knock [58:09.680 --> 58:14.240] at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of [58:14.240 --> 58:19.280] Rights and reread the Third Amendment. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at [58:19.280 --> 58:33.840] CatherineAlbrecht.com. The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our [58:33.840 --> 58:38.320] Constitution. They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [58:38.320 --> 58:42.400] Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an [58:42.400 --> 58:45.680] unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [58:46.320 --> 58:51.840] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [58:51.840 --> 58:56.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [58:56.640 --> 59:01.920] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [59:02.000 --> 59:06.560] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [59:06.560 --> 59:14.000] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [59:15.600 --> 59:20.080] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [59:20.080 --> 59:24.720] x-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans [59:24.720 --> 59:30.400] freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [59:30.400 --> 59:34.640] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [59:34.640 --> 59:39.760] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. When government [59:39.760 --> 59:44.400] employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the [59:44.400 --> 59:49.520] constitutional alarm bells. Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [59:49.520 --> 59:52.480] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [59:53.120 --> 59:57.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:00:30.400 --> 01:00:39.040] Chant down, Bobby. Chant down, Bobby. Chant for justice. Chant for justice. Chant for rubies. [01:00:39.040 --> 01:00:44.400] Chant for our words. Chant for our words. Chant for our words. [01:00:44.640 --> 01:00:51.280] And one of them when me chant, when me see, say all man was created equally. [01:00:51.280 --> 01:00:58.160] Chant down, Bobby, and do it daily. And when night come, give to everybody. [01:00:58.160 --> 01:01:05.280] So one by one, me have to chant them on. Me chant down, Bobby, and be calm. Bobby, and he's wrong. [01:01:05.280 --> 01:01:09.600] The only right man, me say, is the rest, come on. We take. [01:01:09.680 --> 01:01:15.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, and we're at Fountain and Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, [01:01:15.680 --> 01:01:25.040] the 27th day of February 2025. And the phone bridges are up. So if you have a question or [01:01:25.600 --> 01:01:29.920] comment, give us a call. Deborah got them fixed during the last segment. [01:01:31.520 --> 01:01:35.920] She always gets that stuff fixed. That's what we keep her around for. Okay. [01:01:39.840 --> 01:01:46.480] That and all of the generous raises, right? That too. If I talk nice about her, [01:01:46.480 --> 01:01:51.680] she'll double my salary again. Well, so our caller board is working. [01:01:51.680 --> 01:02:03.680] It's 512-646-1984. Anybody has a question? Maybe this guy that I've just been talking about, [01:02:03.680 --> 01:02:08.720] if you're listening and you would like to call in and learn a little bit more about how to deal [01:02:08.720 --> 01:02:18.560] with your public servants, 512-646-1984. Yeah. And I'm hoping I can get people not [01:02:18.560 --> 01:02:28.560] to be afraid of these guys and be willing to take them on. Okay. Caller board is lighting up. [01:02:29.600 --> 01:02:35.840] We start with Greg in California. Hello, Greg. What do you have for us today? [01:02:36.560 --> 01:02:39.840] All right. I just thought I would break the silence for the evening. [01:02:42.800 --> 01:02:48.480] Silence? Wait a minute. You mean all of my witty repartee? [01:02:50.880 --> 01:02:55.840] Well, y'all been talking, but nobody else has been talking. But so I thought I'd call in. [01:02:57.440 --> 01:03:03.360] I had some comments I wanted to make. I don't have a lawsuit going. But listen, [01:03:04.320 --> 01:03:11.840] after listening to you two at Babylon for three years, all great information, believe me, [01:03:13.760 --> 01:03:22.800] and following a number of lawsuits and following judges' decisions in all of these lawsuits that [01:03:22.800 --> 01:03:30.880] have been, whether they're through Telegram or other. And then following another prominent [01:03:30.960 --> 01:03:38.400] attorney, Robert Barnes, what I've learned is what we've suspected. And that is that [01:03:40.240 --> 01:03:48.960] the judges don't read law. They don't rule by law. They don't rule. Their decision-making is not [01:03:48.960 --> 01:03:56.560] one of law-making or based upon law or statute and hardly based upon constitutional rights. [01:03:56.560 --> 01:04:04.800] They are political because they are politicians. They are political for various other reasons. And [01:04:04.800 --> 01:04:14.480] because of their immunity or supposed immunity, which they hide under, they seem to rule in ways [01:04:14.480 --> 01:04:23.680] that are simply confusing to the onlooker because it doesn't have anything or very little to do [01:04:23.680 --> 01:04:25.840] with the law that is put in front of them. [01:04:28.400 --> 01:04:35.200] And part of your perception on that is because of the kinds of cases [01:04:36.080 --> 01:04:43.840] that we run into all the time. Traffic is absolutely the pits. [01:04:45.040 --> 01:04:51.680] You got this judge here and he hears case after case after case after case after case after case [01:04:51.680 --> 01:05:01.440] after case. Same thing over and over and it's boring. And they're just there to make money. [01:05:02.800 --> 01:05:06.400] They got this huge docket, these stacks of tickets to get through. [01:05:07.040 --> 01:05:11.680] And you come down there and you want to ask them questions, you're holding up their production [01:05:11.680 --> 01:05:19.360] line. They get frustrated with it. And they get nasty. You get out of this court and you get into [01:05:20.320 --> 01:05:25.760] above the JP and the municipal court up into the county court and the district court. [01:05:27.360 --> 01:05:32.000] It's a whole different story for the most part. I had somebody contact me, [01:05:32.000 --> 01:05:36.480] had this guy go into court and they wanted me to come down there and see if I could help him. [01:05:37.440 --> 01:05:45.360] The guy's got three charges of beating his wife and charges of neglecting his kids and a couple [01:05:45.360 --> 01:05:51.600] of DUIs. And he wants to represent himself. He's been listening to these patriot mythologists [01:05:52.720 --> 01:06:00.160] and he decides he can represent himself. This district judge who I don't have much use for, [01:06:00.160 --> 01:06:08.240] for the most part, or I didn't, mainly because he didn't like me. He knew who I was. He had [01:06:08.240 --> 01:06:14.560] known who I was for a very long time in this county. And he kept me at as much a distance [01:06:14.560 --> 01:06:23.360] as he could. But I sat in that courtroom and watched him spend about an hour trying to convince [01:06:23.360 --> 01:06:32.160] this guy, you need counsel. You can't do this yourself. And the judge bent over backwards [01:06:34.320 --> 01:06:38.720] to the point that I went over to the bailiff and I said, you know, I know this guy. [01:06:39.680 --> 01:06:46.480] You know me. If you can get the judge to get a 10 minute continuance, [01:06:47.120 --> 01:06:53.680] I think I can get this guy to take, to accept a lawyer. But the bailiff wouldn't make him pay [01:06:53.680 --> 01:07:01.600] for that. But the judge really bent over backwards because he knew this guy was not going to have a [01:07:01.600 --> 01:07:10.320] chance. He did not want to try him without him having a chance. So they're not really all bad [01:07:10.320 --> 01:07:18.320] guys. Oh, what he's speaking to, what Greg is speaking to, and what Barnes was highlighting [01:07:19.280 --> 01:07:26.000] is the same thing that you say sometimes about having the facts and the law may not necessarily [01:07:26.000 --> 01:07:33.200] get you anywhere. Having politics on your side on the other hand, that's powerful. [01:07:33.200 --> 01:07:42.080] But in doing this, if you're terrified of the judge, it's not going to make any difference [01:07:42.080 --> 01:07:48.640] what I say. You're going to be afraid to get in front of the judge. So [01:07:48.720 --> 01:07:57.360] Oh, one part of what we talk about here is, you know, this stuff about how to set up the judge [01:07:57.360 --> 01:08:03.200] so you can beat them up. That's not because we want you to beat up the judge. I mean, [01:08:03.200 --> 01:08:09.440] sometimes it's fun, but that's not the reason. Don't want you to be afraid of that judge. [01:08:10.480 --> 01:08:15.920] Right. Why don't you understand you're the baddest motor scooter in the building. [01:08:15.920 --> 01:08:21.280] They forget that at their peril. This judge that I said I don't care much for, [01:08:21.280 --> 01:08:26.720] he knows I'm the baddest motor scooter in the building. He don't want anything to do with me. [01:08:27.760 --> 01:08:34.800] He wants to stay as far. He knows he got into this judge's position because the judge before him [01:08:34.800 --> 01:08:41.680] died of a heart attack. And I had first degree fell in the aggravated assault charges against [01:08:41.680 --> 01:08:51.680] him before the grand jury when he died. I thought that was a little extreme [01:08:51.680 --> 01:08:57.440] trying to get out of it. But actually this judge, he didn't like me. [01:08:58.480 --> 01:09:04.960] But he was genuinely a nice guy. He would run up and down the stairs in the courtroom singing [01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:11.040] and he's joking with everybody. He was generally a nice guy. He just didn't like me. [01:09:12.160 --> 01:09:17.360] And they don't like people who don't treat them like their God gods. [01:09:18.480 --> 01:09:23.360] And you know, they're used to lawyers and lawyers are not going to do anything [01:09:24.480 --> 01:09:30.320] to give the judge a hard time. Vowing and scraping and, and yes, your majesty. [01:09:30.320 --> 01:09:35.360] I went to [01:09:38.160 --> 01:09:43.760] challenge the grand jury pool. He never had anybody do that before. [01:09:45.680 --> 01:09:49.760] And I devised him, I was going to do that beforehand. I come in, sit in [01:09:49.760 --> 01:09:56.960] room, the judge in panels, the jury, sends the jury out. It's up to leave the bench. And I said, [01:09:56.960 --> 01:10:02.320] your honor, I have business with the court. Yes, Mr. Kelton, what's your business? I gave [01:10:02.320 --> 01:10:09.840] you notice that I was here to challenge the grand jury pool. Mr. Kelton, if you do that, [01:10:09.840 --> 01:10:15.920] you're going to have to do it according to law. I did it according to law and you didn't. Well, [01:10:15.920 --> 01:10:20.320] what do you have already in panel, the grand jury, what do you want me to do? Get that panel back [01:10:20.320 --> 01:10:26.880] in here and reempanel the grand jury. Give me an opportunity to challenge the grand jury pool. [01:10:26.880 --> 01:10:33.680] Then reempanel the grand jury. I'm not going to do that. Well, Mr. Bailiff, I need you to take [01:10:33.680 --> 01:10:39.840] my criminal complaint against this judge. And the judge said, Mr. Bailiff, remove Mr. Kelton from [01:10:39.840 --> 01:10:49.840] my courtroom. The head bailiff took two giant steps backwards. Dick Woods was not going anywhere [01:10:49.840 --> 01:10:56.000] near that. And this sergeant who didn't know who I was came over and put his hand on my arm. [01:10:57.280 --> 01:11:04.880] I looked down and I said, sergeant, I see that you're wearing a pistol. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I am. [01:11:04.880 --> 01:11:10.320] Tell me, is that pistol loaded? Before he could answer, the judge said, that's all right, sergeant. [01:11:10.320 --> 01:11:18.080] You can stand down. He knew where I was going. It's too late, Bubba. He already touched me. [01:11:19.040 --> 01:11:25.200] So I filed first degree felony aggravated assault against the judge for assaulting me [01:11:25.920 --> 01:11:32.960] at the bailiff. And when he passed away, he had that charge for the district attorney, [01:11:32.960 --> 01:11:41.520] and I'm trying to force it to the grand jury. So yeah, this is what I want people to understand. [01:11:42.000 --> 01:11:47.360] Yeah, people need to be free from fear when it comes to [01:11:49.920 --> 01:11:53.760] seeking justice and petitioning courts for redress of grievances. [01:11:55.440 --> 01:12:02.880] They need to be free from fear, be able to do that without being scared that it's gonna go wrong, [01:12:02.880 --> 01:12:05.280] they're not gonna listen, I'm gonna get hurt, all of that. [01:12:06.240 --> 01:12:13.040] If you're afraid, then you tend to be angry and demanding and difficult. [01:12:14.800 --> 01:12:19.040] If you're not afraid, you don't care what the judge does. [01:12:20.080 --> 01:12:23.600] Yeah, you do this, judge. I'll just ask the bailiff to arrest you, [01:12:23.600 --> 01:12:27.920] see how that works out for you. I've done that nine times in court. [01:12:30.080 --> 01:12:34.880] Every single time I've done that, judge sat there and kept his mouth shut. [01:12:36.240 --> 01:12:42.960] Because of the way I did it. I wasn't angry, I wasn't upset, I was polite, [01:12:44.240 --> 01:12:48.720] straightforward and direct. I told the judge exactly what I wanted him to do. [01:12:48.720 --> 01:12:51.840] When he refused to do it, I didn't argue with him. [01:12:52.880 --> 01:12:58.720] I turned to the bailiff, Mr. Bailiff, you hear that? Yes, Mr. Colton, I did arrest that judge. [01:12:59.600 --> 01:13:02.720] Now I'm having a conversation with the court security officer. [01:13:03.200 --> 01:13:06.240] The judge has nothing to do with that conversation. [01:13:06.880 --> 01:13:15.040] One word out of him, he gets obstruction, witness tampering, 3605, 3606. [01:13:15.840 --> 01:13:17.760] So they always sit there and keep their mouth shut. [01:13:19.680 --> 01:13:24.000] You need to be able to do that, and you need to be able to do that without being angry, [01:13:25.520 --> 01:13:28.960] without being afraid of them. If you're afraid of them, they can tell. [01:13:29.440 --> 01:13:33.280] They can tell. So that's why I do this the way I do it. [01:13:33.280 --> 01:13:39.120] But at the end of the day, especially when you get out of the really lower courts, [01:13:39.120 --> 01:13:43.440] these higher judges, they aren't really that difficult. [01:13:45.200 --> 01:13:48.320] Except when they come across somebody like me who's a jerk. [01:13:49.120 --> 01:13:52.800] Randy Colton, Brett Fountain, Rue of La Radio, we'll be right back. [01:13:59.840 --> 01:14:04.880] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his word? [01:14:04.880 --> 01:14:09.920] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [01:14:09.920 --> 01:14:15.200] for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [01:14:15.200 --> 01:14:21.040] 2.15. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:14:21.040 --> 01:14:26.240] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [01:14:26.240 --> 01:14:31.760] Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour [01:14:31.760 --> 01:14:36.800] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character [01:14:36.800 --> 01:14:42.560] development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:14:42.560 --> 01:14:47.200] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of [01:14:47.200 --> 01:14:52.880] our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:14:52.880 --> 01:14:58.080] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. 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For more [01:15:40.880 --> 01:15:46.080] information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:15:46.080 --> 01:15:55.520] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [01:15:55.520 --> 01:15:59.120] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:16:06.160 --> 01:16:36.160] Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo [01:16:36.160 --> 01:17:06.160] Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, Yo, [01:17:07.040 --> 01:17:09.800] He's asked you. What the heck do you want? [01:17:13.380 --> 01:17:21.640] Well, you know, you have kind of a semi rosy view of judges, maybe it's your location. But listen, when you... [01:17:21.720 --> 01:17:28.960] Let's imagine you're a judge and you heard the same, you saw the same, you know, pleadings day in and day out, [01:17:28.960 --> 01:17:33.840] whether it's auto stuff, citation, or civil. [01:17:33.840 --> 01:17:36.840] Don't you think that if somebody came in, [01:17:36.840 --> 01:17:40.040] like what was used, Brett, for example, [01:17:40.040 --> 01:17:41.200] with a different argument, [01:17:41.200 --> 01:17:43.280] that a judge would perk their ears up [01:17:43.280 --> 01:17:46.680] and they would like, maybe I better go read that statute. [01:17:46.680 --> 01:17:49.080] Maybe I better go take a second look here [01:17:49.080 --> 01:17:51.160] and think about what this fellow's saying. [01:17:51.160 --> 01:17:52.240] And that's not what they do. [01:17:52.240 --> 01:17:53.560] You're automatically wrong. [01:17:55.040 --> 01:17:57.400] Every person that comes in and brings an argument, [01:17:57.440 --> 01:18:01.040] even if it's based on law, case law, statute, [01:18:01.040 --> 01:18:03.440] whatever it is, if a judge sees that, [01:18:03.440 --> 01:18:07.680] if it doesn't go along with their quote unquote worldview, [01:18:07.680 --> 01:18:10.800] you're automatically canceled in that court. [01:18:11.880 --> 01:18:12.720] Good example is- [01:18:12.720 --> 01:18:16.160] Well, you know, I went to a Justice of the Peace [01:18:16.160 --> 01:18:17.980] who I had known for a long time. [01:18:17.980 --> 01:18:21.640] He was a 20 year sheriff's deputy. [01:18:21.640 --> 01:18:23.600] And then he became a Justice of the Peace [01:18:23.600 --> 01:18:25.400] and he had been one for 12 years. [01:18:26.320 --> 01:18:29.840] And I went to him and we knew one another [01:18:29.840 --> 01:18:33.920] and he respected me and I went through the code with him. [01:18:35.360 --> 01:18:36.200] That's what he said to me. [01:18:36.200 --> 01:18:38.480] He said, are you telling me [01:18:38.480 --> 01:18:42.200] that what I did as a policeman for the last 20 years, [01:18:43.200 --> 01:18:44.540] for 20 years was wrong. [01:18:44.540 --> 01:18:47.440] And what I did as a JP and what I've been trained to do [01:18:47.440 --> 01:18:50.040] for the last 12 years is wrong. [01:18:50.040 --> 01:18:52.360] What everybody in Texas is doing, [01:18:52.360 --> 01:18:55.640] has been doing for the last 30 years is wrong. [01:18:59.200 --> 01:19:00.840] Don't ask me, Mark. [01:19:00.840 --> 01:19:02.420] I didn't write the code. [01:19:02.420 --> 01:19:03.760] I just read it. [01:19:03.760 --> 01:19:05.920] Here it is, clear as day. [01:19:07.600 --> 01:19:11.640] He just could not accept that what he's been doing [01:19:11.640 --> 01:19:15.140] his whole career is horribly illegal. [01:19:17.120 --> 01:19:17.960] I get it. [01:19:19.040 --> 01:19:21.560] He gets, you know, he sees- [01:19:21.560 --> 01:19:25.040] Well, who could really want to think that about themselves? [01:19:26.440 --> 01:19:29.640] Cognitive dissonance is what we got to deal with. [01:19:29.640 --> 01:19:31.640] That don't mean they're bad guys. [01:19:31.640 --> 01:19:34.840] Just, I've been working on cars for 30 years [01:19:34.840 --> 01:19:37.440] and you come in and tell me what I'm doing here is wrong. [01:19:37.440 --> 01:19:38.800] Get the heck out of here. [01:19:40.400 --> 01:19:43.220] I'm going to even bother to argue with you. [01:19:43.220 --> 01:19:44.520] I know what I'm doing. [01:19:45.840 --> 01:19:47.560] I get it why they're that way. [01:19:48.640 --> 01:19:50.000] Even the ones who want to be good guys. [01:19:50.000 --> 01:19:52.400] My son-in-law is the justice of the peace. [01:19:53.640 --> 01:19:57.060] Before he got elected, I walked through the codes with him. [01:19:58.600 --> 01:20:01.880] Then he goes down to training and comes back [01:20:01.880 --> 01:20:03.920] and how do you think he does it? [01:20:03.920 --> 01:20:07.140] By the code says or what his training said? [01:20:10.720 --> 01:20:14.920] Can't bring himself to do something other [01:20:14.920 --> 01:20:17.880] than what he's trained to do, what everybody else is doing. [01:20:20.120 --> 01:20:21.120] That's what we got to deal with. [01:20:21.120 --> 01:20:26.120] So strategy at this point is set them up. [01:20:28.440 --> 01:20:33.040] Let's go in there and get them to not do something. [01:20:34.360 --> 01:20:38.360] I sent a 250 page criminal complaint [01:20:38.360 --> 01:20:40.940] to the chief justice of the Texas Supreme. [01:20:42.880 --> 01:20:46.800] The governor is the highest level executive officer [01:20:46.800 --> 01:20:51.240] in the state and the chief justice is the supreme [01:20:51.240 --> 01:20:53.740] is the highest level magistrate in the state. [01:20:55.200 --> 01:20:58.140] So felt appropriate that I sent it to him. [01:20:59.680 --> 01:21:01.200] He threw it in the trash. [01:21:02.760 --> 01:21:05.400] I sued him for $20 million in the federal court [01:21:05.400 --> 01:21:06.800] in his personal capacity. [01:21:06.800 --> 01:21:08.500] How's that work for you, Bubba? [01:21:11.080 --> 01:21:13.020] He was not the happy camper. [01:21:14.100 --> 01:21:15.840] This is how we're going to beat him. [01:21:17.000 --> 01:21:20.600] Yeah, we have a friend in common [01:21:20.600 --> 01:21:23.160] or our friend in Seattle, Kurt, there. [01:21:23.160 --> 01:21:26.840] He used those methods and always did. [01:21:26.840 --> 01:21:27.680] No, he didn't. [01:21:29.480 --> 01:21:30.600] He didn't. [01:21:30.600 --> 01:21:31.420] He didn't. [01:21:31.420 --> 01:21:32.260] No, he didn't. [01:21:32.260 --> 01:21:34.040] He may have used some later. [01:21:34.920 --> 01:21:38.640] He went down and created a heck of a mess for himself. [01:21:38.640 --> 01:21:42.480] Did what he wanted to do till he got really ugly. [01:21:42.480 --> 01:21:44.480] And he went looking for a way to fix it. [01:21:45.480 --> 01:21:49.160] But always he's doing the patriot thing. [01:21:49.160 --> 01:21:50.740] Go in and fight with him. [01:21:52.440 --> 01:21:54.200] This was his child. [01:21:55.560 --> 01:21:58.040] If he'd have just took a step back [01:21:59.340 --> 01:22:01.940] and talked to them like they're people. [01:22:03.080 --> 01:22:04.160] We are people. [01:22:04.160 --> 01:22:06.020] I got a guy in Arizona. [01:22:07.720 --> 01:22:09.080] He gets pulled over. [01:22:09.080 --> 01:22:12.320] He's selling flags on the side of the road [01:22:12.320 --> 01:22:14.120] and they pulled him over. [01:22:14.120 --> 01:22:15.920] They stopped him for that and told him [01:22:15.920 --> 01:22:18.480] you can't sell flags here and they wrote him a ticket. [01:22:18.480 --> 01:22:21.440] And he had these patriot plates on. [01:22:21.440 --> 01:22:22.800] They asked him for his license [01:22:22.800 --> 01:22:25.000] and he's telling the patriot stuff [01:22:25.000 --> 01:22:27.680] that he's don't apply to me and blah, blah, blah. [01:22:27.680 --> 01:22:30.200] And really PO'd him. [01:22:30.200 --> 01:22:31.480] They said, are you armed? [01:22:31.480 --> 01:22:33.200] And he said, no, I'm not. [01:22:33.200 --> 01:22:34.240] I said, do you have a gun on you? [01:22:34.240 --> 01:22:35.520] I said, no, I don't. [01:22:35.520 --> 01:22:37.520] I got one over there in the floorboard. [01:22:38.360 --> 01:22:39.840] There was a PO'd at him. [01:22:39.840 --> 01:22:43.720] They charged him with not telling them that he was armed. [01:22:43.720 --> 01:22:45.100] He wasn't. [01:22:45.100 --> 01:22:48.260] Charged him with two felonies, two misdemeanors. [01:22:49.600 --> 01:22:54.600] He paid these patriot jackasses $11,000 [01:22:54.600 --> 01:22:57.580] to write all these BS documents for him. [01:22:58.960 --> 01:23:01.760] So I looked at all of them and said, holy crap. [01:23:01.760 --> 01:23:06.040] I said, Arnold, is this the hill you want to die on? [01:23:08.160 --> 01:23:09.600] What do you want to do with your life? [01:23:09.600 --> 01:23:12.000] Do you want to fix this legal system? [01:23:12.000 --> 01:23:13.880] Is that what you want to do? [01:23:13.880 --> 01:23:17.000] He said, no, he was a Catholic church. [01:23:17.000 --> 01:23:19.680] He wanted to promote the Catholic church. [01:23:19.680 --> 01:23:24.680] Okay, then tell you what, call prosecutor and tell him. [01:23:26.160 --> 01:23:27.720] I got hooked up with all these guys. [01:23:27.720 --> 01:23:29.280] They're telling me all this stuff [01:23:29.280 --> 01:23:32.000] and all these things I'm supposed to do [01:23:32.000 --> 01:23:34.480] and it'll make everything right. [01:23:34.480 --> 01:23:38.640] And turns out it was all a bunch of crap, older. [01:23:38.640 --> 01:23:42.680] I'm sorry about all that junk that's been filed. [01:23:42.680 --> 01:23:47.560] Is there something we can do to just get this over with? [01:23:49.080 --> 01:23:51.920] Prosecutors said, well, I'll tell you what. [01:23:51.920 --> 01:23:54.400] You got $500 in bond up. [01:23:55.480 --> 01:24:00.480] If you'll forego that $500 bond or fine and cost, [01:24:02.400 --> 01:24:04.400] we'll drop both the felonies. [01:24:04.400 --> 01:24:07.320] We'll drop one of the misdemeanors [01:24:07.360 --> 01:24:10.240] and we'll just charge you with one Class C misdemeanor. [01:24:11.440 --> 01:24:13.240] Fine and court costs and it's gone. [01:24:14.840 --> 01:24:19.680] He spent $11,000 and that's all he had to do. [01:24:20.640 --> 01:24:22.960] Just talk to him like they're human beings [01:24:23.840 --> 01:24:26.320] and he wouldn't have all this problem. [01:24:26.320 --> 01:24:27.560] Guy gets, if you get a ticket, [01:24:27.560 --> 01:24:29.600] first thing you do is call a prosecutor, [01:24:29.600 --> 01:24:32.520] talk him into the best deal you can get. [01:24:32.520 --> 01:24:36.680] He makes you offer a deal, write that down. [01:24:37.520 --> 01:24:40.920] Now you can go in there and beat him up if you want to. [01:24:40.920 --> 01:24:43.360] He's already offered, made the offer. [01:24:43.360 --> 01:24:44.480] Can't back up on it. [01:24:46.400 --> 01:24:49.760] But if you go in there and wanted to fight with him, [01:24:49.760 --> 01:24:50.600] he'll give you one. [01:24:52.800 --> 01:24:53.640] Yeah. [01:24:53.640 --> 01:24:58.080] Are you saying that our mutual friend in Washington, [01:24:58.080 --> 01:25:02.920] actually he filed some kind of patriot mythology [01:25:02.920 --> 01:25:04.240] sort of thing? [01:25:04.240 --> 01:25:06.920] Did you guys notice that I didn't jump [01:25:06.920 --> 01:25:08.120] in the middle of that? [01:25:09.640 --> 01:25:13.840] When Brett got arrested in West Texas [01:25:13.840 --> 01:25:16.720] and they called me during Texas, [01:25:16.720 --> 01:25:19.040] I got in the car that minute and headed there. [01:25:21.320 --> 01:25:25.800] But I talked to Kurt, I wanted a timeline. [01:25:26.960 --> 01:25:29.680] He had a timeline, tell me what went on here. [01:25:29.680 --> 01:25:31.200] I could not get it. [01:25:33.640 --> 01:25:35.480] Bring me talk about timelines. [01:25:37.440 --> 01:25:39.320] I can't get a timeline. [01:25:40.480 --> 01:25:42.520] There's just a lot of moving pieces. [01:25:42.520 --> 01:25:47.520] There's, his has been a very multifaceted situation. [01:25:50.640 --> 01:25:54.400] So maybe a timeline was more work than usual. [01:25:54.400 --> 01:25:55.360] I don't know. [01:25:55.360 --> 01:25:58.080] I'm not aware of him filing anything [01:25:58.080 --> 01:25:59.840] that would have got himself into a mess. [01:25:59.840 --> 01:26:01.760] So that's news to me, but. [01:26:01.760 --> 01:26:03.840] I first talked to him. [01:26:03.840 --> 01:26:08.520] I was cautious because he was doing the patriot stuff [01:26:08.520 --> 01:26:10.920] I've seen for 30 years. [01:26:10.920 --> 01:26:13.520] I couldn't. [01:26:13.520 --> 01:26:14.360] I don't think so. [01:26:16.560 --> 01:26:18.720] If I can't get a timeline, [01:26:18.720 --> 01:26:22.680] I have never, ever helped somebody, ever. [01:26:26.360 --> 01:26:29.120] I pressed him for a long time for a timeline. [01:26:29.120 --> 01:26:30.920] He didn't wanna tell me everything. [01:26:31.760 --> 01:26:33.840] He refused. [01:26:33.840 --> 01:26:35.880] And I am not stepping into something. [01:26:36.800 --> 01:26:39.200] Or I don't know what I'm stepping in. [01:26:39.200 --> 01:26:42.520] There's another one like that, but I didn't get into it. [01:26:42.520 --> 01:26:45.320] Turned out there's a good thing we did. [01:26:45.320 --> 01:26:48.560] Hang on, Randy Kelp, Brett Fountain ruled our radio. [01:26:48.560 --> 01:26:49.600] We'll be right back. [01:26:49.600 --> 01:26:53.080] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:26:53.080 --> 01:26:56.480] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:26:56.480 --> 01:26:59.760] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:26:59.760 --> 01:27:03.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:27:03.120 --> 01:27:05.200] Privacy is under attack. [01:27:05.200 --> 01:27:07.240] When you give up data about yourself, [01:27:07.240 --> 01:27:09.680] you're not going to be able to do anything about it. [01:27:09.680 --> 01:27:12.040] You're not going to be able to do anything about it. [01:27:12.040 --> 01:27:14.040] You're not going to be able to do anything about it. [01:27:14.040 --> 01:27:16.040] You're not going to be able to do anything about it. [01:27:16.040 --> 01:27:18.040] You're not going to be able to do anything about it. [01:27:18.080 --> 01:27:19.680] When you give up data about yourself, [01:27:19.680 --> 01:27:21.400] you'll never get it back again. [01:27:21.400 --> 01:27:23.200] And once your privacy is gone, [01:27:23.200 --> 01:27:26.400] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:27:26.400 --> 01:27:29.360] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance [01:27:29.360 --> 01:27:31.720] and keep your information to yourself. [01:27:31.720 --> 01:27:34.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:27:34.120 --> 01:27:37.240] This message is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:27:37.240 --> 01:27:39.120] the private search engine alternative [01:27:39.120 --> 01:27:41.240] to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:27:41.240 --> 01:27:43.520] Start over with StartPage. [01:27:44.520 --> 01:27:48.040] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:27:48.040 --> 01:27:51.760] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, [01:27:51.760 --> 01:27:55.720] but think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:27:55.720 --> 01:27:58.680] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections [01:27:58.680 --> 01:28:01.280] between neurons, which actually makes it harder [01:28:01.280 --> 01:28:03.440] for people to manage problems. [01:28:03.440 --> 01:28:06.600] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people [01:28:06.600 --> 01:28:09.920] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:28:09.920 --> 01:28:11.720] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh [01:28:11.720 --> 01:28:15.160] conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:28:15.160 --> 01:28:17.440] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:28:17.440 --> 01:28:20.720] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:28:20.720 --> 01:28:23.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, [01:28:23.440 --> 01:28:25.520] the world's most private search engine. [01:28:30.440 --> 01:28:33.640] This is building seven, a 47 story skyscraper [01:28:33.640 --> 01:28:35.960] that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:28:35.960 --> 01:28:37.760] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:28:37.760 --> 01:28:41.400] However, 1500 architects and engineers concluded [01:28:41.400 --> 01:28:42.920] it was a controlled demolition. [01:28:42.920 --> 01:28:44.880] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members [01:28:44.880 --> 01:28:45.720] have given their lives. [01:28:45.720 --> 01:28:48.480] But thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:28:48.480 --> 01:28:50.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:28:50.000 --> 01:28:50.840] I'm a structural engineer. [01:28:50.840 --> 01:28:52.320] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:28:52.320 --> 01:28:53.320] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:28:53.320 --> 01:28:54.920] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:28:54.920 --> 01:28:57.480] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:28:57.480 --> 01:29:00.400] Go to rememberbuildingseven.org today. [01:29:02.120 --> 01:29:03.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer [01:29:03.680 --> 01:29:05.240] the rule of law traffic seminar. [01:29:05.240 --> 01:29:07.600] In today's America, we live in an us against them society. [01:29:07.600 --> 01:29:09.880] And if we, the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:29:09.920 --> 01:29:12.800] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:29:12.800 --> 01:29:14.640] Among those rights are the right to travel freely [01:29:14.640 --> 01:29:16.120] from place to place, the right to act [01:29:16.120 --> 01:29:18.000] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:29:18.000 --> 01:29:19.800] the right to due process of law. [01:29:19.800 --> 01:29:22.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:29:22.280 --> 01:29:24.400] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights [01:29:24.400 --> 01:29:25.640] through due process. [01:29:25.640 --> 01:29:27.160] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, [01:29:27.160 --> 01:29:28.640] in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:29:28.640 --> 01:29:30.760] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool [01:29:30.760 --> 01:29:33.400] available that will help you understand what due process is [01:29:33.400 --> 01:29:35.360] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. 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[01:30:02.040 --> 01:30:04.840] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:30:04.840 --> 01:30:07.160] logosradionetwork.com. [01:30:10.040 --> 01:30:11.880] Yeah, and who you want to chip, [01:30:11.880 --> 01:30:12.600] who you take me for? [01:30:12.600 --> 01:30:13.680] Free tolerance? [01:30:13.680 --> 01:30:14.680] Who you want to chip? [01:30:14.680 --> 01:30:15.880] Me, not free tolerance. [01:30:15.880 --> 01:30:16.920] You can't chip me, [01:30:16.920 --> 01:30:18.920] how am I to say? [01:30:18.920 --> 01:30:20.520] Don't let them chip you in the morning, [01:30:20.520 --> 01:30:21.640] chip you in the evening, [01:30:21.640 --> 01:30:23.800] put a chip in your body. [01:30:23.800 --> 01:30:26.160] And anyway, you go computer, read it. [01:30:26.160 --> 01:30:28.080] You can't hide me, say, from nobody. [01:30:28.080 --> 01:30:29.200] What me say? [01:30:29.200 --> 01:30:31.480] Chip in your mom, chip in your daddy, [01:30:31.480 --> 01:30:33.800] chip in your grandpa and your grand me. [01:30:33.800 --> 01:30:36.120] Chip in me, chip in your baby, [01:30:36.120 --> 01:30:37.680] chip in your family, [01:30:37.680 --> 01:30:42.680] Chippin' of your family, whole family Chippin' of your dog and the cat around we [01:30:42.680 --> 01:30:47.680] Chippin' of the beef and you still gon' eat it Chippin' of the fish, them all in the sea [01:30:47.680 --> 01:30:52.680] Chippin' of the shark and the whale around me You know still mankind gone chip crazy [01:30:52.680 --> 01:30:57.680] They're the kind of thing, man, they want to eat it Social security, them gon' tell me [01:30:57.680 --> 01:30:59.680] Number when them give me, them whip it up, you'll see [01:30:59.680 --> 01:31:03.680] Chippin' you in the morning, Chippin' you in the evening, Chippin' you all at dinnertime [01:31:03.680 --> 01:31:08.680] Experiment on mankind, but man, you know, say them lie [01:31:08.680 --> 01:31:13.680] Well, we don't want no chip, man, you have your body Freedom or something, man, you fight for it [01:31:13.680 --> 01:31:18.680] You should tell them, them fi' read it Constitution set us free [01:31:18.680 --> 01:31:23.680] Man, let them put no chip in your body Put no chip in your dog or cat, you see [01:31:23.680 --> 01:31:28.680] No put no chip in your cow and go eat it No put no chip in the fish and go eat it [01:31:28.680 --> 01:31:32.680] All in the whale and the shark in the sea Put the little chip in the little baby [01:31:32.680 --> 01:31:37.680] Want to put the chip in the ground for you, see Want to put the little chip in the high man body [01:31:37.680 --> 01:31:42.680] If me go hide in the Atlantic sea Man did have to lie, me say, gon' go find me [01:31:42.680 --> 01:31:47.680] Satellite get mad, satellite get angry Two chip them use, me say, crash up, you see [01:31:47.680 --> 01:31:51.680] Me say, Chippin' of the morning, Chippin' you in the evening, Chippin' you all at dinnertime [01:31:51.680 --> 01:31:56.680] Man, let them come, come chip we Put no chip in the little baby [01:31:56.680 --> 01:32:01.680] Me say, Chippin' you in the morning, Chippin' you in the evening, They want to come and chip me [01:32:01.680 --> 01:32:05.680] But they want to chip all in at the sea And the shark and the whale around me [01:32:05.680 --> 01:32:11.680] Want me say, chip for you mom, chip for you daddy Chip for the lamb, little, little baby [01:32:11.680 --> 01:32:16.680] Chip for the shark, them we eat in the sea Chip for the whale, animal around me [01:32:16.680 --> 01:32:21.680] Chip for the dog and the cat, them you see Even want to chip man the chicken round we [01:32:21.680 --> 01:32:25.680] Chicken or the cow, beef you go eat eat Them the kind of thing getting me angry [01:32:25.680 --> 01:32:30.680] Man kind man, it's unnecessary Give me source of security to nobody see [01:32:30.680 --> 01:32:35.680] But they still want to come and chip me Get me mad lord, man they get me angry [01:32:35.680 --> 01:32:40.680] Free to lay, man a chip that be But them the chip man you put in your belly [01:32:40.680 --> 01:32:45.680] Chip them your man, kind of make you a fooie Them a put it in their head and follow with the beat [01:32:45.680 --> 01:32:49.680] Anyway you go, me say, eat the country Satellite then use, find the chip [01:32:56.680 --> 01:32:58.680] I don't want to do this on here [01:33:00.680 --> 01:33:06.680] He came to us for help and tried to help him but just fight [01:33:06.680 --> 01:33:10.680] Well we can move, listen, let's move on to a different situation [01:33:10.680 --> 01:33:16.680] We don't have to talk about that particular situation I'm just trying to use this as an example [01:33:16.680 --> 01:33:22.680] Now we'll use a different example, let's use the example of the old 12B6 pistol whipping tool [01:33:22.680 --> 01:33:27.680] This is used in every court in the nation [01:33:27.680 --> 01:33:32.680] Whether you're an experienced lawyer like Warner Mendenhall or Robert Barnes [01:33:32.680 --> 01:33:37.680] Or some people, attorneys that are licensed to argue before the Supreme Court [01:33:37.680 --> 01:33:43.680] A 12B6 motion is basically a way to set up a case [01:33:43.680 --> 01:33:47.680] To drag it out, looks like two to three years [01:33:47.680 --> 01:33:50.680] Which is very expensive to fight these cases [01:33:50.680 --> 01:33:54.680] And there are others who are involved in the same cases [01:33:54.680 --> 01:34:00.680] And they're using, these judges allow the legal system to be used as a means of punishment [01:34:00.680 --> 01:34:04.680] And the punishment is the cost of litigation [01:34:04.680 --> 01:34:07.680] And the length of time of that litigation [01:34:07.680 --> 01:34:15.680] And what we see is that these justices and judges [01:34:16.680 --> 01:34:22.680] Who are supposed to be referees, who are supposed to listen to the argument of both sides [01:34:22.680 --> 01:34:28.680] They are known to make up their mind before they even hear the arguments [01:34:28.680 --> 01:34:32.680] And they don't necessarily follow the law [01:34:32.680 --> 01:34:36.680] It's supposed to be the preponderance of evidence [01:34:36.680 --> 01:34:41.680] The preponderance of law, of case law, of statutes [01:34:41.680 --> 01:34:45.680] It's supposed to win a case, but if you look at these cases [01:34:45.680 --> 01:34:51.680] Alphonse is a great example of how he carefully laid his case out [01:34:51.680 --> 01:34:54.680] He presented it, and it never got answered [01:34:54.680 --> 01:34:56.680] It's never going to be answered [01:34:56.680 --> 01:34:58.680] And if you don't answer the case [01:34:58.680 --> 01:35:01.680] If there's a case where there's a default judgment [01:35:01.680 --> 01:35:05.680] As you mentioned in Utah, that judge didn't follow the law [01:35:05.680 --> 01:35:07.680] The court clerk didn't follow the law [01:35:07.680 --> 01:35:09.680] You see this happening all over the country [01:35:09.680 --> 01:35:11.680] Judges do what they want to do [01:35:11.680 --> 01:35:23.680] How often do you see a citizen in this country hold judges accountable for their decisions? [01:35:25.680 --> 01:35:28.680] They ruled that mine was frivolous [01:35:28.680 --> 01:35:30.680] 150 page criminal complaint [01:35:30.680 --> 01:35:35.680] I stipulated with specificity and particularity [01:35:35.680 --> 01:35:38.680] Every allegation that I made [01:35:38.680 --> 01:35:42.680] I took O'Connor's federal causes of action [01:35:42.680 --> 01:35:49.680] And made sure I addressed every single element of each claim that I made [01:35:49.680 --> 01:35:52.680] 150 page complaint [01:35:52.680 --> 01:35:55.680] This case is frivolous, dismissed with prejudice [01:35:55.680 --> 01:35:58.680] Is that a fact, Jack? [01:35:58.680 --> 01:36:02.680] Okay, let's see how that works out for you [01:36:02.680 --> 01:36:07.680] Take them to the federal court, criminally [01:36:07.680 --> 01:36:10.680] You don't want to follow the law the way you're supposed to? [01:36:10.680 --> 01:36:13.680] Then I go for you [01:36:13.680 --> 01:36:16.680] That works for me [01:36:16.680 --> 01:36:20.680] Now they're going to get me to the president [01:36:20.680 --> 01:36:25.680] I'm going to get to pitch my case to the president through the attorney general [01:36:25.680 --> 01:36:28.680] Because the attorney general is not going to do what I asked her to [01:36:28.680 --> 01:36:31.680] Because I'm just a two-bit pro se, no nothing [01:36:31.680 --> 01:36:35.680] She don't have time to mess with me [01:36:35.680 --> 01:36:38.680] See how that works for you [01:36:38.680 --> 01:36:41.680] And I charge her criminal [01:36:41.680 --> 01:36:46.680] File against her, now she's got a lot of political enemies out there [01:36:46.680 --> 01:36:50.680] So, you want to play Russian roulette? [01:36:50.680 --> 01:36:58.680] Think maybe the Democrats can put together a grand jury that will want to host you? [01:37:01.680 --> 01:37:04.680] Everything's political [01:37:04.680 --> 01:37:07.680] And I didn't go in here just to start a fight [01:37:07.680 --> 01:37:10.680] I was trying to get to an outcome [01:37:10.680 --> 01:37:14.680] And they wanted to have a fight [01:37:14.680 --> 01:37:18.680] I wouldn't have had a problem if we had got to a 12b6 [01:37:18.680 --> 01:37:21.680] But we didn't get to one [01:37:21.680 --> 01:37:25.680] They did a 12b6 and I did a response to it [01:37:25.680 --> 01:37:27.680] They just ignored everything [01:37:27.680 --> 01:37:30.680] They used case law that was all trash and I ripped their case law apart [01:37:30.680 --> 01:37:32.680] I didn't go in there to have a fight [01:37:32.680 --> 01:37:38.680] I went in there to get to an outcome [01:37:38.680 --> 01:37:41.680] And everything I did is toward that outcome [01:37:41.680 --> 01:37:45.680] And I am a citizen in a republic [01:37:45.680 --> 01:37:49.680] It's my duty to file against the judges [01:37:49.680 --> 01:37:55.680] Greg, how many times have you filed criminal charges against a judge? [01:37:55.680 --> 01:37:58.680] Every time [01:37:58.680 --> 01:38:01.680] Okay, what did you do with the criminal complaint? [01:38:01.680 --> 01:38:06.680] Who did you file it with? [01:38:06.680 --> 01:38:08.680] Are you asking me? [01:38:08.680 --> 01:38:10.680] Yeah [01:38:10.680 --> 01:38:16.680] No, I've never filed criminal complaints against any judge because I've never had a case against a judge [01:38:16.680 --> 01:38:20.680] Well, you wuss, go out and pick a fight [01:38:20.680 --> 01:38:24.680] You're no fun [01:38:24.680 --> 01:38:29.680] I'm going to go to Arizona just to pick a fight [01:38:29.680 --> 01:38:32.680] Randy, I'm still taking asshole training lessons [01:38:32.680 --> 01:38:35.680] Oh, okay [01:38:35.680 --> 01:38:41.680] What I'm trying to get you to do is don't automatically assume they're bad guys [01:38:41.680 --> 01:38:44.680] And I'm working out a different way of doing it [01:38:44.680 --> 01:38:52.680] The next time I file suit, I'm going to start with a petition for declaratory judgment [01:38:52.680 --> 01:38:55.680] Petition for declaratory judgment [01:38:55.680 --> 01:39:01.680] There is no 12b motion in a declaratory judgment suit [01:39:01.680 --> 01:39:10.680] I filed one in Fort Worth, a bride, a federal judge in Fort Worth [01:39:10.680 --> 01:39:18.680] Petition for declaratory judgment and he dismissed it with prejudice, failure to state a claim [01:39:19.680 --> 01:39:24.680] So I went straight to the FBI and filed criminal charges against him [01:39:24.680 --> 01:39:29.680] It's declaratory judgment, it doesn't have claims [01:39:29.680 --> 01:39:40.680] Declaratory judgment, you take the point of law that you want, that you've developed to support your case [01:39:40.680 --> 01:39:47.680] And you ask for a ruling on the application of the law [01:39:47.680 --> 01:40:00.680] Here I'll sue and ask, does a judge have a duty to properly apply the law to the facts? [01:40:00.680 --> 01:40:09.680] And if the judge fails to properly apply the law to the facts, is that a crime in the United States? [01:40:09.680 --> 01:40:12.680] I'll file that one [01:40:12.680 --> 01:40:15.680] Walker v. Packer [01:40:15.680 --> 01:40:18.680] Walker v. Packer, this is what the judge did [01:40:18.680 --> 01:40:22.680] These are all the facts that I asserted [01:40:22.680 --> 01:40:25.680] This is his response [01:40:25.680 --> 01:40:33.680] Applying his response to this case, did the judge properly apply the law to the facts? [01:40:33.680 --> 01:40:35.680] This one's a no-brainer [01:40:35.680 --> 01:40:40.680] They say no, now my civil suit's dead bang [01:40:40.680 --> 01:40:43.680] Gotcha [01:40:43.680 --> 01:40:45.680] That's my neck, that's my strategy on this one [01:40:45.680 --> 01:40:49.680] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, move our radio [01:40:49.680 --> 01:40:51.680] I'm back [01:41:13.680 --> 01:41:17.680] On a current major medical plan by lowering the claims cost [01:41:17.680 --> 01:41:23.680] The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan [01:41:23.680 --> 01:41:29.680] That provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc [01:41:29.680 --> 01:41:32.680] All at zero cost, with zero copay [01:41:32.680 --> 01:41:38.680] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes [01:41:38.680 --> 01:41:44.680] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes [01:41:44.680 --> 01:41:50.680] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit [01:41:50.680 --> 01:41:59.680] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com [01:41:59.680 --> 01:42:02.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:42:02.680 --> 01:42:06.680] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary [01:42:06.680 --> 01:42:13.680] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step [01:42:13.680 --> 01:42:17.680] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing [01:42:17.680 --> 01:42:21.680] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [01:42:21.680 --> 01:42:26.680] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too [01:42:26.680 --> 01:42:32.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience [01:42:32.680 --> 01:42:37.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:42:37.680 --> 01:42:41.680] About the principles and practices that control our American courts [01:42:41.680 --> 01:42:50.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more [01:42:50.680 --> 01:42:59.680] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ [01:43:02.680 --> 01:43:15.680] Hello? Oh man, you're in jail? You got busted, man? Oh man, I'm broke, dude [01:43:15.680 --> 01:43:25.680] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:43:25.680 --> 01:43:29.680] Some things I realize fully [01:43:29.680 --> 01:43:34.680] Somebody's on the police, a policeman [01:43:34.680 --> 01:43:38.680] Somebody's on the police, a bully [01:43:38.680 --> 01:43:42.680] There's always a room at the top of the hill [01:43:42.680 --> 01:43:49.680] Okay, we are back with Andy Kelton from Fountain Rule of Law Radio, and Greg, I'm going to drop you like a hot rock [01:43:49.680 --> 01:43:54.680] Can you call us back tomorrow night? I got a first time caller and we've only got one segment [01:43:54.680 --> 01:43:58.680] Well, good luck with that [01:43:58.680 --> 01:44:03.680] Thank you, call back tomorrow night and we'll start a fight on the air [01:44:03.680 --> 01:44:06.680] Alright, good night [01:44:06.680 --> 01:44:10.680] Okay, now we're going to Mike in Colorado [01:44:10.680 --> 01:44:14.680] Mike, what do you have for us today? [01:44:14.680 --> 01:44:17.680] Hey Randy, how are you doing this evening? [01:44:17.680 --> 01:44:21.680] I'm doing pretty good for an old fat guy [01:44:21.680 --> 01:44:35.680] Well, I would like to say how much I have appreciated all of the content that I've been able to glean from the Rule of Law Radio archive so far [01:44:35.680 --> 01:44:49.680] But the reason I'm calling is because I'm in the midst of a dispute with an HOA that I would like a little bit of guidance on because I'm pretty much brand new to the world of litigation and all of this [01:44:50.680 --> 01:44:59.680] Okay, have you read the whole HOA contract? [01:44:59.680 --> 01:45:05.680] I have been through the HOA declarations multiple times [01:45:05.680 --> 01:45:15.680] I am going to be headed to the county clerk either tomorrow or Monday in order to just make sure that there are no amendments that I'm not aware of [01:45:15.680 --> 01:45:29.680] I filed a formal request for a meet and confer almost a month ago now and I followed that up with a secondary formal request [01:45:29.680 --> 01:45:36.680] And I've also submitted a SHA accommodation request as well [01:45:36.680 --> 01:45:46.680] But that was just filed on Monday, so they haven't had a whole lot of time to look through that and get back to me about it [01:45:46.680 --> 01:45:50.680] What was the nature of the HOA's claim? [01:45:50.680 --> 01:46:01.680] So the HOA is claiming that I have violated one of their covenants regarding an outbuilding [01:46:01.680 --> 01:46:11.680] It's because I'm building a sauna in the backyard of a house that I'm renting [01:46:14.680 --> 01:46:18.680] And the HOA has rules against saunas? [01:46:18.680 --> 01:46:34.680] The HOA has rules against outbuildings, sheds, tents, and other structures in backyards and people's driveways here in the community [01:46:34.680 --> 01:46:56.680] But there is nothing that I can find in their declarations that grants the HOA the authority to give notice of violations or levy fines beyond the HOA assessment fees [01:46:56.680 --> 01:47:00.680] What is an assessment fee? [01:47:00.680 --> 01:47:07.680] The HOA dues, like your monthly or quarterly fees [01:47:07.680 --> 01:47:15.680] Oh really? You would think they would have some sort of mechanism for punishing people with fines [01:47:15.680 --> 01:47:27.680] So they have explicit language that grants them the authority to do that when it comes to the HOA fees [01:47:27.680 --> 01:47:41.680] But their declaration has language that pertains to litigation when it comes to violations beyond assessment fees [01:47:41.680 --> 01:47:59.680] Hold on, if there are no covenants that address some kind of remedy, then there's nothing to litigate [01:47:59.680 --> 01:48:19.680] Exactly. From what I have gathered talking to other people who have dealt with HOA disputes here in Colorado, a lot of HOAs rely on what is called the Colorado Common Interest Ownership Act [01:48:19.680 --> 01:48:28.680] And they try and claim that that act somehow grants them the authority to levy fines on people for violations [01:48:28.680 --> 01:48:37.680] What is the preamble to the act? What is the act claimed? What is the authority of this act? [01:48:37.680 --> 01:48:56.680] I don't have that in front of me at the moment, but it is an act that to the best of my understanding is utilized in order to help HOAs enforce the authority that they have granted to them by their covenants [01:48:56.680 --> 01:49:10.680] And also help homeowners receive some kind of due process when dealing with any kind of violation or dispute [01:49:10.680 --> 01:49:32.680] Does it contain language that assesses some kind of claim that allows the HOA to assess a claim for a violation of a covenant when the language of that remedy is not in the HOA contract? [01:49:33.680 --> 01:49:42.680] To the best of my knowledge it does not, but now that you're saying that I'll have to go back through that act and just double check and make sure [01:49:42.680 --> 01:49:48.680] Yeah, I would be really sensitive to that. That's a really important point [01:49:48.680 --> 01:50:04.680] I can imagine it saying that where an HOA has a set of covenants that the HOA can exact this remedy for a violation of a covenant [01:50:04.680 --> 01:50:12.680] So in that case the remedy would not have to be in the covenants themselves, it could be in the state law [01:50:12.680 --> 01:50:24.680] But that's a very fine line for them to try to walk without going into the dangerous territory of interfering with the obligations of a private contract [01:50:24.680 --> 01:50:25.680] Exactly [01:50:25.680 --> 01:50:31.680] So that's a really touchy spot for them to be in [01:50:31.680 --> 01:50:35.680] Have you countersued the HOA? [01:50:35.680 --> 01:50:40.680] I have not filed any type of suit yet [01:50:40.680 --> 01:50:56.680] I have been trying to be really careful about this because one of the bits of research that I did was stating that if you sue a HOA and win [01:50:56.680 --> 01:51:09.680] Then there's a good potential that you could cause everyone in the neighborhood HOA fees to go up [01:51:09.680 --> 01:51:17.680] Okay, the point wasn't to win a suit against the HOA [01:51:17.680 --> 01:51:25.680] They're pulling two pair on you, you need to pull out three of a kind [01:51:25.680 --> 01:51:28.680] It's about leverage [01:51:28.680 --> 01:51:31.680] Okay [01:51:31.680 --> 01:51:40.680] Consider it that way, you don't really want to have to sue them, but you want them not want you to sue them [01:51:40.680 --> 01:51:43.680] But this is all poker [01:51:43.680 --> 01:51:53.680] So then would a step in that direction be to file some kind of a letter of tort? [01:51:53.680 --> 01:51:56.680] No, no, no, don't do anything yet [01:51:56.680 --> 01:52:02.680] First thing to do, read the contract very carefully [01:52:02.680 --> 01:52:08.680] If the state of Colorado has some statutes concerning this, read that [01:52:08.680 --> 01:52:17.680] Look it over carefully, figure out what all your options are and then draft a plan [01:52:17.680 --> 01:52:19.680] Yep [01:52:19.680 --> 01:52:24.680] You gotta know where you're going, gonna wind up somewhere else [01:52:24.680 --> 01:52:27.680] So first thing, get all the law in place [01:52:27.680 --> 01:52:35.680] And once you get everything in place, then one of the strategies I really like to do is I like to get them to do stupid stuff [01:52:35.680 --> 01:52:41.680] Get them to do something to give you a claim against them [01:52:41.680 --> 01:52:48.680] You're gonna read the stuff that you can use to defend yourself with [01:52:48.680 --> 01:52:53.680] Not the greatest strategy [01:52:53.680 --> 01:52:58.680] You want to read the stuff that gives you a crack at it [01:52:58.680 --> 01:53:04.680] What can they do that'll give you a claim back after them [01:53:04.680 --> 01:53:13.680] So based off of everything that I have figured out so far as far as their declarations go [01:53:13.680 --> 01:53:22.680] Without having ascertained if there are any kind of amendments that have been made that grant them these authorities [01:53:22.680 --> 01:53:39.680] As of right now, based on some interactions with their lawyer, outright dismissing constitutional rights and FHA accommodations from an original rebuttal letter that I wrote [01:53:39.680 --> 01:53:50.680] There is the potential that their legal counsel has broken potentially up to 10 ABA model rules of professional conduct [01:53:50.680 --> 01:53:54.680] Have you filed... [01:53:54.680 --> 01:54:02.680] Okay, Colorado, they're gonna tell you that you filed bar group grievances with the state bar [01:54:02.680 --> 01:54:04.680] Not true [01:54:04.680 --> 01:54:11.680] In Colorado, bar grievances get filed with the Colorado Supreme [01:54:11.680 --> 01:54:21.680] Just ignore their bar, file them with the Supreme. First you beat up the lawyer good. How did they know you were building this sauna? [01:54:21.680 --> 01:54:33.680] So there was a picture that was taken from a neighbor's backyard that was attached to the original letter of violation that I got from the... [01:54:33.680 --> 01:54:37.680] Okay, they can do that. I was thinking of the grass police [01:54:37.680 --> 01:54:42.680] Where they came over on his property and took pictures of the grass and he sued them to the federal... [01:54:42.680 --> 01:54:44.680] That was great [01:54:44.680 --> 01:54:49.680] That was glorious. He beat them in the federal court [01:54:49.680 --> 01:54:53.680] Part of what you want to do, these guys tend to be pretty arrogant [01:54:53.680 --> 01:55:02.680] And don't just look at how you can defend yourself. Look at what you can do to go on the attack [01:55:02.680 --> 01:55:03.680] Okay [01:55:03.680 --> 01:55:08.680] What are they doing wrong or what can you do to get them to do something wrong? [01:55:08.680 --> 01:55:11.680] They're in bar grieving them [01:55:11.680 --> 01:55:14.680] Bar grieving the slot out of their lawyer [01:55:14.680 --> 01:55:17.680] If I were to... [01:55:17.680 --> 01:55:23.680] Wait, we're running out of time tonight. If you got more questions, call back tomorrow night [01:55:23.680 --> 01:55:28.680] Go through that Colorado code and call back tomorrow night and let's talk about this [01:55:28.680 --> 01:55:35.680] Maybe I can get David Lewis on. He fought a big HOA issue and won [01:55:35.680 --> 01:55:37.680] So we may want to get him on [01:55:37.680 --> 01:55:45.680] Thank you all for listening. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue Lover Radio will be back tomorrow night at our four hour info marathon [01:55:45.680 --> 01:55:47.680] Thank you for listening. Good night