Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:05.240] against you, that would go over very well at the moment. [00:05.240 --> 00:14.480] So I left and went out in the boyer in the courthouse and called 911. [00:14.480 --> 00:22.740] Got a South Lake police officer to come down and take my complaint against the judge. [00:23.740 --> 00:31.540] In order to demonstrate the nature of the complaint to the officer, [00:31.540 --> 00:37.060] I gave him a copy of the lawsuit that I was going to file against the judge. [00:39.620 --> 00:44.700] And the secret hope that he would show it to the judge. [00:46.420 --> 00:52.140] I wanted the judge to know that I just played him like a cheap fiddle. [00:52.740 --> 00:57.260] I had that lawsuit in my hand. [00:57.260 --> 01:02.860] When I went in and asked the judge to do something that I was relatively certain [01:02.860 --> 01:07.420] he would refuse to do, and he was very accommodating. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.780] He refused to do it. [01:10.780 --> 01:14.340] That was justice to the piece three, Tarrant County, Texas. [01:15.620 --> 01:19.940] So I went to justice to the piece four, Tarrant County, Texas, and I sued him. [01:20.700 --> 01:23.420] That was fun. [01:24.420 --> 01:29.340] And the bailiff there got real nasty with me, so I called 911 on him. [01:30.580 --> 01:33.740] And that got real exciting. [01:34.420 --> 01:36.980] And then the judge, the clerk, come and said, [01:36.980 --> 01:39.940] the judge is off the bench right now, he'll speak with you. [01:40.260 --> 01:43.460] And I went inside and the judge is behind this glass thing. [01:45.380 --> 01:49.420] I slid under the glass a red folder [01:49.420 --> 01:52.260] and I said, Your Honor, I have these for you. [01:52.260 --> 01:53.580] And he said, what are those? [01:53.580 --> 01:56.020] And I said, those are verified criminal affidavits [01:56.740 --> 02:01.500] against justice of the piece three and some various and other slundery [02:02.060 --> 02:03.620] public officials. [02:04.380 --> 02:08.380] He said, Mr. Kelton, what do you want me to do with these? [02:09.460 --> 02:14.220] I want you to do exactly what Article 15.09 [02:14.220 --> 02:16.700] Texas Code of Criminal Procedure commands you to do. [02:17.300 --> 02:21.340] And I said, well, before you decide what you're going to do, [02:22.300 --> 02:26.700] you might want to get the lawsuit I just filed against JP3 [02:26.700 --> 02:30.180] and read that before you make a decision. [02:31.580 --> 02:33.980] So I left, come back the next day [02:35.100 --> 02:40.940] and asked the clerk, what did the judge do with the complaints I gave to him? [02:41.980 --> 02:45.820] And she said he forwarded them to the prosecuting attorney. [02:47.700 --> 02:51.380] Oh, this is that fact, Jack. [02:52.420 --> 02:56.820] So I went to justice of the peace. [02:56.820 --> 03:00.700] I was going to justice of the, oh, I went to justice of the peace. [03:01.740 --> 03:03.380] Four, no, five. [03:04.500 --> 03:08.220] I went to justice piece five and filed suit against this judge. [03:10.340 --> 03:13.660] And boy, those folks got real excited. [03:13.660 --> 03:15.740] I got a call while I'm talking to him. [03:15.740 --> 03:18.860] This is a big office and there's nobody in there. [03:18.860 --> 03:22.100] Just I'm the only one of them outside their little glass thing. [03:22.100 --> 03:24.500] And I get a call and I answered it. [03:24.500 --> 03:28.380] And the clerk said, you can't use a phone in this office. [03:29.980 --> 03:31.260] I said, yeah, I can. [03:32.940 --> 03:34.740] She got real excited. [03:35.460 --> 03:38.340] So I told her, get me the bailiff. [03:40.260 --> 03:42.220] And the bailiff come out and he said, [03:42.380 --> 03:45.060] and the bailiff come out and he got all huffy puffy. [03:46.140 --> 03:51.300] And I kind of climbed down his throat and told him that I wanted him to arrest the clerk. [03:52.100 --> 03:53.700] Well, he wasn't going for that. [03:53.700 --> 03:58.860] And he made implied threats that he was going to arrest me. [04:00.820 --> 04:04.420] I said, look, Bubba, we're all grownups here. [04:05.700 --> 04:11.020] And I am not very comfortable with somebody with a pistol on their hip threatening me. [04:11.980 --> 04:15.220] If you're not going to do your job, get your butt back in there. [04:15.220 --> 04:17.460] That office would get me someone who will. [04:17.460 --> 04:22.900] Well, he didn't take that too well, but he didn't pursue. [04:23.940 --> 04:26.540] And I took out my cell phone dial 9-1-1. [04:26.540 --> 04:31.260] Well, when I was dialing 9-1-1, he didn't tell me I couldn't use the phone in this office. [04:32.620 --> 04:35.020] He kind of took a step back and shut his mouth. [04:35.180 --> 04:42.780] And then I had some a number of a couple of sheriff's deputies show this was in Arlington. [04:42.780 --> 04:45.260] I had done this before in that particular court. [04:45.900 --> 04:51.380] And two Arlington police officers showed up and I had so much fun with them. [04:52.620 --> 04:55.620] First thing I told them is I wanted them to arrest the bailiff, [04:55.940 --> 04:57.940] and then I wanted them to arrest the judge. [04:58.900 --> 05:00.820] And they said, we can't do that. [05:00.820 --> 05:04.260] Of course you can. Come on, guys, take your chicken suits off. [05:04.500 --> 05:05.620] This would be great fun. [05:06.980 --> 05:08.740] And they referred me to their sergeant. [05:09.700 --> 05:13.860] So they called their sergeant and the sergeant came out. [05:14.580 --> 05:18.900] And I was having a hip problem, so I was sitting down and the sergeant came out. [05:20.100 --> 05:25.380] And they indicated that they were pretty leery of the sergeant, just from the way they spoke. [05:25.380 --> 05:30.020] And the sergeant got there and she said, what seems to be the problem here? [05:30.020 --> 05:35.380] And I said, the problem is, is these two deputies won't take their chicken suit off. [05:38.180 --> 05:40.900] She gave me kind of a strange look. [05:41.700 --> 05:46.660] And I told her, well, I'm filing criminal charges against the justice of the peace [05:47.380 --> 05:48.740] and against the bailiff. [05:49.780 --> 05:55.380] And these two officers, they wouldn't take your chicken suit off and take my complaints. [05:56.020 --> 05:59.140] So they decided to throw you under the bus instead. [06:00.820 --> 06:07.540] These two deputies looked like if they could have found something to crawl under, they would have. [06:07.540 --> 06:11.060] And the sergeant looks at both of them and looked at me. [06:12.340 --> 06:13.860] What is it that you want? [06:13.860 --> 06:18.340] I want you to arrest the bailiff over here for threatening me with a, [06:18.340 --> 06:27.540] well, prominently displaying this deadly weapon and arrest the head clerk in there for refusing to [06:28.020 --> 06:32.580] take criminal complaints that I'm filing with the justice of the peace. [06:34.580 --> 06:35.080] Oops. [06:36.260 --> 06:40.260] Then she started doing a little song and dance and self-serve down your pants in the standard. [06:40.980 --> 06:42.420] Oh, well, I don't know. [06:42.420 --> 06:45.220] You need to take this to the district attorney. [06:46.660 --> 06:50.100] Yeah, but the complaints I got are against the district attorney. [06:52.020 --> 06:53.620] And they didn't know how to handle it. [06:53.620 --> 07:03.140] So I filed suit against JP3 in Southlake with JP4 in Lake Worth. [07:04.020 --> 07:06.900] And JP4, he didn't act right on it. [07:06.900 --> 07:13.620] So I filed against JP4 with JP, I don't remember what this one is, two? [07:14.580 --> 07:17.460] She might've been two in Arlington. [07:17.460 --> 07:24.020] And the JP wasn't there to issue warrants. [07:24.020 --> 07:27.220] So the next couple of days later, I was, I was pretty sick. [07:27.220 --> 07:31.780] So it was a while before I was probably a week later before I was able to function. [07:33.300 --> 07:37.700] I went to, I told my phone to give me the [07:39.940 --> 07:45.540] address and directions to JP6, but it sent me to JP8. [07:45.860 --> 07:50.580] So what I'd had is when I'm giving criminal complaints to these prosecutors, [07:51.780 --> 07:56.580] they're telling me that, oh, I'm turning the phone's on. [07:56.580 --> 07:59.060] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [07:59.060 --> 08:02.580] I call in number 512-646-1984. [08:03.140 --> 08:07.700] So they had been telling me that I need to file my complaints with the prosecuting attorney. [08:08.340 --> 08:16.900] So I went to the JP and it turned out they gave me directions to JP8. [08:18.340 --> 08:25.940] So I gave JP8 criminal charges against the assistant district attorney that headed up [08:25.940 --> 08:33.060] the grand jury, accusing the assistant district attorney of shielding criminal complaints [08:34.020 --> 08:39.860] against the district attorney from the grand jury, because I went down to the grand jury [08:40.500 --> 08:45.700] and to file criminal complaints against the district attorney, accusing the district attorney [08:46.420 --> 08:55.140] of secreting criminal complaints against Fort Worth police officers from the grand jury. [08:55.140 --> 09:01.860] And what I accused them of arresting Dr. Joe and taking him to jail instead of directly to [09:01.860 --> 09:10.740] the nearest magistrate. Well, this one didn't tell me that I should give my complaints to [09:10.740 --> 09:19.380] the district attorney. That wouldn't work out so well because my complaints were against the [09:19.380 --> 09:24.900] district attorney. Well, I dropped off my complaints because she wasn't in the office. [09:25.460 --> 09:28.260] And then I went to JP6 and gave him the complaints. [09:29.540 --> 09:35.780] And he held his something like a hearing and decided that my complaints were insufficient [09:35.780 --> 09:43.620] to establish probable cause. Well, we're going to see how that works out. Randy [09:43.620 --> 09:48.420] Kelton brought down the jail law video. I'll explain how that works when we come back. So [09:49.380 --> 09:55.700] I'm getting pretty well wound up on these guys. Hang on. We'll be right back. [10:03.940 --> 10:09.860] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. 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As a distributor, [10:56.500 --> 11:02.420] you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [11:02.420 --> 11:08.820] Order now. Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding [11:08.820 --> 11:15.140] of His Word? Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time for [11:15.140 --> 11:20.980] Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [11:21.620 --> 11:26.100] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [11:26.100 --> 11:31.300] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [11:31.300 --> 11:36.820] Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour [11:36.820 --> 11:41.380] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian [11:41.380 --> 11:46.500] character development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a [11:46.500 --> 11:52.020] hearing ear. Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [11:52.020 --> 11:57.860] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [11:57.860 --> 12:03.060] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [12:06.820 --> 12:09.060] LogosRadioNetwork.com [12:37.220 --> 12:43.540] Radio and we're talking about a project I've been working on [12:44.980 --> 12:54.260] where I start taking these public officials to legal task and it goes to some of my [12:55.540 --> 13:01.540] philosophies. I've got a book on the Radio Channel, [13:01.540 --> 13:15.460] Legal 101, and in there I have a set of rules and things to do and I'm following those. [13:17.780 --> 13:22.740] Taking these public officials on, you have a rule that you never ask a public official [13:23.460 --> 13:27.300] to do anything that you actually want them to do [13:29.540 --> 13:36.420] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [13:37.380 --> 13:44.900] So when they don't do it, you get to hammer them. So in this case, I have this statute in Texas. [13:45.380 --> 13:56.100] It is a 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and what it says is that one of the complaints [13:56.100 --> 14:04.340] forwarded to a magistrate complete in accordance with 1508 and that just establishes the ways you [14:04.340 --> 14:12.100] can actually send it to them, phone, fax, email, and it is complete in accordance with 1505 and [14:12.100 --> 14:18.980] that establishes the requisites of a complaint. The magistrate shall orthwit issue a warrant. [14:18.980 --> 14:28.900] Well, I took them to this JP-8 by mistake and she wasn't in. I was going to JP-6 [14:29.860 --> 14:42.180] because I sued JP-3 with JP-4 and JP-4, when he got my complaints, didn't issue warrants, [14:42.180 --> 14:54.900] so I sued JP-4 with JP-2 and JP-4 immediately, since I sued him, moved my JP-3 suit to JP-6. [14:55.860 --> 15:03.620] So I was going to JP-6 but wound up with 8. So I gave my criminal complaints against the [15:03.620 --> 15:12.820] district attorney. I left him with JP-8 and then went to JP-6 and JP-6, he was a lot more [15:12.820 --> 15:19.380] professional and had himself a meeting, had me come back at 2, and he made a determination [15:19.540 --> 15:26.580] probable cause. Didn't find any probable cause. We had a pretty good back and forth. [15:27.860 --> 15:32.660] It worked out better this time because I had two witnesses with me. I had been reluctant to take [15:32.660 --> 15:37.140] witnesses because sometimes they act ignorant, but these guys didn't. They sat back there and [15:37.140 --> 15:45.780] kept their mouths shut and the judge kept looking past me at the witnesses and it seemed that because [15:45.780 --> 15:52.980] of that he was much more careful. And I kind of stood right square in the middle of him in this [15:52.980 --> 16:01.940] hearing and he made a determination that there was no probable cause. And you know, I made an [16:01.940 --> 16:08.020] argument about that, that all I have to do is assert that I have reason to believe and do believe [16:08.020 --> 16:13.620] and assert enough facts to give a reasonable person cause to believe the crime has been committed [16:13.620 --> 16:19.220] and the accused has committed the crime. You have plenty before you. Well, I don't find probable [16:19.220 --> 16:27.380] cause in your honor. Am I supposed to give you a complete brief? I would have thought I had to do [16:27.380 --> 16:35.060] that later, but right now the accused is not before you. So as I read the Texas Code of Criminal [16:35.060 --> 16:40.740] Procedure, you can't hold an examining trial at this time. You first have to get the accused before [16:40.740 --> 16:48.980] you. In order to do that, under 15.09, you have to issue a warrant, get him before you. Once you [16:48.980 --> 16:54.420] get him before you, then you can hold an examining trial. Well, he decided he didn't find probable [16:54.420 --> 17:09.460] cause. So I went to, did I do it yet? I'm going to go to JP8. She refused to issue warrants on [17:09.460 --> 17:16.340] my complaint, so I'm going to sue her. But first I'm going to sue JP6 with JP8. [17:19.700 --> 17:26.500] I'm going to sue JP8 with another one. There's some more JP's I haven't got to yet. [17:27.620 --> 17:31.940] I intend to sue every justice of the peace in the county. [17:32.660 --> 17:39.620] They're all going to do the same thing, and I'll sue them all. But I got a present. [17:41.380 --> 17:51.300] The same day I was doing this, the first judge that I sued had an answer filed in the court. [17:52.500 --> 17:57.460] And they had moved it to JP6, and JP6 had that answer and gave me a copy. [17:58.420 --> 18:08.820] And I read it. It was perfect. I sued the judge alleging that the judge failed to perform an [18:08.820 --> 18:19.060] administrative duty. And the answer said that the judge had absolute immunity. Well, here's the [18:19.700 --> 18:27.860] problem. What keeps you in court is not what you can prove at the end of the day. [18:29.940 --> 18:38.820] What keeps you in court is the nature of the claim that you made. And I made a claim that the judge [18:38.820 --> 18:45.700] failed to perform an administrative duty over which the judge had no discretion. [18:45.700 --> 18:53.300] 15.09 says that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate complete in accordance with 1508, [18:54.580 --> 19:02.100] and I'm sorry, forwarded to a magistrate in accordance with 1508, and it is completed [19:02.100 --> 19:12.100] according to 1505, the magistrate shall forthwith issue a warrant. Doesn't say anything about [19:12.180 --> 19:19.380] probable cause. You can't hold a probable cause hearing in Texas without the accused being there [19:19.380 --> 19:26.340] because there's all kind of rights you have to afford the accused. So the first thing you have [19:26.340 --> 19:33.620] to do is issue a warrant and get the accused before him. Then he is to advise the accused of [19:33.620 --> 19:41.060] his rights, give the accused opportunity to make a statement, and then render that statement to [19:41.060 --> 19:48.100] writing, have the accused sign and approve the veracity of the statement. And then the judge [19:48.100 --> 19:56.340] can must give the accused opportunity to examine any witnesses against him. And then the judge can [19:56.340 --> 20:04.180] must make a determination probable cause and issue a determination under 16.17. The law is real clear [20:04.180 --> 20:13.460] on how all this stuff works. Well, I sued this judge, I filed a complaint with this judge, [20:14.900 --> 20:22.340] and he did not issue a warrant forthwith, so I sued him because the statute did not give him [20:23.620 --> 20:30.100] any administrative capacity, I'm sorry, did not give him any judicial capacity. [20:31.060 --> 20:37.620] It dictated what he must do. So they filed a response saying that the judge has [20:37.620 --> 20:43.460] absolute immunity for what he does on the bench that's within the scope of his authority. [20:44.980 --> 20:50.980] And that's true. But in this case, [20:54.420 --> 20:59.140] refusing to issue a warrant was not within the scope of his authority. [21:00.900 --> 21:07.540] He was commanded to do a certain thing over which he had no authority and under the Texas [21:08.180 --> 21:25.140] Civil Torture and Remedies 104.102, a judge has indemnity from a suit except when he exerts or [21:25.140 --> 21:43.780] purports to exert authority he doesn't have. Except when a judge acts in an administrative [21:43.780 --> 21:50.820] capacity for which he has no discretion. In that case, he has no indemnity. [21:51.380 --> 22:00.420] There's nothing in Texas law that gives him immunity. 104.102 gives him indemnity and the [22:00.420 --> 22:06.100] courts have treated that like it's immunity, but it's not. But in this case, he doesn't have it, [22:06.100 --> 22:16.980] in any case. But he didn't argue anything else. And this is important to understand. If you get [22:16.980 --> 22:27.060] sued and you don't think that the accused has, that the accuser has standing to sue you, [22:27.060 --> 22:37.540] you can argue that. But you also have to argue any of his other issues because if that [22:37.940 --> 22:45.140] objection gets overruled and you haven't raised an objection to anything else, [22:46.740 --> 22:56.900] then you waived it. And they waived it. Oh, wonderful. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [22:56.900 --> 22:59.700] and we'll be right back. 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[26:17.060 --> 26:25.540] Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the line to hand. Won't you follow the law of the land? [26:27.300 --> 26:34.420] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Greg Felton from the Rule of Law Radio, and we're on this [26:35.700 --> 26:46.820] Thursday, the sixth day of November 2025, and I'm talking about suing public officials. [26:47.220 --> 26:51.380] It turns out these guys are really putzes. [26:53.780 --> 26:59.060] These judges think they're absolutely immune from suit no matter what. [27:00.740 --> 27:09.380] So I went in and deliberately set him up, asked the judge to do something that the law [27:10.180 --> 27:19.780] specifically commands them to do, and it was something the judge would necessarily find [27:20.980 --> 27:32.500] somewhat repugnant or more and more directly intimidating. I asked the judge to issue [27:32.500 --> 27:37.380] warrants against the assistant district attorney for the grand jury. [27:38.180 --> 27:42.740] When I went to the first judge and I gave him these criminal complaints against his bailiff, [27:43.620 --> 27:51.300] he said, Mr. Kelton, in the state of Texas, all complaints are directed to the prosecuting attorney. [27:53.300 --> 27:56.740] No, they're not. Nothing directs a complaint to a prosecuting attorney, [27:57.540 --> 28:03.780] and I heard that a couple of times from judges. So I went to the second judge and sued the first [28:03.780 --> 28:09.860] judge, and he told me the same thing. I gave him the complaints, and he said, Mr. Kelton, [28:09.860 --> 28:15.700] what do you want me to do with these? I said, I want you to do exactly what Article 15.09 commands [28:15.700 --> 28:23.220] you to do, but before you do anything, you might want to read that suit I just filed against JP3 [28:24.180 --> 28:28.820] with you before you decide what to do with these complaints. [28:29.380 --> 28:32.740] So I come back the next day and the clerk said he sent them to the prosecuting attorney. [28:34.420 --> 28:42.580] Well, that was getting to be a problem. So when I went to the next judge, I gave him a criminal [28:42.580 --> 28:49.940] complaint against the assistant district attorney and accused the assistant district attorney of [28:49.940 --> 29:03.540] sedition. Sedition. Sedition is if someone, I mean, I should have looked that up, [29:05.220 --> 29:18.100] if someone does something that is intended to undermine the government, undermine or alter [29:18.100 --> 29:28.820] the form of government. Now, the way I read the Constitution, we are guaranteed by the [29:28.820 --> 29:36.180] federal Constitution. The federal Constitution under Article 4, Section 4 guarantees to the [29:36.180 --> 29:45.220] states a Republican form of government. The only thing I can find that separates a Republican [29:45.220 --> 29:53.620] form of government from a democracy is the ability of a citizen to give notice to a grand [29:53.620 --> 30:03.780] jury of crime by public officials. That gives the citizen the power to maintain and control [30:03.780 --> 30:10.180] the governmental instruments they have created. So I accused the assistant district attorney [30:11.140 --> 30:18.100] of secreting criminal complaints against the district attorney from the grand jury [30:20.180 --> 30:31.140] and of directing police and magistrates to send all complaints to the prosecuting attorney [30:32.180 --> 30:37.700] instead of acting in accordance with the very clear dictates of Texas law. [30:38.660 --> 30:43.620] Texas law says that if a policeman arrests someone for any reason, with or without a warrant, [30:45.620 --> 30:52.900] they are to take the person directly to the nearest magistrate, not the prosecuting attorney. [30:53.860 --> 30:58.900] And the magistrate is to examine into the sufficiency of the allegation, and if he finds [30:59.140 --> 31:07.780] probable cause, then he is to issue an order under 16.17. And he goes on to say if an order [31:07.780 --> 31:20.580] is not issued within 48 hours, the accused shall be discharged. And in 1730, directs the magistrate [31:20.580 --> 31:24.980] to seal all documents had in the hearing, cause his name to be written across the sealing envelope, [31:24.980 --> 31:30.820] and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction. That is the only place in Texas law [31:31.780 --> 31:39.220] where I find anything ordered by statute to be sealed. And that is to preserve the chain of [31:39.220 --> 31:46.500] evidence. Well, that doesn't happen. Somebody's arrested, they're taken straight to jail, [31:47.380 --> 31:54.100] and this magistrate does this thingy they call a magistration, which is not codified in law [31:54.100 --> 32:00.420] anywhere, and they give all the records to the sheriff. They never do get to the [32:02.180 --> 32:07.700] clerk of the court of jurisdiction. And they certainly never get to the grand jury, [32:09.060 --> 32:17.300] because Article 4 Section 17, I'm sorry, Article 5 Section 17 [32:18.020 --> 32:24.980] requires that all complaints go to the grand jury. There must be an indictment in all complaints, [32:24.980 --> 32:32.260] felonies, and misdemeanors. It specifically stipulates that if the allegation is a misdemeanor, [32:33.140 --> 32:38.660] then the clerk shall certify it to the district court, and the district court shall certify it [32:38.660 --> 32:46.260] to the court of jurisdiction, to the county court, to the inferior, or to the inferior courts, [32:47.140 --> 32:54.900] Justice of the Peace and municipal courts are inferior courts. The Constitution requires [32:54.900 --> 33:00.820] an indictment in all criminal prosecutions. It is as clear as day. [33:03.460 --> 33:08.100] But the judges are saying, oh, you don't have a right to an indictment in a misdemeanor. I said, [33:08.100 --> 33:15.780] where'd you come up with that, guys? That's not what the Constitution says. Well, prosecutors [33:15.780 --> 33:23.540] have advised the police and lower courts in practices and procedures that bypass a very [33:23.540 --> 33:36.740] large portion of the Texas statute. It literally renders Chapter 16 superfluous. Superfluous. [33:37.220 --> 33:43.380] That's a term that comes up in a case called DiRusso v. State. [33:45.380 --> 33:52.420] Yeah, DiRusso. Joseph DiRusso v. State. That DiRusso, the one that comes on our show on a [33:52.420 --> 34:00.900] regular basis, they came after him, and he was upset at him about the rulings in the case, [34:00.900 --> 34:08.260] and I got the rulings in the case. Holy mackerel. That was a seminal case. [34:10.420 --> 34:19.060] They said that you cannot interpret one law in such a way that it would render another law [34:19.060 --> 34:29.220] superfluous. So the local Justices of the Peace and local courts and prosecutors have interpreted [34:29.220 --> 34:37.460] 1517 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure in such a way that it renders Chapter 16 superfluous [34:38.020 --> 34:44.340] and it violates Constitution Article 5, 6, and 17. They hold this [34:45.060 --> 34:51.380] Magistration thing, they call it. The judge makes a, he doesn't make a determination for all the [34:51.380 --> 34:56.740] cause, he just sets bail, and then instead of sealing all the documents had in the hearing [34:56.740 --> 35:00.100] cause of his name to be written across the seat of the envelope before the Court of Jurisdiction, [35:01.380 --> 35:09.220] he gives it to the jailer. The jailer gives it to the sheriff, and it never gets to the [35:09.220 --> 35:15.940] clerk of the Court of Jurisdiction. I was in Johnson County a few weeks ago. I filed a habeas [35:15.940 --> 35:25.060] corpus for David Straight's wife, she's in jail down there, and I'm sitting in the court, [35:25.060 --> 35:31.700] the judge is hearing the habeas, and I told the judge, you know, I know this woman's been arrested [35:31.700 --> 35:35.060] because she's in jail, she called me from the jail, so she's obviously been arrested. [35:36.020 --> 35:43.780] And the prosecutor over here, he knows that she's been arrested, but you, you don't know that she's [35:43.780 --> 35:53.060] been arrested because I looked in the public record and there is no evidence in the public record [35:53.940 --> 36:01.060] to show that she's been arrested. And since it's not in the public record, it's not before you, [36:01.780 --> 36:10.020] and if it's not before you, you can't see it, so it doesn't exist. He ruled against me anyway, [36:10.020 --> 36:15.860] so I'm going to go back and take him to the grand jury and let him explain to a grand jury how he's [36:15.860 --> 36:24.500] holding someone in jail when they have not followed the clear letter of statutory law. [36:25.860 --> 36:32.900] So anyway, that's what I'm working on. So I got this judge that I filed criminal complaints [36:32.900 --> 36:40.660] against the district attorney, and the district attorney is not in jail, so he's not before the [36:40.660 --> 36:44.580] court so he can't hold an examining trial. He's commanded to issue a warrant, [36:44.580 --> 36:47.940] get him before the court so he can hold an examining trial. [36:49.860 --> 36:54.340] He refused. I'm kind of like all the others. So I'm suing him. Hang on, [36:54.340 --> 36:56.900] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [37:03.540 --> 37:08.820] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds of [37:08.820 --> 37:14.340] thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be [37:14.340 --> 37:20.980] on? Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the [37:20.980 --> 37:28.740] claims cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides [37:28.740 --> 37:36.340] your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and tele-doc all at zero cost with zero [37:36.340 --> 37:43.460] co-pay. If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. As an [37:43.460 --> 37:49.940] employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. The CHAMP plan [37:49.940 --> 37:56.900] can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. Call Scott at [37:56.900 --> 38:08.020] 214-730-2471 or DallasMMS.com. Are you wondering what this world is coming to and why God isn't [38:08.020 --> 38:14.580] stopping it? Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [38:14.580 --> 38:19.540] Scripture Talk, where Nana and guests study God's Word to find these answers and more. [38:20.260 --> 38:25.460] Join us for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to explain [38:25.460 --> 38:31.300] God's plan as well as to provoke unto love and good works. Our first hour studies are in the [38:31.300 --> 38:37.380] book of Matthew. Our second hour topics vary each week, exploring sound doctrine as well as Christian [38:37.380 --> 38:44.340] character development. Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5-16. Let your light so shine before men [38:44.340 --> 38:50.180] that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's [38:50.180 --> 38:55.780] light and to be a blessing to all those who have a hearing ear. So tune in to Scripture Talk live [38:55.780 --> 39:02.340] on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. for an inspiring and motivating study of the [39:02.340 --> 39:06.340] Scriptures. [39:20.500 --> 39:27.300] Where you gonna look for one? If you could not wait any about too long, would your purpose [39:27.300 --> 39:34.020] has been done? Such a symptom and a soldier, a warrior of love, scuffling to keep the peace. [39:34.900 --> 39:41.300] All they're taking is a misunderstanding, and somebody calls the police, watching the spots [39:41.860 --> 39:49.060] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Red Fountain, Lulua Radio. [39:51.060 --> 39:57.780] Calling line is open. Our calling number is 512-646-1984. If you have a question or [39:57.780 --> 40:03.140] comment, give us a call. And if nobody calls in, you're gonna have to put up with me the whole [40:03.140 --> 40:15.380] two hours. Okay, the last judge I'm suing, he actually set a hearing or set a meeting with me [40:15.380 --> 40:19.380] and I went in to hear, went in and sat down in front of him. And I thought it was just going to [40:19.380 --> 40:24.340] be discussed the issue, but he was decided that he was going to hold an examining trial. [40:24.340 --> 40:38.580] Well, he examined into my, the sufficiency of my complaint and told me that he had discretion. [40:39.140 --> 40:50.020] I told him he didn't. I cited him, cited 15.09, but he cited 106 and said under 106, he had [40:50.020 --> 41:04.340] discretion. Well, I didn't have 106 memorized. The lion S.O.B. 106 says, the people shall be [41:04.340 --> 41:11.380] secure in their persons, houses, papers, and possessions from all unreasonable searches, [41:11.860 --> 41:24.580] seizures, or, oh, something's wrong. There's something missing. Oh, maybe it's, I'm not seeing [41:24.580 --> 41:33.460] all of it. There we go. Okay. Searches, unreasonable searches or, I'm sorry, unreasonable [41:33.460 --> 41:39.940] seizures or searches. No warrant to search any place to seize any person or thing shall [41:39.940 --> 41:46.500] issue without describing them as nearest may be, nor without probable cause supported by [41:46.500 --> 41:53.940] author affirmation. So he used that to say that he had jurisdiction to make a determination, [41:53.940 --> 42:03.860] probable cause, but I didn't petition for a search warrant. He screwed it up big time. [42:03.860 --> 42:14.580] So I sued him, but he was pretty good. I did have a couple of witnesses with me and frankly, [42:15.140 --> 42:23.620] that made a difference. He would have probably been much more difficult had I not had two people [42:23.620 --> 42:30.180] out there watching, but he was much more careful and he had this little hearing and I kind of [42:30.180 --> 42:37.780] crawled down his throat and worked him over and he wanted to get PO'd. He was, let me know he was [42:37.780 --> 42:44.900] an ex-cop and he knew more than I did and I didn't know what I was talking about and refused to issue [42:44.900 --> 42:55.780] a warrant. So I sued him anyway. And now, okay, I got that all done. I got all these guys sued [42:56.420 --> 43:03.620] and now I got one of them, their time ran out Monday to file an answer and they got the answer [43:03.620 --> 43:12.420] filed on the last day. It was an assistant district attorney who filed the answer and anyone who's [43:12.420 --> 43:19.780] been listening to the show for a while will recognize the problem with that. The answer [43:19.860 --> 43:23.540] could not for my purposes have been any better. [43:25.860 --> 43:34.660] The lawyer claimed that the judge had absolute immunity and he claimed two circumstances [43:35.300 --> 43:39.300] where a judge has absolute immunity, but he missed one. [43:41.860 --> 43:46.580] When a judge is required to perform an administrative function, [43:47.540 --> 43:55.060] a function over which the judge has no discretion, that is an administrative function and for that, [43:55.940 --> 44:04.260] since it does not require judicial discretion, that is something for which he has no immunity. [44:05.460 --> 44:12.180] And the problem they have is, is that the lawyer argued that the judge had absolute immunity. [44:12.980 --> 44:22.900] He did not argue anything else, only that the judge had absolute immunity. He did not argue that [44:22.900 --> 44:30.820] the judge may have had some discretion as to whether or not to issue the warrant that I asked [44:30.820 --> 44:39.060] him to issue. He might have been able to come up with something that mitigated what article 15.09 [44:39.700 --> 44:46.020] says. 15.09 says that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate in accordance to 15.08, [44:46.020 --> 44:55.060] and it lists the ways you can get it to the magistrate, personal service, fax, email, [44:55.060 --> 45:00.420] and several other ways, and it's complete in accordance to 15.05, the magistrate shall [45:00.980 --> 45:14.980] issue a warrant. Well, that seems pretty clear. Shall forthwith issue a warrant. [45:15.780 --> 45:20.980] That doesn't sound like it gives the magistrate any discretion. [45:21.620 --> 45:30.740] So the thing that keeps you in the court, the thing that protects you from a motion to dismiss [45:30.740 --> 45:36.580] for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, is not what you can prove up at the end of the day. [45:38.020 --> 45:45.780] It is the nature of the claim that you make. So if you're filing in the federal court, [45:46.500 --> 45:56.420] if you're filing in the federal court, you can expect a 12b6, the 12b1 or 12b6. 12b1 is immunity, [45:56.420 --> 46:02.980] 12b6 is failure to state a claim. You can always expect a 12b1 and 12b6. [46:05.620 --> 46:15.620] In this case, I get past 12b6. He's essentially saying that the court [46:15.620 --> 46:20.900] has no jurisdiction because the judge has absolute immunity. [46:23.300 --> 46:31.380] Now, it's not whether I can prove up my claims against the judge that keeps me in court. [46:32.260 --> 46:40.900] It is the nature of the claim, and my claim is that the judge failed to perform an administrative [46:40.900 --> 46:46.900] duty. Now, they may not agree that that's an administrative duty. That's a separate issue. [46:48.260 --> 46:52.020] That's something they may be able to prove up as an affirmative defense later. [46:53.380 --> 46:56.740] But what keeps you in the court is the nature of the claim. [46:58.020 --> 47:04.740] And I claimed under failure to perform an administrative duty, the judge can't [47:05.060 --> 47:12.260] render his ruling on whether or not he thinks I can prove up that claim. He must render his ruling [47:12.260 --> 47:23.860] based on the nature of the claim. And the claim is no jurisdiction for, no discretion [47:23.860 --> 47:32.580] discretion in rendering the ruling. And under the Young Doctrine and under [47:35.060 --> 47:43.700] Texas Civil Tort and Remedies 104.102, if the judge fails to perform an administrative duty, [47:43.700 --> 47:48.900] then he has no immunity. So this would keep me in court. And the problem is that's all they argued. [47:49.380 --> 47:56.900] So if I win that argument, then they have nothing else before the court. [47:58.500 --> 48:04.340] So you can't come in and argue one thing, and if you lose that, then come back and argue another. [48:05.140 --> 48:12.580] When you file your answer, you have to address everything you're going to raise as an objection [48:13.540 --> 48:20.660] to the case. You have to object to every issue. You miss one of them, then you waived your objection. [48:22.020 --> 48:27.540] So all they did was said that the judge has absolute immunity. [48:28.980 --> 48:36.340] So if they lose that one, then there's nothing else before the court. Gotcha. [48:36.980 --> 48:45.620] So, not only that, that's the second issue I will take on. The first issue I will take on [48:46.740 --> 48:51.220] is that an assistant district attorney filed the answer. [48:54.100 --> 49:01.300] I sued the judge in his personal capacity, alleging that he had no [49:01.700 --> 49:11.700] jurisdiction to render this ruling. And what's before the court is the jurisdiction. [49:13.700 --> 49:19.780] And in Texas law under Article 5, Section 53 of the Constitution, [49:20.260 --> 49:32.100] the government is forbidden to provide a benefit to a public official that's not included in their contract. [49:34.420 --> 49:42.900] And legal counsel for a public official sued in their personal capacity is not in their contract. [49:43.620 --> 49:51.620] So, before we get to whether or not my allegation of no jurisdiction, [49:53.300 --> 50:01.700] before we can get to that, we go to the authority of the lawyer to file the pleading with the court. [50:02.740 --> 50:11.380] Since my allegation is that he acted outside of scope, that prevents him from being able to [50:12.020 --> 50:19.620] that prevents him from using a public lawyer. So, if I get that one ruled in my favor, [50:21.220 --> 50:28.260] then I claim that the prosecutor lacks standing to file this motion with the court and move the [50:28.260 --> 50:35.780] court to strike the pleading. If the court strikes the pleading, then the 21-day time limit is up. [50:36.660 --> 50:41.380] They don't have a pleading before the court, then I move for default judgment. [50:44.500 --> 50:47.060] So, he did it perfectly, gave me exactly what I needed. [50:48.340 --> 50:54.100] And they're going to rule against me in the trial court. Yeah, absolutely expected. We don't care [50:54.100 --> 50:58.740] about that because your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. So, you got [50:58.740 --> 51:06.340] this judge sitting here and I move to strike his lawyers pleading as improperly filed in violation [51:06.340 --> 51:14.100] of the Constitution. And then I move for default judgment because they over the nature of the [51:14.100 --> 51:21.380] claim. They're going to rule against me, but he's sitting there thinking, what if the appellate court [51:21.380 --> 51:28.260] rules in his favor? Then I have to pay this guy out of my own pocket. But if I make a deal [51:28.260 --> 51:36.660] before the appellate court rules, then the state can pay. So, come on guys, make me a deal, write [51:36.660 --> 51:42.820] me a check. I'll sell out in a heartbeat. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Willvar Radio, [51:43.540 --> 51:48.660] a call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [51:48.660 --> 51:59.620] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because [51:59.620 --> 52:05.860] they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the [52:05.860 --> 52:13.140] process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. Enter the recovery version. First, [52:13.140 --> 52:19.620] this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 [52:19.620 --> 52:25.860] explanatory footnotes. Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [52:25.860 --> 52:30.900] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [52:31.540 --> 52:36.260] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [52:36.900 --> 52:47.220] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [52:47.220 --> 52:53.540] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [52:54.180 --> 53:02.820] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [53:05.220 --> 53:08.980] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [53:08.980 --> 53:12.660] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [53:12.660 --> 53:16.660] Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an [53:16.660 --> 53:19.940] unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [53:20.740 --> 53:26.260] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [53:26.260 --> 53:31.060] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [53:31.060 --> 53:37.220] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [53:37.220 --> 53:42.420] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [53:42.420 --> 53:48.420] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [53:48.420 --> 53:54.820] Most people think of seven as a more civilized number than six. Think of how the number six is [53:54.820 --> 54:00.340] implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment [54:00.340 --> 54:06.180] would be about civil trials. Civil seven, civil trials, get it? Civil trials are ones where people [54:06.180 --> 54:11.060] sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, like the dividing line between properties. [54:11.060 --> 54:15.620] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [54:15.620 --> 54:20.580] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil matters [54:20.580 --> 54:22.900] instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [54:23.540 --> 54:27.620] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [54:35.780 --> 54:39.540] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [54:39.540 --> 54:43.220] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [54:43.220 --> 54:47.220] Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an [54:47.220 --> 54:50.580] unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [54:51.300 --> 54:56.820] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [54:56.820 --> 55:01.620] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [55:01.620 --> 55:06.900] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [55:06.900 --> 55:11.540] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [55:11.540 --> 55:16.980] Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [55:16.980 --> 55:18.900] Start over with Startpage. [55:20.420 --> 55:26.100] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel 1984 when Winston is threatened with his worst fear? [55:26.100 --> 55:30.180] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [55:30.180 --> 55:34.260] But what if his worst fear was spiders? Eight-legged spiders, to be exact. [55:34.260 --> 55:37.620] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [55:37.620 --> 55:41.140] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [55:41.540 --> 55:46.340] Our Founding Fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to protect us from creepy [55:46.340 --> 55:51.140] crawly eight-legged punishments and other cruel and unusual prison practices that were common in [55:51.140 --> 55:55.860] their day. The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from requiring excessive bail [55:55.860 --> 56:02.180] and charging excessive fines. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [56:11.540 --> 56:33.300] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and we have Dr. Joe on. [56:33.620 --> 56:43.220] And I wanted Dr. Joe to come on and talk about silver. He is a silver broker. [56:45.620 --> 56:51.540] A whole lot has been happening with silver lately. Dr. Joe, will you kind of give us a [56:51.540 --> 56:58.660] rundown on what's going on with silver? Already, I started my interest in career [56:59.380 --> 57:05.940] with a box of silver dollars that my mother used to collect. She worked in the [57:06.500 --> 57:14.260] cutlery before the war and during the war, and silver dollars were still in common circulation [57:14.260 --> 57:20.660] back then. And so she collected them. She had a big box of silver dollars. So I grew up with [57:21.300 --> 57:28.980] silver. That was money. And if you look in the Bible, real money is gold and silver, [57:29.620 --> 57:35.540] copper also, but mostly silver for common usage. The kings used the gold more. [57:36.820 --> 57:47.700] So we had silver in our coinage up until what year, Randy? You remember? 1963. 65. Okay, 65. [57:47.700 --> 57:59.140] I was delivering newspapers, and I collected a big bag full of silver coins. And you're right, [57:59.140 --> 58:05.460] 65 that Nixon took up all the silver. And I've still got this big bag of silver coins sitting [58:05.460 --> 58:13.780] up here on the shelf that I've had for, what, 60 years now? And they've done nothing but appreciate [58:13.780 --> 58:22.340] in value. They were replaced by what they call cupro nickel slugs that have no [58:22.900 --> 58:32.580] real inherent intrinsic value. So silver was money, has been money. And when you look at a dollar, [58:33.300 --> 58:39.140] the legal definition of a dollar is so much, so many grains of 99% pure silver. [58:39.780 --> 58:44.740] If I remember right, it's 271 grains. That's what Dr. Vieth used to say. [58:46.340 --> 58:56.180] If you look at the coinage act of 1792, it provides the death penalty for anybody [58:56.180 --> 59:04.020] who would debase the currency. So the comment is, there's no place in the constitution [59:04.740 --> 59:10.820] for anything other than the use of gold and silver coins. And here we've got some kind of bank [59:11.780 --> 59:18.900] that purports to issue notes, which is really nothing more than a piece of paper with the [59:19.780 --> 59:29.300] word dollar written on it. As I understand, those notes were issued for the singular purpose [59:29.300 --> 59:34.980] of interbank transfers. They were not intended for legal tender. [59:36.020 --> 59:45.460] If you look at the law, they are only for between banks. And I remember reading that law, [59:46.580 --> 59:51.940] last year I was doing some research. I had seen it before, but the truth of the matter is the [59:51.940 --> 01:00:02.100] United States dollar is so many grains of pure silver. And there are people who keep track of [01:00:02.100 --> 01:00:08.820] how many silver dollars are in the possession of the government, how much silver, and how many [01:00:08.820 --> 01:00:15.300] paper dollars are out there in circulation. And the last I saw about six weeks ago, there was [01:00:15.300 --> 01:00:24.180] 1050 some odd paper dollars in circulation for every one dollar of real silver in the treasury. [01:00:26.100 --> 01:00:27.220] So what does that tell you? [01:00:29.540 --> 01:00:36.260] It reflects the actual value of silver. And but all through the years, I've been told forever that [01:00:36.260 --> 01:00:44.180] silver is absolutely the greatest investment. But the price of silver has been artificially [01:00:45.460 --> 01:00:51.780] dampened. Because as I understand, there has never been a currency based on gold, [01:00:52.900 --> 01:00:58.260] that the only all currencies were always based on silver. They weren't based on gold because [01:00:58.260 --> 01:01:03.140] it wasn't enough of it. You couldn't make enough coins to spread them around to be useful. [01:01:03.700 --> 01:01:08.180] So there was a lot more silver. So they based all the currencies on silver. [01:01:08.180 --> 01:01:18.020] Here's a question for you. How many households do you know that have a little bag of silver coins [01:01:18.020 --> 01:01:27.700] in case of an emergency? Only one that I know of, or two, I guess. Well, I know a few. Scott, [01:01:27.700 --> 01:01:36.100] he's got some, you've got some, and I've got some. It's become what was common. And everybody had [01:01:36.100 --> 01:01:44.020] silver, which was the money was valuable in and of itself. When you paid in a piece of silver coin, [01:01:44.020 --> 01:01:49.460] the debt was paid and that was the end of it. And the economy was very much more stable [01:01:50.340 --> 01:01:58.100] back in those days. Now, unemployment, inflation up down sideways. I have never seen, [01:01:58.100 --> 01:02:03.060] and nor has there been, to the best of my knowledge, in the history of the world, [01:02:03.060 --> 01:02:10.500] a situation where an entire nation doesn't have money. We've got paper notes, [01:02:11.220 --> 01:02:19.540] we've got copper slugs, but we do not have anything of the traditional historical value [01:02:19.540 --> 01:02:25.300] called silver, not to any significant degree. And the problem with silver, [01:02:25.700 --> 01:02:33.940] for centuries, silver was just silver. And it was used in a few places. It was used for silver leaf [01:02:34.740 --> 01:02:42.420] and plating, but there wasn't a great use for silver. But as of late in the last [01:02:43.860 --> 01:02:53.460] few decades, silver is extensively used in electronic circuits. And as I understand, [01:02:53.540 --> 01:03:00.580] we have already well mined out all the silver reserves on the planet. [01:03:02.420 --> 01:03:11.620] We're running out of silver. And the electronics arena needs way more silver than it's got. [01:03:12.420 --> 01:03:18.820] But silver was the basis for currency. So the government has artificially [01:03:19.380 --> 01:03:25.460] restricted the value of silver because they didn't want it to go up because they didn't want [01:03:25.460 --> 01:03:35.540] their currency to inflate. But as I understand, recently, silver has really began to appreciate. [01:03:36.660 --> 01:03:43.540] It was like $19 to $20 for 40 years. What is it now, spot price? [01:03:44.500 --> 01:03:46.980] It's 47 last time I checked. [01:03:50.020 --> 01:03:55.380] That's saying that these governments are unable to control the price of silver. It's getting out of [01:03:55.380 --> 01:04:02.500] their control because it's becoming so valuable. I'm hearing that before long, silver will be more [01:04:02.500 --> 01:04:11.220] valuable than gold. Oh, I've heard that. It's wearer than gold. Here's a dynamic for you that [01:04:11.220 --> 01:04:23.060] most people don't understand. If you have a $5,000 computer and it's got 20 cents worth of silver in [01:04:23.060 --> 01:04:34.980] it, which is not much, how deleterious will it be on a $5,000 sale if 20 cents of silver goes to 40 [01:04:34.980 --> 01:04:44.580] cents of silver? So the price of silver could double easily and industrial demand would not [01:04:44.580 --> 01:04:55.540] be dented in the slightest. That's good for the price of silver. That makes sense? Yes. [01:04:55.940 --> 01:05:04.900] One of the uses of silver is silver nitride, antibiotic colloidal silver. They put a tiny, [01:05:04.900 --> 01:05:12.020] tiny, tiny, tiny bit of silver in surgical bandages and it prevents infections. [01:05:12.020 --> 01:05:19.700] Silver kills everything. [01:05:21.140 --> 01:05:27.700] Yeah. If the price of silver doubles, will that decrease the usage of silver in [01:05:28.660 --> 01:05:34.820] tiny, tiny, tiny amounts in bandages? No. [01:05:34.820 --> 01:05:43.060] No. So the industrial uses of silver are enormous. They're more and more all the time. [01:05:43.780 --> 01:05:48.500] The supply is limited. The price has been suppressed. What's it look like to you? [01:05:49.700 --> 01:05:58.500] The demand for silver is far outstripping the supply and we have really well mined out all [01:05:58.500 --> 01:06:04.660] the silver. There's some around, but very little amount. It's all been mined out. We're running out [01:06:04.660 --> 01:06:10.100] of silver. We're not running out of gold. There's plenty. Right. Running out of silver. For your [01:06:10.100 --> 01:06:14.980] financial safety, for your family's financial safety, what's a good idea? [01:06:17.940 --> 01:06:28.260] Silver's like, it's absolute. I knew some people who used to buy equipment. When the economy [01:06:28.340 --> 01:06:35.060] got down and companies were going out of business, they would go in and buy up their equipment and [01:06:35.060 --> 01:06:44.020] this guy would put it in a warehouse because it's hard. It doesn't evaporate. It stays what it is [01:06:44.020 --> 01:06:50.820] and then when the economy comes back up, then this equipment becomes very valuable. Silver, gold, [01:06:50.820 --> 01:06:59.460] silver, lead, something that's hard is something you want as a hedge against inflation. [01:07:00.500 --> 01:07:07.940] Right now, as I understand, silver is not like gold as a hedge against inflation. Silver, not so much. [01:07:08.500 --> 01:07:15.620] Silver is more speculative now. You buy silver, it's going up. It ain't coming down. [01:07:15.620 --> 01:07:24.180] The supply of silver is running out and the industrial uses for silver is increasing. It's [01:07:24.180 --> 01:07:32.580] going to do nothing but go up. It's an industrial metal at a time when industrial demand is going [01:07:33.700 --> 01:07:42.500] straight up. For 40 years, silver was around 20 bucks, 19, 20, 21. Then it would back down and [01:07:42.500 --> 01:07:50.260] back up and boom, here recently it's doubled. From what I hear, that's just going to keep happening. [01:07:52.260 --> 01:07:59.220] Now, the good news is you don't have to have $100,000 to invest in silver. [01:08:01.140 --> 01:08:10.660] You can start off with $20. $100 would be better. $500 would be great. $1,000 would be excellent, [01:08:11.220 --> 01:08:18.500] but you don't have to be a millionaire several times over to get into to silver. [01:08:25.300 --> 01:08:31.380] Are you still there? Say that again? Okay, I thought I lost you. I bumped my mic and then you [01:08:32.180 --> 01:08:37.300] dropped out. Silver, unlike gold, gold's like what, $1,000 an ounce now? [01:08:38.260 --> 01:08:45.860] No, it's $4,000 an ounce. That's hard to get into, but silver's not. But silver, [01:08:46.900 --> 01:08:56.820] because its industrial use is much greater than gold, it's likely the predictions I've heard is [01:08:56.820 --> 01:09:04.740] it's going to wind up more expensive than gold. There's another metal that went through something [01:09:04.740 --> 01:09:11.540] similar. The Washington Monument, the point on the top of the Washington Monument, [01:09:12.980 --> 01:09:20.020] when the Washington Monument was built, that point was made out of the most expensive metal on the [01:09:20.020 --> 01:09:28.580] planet, aluminum. It was the most expensive metal on the planet at the time, but then they figured [01:09:28.580 --> 01:09:37.780] out how to extract aluminum from bauxite, and aluminum got cheap. Silver's doing exactly the [01:09:37.780 --> 01:09:40.980] opposite. [01:09:40.980 --> 01:10:07.300] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [01:10:07.380 --> 01:10:12.740] and a better understanding of his word? Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays [01:10:12.740 --> 01:10:17.860] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the [01:10:17.860 --> 01:10:23.540] scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2.15. Study to show thyself approved unto God, [01:10:23.540 --> 01:10:27.460] a workman that needed not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:10:28.180 --> 01:10:32.820] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by [01:10:33.140 --> 01:10:38.660] and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with [01:10:38.660 --> 01:10:44.020] discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. 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In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, [01:11:24.500 --> 01:11:30.580] adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio [01:11:30.580 --> 01:11:36.260] Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come [01:11:36.260 --> 01:11:42.980] to trust Young Jevity so much we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, [01:11:42.980 --> 01:11:49.220] and many others. When you order from logosradionetwork.com your health will improve as [01:11:49.220 --> 01:11:55.380] you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity you may want to join [01:11:55.380 --> 01:12:01.860] us. As a distributor you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase [01:12:01.860 --> 01:12:24.500] your income. Order now. This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:12:24.500 --> 01:12:36.260] Okay, we are back, Randy Felton, Brett Felton. We're going to radio and talk to Dr. Joe [01:12:37.220 --> 01:12:46.180] about silver. Now, Dr. Joe, you are a silver broker. I have access to more silver than you [01:12:46.180 --> 01:12:55.860] could possibly buy. Yep. Okay, what's the best way to purchase silver? Well, if we have a couple [01:12:55.860 --> 01:13:06.660] minutes, I'd like to make a few more comments. Do we have a minute? Yes. This is a sleeping giant. [01:13:06.660 --> 01:13:12.260] I mean, this is a sleeping giant and at the other side of it there's a tremendous danger. [01:13:13.060 --> 01:13:19.780] You look throughout the world in the United States, there's no money. People do not have [01:13:19.780 --> 01:13:27.140] in their pocket a silver quarter, a silver dime, a silver anything. They don't have any real value. [01:13:28.420 --> 01:13:36.420] That is extraordinarily dangerous. If anything goes wrong on a big scale, people have no way [01:13:36.420 --> 01:13:43.860] of making a simple exchange. Historically, that's never happened and I view it as a [01:13:43.860 --> 01:13:50.340] tremendous danger. You probably know the way the Chinese write. They write in characters. [01:13:51.380 --> 01:13:58.180] If they write a character for danger, it can also be interpreted as opportunity. [01:13:58.180 --> 01:14:03.940] I believe that silver is the biggest sleeping giant that ever has been and I'm compelled by [01:14:03.940 --> 01:14:09.780] the danger to recommend it to people and I'm compelled by the enormous opportunity [01:14:09.780 --> 01:14:18.820] to recommend it to people. A third thing is you can hold your silver, physical silver, [01:14:18.820 --> 01:14:24.660] in a little box under your bed, under your mattress, in the closet, under in the cellar [01:14:25.220 --> 01:14:30.500] and it's yours. Nobody can get it. You don't have to go to the bank. You don't have to use [01:14:30.500 --> 01:14:37.540] the electronic teller. It's yours in your hand, in your possession. That's a tremendous advantage. [01:14:39.140 --> 01:14:47.060] You've got a triple whammy here. It is geopolitically a bad thing to not have silver [01:14:47.060 --> 01:14:54.260] and a good thing to have silver and also it's under your control in your hand and [01:14:54.740 --> 01:15:01.860] its value is about to double and double again easily. So that's the urgency [01:15:03.060 --> 01:15:08.180] of getting some of this investment. It's more than an investment. It's your safety, [01:15:08.180 --> 01:15:14.020] it's your family's safety, it's your children's safety and it's your investment future. [01:15:15.540 --> 01:15:20.100] So if someone wants to purchase silver, how do they purchase that through you? [01:15:20.100 --> 01:15:29.540] Well, they give me a call and they say, Randy Kelton said, give me a, help me buy some silver. [01:15:30.900 --> 01:15:36.340] So if somebody says that Randy Kelton recommended them, are you going to charge them double? [01:15:38.100 --> 01:15:47.460] I, you know, I'm keeping quiet about that, but we will do the market spot price in a small [01:15:47.460 --> 01:15:53.700] percentage for handling fees and we'll make a donation to the Randy Kelton rule of law radio. [01:15:54.740 --> 01:15:57.860] No, no, no, no. Make it to the Randy Kelton's beer fund. [01:15:59.380 --> 01:16:01.220] Oh, the beer fund? [01:16:01.220 --> 01:16:06.340] Yeah, the beer fund has not gotten near enough exposure lately. [01:16:07.700 --> 01:16:11.780] Oh, you talk about a geopolitical tragedy. There you go. [01:16:11.780 --> 01:16:21.060] Yeah. So if they just contact me, I will get them to Dr. Joe, if you want to get silver. [01:16:23.220 --> 01:16:28.180] I have been hearing, you know, everybody's been saying buy silver, buy silver for the last [01:16:29.380 --> 01:16:36.420] 20 years that I've been on radio. And silver hovered around 19 or 20 dollars all this time. [01:16:36.420 --> 01:16:41.940] And I'm saying to everybody, well, what's the deal here? Silver is supposed to be this [01:16:42.580 --> 01:16:53.700] great investment. And then what about two months ago? Boom. The governments, because their [01:16:53.700 --> 01:16:59.780] currencies were based on silver, have been holding down the price of silver. [01:17:00.580 --> 01:17:07.380] And a couple of months ago, they lost control of it. Now it's going up and seeking its true market [01:17:07.380 --> 01:17:14.260] value. If anybody donates to my beer fund, I'll buy silver with it. [01:17:17.620 --> 01:17:18.740] Just kidding. Just kidding. [01:17:18.740 --> 01:17:24.820] Silver has gone from 25, 30 dollars an ounce in the last few months up to, it hit 50 dollars the [01:17:24.820 --> 01:17:28.340] other day. Now it's back down a little bit. It's a good time to buy. [01:17:30.740 --> 01:17:36.660] Okay. So anybody interested in silver, let me know and I'll get you to Dr. Joe. [01:17:37.620 --> 01:17:43.620] We do have another caller. Eric in Massachusetts. [01:17:46.580 --> 01:17:49.140] Eric, what do you have for us today? [01:17:50.660 --> 01:17:57.380] Well, I'll make a few comments about silver and gold. Supposedly silver and gold have a [01:17:57.460 --> 01:18:06.980] ratio, a natural ratio. So when you're mining gold, oftentimes you're getting silver also. [01:18:08.740 --> 01:18:15.540] Well, gold is a hedge. Gold will preserve the value of your money. [01:18:16.980 --> 01:18:17.780] Silver is unique. [01:18:17.780 --> 01:18:23.860] I'm talking about mining, Randy. So when you're mining gold, oftentimes [01:18:24.420 --> 01:18:26.660] you're mining silver at the same time. [01:18:26.660 --> 01:18:33.220] Yeah. The biggest silver mine ever was in Colorado. And the way they found it is they're [01:18:33.220 --> 01:18:38.900] mining gold and they're pulling out all these tailings and these, they've got these big piles [01:18:38.900 --> 01:18:48.420] of tailings that are black, almost black. They're kind of bluish black. And a expert come by to look [01:18:48.420 --> 01:18:52.980] at the mines one day and he says, what are you doing with all this silver ore? They didn't know [01:18:52.980 --> 01:19:00.420] what it was. I forget the name of it. It was the one Molly Brown, the one from the Titanic. [01:19:00.980 --> 01:19:07.300] It's the one she owned. It was the biggest silver mine ever in history. And it started out as a gold [01:19:07.300 --> 01:19:12.980] mine. They were pulling out the silver ore and didn't know what it was. So they had piles of [01:19:12.980 --> 01:19:18.980] silver ore and it's black, almost blue ore. It turned out it was silver. [01:19:22.500 --> 01:19:23.940] Did you hear about that, Eric? [01:19:25.380 --> 01:19:28.900] I did not hear about that. I did not hear about that. [01:19:29.940 --> 01:19:31.700] That was one of those crazy things. [01:19:33.460 --> 01:19:41.780] I did. I was following the advice of Dr. Joe and I did have silver coins for many years. [01:19:42.980 --> 01:19:47.300] But unfortunately, I had to sell them recently because of my nasty tenant, [01:19:48.980 --> 01:19:51.540] really the nasty judge is really what it was. [01:19:54.580 --> 01:20:03.620] And gold too, I had to sell them gold and silver, which hurt because they're about double price now. [01:20:05.300 --> 01:20:08.260] Then you probably sold it just before the price went up. [01:20:09.220 --> 01:20:13.540] I did, yeah. Gold was starting to move up. So I bought the gold at maybe [01:20:14.420 --> 01:20:20.980] $1,600 to $1,800 and I sold it for maybe $2,500. Whereas now it's like Dr. Joe just said, it's [01:20:20.980 --> 01:20:31.460] about $5,000. And the silver, I don't remember what I bought it at, but I sold it maybe around [01:20:31.460 --> 01:20:41.860] $25 an ounce. But I had, what I mostly had was, I had, maybe it was closer to 30, but I sold, [01:20:41.860 --> 01:20:48.340] I had what is called coins, what are those coins called? Were they 90% silver? [01:20:48.340 --> 01:20:49.540] Rounds, silver rounds? [01:20:50.500 --> 01:20:56.260] No, no, where it's 90% silver, like the pre-1964 dimes and quarters. [01:20:58.500 --> 01:20:59.700] Yeah, I've got a lot of those. [01:21:00.660 --> 01:21:07.060] Yeah. So those are good to have because you can kind of use those and say, well, here, [01:21:07.060 --> 01:21:15.620] this is worth this much. But here's what I'm calling about. On Thursdays, maybe we should [01:21:15.620 --> 01:21:22.340] do an educational class, or you should do an educational class, pick a topic that people [01:21:22.420 --> 01:21:29.220] want to hear about and do, you know, two hours or two hours and call-ins on a specific topic. [01:21:30.740 --> 01:21:35.060] That might be interesting. And then you build a good library. [01:21:36.020 --> 01:21:44.660] Well, I have my Legal 101 book, and I've been wanting to do that on the air [01:21:45.140 --> 01:21:54.180] to get it in segments, you know, 15-minute segments. I've got a lot of stuff there, [01:21:54.180 --> 01:21:58.260] and there's a lot of stuff in there that I haven't went over in quite a while. [01:22:00.340 --> 01:22:06.020] Over the years, I've developed a whole bunch of rules on, and like one of the rules I talk [01:22:06.020 --> 01:22:09.220] about a lot is never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:22:10.180 --> 01:22:13.700] I've got a number of rules like that that are very powerful. [01:22:14.420 --> 01:22:17.700] You never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do, [01:22:19.140 --> 01:22:23.460] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law doesn't compel them to do. [01:22:24.020 --> 01:22:27.860] So when they don't do it, you can hammer them. That's what I'm talking about at the beginning [01:22:27.860 --> 01:22:33.220] of this show. I'm asking public officials to do something that the law compels them to do. [01:22:33.220 --> 01:22:35.300] When they don't do it, then I'm going to sue them. [01:23:03.460 --> 01:23:10.340] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:23:10.340 --> 01:23:14.980] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:23:14.980 --> 01:23:16.580] back with details in a moment. [01:23:17.380 --> 01:23:22.900] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:23:22.900 --> 01:23:27.380] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:23:27.620 --> 01:23:32.340] You'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights, [01:23:32.340 --> 01:23:38.580] say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:23:38.580 --> 01:23:44.340] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:23:44.340 --> 01:23:47.620] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:23:49.460 --> 01:23:54.980] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? If so, you might think that multitasking [01:23:54.980 --> 01:23:59.780] improves your smart. But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:23:59.780 --> 01:24:04.340] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:24:04.340 --> 01:24:07.540] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:24:07.540 --> 01:24:12.580] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:24:12.580 --> 01:24:17.700] in their prefrontal cortex. That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:24:17.700 --> 01:24:24.740] and regulate our emotions. So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as attack. [01:24:24.980 --> 01:24:29.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:24:34.820 --> 01:24:40.260] This is building seven, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:24:40.260 --> 01:24:45.780] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:24:45.780 --> 01:24:50.340] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:24:50.340 --> 01:24:54.260] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:24:54.260 --> 01:24:56.660] I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:24:56.660 --> 01:24:59.220] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:24:59.220 --> 01:25:04.660] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to rememberbuildingseven.org today. [01:25:06.420 --> 01:25:10.420] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. In today's America, [01:25:10.420 --> 01:25:14.260] we live in an us against them society. And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:25:14.260 --> 01:25:18.420] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [01:25:18.420 --> 01:25:22.420] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:25:22.420 --> 01:25:26.820] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [01:25:26.820 --> 01:25:31.220] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie [01:25:31.220 --> 01:25:35.140] Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool [01:25:35.140 --> 01:25:39.220] available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of [01:25:39.220 --> 01:25:43.860] law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:25:43.860 --> 01:25:47.540] ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [01:25:47.540 --> 01:25:52.100] Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:25:52.100 --> 01:25:56.020] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your [01:25:56.020 --> 01:26:00.100] rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and [01:26:00.100 --> 01:26:08.180] together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the Logos Radio [01:26:08.180 --> 01:26:10.820] Network. Logosradionetwork.com. [01:26:27.220 --> 01:26:33.940] Okay, we are back with Randy Kelton from Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. [01:26:34.660 --> 01:26:44.020] And 12, 12B. That's what I'm, right now what I'm suing, I'm suing in the state court. [01:26:45.380 --> 01:26:51.060] But I'm suing in the state court to get the state actors to screw everything up [01:26:52.020 --> 01:26:56.660] so that I can go to the federal court. And when I get to the federal court, [01:26:56.660 --> 01:27:03.540] there always the first thing you're going to get is 12B, especially if you're suing public officials. [01:27:04.900 --> 01:27:17.540] So we have to set them up so that when we get there, we have at least one claim that bypasses 12B1. [01:27:20.900 --> 01:27:28.820] 12B1 goes to immunity. So we have to ask the public official to do something that the law [01:27:28.980 --> 01:27:34.020] specifically commands them to do over which they have no discretion. [01:27:36.500 --> 01:27:45.940] And that gets you by 12B1. And then 12B6, you just have to actually state a claim and you can use, [01:27:46.820 --> 01:27:58.020] like I use O'Connor's litigation guides and it lists all of the claims and causes of actions [01:27:58.020 --> 01:28:05.140] and court claims. And you just have to make sure you make your allegations in accordance with the [01:28:05.140 --> 01:28:12.260] elements. You must allege each element in order to be a 12B6. [01:28:17.300 --> 01:28:22.820] Well, you know, what's interesting is they will always [01:28:23.540 --> 01:28:31.380] basically make the statement, you know, you didn't make a claim. So you could lay out the most [01:28:31.380 --> 01:28:39.380] beautiful thing, all the elements and those darn lawyers are always going to say they're [01:28:39.380 --> 01:28:44.580] failure to state a claim. And it's really annoying and it's really off-putting. [01:28:45.220 --> 01:28:51.140] And that's where you need to do a motion for sanctions and bar briefs is not out of. [01:28:53.700 --> 01:29:01.700] If they file a frivolous pleading where you've obviously stated a claim and they [01:29:02.500 --> 01:29:07.700] allege that you failed to state a claim, first thing I want to do is move for sanctions [01:29:08.660 --> 01:29:14.820] and then go to the state bar's standards and bar brief the snot out of them. [01:29:16.660 --> 01:29:18.260] Lawyers are low hanging fruit. [01:29:18.900 --> 01:29:27.300] It's funny you should say that. I'm dealing with this right now. So literally the bar organization [01:29:28.180 --> 01:29:34.740] called me today and I've spoken to the guy before and I just sent something in last week [01:29:36.100 --> 01:29:43.300] where I, you know, said, hey, this attorney's not speaking with candor to the court. And, [01:29:43.300 --> 01:29:48.820] you know, he did this and this and this. So the guy will call me and say, well, you know, Mr. [01:29:48.820 --> 01:29:55.860] Porter, you really can't file these unless you get the judge to, you know, make some, you know, [01:29:55.860 --> 01:30:00.100] you have to ask for a sanction or get some agreement from the judge. We can't really [01:30:00.100 --> 01:30:06.500] do anything with this. And, you know, so I explained it, you know, and he's like, all right, [01:30:06.500 --> 01:30:16.580] well, we'll, you know, we'll make a check mark on him. But the next one, so I had the conversation [01:30:16.580 --> 01:30:23.300] with him today and the next one, I realized I actually have something from the judge for them. [01:30:23.300 --> 01:30:31.220] But the next time I filed, so I had originally filed in the case, this is a federal case, [01:30:31.220 --> 01:30:37.300] where he didn't remove the case properly. He was making statements on behalf of the [01:30:38.660 --> 01:30:44.500] defendant. So violation of rule 602. And then he didn't make an appearance. [01:30:46.180 --> 01:30:53.060] So my next filing, I can say he's making a claim on behalf of the defendant or on behalf of the [01:30:53.060 --> 01:31:02.740] defendant. And he, he didn't make an appearance. And here's where the judge acknowledged it and [01:31:02.740 --> 01:31:10.500] said, well, he corrected it too late. He violated it. So that's what they're looking for. They're [01:31:10.500 --> 01:31:15.540] looking for me because you're never going to get a judge to sanction an attorney. [01:31:16.420 --> 01:31:21.380] We don't care about that. You're never going to get the bar to sanction one of their attorneys. [01:31:21.380 --> 01:31:25.380] They're just there as a public relations agency for the lawyers. [01:31:26.660 --> 01:31:32.740] That's not where the power of a bar grievance is. They have to notice their insurance carrier. [01:31:34.180 --> 01:31:39.620] That's where the power is. Now, insurance carrier, he don't care if it's valid or not. [01:31:41.220 --> 01:31:47.700] That's an excuse for him so he can raise the premiums. So he's going to be jumping up and [01:31:47.700 --> 01:31:57.620] down, clapping his hands. Oh, goody goody. Understood. So in this same case, [01:32:02.020 --> 01:32:08.740] I made a motion. So it was removed. It wasn't removed properly in my opinion. [01:32:09.380 --> 01:32:15.860] I had actually made a call maybe about this time last year to you. And so I filed a motion to [01:32:15.860 --> 01:32:21.460] dismiss the removal, which isn't proper in a federal court. But what else are you going to do? [01:32:22.660 --> 01:32:24.660] Actually, you would file a motion to remand. [01:32:26.260 --> 01:32:34.340] Understood. But I didn't want to lose my sort of opportunity to remand. And really, what was it? [01:32:34.340 --> 01:32:44.420] It was an improper filing. I shouldn't have to waste a remand on that. But the judge actually [01:32:45.300 --> 01:32:53.220] took it as a remand. So I said, hey, this is a deficient pleading, a deficient removal. [01:32:53.220 --> 01:32:58.900] It should be dismissed. And that, I think, is valid. That's a valid claim. It wasn't removed [01:32:58.900 --> 01:33:06.580] properly. This should be dismissed. I think that's valid. I'm not arguing international shoe. [01:33:06.580 --> 01:33:14.340] I'm not arguing other case law regarding remand. It wasn't removed properly. So the judge took it [01:33:14.340 --> 01:33:22.580] as a remand. So then when I go to file a proper remand, international shoe and all the other [01:33:22.580 --> 01:33:30.500] proper cases, the judge says, and it's funny because I wrote in there something was sanctionable. [01:33:31.060 --> 01:33:40.340] Well, the attorney did this. He removed it. And that's sanctionable. I file it. The next day, [01:33:40.420 --> 01:33:48.580] the judge makes a ruling and starts to threaten to sanction me because I'm relitigating the remand. [01:33:49.620 --> 01:33:56.340] And that was farthest from the truth because all I said was my filing was a motion to dismiss [01:33:56.340 --> 01:34:05.460] for deficiencies. And the judge is accusing me of relitigating the remand. But what is a remand? [01:34:05.540 --> 01:34:13.220] Is a remand. A remand is a jurisdictional issue. I can argue that every single day I want because [01:34:13.220 --> 01:34:18.420] that's not waivable. Obviously, if you do it excessively, they're going to be upset with you, [01:34:18.420 --> 01:34:27.700] aren't they? But the judge is trying to threaten me, sanction me, for arguing something that's not [01:34:27.700 --> 01:34:32.580] waivable. How crazy is that? And the federal court too. [01:34:33.780 --> 01:34:36.580] That should get a judicial conduct complaint against the judge. [01:34:38.100 --> 01:34:45.380] It will after she denies me my motion to recuse. [01:34:48.260 --> 01:34:55.380] And obviously a motion to recuse is an extremely high bar, but because I didn't think about this [01:34:55.380 --> 01:35:05.700] stuff and we all discussed these things, I'm going to play it as, hey, we pro se litigants [01:35:06.660 --> 01:35:14.100] get abused by these attorneys. And now the attorney is playing into this threat of sanctioning. [01:35:14.100 --> 01:35:19.620] And every time he's filing now, he's like, well, we should sanction him. And he's frivolous and [01:35:19.620 --> 01:35:25.460] vexatious. So now she's opened the floodgates. The judge has opened the floodgates for the attorney [01:35:25.460 --> 01:35:33.220] to start slamming me, threatening me with sanctions, frivolous, vexatious, all of these slurs. [01:35:34.260 --> 01:35:40.340] Again, for what? For something that's jurisdiction, that's not waivable, that can be brought up five [01:35:40.340 --> 01:35:49.140] minutes before the final decision. That jurisdiction can be brought up right before the order. [01:35:49.780 --> 01:35:52.820] Did you file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge? [01:35:54.420 --> 01:35:58.020] Understood. But what I'm going to do is I didn't get to finish sort of what I was saying. [01:35:58.020 --> 01:36:05.380] What I'm going to do is I'm going to write up a, and I've already started a motion to [01:36:05.380 --> 01:36:11.460] recuse the judge and say, look, here's the abuse you've opened up. You've created this animus [01:36:12.260 --> 01:36:18.900] against me as a pro se litigant. You've threatened to sanction me twice now. [01:36:19.860 --> 01:36:26.900] And then because of that, the attorney is accusing me of frivolous, vexatious, [01:36:26.900 --> 01:36:36.260] whatever. And I have in the state court where the appeals court recognized that I had suffered [01:36:36.260 --> 01:36:44.820] eight years of an attorney doing this to me, and they chided in court during oral arguments [01:36:45.300 --> 01:36:48.100] the attorney for doing that yet again. [01:36:51.140 --> 01:36:54.900] That sounds like a good grounds to do judicial conduct complaint to judge. [01:36:54.900 --> 01:36:58.580] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, River by Radio, we'll be right back. [01:37:03.620 --> 01:37:08.740] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds [01:37:08.740 --> 01:37:13.940] of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford [01:37:13.940 --> 01:37:20.100] to be on? Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan [01:37:20.100 --> 01:37:27.780] by lowering the claims cost? 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[01:39:28.820 --> 01:39:33.860] I will never understand some things I realize fully [01:39:35.300 --> 01:39:41.940] Somebody's gonna police a policeman Somebody's gonna police a bully [01:39:43.780 --> 01:39:51.140] There's always a room at the top of the hill I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely [01:39:51.540 --> 01:39:55.940] Still they're wishing it was more than our position to build [01:39:56.660 --> 01:40:00.500] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will [01:40:04.820 --> 01:40:08.660] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:40:09.300 --> 01:40:19.620] and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. Okay, so the judge has opened the door [01:40:20.580 --> 01:40:26.180] for the prosecutor to harass you with motions for sanctions. [01:40:28.820 --> 01:40:32.180] Oh, hold on. Let me unmute you. There we go. [01:40:33.380 --> 01:40:36.100] Not the prosecutor, just the defense attorney. [01:40:36.100 --> 01:40:37.540] I'm sorry, defense attorney. [01:40:38.180 --> 01:40:46.020] Yeah. So if I just kind of do a normal motion to recuse, [01:40:46.580 --> 01:40:54.100] it's not going to really go anywhere. And it's, you know, most likely this won't go anywhere regardless. [01:40:54.660 --> 01:40:58.740] But what my plea is, is going to be a larger sort of plea. [01:40:59.460 --> 01:41:09.220] Like, look, here's how we pro se are being abused and treated both by the courts and attorneys. [01:41:09.220 --> 01:41:14.020] I have an example here in state court where the appeals court recognized me [01:41:14.980 --> 01:41:20.500] because I was being abused by the attorney as a meritorious litigant. [01:41:21.300 --> 01:41:30.580] I brought value to their court and they rule in my favor. Right? So the judge has opened up this door [01:41:31.620 --> 01:41:40.420] for animus towards me where both the judge now and the defense attorney are speaking in concert [01:41:40.420 --> 01:41:44.900] with each other about sanctioning me. And what are they sanctioning me on? [01:41:44.900 --> 01:41:49.540] Something that's absolutely ridiculous, which is jurisdiction. That's not waivable. [01:41:49.540 --> 01:41:54.820] Well, how is that possible? Right? And I actually asked you guys a question [01:41:54.820 --> 01:42:00.580] if pro se's are easier to sanction or harder to sanction. I assume they're harder to sanction. [01:42:00.580 --> 01:42:08.820] So my filing would be really more a larger plea to, hey, we as pro se litigants [01:42:09.780 --> 01:42:17.220] are supposed to be at a disadvantage, but we are being abused. And Chris from Colorado has that [01:42:17.220 --> 01:42:27.780] document from the former Judge Merritt E. McAllister where she's talking about how pro se litigants [01:42:27.780 --> 01:42:32.500] are at a disadvantage. And I would probably look at that and reference it and make any case [01:42:32.500 --> 01:42:43.620] law that she has, but it's sort of a larger pleading towards recusal in the realm of on [01:42:43.620 --> 01:42:49.220] behalf of all pro se's per se. If it's just me, they're going to say there's not enough animus [01:42:49.220 --> 01:42:57.220] here or there's whatever. They never remand or excuse me, recuse in general. It's a pretty high [01:42:57.220 --> 01:43:03.380] bar. And obviously I acknowledge it's a high bar. But if I say, hey, there's a reason here. [01:43:04.100 --> 01:43:09.700] You've opened up Pandora's box. You said something you shouldn't have said. It's unrealistic even [01:43:09.700 --> 01:43:16.900] what your claim is. And this is the abuse that we pro se litigants have to deal with. And it's [01:43:16.900 --> 01:43:24.180] inappropriate. And I would like a new venue per se or a new court per se. What are your thoughts [01:43:24.180 --> 01:43:32.820] on that? I think we don't go after the judges near enough. So we need to go after them. [01:43:34.420 --> 01:43:42.020] It's just harder in the Fed unless we set them up. I'm going after judges, but I'm kind of setting [01:43:42.020 --> 01:43:47.300] them up from the front end so I can go to the attorney general to try to get them arrested. [01:43:48.340 --> 01:43:53.060] But once you're in court with them, every time I'm in court with them, they rule against me out of [01:43:53.060 --> 01:44:01.540] hand at every turn, no matter what. That's been my experience. I'm actually suing the Fifth Circuit [01:44:02.180 --> 01:44:09.940] judges for not giving me a proper hearing after I paid them 700 bucks to do it. [01:44:12.100 --> 01:44:16.260] There is a different perspective I'm taking on. [01:44:16.260 --> 01:44:25.380] Have you read Walker v. Packer? Yeah, we've talked about it many times. [01:44:25.380 --> 01:44:32.020] Okay. Walker v. Packer. It says that it is an abuse of discretion. [01:44:33.460 --> 01:44:39.700] Well, I read that and I say, if it's an abuse of discretion, [01:44:39.780 --> 01:44:48.820] and the way I read the penal code, if a public official abuses his discretion [01:44:49.940 --> 01:44:53.780] and in the process denies being full and free access to her enjoyment right, [01:44:53.780 --> 01:44:56.420] how isn't it not a crime just because the judge did it? [01:44:59.940 --> 01:45:03.060] I'm saying they don't have any more authority to abuse their discretion [01:45:03.780 --> 01:45:07.620] to my detriment than anybody else does. It's a crime. [01:45:09.700 --> 01:45:17.220] Nobody's going after them criminally. I'm going after them criminally. [01:45:20.020 --> 01:45:22.660] What you're doing is challenging unto itself. [01:45:24.100 --> 01:45:29.700] Everybody's going to jump in line to protect them, but that is not going to look good. [01:45:31.860 --> 01:45:34.740] That's like playing Russian roulette with their career. [01:45:35.380 --> 01:45:42.260] And the good thing about Walker v. Packer is it states that very specifically. [01:45:43.780 --> 01:45:48.820] For a judge to fail to properly apply the law to the facts, it's an abuse of discretion. [01:45:49.940 --> 01:45:51.780] And they're saying that's the only thing you could appeal. [01:45:51.780 --> 01:45:59.140] You know, we just had Trump go after this judge for abusing his discretion. [01:46:00.820 --> 01:46:02.660] Why didn't they file criminally against him? [01:46:02.660 --> 01:46:07.460] Why didn't they file criminally against him? How is that not a crime? [01:46:12.260 --> 01:46:14.340] They are actually filing against judges. [01:46:15.940 --> 01:46:24.900] You have two, at least two judges that are being prosecuted for protecting. [01:46:26.340 --> 01:46:31.780] No, that's something different. What I'm saying is a judge has no discretion [01:46:32.660 --> 01:46:40.660] in properly applying the law to the facts. That's what Walker v. Packer says. [01:46:41.780 --> 01:46:48.100] A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. It's right there in the case law. [01:46:49.780 --> 01:46:56.580] So if a public official abuses his discretion and in the process denies me full and free access to [01:46:56.580 --> 01:46:59.860] or enjoyment right, that's official misconduct as I read the code. [01:47:01.860 --> 01:47:06.420] It's exactly what the code says. So how is it not a crime when a judge does it? [01:47:09.540 --> 01:47:15.540] Yeah, I absolutely agree with that. And I think we do need to target judges in that manner because, [01:47:16.740 --> 01:47:20.420] you know, with Trump, you're seeing the extreme versions of this. [01:47:22.020 --> 01:47:24.820] But even he is not going after him criminally. [01:47:25.460 --> 01:47:28.420] Right. We may need to give him the idea. [01:47:32.820 --> 01:47:35.460] You'd have to give his prosecutors the idea. [01:47:36.100 --> 01:47:43.060] I sent a criminal complaint to the grand jury in Forth to their address at the courthouse in [01:47:43.060 --> 01:47:49.620] Suite 300. I get a response back from the federal judge and the federal clerk [01:47:50.420 --> 01:47:54.980] said, you filed a civil suit and you didn't pay the filing fee and they dismissed it. [01:47:56.260 --> 01:48:02.980] Say what? What are you doing with this? How did you get this? I didn't mail this to you. [01:48:04.500 --> 01:48:10.260] I mailed it to the grand jury and the grand jury, according to Scalia, is a fourth branch of government. [01:48:12.740 --> 01:48:17.300] So now I'm going to file criminal charges with the U.S. attorney in D.C. [01:48:18.100 --> 01:48:21.860] with the grand jury at the address of the U.S. attorney in D.C. [01:48:23.620 --> 01:48:29.380] And when I don't get my cover letter back from the grand jury, I'm going to accuse him of [01:48:29.380 --> 01:48:41.700] violating separation powers. He is the executive. The judge is the judicial, the grand jury [01:48:41.700 --> 01:48:48.100] and the grand jury is the grand jury. Fourth branch of government. [01:48:51.540 --> 01:48:55.300] Trying to get that door open. If we can get the door open to the grand jury, [01:48:55.860 --> 01:49:02.340] then the judge failed to properly apply the law to the facts. You file a opposition in the court, [01:49:03.060 --> 01:49:07.140] you file a judicial content complaint, you file a criminal complaint with the grand jury. [01:49:07.540 --> 01:49:13.140] Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the grand jury is going to know, Bill. [01:49:15.140 --> 01:49:20.260] But there was this time I walked into my district attorney's office [01:49:21.540 --> 01:49:24.980] and he's sitting there with his head in his hand and I said, what's the matter, Greg? [01:49:25.780 --> 01:49:30.020] And he looks up at me with this full-on look on his face and he said, [01:49:30.980 --> 01:49:37.620] those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [01:49:39.300 --> 01:49:44.740] I went to Travis County and demanded to see the minutes of the grand jury. [01:49:45.940 --> 01:49:52.900] In Texas, when the grand jury votes, then they're to come before the court with the form of the [01:49:52.900 --> 01:49:57.940] grand jury present and read the indictment to the court and the court shall make notes in the [01:49:57.940 --> 01:50:04.420] minutes of the court. So I said, I'm going to see those minutes. And Travis County, [01:50:04.420 --> 01:50:09.540] they gave them to me. Four or five different minutes from different, they had a grand jury [01:50:09.540 --> 01:50:16.660] every day. So I get these and I go through them and every one of them had four or five nobiles. [01:50:18.900 --> 01:50:22.900] This grand jury, these grand juries are not a rubber stamp. [01:50:22.900 --> 01:50:27.860] Every single one of them had four or five nobiles. [01:50:29.940 --> 01:50:33.300] So when you file criminal charges against the district judge [01:50:34.820 --> 01:50:41.140] and he's sitting there thinking, well, they're not going to indict me, maybe. [01:50:43.060 --> 01:50:49.060] Who wants to play Russian roulette with their career and their liberty? [01:50:49.300 --> 01:50:52.260] And then we get these courts back in line. [01:50:53.940 --> 01:50:58.900] But as long as there's this unstated presupposition that a judge commit official [01:50:58.900 --> 01:51:03.940] oppression, it's not a crime. It's only a crime when somebody else does it. [01:51:06.180 --> 01:51:08.100] I'm saying it's time to go for their throats. [01:51:09.620 --> 01:51:13.700] This should be a Thursday show. We should do an old Thursday show [01:51:14.260 --> 01:51:17.460] training us how to fight the judges this way. [01:51:37.140 --> 01:51:41.220] Okay, we are about out of time. Thank you all for listening. We'll be back tomorrow night [01:51:41.220 --> 01:51:53.540] at our regular time at nine o'clock Eastern, eight o'clock Central. Work y'all for listening.