[00:00.000 --> 00:04.500] This news brief brought to you by the International Newsnet. [00:04.500 --> 00:11.000] Congresswoman Jackie Spear Wednesday called on Congress to do something about sexual harassment and rape in the U.S. military. [00:11.000 --> 00:15.000] Spear said 19,000 service members are raped every year in the military, [00:15.000 --> 00:20.500] but only 13% report the rapes because there has been such an ineffective addressing of this issue. [00:20.500 --> 00:26.000] Meeting House Democrats have accused the Obama administration of ignoring the mortgage crisis, [00:26.000 --> 00:29.500] thus threatening tens of millions of Americans with foreclosure. [00:29.500 --> 00:32.500] Lawmakers said they were encouraged by Obama's mention of mortgage relief [00:32.500 --> 00:34.500] and his address to Congress last week, [00:34.500 --> 00:40.500] but the administration declined their request for a briefing on details of the White House plan. [00:40.500 --> 00:45.500] Next week's Toronto appearance by George Bush at the Christian University has been cancelled. [00:45.500 --> 00:50.500] The decision came after former students launched a petition urging the university to cancel this speech. [00:50.500 --> 00:53.500] On Tuesday, a professor spoke out against Bush's appearance, [00:53.500 --> 00:56.500] following the resignation of another staff member. [00:56.500 --> 01:01.500] The university's website announced the cancellation without mentioning Bush by name. [01:01.500 --> 01:07.500] Barack Obama unveiled a $447 billion jobs plan before Congress last week, [01:07.500 --> 01:11.500] offering tax breaks for corporations as inducements to hire new workers. [01:11.500 --> 01:15.500] Part of the plan is based on a state-run program from Georgia. [01:15.500 --> 01:20.500] Georgia Works allows businesses to hire unemployed workers temporarily without pay. [01:20.500 --> 01:28.500] The unemployed work eight 24-hour weeks, while continuing to receive jobless benefits, plus a $240 stipend from the government. [01:28.500 --> 01:33.500] Critics say only 24% of the applicants in the program have been converted into hires, [01:33.500 --> 01:37.500] and Georgia has no statistics on whether those hired were long-term. [01:37.500 --> 01:42.500] Only 12 unemployed people signed up in August, and just 92 have done so since February. [01:42.500 --> 01:46.500] Andrew Stathner, Deputy Director of the National Employment Law Project said, [01:46.500 --> 01:50.500] Georgia Works looks more like work than training, adding, [01:50.500 --> 01:54.500] You can't try someone out and not pay them. It's not allowed under our nation's labor laws. [01:54.500 --> 02:03.500] Thousands of people gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square Friday to oppose the recent expansion of Egypt's emergency law. [02:03.500 --> 02:10.500] Al Jazeera reports there is palpable anger across Egypt over the military's handling of transition from autocratic rule. [02:10.500 --> 02:16.500] Following last Friday's occupation of the Israeli Embassy by demonstrators and attempts to storm security buildings, [02:16.500 --> 02:22.500] the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces said it would enforce the emergency law at least until the end of this year. [02:22.500 --> 02:29.500] Lifting the emergency law which gave security forces unlimited powers for 30 years in Egypt during Hosni Mubarak's rule [02:29.500 --> 02:33.500] was a central demand of mass protests which toppled the autocrat in February. [02:33.500 --> 02:37.500] At least 33 political groups took part in Friday's protests. [02:37.500 --> 02:42.500] The most prominent opposition, the Muslim Brotherhood, did not participate. [03:08.500 --> 03:32.500] Music [03:32.500 --> 03:34.500] Hi, folks. We are back. [03:34.500 --> 03:38.500] This is Rule of Law Radio. Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. [03:38.500 --> 03:41.500] This is our Friday night for our marathon. [03:41.500 --> 03:43.500] We have about two hours left in the show. [03:43.500 --> 03:45.500] Right now we are taking your calls. [03:45.500 --> 03:49.500] Calling number is 512-646-1984. [03:49.500 --> 03:52.500] And right now we're going to go to our next caller. [03:52.500 --> 03:55.500] Hello. Can we get your name, please? [03:55.500 --> 03:59.500] Yeah, I guess you're talking to me. This is Keith. [03:59.500 --> 04:01.500] Hi, Keith. Where you at? [04:01.500 --> 04:03.500] Alabama. [04:03.500 --> 04:07.500] Well, sorry about that. We're able to actually screen the calls beforehand, [04:07.500 --> 04:09.500] so I'm not able to get the names up at the moment. [04:09.500 --> 04:11.500] But what can we do for you? [04:11.500 --> 04:15.500] I have a couple of comments I'd like to make. [04:15.500 --> 04:19.500] You know, you was talking about the driver's license issues, you know. [04:19.500 --> 04:24.500] You know, you are presumed to be in commerce if you have a driver's license. [04:24.500 --> 04:30.500] And unless you rebut that presumption, then that's a presumption that's going to stand. [04:30.500 --> 04:37.500] Now, it sounded like you got in trouble just for saying that in your state. [04:37.500 --> 04:41.500] I've had my share with these people. [04:41.500 --> 04:48.500] I've been pulled over for four years expired tag and wasn't wearing a seat belt [04:48.500 --> 04:53.500] and no insurance, but they didn't give me a ticket for no seat belt. [04:53.500 --> 04:58.500] They gave me a ticket for expired tag and no insurance. [04:58.500 --> 05:06.500] When I go to court, you know, the first appearance is, you know, like I said, [05:06.500 --> 05:10.500] just a clerk sitting there and want to know how you plead. [05:10.500 --> 05:14.500] And I'm trying to ask them some questions and they can't answer a question. [05:14.500 --> 05:16.500] They say, well, you want to go to trial? [05:16.500 --> 05:19.500] And I said, well, absolutely. I want to talk to a judge. [05:19.500 --> 05:28.500] So we go, they set a date up and we go to, I appear at the next time they asked me to appear. [05:28.500 --> 05:31.500] And I'm trying to ask the judge some questions. [05:31.500 --> 05:34.500] The judge don't want to answer no questions. [05:34.500 --> 05:36.500] Doesn't want to hear me say another word. [05:36.500 --> 05:38.500] It's guilty or not guilty. [05:38.500 --> 05:41.500] So I'm asking, are you refusing to answer my questions? [05:41.500 --> 05:45.500] And the judge just says, all I want to hear is guilty or not guilty. [05:45.500 --> 05:50.500] So well, in that case, I'm going to plead innocent and tell you prove otherwise. [05:50.500 --> 05:54.500] And that judge just turned white as a ghost. [05:54.500 --> 05:56.500] The judge wouldn't let me say another word. [05:56.500 --> 06:03.500] One of the here, the officer story told the officer to go tell the prosecutor what the officer told the judge. [06:03.500 --> 06:06.500] And the judge asked me to sit down. [06:06.500 --> 06:14.500] So I got out and I'm reading judges conducting business prosecutor comes in there and talks to the judge. [06:14.500 --> 06:21.500] And the judge tells the prosecutor to find something in the book because the judge couldn't go no further. [06:21.500 --> 06:28.500] And prosecutors going through the book, judge just calling case after case, about 10 cases later. [06:28.500 --> 06:35.500] Judge calls him back up there and asked the prosecutor or asked the officer to tell his story again. [06:35.500 --> 06:40.500] And then judge just told the officer, I'm not allowing this, this case is dismissed. [06:40.500 --> 06:51.500] You know, the judge knew that I knew something and the judge knew that I had plenty of cash cows sitting in the audience there [06:51.500 --> 06:53.500] and didn't want them hearing anything I had to say. [06:53.500 --> 06:57.500] So I walked out with the officer and I'm standing right beside him in the hallway. [06:57.500 --> 07:02.500] I said, smile down and say, have a nice day and walk up. [07:02.500 --> 07:11.500] But my most recent thing was back in January, I'm traveling in a little gas saving car. I never have registered. [07:11.500 --> 07:16.500] And I got a ticket for no tag. [07:16.500 --> 07:20.500] And I'm assuming that's why I was pulled over. [07:20.500 --> 07:27.500] The officer gave me a ticket for no insurance. They didn't give me a ticket for no tag. [07:27.500 --> 07:35.500] And I'd gotten out of the car immediately. I pulled up under a well lit street lamp and the officer threatened to shoot me. [07:35.500 --> 07:40.500] I didn't get back in the car. So obviously I got back into the car. [07:40.500 --> 07:46.500] But they gave me a court date and I went on that date because I signed the ticket that I would appear on that day in time. [07:46.500 --> 07:51.500] You know, that's an agreement. It's basically a contract, right? [07:51.500 --> 07:53.500] Usually, yeah, something like that. [07:53.500 --> 08:01.500] I go there on the day and time and there was a night court on a Friday afternoon and they didn't have court. [08:01.500 --> 08:07.500] So I got an officer behind the desk who asked, you know, to help me and I said, yeah, I'm here for court. [08:07.500 --> 08:10.500] And you're usually a line of people waiting to get in the court. [08:10.500 --> 08:13.500] So I said, well, I'm here for court. [08:13.500 --> 08:20.500] And he said, let me say the ticket. I showed it to him. He says, well, somebody must have goofed up because we don't have court tonight. [08:20.500 --> 08:25.500] So I got him to sign a piece of paper that I was there on that day in time. [08:25.500 --> 08:30.500] And he signed his name back. I'm not left. [08:30.500 --> 08:34.500] So I didn't think much about it for about two months. [08:34.500 --> 08:39.500] And I finally said, well, I better have a friend called down there and check on the status of it. [08:39.500 --> 08:45.500] And they had issued two warrants, so you do appear and contempt the court. [08:45.500 --> 08:49.500] I said, ain't that strange? [08:49.500 --> 08:51.500] So I wrote them a letter. [08:51.500 --> 08:58.500] I wrote them a few days and then I also wrote a notice and demand. [08:58.500 --> 09:09.500] And I let them know that, you know, I've read the Alabama motor vehicle codes and all the motor care jacks and I have certified copies of all of them. [09:09.500 --> 09:13.500] And that I wasn't on the road for commerce. [09:13.500 --> 09:21.500] And I let them know that Alabama under title once chapter three, section one, Alabama's common law state. [09:21.500 --> 09:31.500] And that that they had to produce a witness who could testify under penalty of perjury that I had injured them and or damaged the property. [09:31.500 --> 09:39.500] Couple weeks later, we call back down there and the warrants are we're no more. [09:39.500 --> 09:44.500] So, you know, if you don't know how to handle these situations. [09:44.500 --> 09:53.500] It sounds like in Alabama, you actually have some judges that pay attention when laws put in front of them. [09:53.500 --> 09:55.500] Well, I didn't send it to the judge. [09:55.500 --> 09:58.500] I sent it to the court administrator. [09:58.500 --> 10:03.500] Well, the court administrator undoubtedly got it and asked the judge what to do. [10:03.500 --> 10:09.500] At least the courts are paying attention to law in most places we encounter. [10:09.500 --> 10:11.500] They simply ignore it. [10:11.500 --> 10:18.500] Well, I don't think there's too many people in my town that does what I do or, you know, people think I'm crazy. [10:18.500 --> 10:25.500] I had my mother ask me how come I spent so much time studying the law and doing all this stuff. [10:25.500 --> 10:35.500] I says, you know what, if you don't ask me that no more, I won't ask you how come your generation and the generations before you didn't do what I'm doing. [10:35.500 --> 10:40.500] Because that would have prevented us from being in this mess we are now. [10:40.500 --> 10:41.500] You're right. [10:41.500 --> 10:54.500] I'm approaching 50 years old, you know, and I can't think of all the years before that I spent doing all the things young men normally do, you know. [10:54.500 --> 11:03.500] But I don't remember those things that young men normally do. [11:03.500 --> 11:07.500] That was back in another century. [11:07.500 --> 11:11.500] Well, I remember them well. [11:11.500 --> 11:13.500] I miss them and I don't. [11:13.500 --> 11:15.500] You know, I like where I'm at right now. [11:15.500 --> 11:23.500] You know, I love trying to put these people in place and getting everything back in order. [11:23.500 --> 11:26.500] And I wish I could get more people to follow suit. [11:26.500 --> 11:31.500] Well, don't don't be too disappointed. [11:31.500 --> 11:36.500] Each of us are put have been put here for our own purpose. [11:36.500 --> 11:39.500] And some people are here for this purpose. [11:39.500 --> 11:41.500] Some people for other purposes. [11:41.500 --> 11:47.500] And as I got older, I've gotten more philosophical about that. [11:47.500 --> 11:51.500] I don't expect everybody to have my passion. [11:51.500 --> 11:55.500] Other people have passions about different things. [11:55.500 --> 12:00.500] And I know Einstein claimed that we only used about 10% of our capacity. [12:00.500 --> 12:03.500] I think we use all of it all the time. [12:03.500 --> 12:07.500] But we're all focused in different directions. [12:07.500 --> 12:13.500] And we shouldn't get upset at people because they're not as focused as we are. [12:13.500 --> 12:16.500] We're focused on freedom. [12:16.500 --> 12:19.500] And other people, freedom is not that important to them. [12:19.500 --> 12:25.500] Other people may have five kids to feed and three, they're trying to get through college. [12:25.500 --> 12:29.500] Oh, I understand all that. [12:29.500 --> 12:33.500] So it's okay. It doesn't take too many. [12:33.500 --> 12:37.500] It only takes a few of us down there kicking their behinds. [12:37.500 --> 12:39.500] And it makes it better for everybody. [12:39.500 --> 12:41.500] That's right. That's right. [12:41.500 --> 12:48.500] Now, the main reason I called in, I sent you an email and you replied back to call you or call into the radio show. [12:48.500 --> 12:52.500] Yes, you left a message on my phone that said, Keith. [12:52.500 --> 12:58.500] And I went back through the emails and I couldn't find the email that had Keith on it. [12:58.500 --> 13:01.500] I think I signed it. [13:01.500 --> 13:03.500] Then, okay, I'll have to look again. [13:03.500 --> 13:06.500] I looked this evening and couldn't find one. [13:06.500 --> 13:09.500] If you don't hear from me, get an email response. [13:09.500 --> 13:16.500] Send me another one and put Keith in the subject and capital letters and I'll know which one it is. [13:16.500 --> 13:22.500] Okay. Would you want to discuss this a little bit or just wait and talk to me on the phone? [13:22.500 --> 13:26.500] Okay. What is the issue? [13:26.500 --> 13:34.500] Well, the issue is, you know, I was foreclosed on and allegedly the property was sold on the courthouse stuff. [13:34.500 --> 13:36.500] Oh, I remember. [13:36.500 --> 13:41.500] And now you've went back and it still shows the property to be in your name. [13:41.500 --> 13:46.500] I went down there and just recently got a certified copy of a warranty date. It's still in my name. [13:46.500 --> 13:49.500] And the taxes said it's still in my name. [13:49.500 --> 13:53.500] Okay. Need to look at, is this property in Alabama? [13:53.500 --> 14:00.500] Yeah. And it also, the clerk I was asking about a trust deed or anything like that. [14:00.500 --> 14:04.500] Well, she said, well, there's no liens on the property. [14:04.500 --> 14:07.500] Oh, wait, wait, wait. There's no liens? [14:07.500 --> 14:11.500] There's a little IRS issue on there. [14:11.500 --> 14:15.500] Put one on it. [14:15.500 --> 14:18.500] Put one on it now. You got a brother? [14:18.500 --> 14:20.500] He's passed away. [14:20.500 --> 14:22.500] Need a life one. [14:22.500 --> 14:31.500] Get somebody, not you, somebody else that you know and trust to come down and lean the property big time. [14:31.500 --> 14:36.500] Lean it above the value of the property. [14:36.500 --> 14:40.500] First in line, first in time. [14:40.500 --> 14:44.500] Now, should that be filed under a UCC or? [14:44.500 --> 14:51.500] No, just filing in. A notice of lean. [14:51.500 --> 14:55.500] Oh, Tim Turner is probably down there close to you somewhere. [14:55.500 --> 14:58.500] Except Tim Turner gets people put in jail with his process. [14:58.500 --> 14:59.500] Yeah. [14:59.500 --> 15:04.500] How to find the laws in your state that deal with how to establish a proper judicial lien. [15:04.500 --> 15:06.500] How to go to jail. [15:06.500 --> 15:13.500] Just set up a trust, move the property to a trust. [15:13.500 --> 15:18.500] But you need to get a lien of some kind filed in there on the property. [15:18.500 --> 15:22.500] Well, in the meantime, I'm not on the property. [15:22.500 --> 15:23.500] That's okay. [15:23.500 --> 15:24.500] That's okay. [15:24.500 --> 15:27.500] This is about jerking a knot in their shorts. [15:27.500 --> 15:34.500] What I was going to ask you is to look for the state requirements for filing liens. [15:34.500 --> 15:40.500] Now, in the real estate sentiment procedures act, it requires that a lien be filed, [15:40.500 --> 15:46.500] that if a property transfers hands by assignment, [15:46.500 --> 15:53.500] and if the assignee is not going to hold the property more than 30 days, [15:53.500 --> 15:59.500] he's not required to file it with the state registrar, with the county registrar. [15:59.500 --> 16:04.500] But if he's going to hold it for more than 30 days, [16:04.500 --> 16:10.500] the real estate settlement procedures act requires that he file it in the public record. [16:10.500 --> 16:14.500] Look at the state law concerning that issue. [16:14.500 --> 16:16.500] See what the state law says about it. [16:16.500 --> 16:22.500] But in any case, Monday, get down there with a lien, get it filed. [16:22.500 --> 16:25.500] I've got a friend I know I could trust to do that with. [16:25.500 --> 16:26.500] Okay, good. [16:26.500 --> 16:33.500] Then have him file the lien, make a private contract between you, [16:33.500 --> 16:38.500] so that you can use the contract to cancel the lien at any time. [16:38.500 --> 16:41.500] And that's just in case your friend gets PO'd at you. [16:41.500 --> 16:44.500] If he's really a friend, he won't have a problem with that. [16:44.500 --> 16:46.500] And then file the lien against the property. [16:46.500 --> 16:48.500] The contract's private, nobody will seize it. [16:48.500 --> 16:52.500] Your lien will stand first in time, first in time, that's what they get for not filing. [16:52.500 --> 16:56.500] This is Randy Kelton, devastated at Craig, wheel of Loranio. [16:56.500 --> 16:59.500] Hang on, we'll be back on the other side. [17:03.500 --> 17:06.500] In the 80s, they did it to Reagan. [17:06.500 --> 17:09.500] A debt-sealing compromise. [17:09.500 --> 17:14.500] Democrats promising spending cuts, but delivering only tax sites. [17:14.500 --> 17:20.500] The 90s brought more compromises, more broken promises, and more new taxes. [17:20.500 --> 17:24.500] This August, the next chapter will be written. [17:24.500 --> 17:26.500] A defining moment. [17:26.500 --> 17:32.500] 14 trillion in debt, millions unemployed, the dollar in decline. [17:32.500 --> 17:34.500] We know where they stand. [17:34.500 --> 17:38.500] But will our party's leaders repeat the mistakes of the past? [17:38.500 --> 17:41.500] Will they choose compromise or conviction? [17:41.500 --> 17:44.500] One candidate has always been true. [17:44.500 --> 17:49.500] Ron Paul, cut spending, balance the budget, no deals. [17:49.500 --> 17:53.500] Standing up to the Washington machine, guided by principle. [17:53.500 --> 17:56.500] Restore America now. [17:56.500 --> 17:59.500] I'm Ron Paul, and I approve this message. [17:59.500 --> 18:04.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [18:04.500 --> 18:08.500] Stop debt collectors now, with the Michael Miras Proven Method. [18:08.500 --> 18:14.500] Michael Miras has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [18:14.500 --> 18:20.500] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [18:20.500 --> 18:24.500] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [18:24.500 --> 18:26.500] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.500 --> 18:28.500] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:28.500 --> 18:33.500] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:33.500 --> 18:38.500] The Michael Miras Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.500 --> 18:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.500 --> 18:46.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Miras banner, [18:46.500 --> 18:49.500] or email Michael Miras at yahoo.com. [18:49.500 --> 18:57.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.500 --> 19:00.500] To learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:00.500 --> 19:06.500] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the father can do it by you. [19:06.500 --> 19:12.500] But don't let backmine people hurt you, until they can get behind you. [19:12.500 --> 19:14.500] Know what I mean? [19:14.500 --> 19:17.500] My friend, Mala Jackson. [19:23.500 --> 19:24.500] Hi, folks, we are back. [19:24.500 --> 19:25.500] This is rule of law radio. [19:25.500 --> 19:30.500] The call-in number is 512-646-1984. [19:30.500 --> 19:33.500] We're going to go ahead and finish up with Keith. [19:33.500 --> 19:36.500] All right, Keith, please continue. [19:36.500 --> 19:39.500] All right. [19:39.500 --> 19:41.500] Okay, is that it, Keith? [19:41.500 --> 19:46.500] Okay, they have foreclosed you're out of the property. [19:46.500 --> 19:47.500] I'm going to suggest you file. [19:47.500 --> 19:50.500] Is anybody else in the property? [19:50.500 --> 19:58.500] No, there's a foresell sign up on it, and I don't know if they can actually do anything, [19:58.500 --> 20:01.500] because I'm sure the title is clouded. [20:01.500 --> 20:07.500] Okay, they won't be able to do anything once you file that lien. [20:07.500 --> 20:12.500] Right, and I'm sure the trust deed was sold. [20:12.500 --> 20:15.500] I don't even think it was ever recorded. [20:15.500 --> 20:23.500] Okay, but they didn't record the trust deed with it, which is basically a promissory note. [20:23.500 --> 20:26.500] Okay, we need to talk. [20:26.500 --> 20:31.500] Let's talk tomorrow, and I'll explain what we do to go after that particular issue. [20:31.500 --> 20:36.500] You want to sue the attorneys who prosecuted the foreclosure. [20:36.500 --> 20:37.500] Right. [20:37.500 --> 20:40.500] What's the time they will call you? [20:40.500 --> 20:46.500] Be any time during the day tomorrow, just not before five in the morning. [20:46.500 --> 20:49.500] Oh, come on. [20:49.500 --> 20:51.500] Yeah, call me tomorrow. [20:51.500 --> 20:59.500] First thing we want to do, since it was the attorney who prosecuted the foreclosure, [20:59.500 --> 21:07.500] and you have reason to believe that nobody has had authority to move against you, [21:07.500 --> 21:11.500] so far as you know, the bank didn't do anything. [21:11.500 --> 21:16.500] You only know that this attorney did something, so the first place to go. [21:16.500 --> 21:22.500] Right, well, that was prosecuting, I guess, the foreclosure and not the lien of the bank. [21:22.500 --> 21:24.500] Well, now wait a minute. [21:24.500 --> 21:28.500] That's a presumption. [21:28.500 --> 21:38.500] How do you know that this attorney was actually prosecuting a foreclosure for the true holder of the note and the security instrument, [21:38.500 --> 21:41.500] and the lien document? [21:41.500 --> 21:42.500] Well, that I don't know. [21:42.500 --> 21:44.500] All I know is that they sent it. [21:44.500 --> 21:45.500] Okay, wait a minute. [21:45.500 --> 21:49.500] That is absolutely critical. [21:49.500 --> 21:50.500] You don't know it. [21:50.500 --> 21:58.500] If I come to you and I say, you owe this note over here to that bank. [21:58.500 --> 22:06.500] I'm here to foreclose based on that note. [22:06.500 --> 22:10.500] And you can say, who am I, if I'm Randy Kelton? [22:10.500 --> 22:12.500] What's your first question? [22:12.500 --> 22:15.500] Well, let's see the note. [22:15.500 --> 22:16.500] No. [22:16.500 --> 22:21.500] Even before that, it doesn't matter if I have the note, I have the note in my hand. [22:21.500 --> 22:25.500] You're going to look at the note and say, well, your name ain't on the note. [22:25.500 --> 22:26.500] Yep. [22:26.500 --> 22:27.500] And you look at the link. [22:27.500 --> 22:29.500] Well, your name ain't on the link either. [22:29.500 --> 22:31.500] Who the heck are you? [22:31.500 --> 22:35.500] Where did you get authority to enforce this note? [22:35.500 --> 22:45.500] One of the first things we did this way was in Minnesota, they're moving to foreclose and we filed suit against the attorney [22:45.500 --> 22:56.500] demanding that the attorney prove that he had agency to act for the principle in the foreclosure. [22:56.500 --> 23:08.500] And all he had to do was prove that the person claiming to hold the note actually held it and then prove that he had a contract with that person to collect. [23:08.500 --> 23:09.500] But he didn't. [23:09.500 --> 23:14.500] He filed an answer to our motion and jumping up and down, waving his arms. [23:14.500 --> 23:17.500] It was clear what they were thinking. [23:17.500 --> 23:20.500] These guys shouldn't play poker. [23:20.500 --> 23:31.500] In their pleading, they indicated that we may have claims against the bank, the principle, but not them. [23:31.500 --> 23:43.500] What they're thinking is, holy crap, what if the bank, what if my client can't prove up that he actually is the true holder of this note? [23:43.500 --> 23:45.500] They didn't see my client. [23:45.500 --> 23:47.500] They sued me. [23:47.500 --> 23:53.500] And if the client can't prove up, holy shit, they're going to win from me. [23:53.500 --> 23:58.500] So this is a lot more fun. [23:58.500 --> 24:03.500] I can't wait to talk to you tomorrow. [24:03.500 --> 24:04.500] Okay. [24:04.500 --> 24:05.500] Yeah. [24:05.500 --> 24:06.500] You will like this. [24:06.500 --> 24:07.500] Okay. [24:07.500 --> 24:08.500] We have a lot of color. [24:08.500 --> 24:09.500] I'll talk to you tomorrow. [24:09.500 --> 24:13.500] We'll move ahead with the colors. [24:13.500 --> 24:14.500] Very good. [24:14.500 --> 24:15.500] Okay. [24:15.500 --> 24:18.500] Say hi to all them hillbillies down there. [24:18.500 --> 24:19.500] Yeah. [24:19.500 --> 24:20.500] Okay. [24:20.500 --> 24:21.500] Thank you. [24:21.500 --> 24:25.500] Now we're going to go to William in Texas. [24:25.500 --> 24:28.500] William, what do you got for us tonight? [24:28.500 --> 24:37.500] Well, another adventure of me trying to get my wife out of jail up here in Denver County. [24:37.500 --> 24:39.500] Okay. [24:39.500 --> 24:41.500] How's it going so far? [24:41.500 --> 24:42.500] Okay. [24:42.500 --> 24:55.500] The last time I talked to you, the court appointed attorney is basically, I bar-grieved him and [24:55.500 --> 25:01.500] then he said that he wrote me back and says, I'm not going to talk to you because you bar-grieved [25:01.500 --> 25:04.500] me, so forth and so on. [25:04.500 --> 25:12.500] Well, what I did is after I bar-grieved him, I went ahead and filed in by criminal complaints [25:12.500 --> 25:21.500] against the district judge and the complaining officer in with the grand jury for me. [25:21.500 --> 25:24.500] I had no problem getting into the room. [25:24.500 --> 25:30.500] I filed them in straight with him and I was able to leave. [25:30.500 --> 25:42.500] The next time I went down there, which was yesterday actually, I went to go file in by [25:42.500 --> 25:46.500] criminal complaints against the district attorney. [25:46.500 --> 25:54.500] Well, I met up with the foreman out in the hallway and I asked him if I could go ahead [25:54.500 --> 25:59.500] and prove that to him and he goes, no, no, let's wait till we get in the room and you [25:59.500 --> 26:00.500] can do it there. [26:00.500 --> 26:03.500] I'm still kind of learning procedure and everything. [26:03.500 --> 26:05.500] I'm like, well, okay. [26:05.500 --> 26:08.500] The bailiff shows up and the grand jury foreman goes inside. [26:08.500 --> 26:10.500] Well, I follow him inside. [26:10.500 --> 26:15.500] The bailiff nods to me and says, you can't go in there. [26:15.500 --> 26:20.500] Well, I've already talked to him and I've got criminal complaints to file so I need to go [26:20.500 --> 26:21.500] in there. [26:21.500 --> 26:23.500] No, you're not allowed in here. [26:23.500 --> 26:24.500] You don't understand. [26:24.500 --> 26:25.500] I've already spugled him. [26:25.500 --> 26:27.500] I don't care if you're not going in there. [26:27.500 --> 26:29.500] I'm like, what's your authority? [26:29.500 --> 26:30.500] He shows me as bad. [26:30.500 --> 26:31.500] He goes, that's my authority. [26:31.500 --> 26:33.500] Like, okay, what is your name? [26:33.500 --> 26:35.500] And he tells me his name. [26:35.500 --> 26:36.500] I go downstairs. [26:36.500 --> 26:37.500] I think about it for a minute. [26:37.500 --> 26:42.500] I'm like, what is going on? [26:42.500 --> 26:50.500] Then go outside to my vehicle and then get a couple things to come back inside and then [26:50.500 --> 26:52.500] I get officers following. [26:52.500 --> 27:01.500] I go back upstairs and the officers follow me all the way around the corner and there's [27:01.500 --> 27:08.500] a deputy in there waiting with the bailiff. [27:08.500 --> 27:12.500] I walk in there and the deputy is like, you can't go in there. [27:12.500 --> 27:17.500] I'm like, no, I've got criminal complaints I need to give to the grand jury foreman. [27:17.500 --> 27:19.500] He goes, no, you're not getting in there. [27:19.500 --> 27:22.500] I'm like, what's your authority? [27:22.500 --> 27:24.500] He's like, to stay in Texas. [27:24.500 --> 27:29.500] I'm like, you realize you just, you know, this is abuse of official capacity and it's [27:29.500 --> 27:30.500] official pressure. [27:30.500 --> 27:31.500] He goes, no, it's not. [27:31.500 --> 27:36.500] I'm like, you're telling me that you're not going to let me go in there and present my [27:36.500 --> 27:37.500] criminal complaint. [27:37.500 --> 27:42.500] So if you continue this up, you know, I'll throw you out of the building. [27:42.500 --> 27:43.500] Oh, okay. [27:43.500 --> 27:48.500] So I went ahead and left and I'm sitting there going, what other remedy do I have? [27:48.500 --> 27:51.500] Do I have at this point? [27:51.500 --> 28:00.500] Now you prepare criminal charges against the district attorney accusing the district attorney [28:00.500 --> 28:08.500] of tampering with a witness obstruction of justice and acting in concert and collusion [28:08.500 --> 28:11.500] with the bailiff and this deputy. [28:11.500 --> 28:17.500] I suggest you never go there again without witnesses. [28:17.500 --> 28:24.500] They will lie like dogs and file a criminal charges against the sheriff. [28:24.500 --> 28:25.500] Okay. [28:25.500 --> 28:28.500] I've already asked for his delegation of authority. [28:28.500 --> 28:31.500] I gave him 10 days and I haven't heard back anything yet. [28:31.500 --> 28:37.500] So he's in violation on that right there. [28:37.500 --> 28:39.500] But I wait a minute. [28:39.500 --> 28:41.500] Hold on. [28:41.500 --> 28:48.500] Where is he required to provide for you delegation of authority? [28:48.500 --> 28:54.500] I was told to ask for a delegation of authority from each of the officers concerning my, the [28:54.500 --> 28:56.500] judicial and the officers. [28:56.500 --> 28:58.500] Who told you that? [28:58.500 --> 29:01.500] Oh, I've got a friend that's been helping me out with some of this stuff. [29:01.500 --> 29:02.500] Okay. [29:02.500 --> 29:08.500] Where is the law that requires them to show you their delegation of authority? [29:08.500 --> 29:14.500] Well, from what I understand, don't they have to show some type of delegation of authority [29:14.500 --> 29:19.500] when it has to do with the Constitution and the Texas Constitution? [29:19.500 --> 29:20.500] No. [29:20.500 --> 29:21.500] Okay. [29:21.500 --> 29:23.500] If they have authority, they have authority. [29:23.500 --> 29:25.500] They don't have to prove it to you. [29:25.500 --> 29:27.500] The statute just what gives them their authority. [29:27.500 --> 29:31.500] You have to look and see what the statute says they can or cannot do. [29:31.500 --> 29:33.500] You can't ask them to produce something. [29:33.500 --> 29:34.500] The law is already there. [29:34.500 --> 29:38.500] Yeah, and the reason I'm saying that is don't file a complaint on that issue. [29:38.500 --> 29:45.500] Don't file a complaint on any issue unless you have the statute that says you must do this thing. [29:45.500 --> 29:48.500] Or if you do this thing, it's a crime. [29:48.500 --> 29:49.500] Okay. [29:49.500 --> 29:53.500] This is Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, Eddie Craig, Willowville Radio. [29:53.500 --> 29:57.500] Call it number 512-646-1984. [29:57.500 --> 29:59.500] We'll be right back. [29:59.500 --> 30:05.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [30:05.500 --> 30:07.500] The government says the fire brought it down. [30:07.500 --> 30:12.500] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [30:12.500 --> 30:15.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:15.500 --> 30:18.500] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [30:18.500 --> 30:19.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:19.500 --> 30:20.500] I'm a structural engineer. [30:20.500 --> 30:21.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:21.500 --> 30:22.500] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:22.500 --> 30:24.500] I'm a father who lost his son. [30:24.500 --> 30:27.500] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [30:27.500 --> 30:31.500] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [30:31.500 --> 30:34.500] On a diet, then be sure to get plenty of rest. [30:34.500 --> 30:39.500] Those fattening foods you promised to give up look a lot more tempting when you're short on sleep. [30:39.500 --> 30:44.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back with details that can help you lose weight. [30:44.500 --> 30:46.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:46.500 --> 30:49.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:49.500 --> 30:54.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:54.500 --> 31:00.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [31:00.500 --> 31:02.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [31:02.500 --> 31:06.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [31:06.500 --> 31:10.500] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [31:10.500 --> 31:13.500] Start over with StartPage. [31:13.500 --> 31:19.500] What is it about opening the fridge at midnight that brings out the ravenous, munchy monster in all of us? [31:19.500 --> 31:20.500] It's not your imagination. [31:20.500 --> 31:24.500] Scientists say fattening food may actually be more tempting when we're tired. [31:24.500 --> 31:29.500] That's because the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that handles self-control, [31:29.500 --> 31:32.500] starts slacking off when you start nodding off. [31:32.500 --> 31:38.500] Harvard researcher William Kilgore showed people photos of fattening foods like French fries and cheesecake. [31:38.500 --> 31:43.500] The brains of well-rested adults sent inhibition signals warning them to steer clear. [31:43.500 --> 31:49.500] But the brains of sleepy people were less likely to object, making them more likely to indulge. [31:49.500 --> 31:51.500] Take those potato chips away. [31:51.500 --> 31:53.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:53.500 --> 32:22.500] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:22.500 --> 32:25.500] Hi, folks. We are back. This is Google's Law Radio. [32:25.500 --> 32:27.500] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. [32:27.500 --> 32:30.500] This is our Friday night for our marathon. [32:30.500 --> 32:32.500] We have about an hour and a half left in the show. [32:32.500 --> 32:34.500] Right now, we are taking your phone calls. [32:34.500 --> 32:38.500] 512-646-1984 is the call-in number. [32:38.500 --> 32:40.500] Our next caller up here is William. [32:40.500 --> 32:43.500] So, William, what can we do for you? [32:43.500 --> 32:45.500] We're already talking to William. [32:45.500 --> 32:47.500] I know. We're just continuing on. [32:47.500 --> 32:53.500] Okay. So, putting aside the delegation of authority, [32:53.500 --> 33:00.500] I went ahead and took the criminal complaints I had which were against the district attorney. [33:00.500 --> 33:06.500] And I went ahead and gave them to the court of appointed attorney over my wife's case, [33:06.500 --> 33:11.500] which, you know, I know he's probably not going to do anything except side with the district attorney. [33:11.500 --> 33:19.500] Now, I was wondering if I should go ahead and start filing Bart Rubin since concerning those criminal complaints on the district attorney. [33:19.500 --> 33:23.500] Okay. Okay. Hold on. Let's stay with the criminal complaints for the moment. [33:23.500 --> 33:24.500] Okay. [33:24.500 --> 33:34.500] Okay. What I suggest you do is the deputy, the bailiff, the sheriff prosecuting attorney. [33:34.500 --> 33:42.500] You make up a complaint against the prosecuting attorney for conspiring to tamper with a witness and obstruct justice. [33:42.500 --> 33:53.500] You make up complaints against the bailiff and the sheriff's deputy for shielding from prosecution, 38.05 p.m. code. [33:53.500 --> 34:03.500] A tampering, I think, is 38, 13 or 16. It's somewhere in, I think, in the same statute. [34:03.500 --> 34:04.500] Okay. [34:04.500 --> 34:09.500] And then there's also one for obstruction of justice. You will read that one. [34:09.500 --> 34:10.500] Okay. [34:10.500 --> 34:17.500] Then take all of those, get them, affirm them before a notary's, we haven't verified. [34:17.500 --> 34:18.500] Okay. [34:18.500 --> 34:22.500] And go down and find the highest level district judge you can. [34:22.500 --> 34:31.500] You might ask around for which judge is the most stinking, rotten, low-down district judge around. [34:31.500 --> 34:35.500] I think we're in his court right now. [34:35.500 --> 34:36.500] Okay. [34:36.500 --> 34:42.500] Find out when he is having motion hearings. [34:42.500 --> 34:43.500] Okay. [34:43.500 --> 34:46.500] You can call his coordinator and find that out. [34:46.500 --> 34:47.500] Okay. [34:47.500 --> 34:48.500] Oh, wait a minute. [34:48.500 --> 34:51.500] If you have a case in that court, I suggest you use another court. [34:51.500 --> 34:52.500] Okay. [34:52.500 --> 34:56.500] To use another judge and surprise another judge with them. [34:56.500 --> 34:57.500] Okay. [34:57.500 --> 35:02.500] Go into the other judge's court when he's having motion hearings and you run the routine on the bailiff. [35:02.500 --> 35:04.500] You call the bailiff over. [35:04.500 --> 35:07.500] Tell him your name. [35:07.500 --> 35:09.500] Does he can ask you your name? [35:09.500 --> 35:10.500] Nothing else. [35:10.500 --> 35:16.500] You tell him your name and say, instruct the judge that I have business with the court. [35:16.500 --> 35:18.500] And he'll say, may I tell him the nature of the business? [35:18.500 --> 35:21.500] Make sure you're wearing a suit and tie so they think you're an attorney. [35:21.500 --> 35:22.500] Okay. [35:22.500 --> 35:24.500] Give him this phone. [35:24.500 --> 35:26.500] I said, yes, give him these. [35:26.500 --> 35:27.500] Go sit down. [35:27.500 --> 35:28.500] Okay. [35:28.500 --> 35:31.500] So this avoid city confrontation. [35:31.500 --> 35:35.500] I'd like to screw him around a little bit, but just give him the folder. [35:35.500 --> 35:40.500] The judge gets the folder and he'll see these criminal complaints. [35:40.500 --> 35:43.500] And then he'll give you sage advice. [35:43.500 --> 35:55.500] Oh, Mr. Mr. William, you need to really need to follow these with the police department or the sheriff department or some magistrate or some other song and dance. [35:55.500 --> 35:59.500] And we don't care what he does. [35:59.500 --> 36:05.500] If he does anything other than hold an examining trial, we don't care. [36:05.500 --> 36:07.500] But he's required to do this. [36:07.500 --> 36:09.500] Hold an examining trial. [36:09.500 --> 36:19.500] And after the hearing, seal all the documents had in the hearing in an envelope because his name will be written across the seal of the envelope for it to the clerk of the court jurisdiction. [36:19.500 --> 36:23.500] That's 17.30 code of criminal procedure. [36:23.500 --> 36:36.500] 17.31 says the clerk shall keep all those papers safe and deliver them up to the next grand jury. [36:36.500 --> 36:37.500] Okay. [36:37.500 --> 36:41.500] Right there in the coat. [36:41.500 --> 36:45.500] So the judge won't act on him. [36:45.500 --> 36:52.500] He will most likely give him back to you and try to give him back to you. [36:52.500 --> 36:57.500] And when he tries to give him back to you, he said, no, no, no, judge, I've got another copy. [36:57.500 --> 36:58.500] Well, you need to take these back. [36:58.500 --> 37:00.500] No, no, no. [37:00.500 --> 37:01.500] You got them. [37:01.500 --> 37:03.500] You keep them. [37:03.500 --> 37:07.500] I bushwhacked the judge in Waco. [37:07.500 --> 37:13.500] And he tried to hand me back the paperwork and I held up both hands with my palms out. [37:13.500 --> 37:15.500] No, no, no, no. [37:15.500 --> 37:16.500] You got them. [37:16.500 --> 37:17.500] You get to keep them. [37:17.500 --> 37:19.500] Well, I'll throw them in the trash. [37:19.500 --> 37:20.500] I don't care. [37:20.500 --> 37:21.500] I've got more. [37:21.500 --> 37:24.500] He didn't throw them in the trash. [37:24.500 --> 37:32.500] But, so don't take them back because you want to be able to tell the grand jury that he has them. [37:32.500 --> 37:33.500] Okay. [37:33.500 --> 37:37.500] So then you go, there's two or three things you can do. [37:37.500 --> 37:41.500] You can go to the prosecuting attorney or back to the grand jury. [37:41.500 --> 37:47.500] Since you've already went to the grand jury with criminal complaints against the prosecuting attorney. [37:47.500 --> 38:02.500] When you go to a district judge and he refuses to act on the complaints, then you look under chapter 52 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [38:02.500 --> 38:06.500] 52 goes to a court of inquiry. [38:06.500 --> 38:21.500] And court of inquiry is very similar to an examining trial and it is specifically used to address improprieties on the part of public officials. [38:21.500 --> 38:34.500] And I think if you look in my Juris Imprudence website under blanks, I think you'll find somewhere in that site you'll find a court of inquiry filing. [38:34.500 --> 38:35.500] Okay. [38:35.500 --> 38:37.500] And look at that. [38:37.500 --> 38:38.500] File that. [38:38.500 --> 38:41.500] They'll refuse to act on it. [38:41.500 --> 38:50.500] And then make up a set of filings and send them down here to the prosecuting attorney in Austin. [38:50.500 --> 38:55.500] Because the district judge and the district attorney are state officials. [38:55.500 --> 39:01.500] If they don't, if you can't get remedy there, you can come to it. [39:01.500 --> 39:04.500] You can file against them in Travis County. [39:04.500 --> 39:05.500] Okay. [39:05.500 --> 39:09.500] They will not like you filing against them down here in Travis County. [39:09.500 --> 39:18.500] And then when Travis County refuses to act on it and you start jerking them around, they're going to call up there and say, what is going on? [39:18.500 --> 39:22.500] We got this guy down here trying to get us to indict you. [39:22.500 --> 39:25.500] That's likely when they're going to want to make a deal. [39:25.500 --> 39:37.500] Okay, because the district attorney is trying to cut me off on everything and I just have a feeling that they're not going to let me anywhere near the grand jury if they can help it. [39:37.500 --> 39:39.500] That's probably right. [39:39.500 --> 39:41.500] That's why if you go back, you need witnesses. [39:41.500 --> 39:42.500] Okay. [39:42.500 --> 39:45.500] Best to take 10 or 20 if you can find them. [39:45.500 --> 39:47.500] Okay. [39:47.500 --> 39:56.500] Go down to where the day laborers are in our budget day laborers. Get you some witnesses. [39:56.500 --> 39:58.500] Okay. [39:58.500 --> 40:01.500] Or do it by mail. [40:01.500 --> 40:06.500] I suggest by mail this way they don't wind up arresting you. [40:06.500 --> 40:07.500] Okay. [40:07.500 --> 40:33.500] Send it to the grand jury foreman, registered, restricted, put a letter in there asking him to initial it and send it back to you and notify him that after the last time you talked to you, you were threatened by deputies with pistols and forced to leave the building. [40:33.500 --> 40:37.500] Now, one statute you should read. [40:37.500 --> 40:41.500] I remember right is 2206. [40:41.500 --> 40:43.500] There might be 2602. [40:43.500 --> 40:48.500] Look up making a terroristic threat. [40:48.500 --> 40:51.500] Texas penal code. [40:51.500 --> 41:01.500] If you threaten someone for the purpose of denying them access to a public building or interrupting their access to a public building. [41:01.500 --> 41:03.500] That's a terrorist threat. [41:03.500 --> 41:09.500] I filed that complaint against my local district judge. [41:09.500 --> 41:19.500] He told me to get out of the clouds created disturbance that I was to get out of the building or he would have me arrested. [41:19.500 --> 41:24.500] I reached in my pocket pulled out this little digital recorder and I said, Oh, I'm sorry, judge. [41:24.500 --> 41:28.500] I didn't have this turned on click stuck it right in his face. [41:28.500 --> 41:36.500] When you say that again, he's just looking at me for a minute, his eyes bugging out, breathing real heavy. [41:36.500 --> 41:42.500] Then he's whirled around and stormed out of the courtroom. [41:42.500 --> 41:55.500] I was making criminal accusations against the district attorney to the bailiff because the high sheriff of the county had directed me to and he came in and threatened me for the purpose of interrupting my access to a public building. [41:55.500 --> 42:02.500] So I started with making a terroristic threat, make that against the deputy and the sheriff for sending him to do it. [42:02.500 --> 42:05.500] Respond, respond yet superior. [42:05.500 --> 42:06.500] I got that corrected. [42:06.500 --> 42:09.500] My pronunciation corrected yesterday by Deborah. [42:09.500 --> 42:13.500] It's respond yet superior. [42:13.500 --> 42:16.500] And get that to the grand jury for me. [42:16.500 --> 42:22.500] You know, the grand jury is going to look at this and you know, as it builds up, they're going to say, wait a minute, wait a minute. [42:22.500 --> 42:25.500] Something is wrong here. [42:25.500 --> 42:26.500] Yes. [42:26.500 --> 42:46.500] I mean, when I presented the criminal complaints against the district judge and the charging officer, the district attorney and the court appointed attorney moved for continuance on my wife's case. [42:46.500 --> 42:54.500] They're obviously getting nervous because this is getting really, really serious. [42:54.500 --> 43:02.500] They could actually have a political enemy out there who could use this to end their careers and they know it. [43:02.500 --> 43:05.500] So just keep up the good work. [43:05.500 --> 43:17.500] I'll say this much. I mean, I ran for mayor of Amarillo earlier this year and I only got like 23 votes, but I mean, just the mere fact that I did it. [43:17.500 --> 43:24.500] I think they're trying to teach me a lesson, but by, you know, restricting my access, but I'm not giving up. [43:24.500 --> 43:27.500] Well, we'll see who learns a lesson here. [43:27.500 --> 43:28.500] Okay. [43:28.500 --> 43:33.500] And they're likely to recognize the routine I've kind of worked over Randall County myself. [43:33.500 --> 43:34.500] Okay. [43:34.500 --> 43:36.500] Are you in Randall County? [43:36.500 --> 43:38.500] No, I'm in Potter, but... [43:38.500 --> 43:40.500] Okay, Potter County. Tell that little... [43:40.500 --> 43:44.500] You need to tell the district attorney in Randall County to stand up. [43:44.500 --> 43:48.500] Runt. [43:48.500 --> 43:54.500] Okay, this is Randy Calton, Debbie Stevens, and Craig, group of Law Radio. [43:54.500 --> 44:00.500] We'll be right back on the other side. [44:00.500 --> 44:04.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:04.500 --> 44:14.500] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [44:14.500 --> 44:18.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.500 --> 44:22.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.500 --> 44:27.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [44:27.500 --> 44:33.500] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [44:33.500 --> 44:42.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:42.500 --> 44:51.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:51.500 --> 45:00.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EV. [45:00.500 --> 45:05.500] The Oklahoma City Bombing, top 10 reasons to question the official story. [45:05.500 --> 45:09.500] Reason number one, John Doe number two, and other accomplices. [45:09.500 --> 45:17.500] On the day of the bombing, nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the Ryder truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. [45:17.500 --> 45:24.500] FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the Ryder truck bomb to the Murra Building and detonated it. [45:24.500 --> 45:32.500] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, [45:32.500 --> 45:38.500] testified that she saw McVeigh with another man, the papal John Doe number two, exiting the Ryder truck. [45:38.500 --> 45:44.500] While at least 15 other witnesses claim to have seen McVeigh with other perpetrators the day of the bombing, [45:44.500 --> 45:52.500] still less than 226 witnesses placed him with other men in the days before the bombing, including when he rented the Ryder truck, [45:52.500 --> 45:56.500] and in some cases have positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:56.500 --> 46:23.500] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:23.500 --> 46:34.500] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:34.500 --> 46:47.500] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons. [46:47.500 --> 46:53.500] Alright folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. We are currently taking your calls. [46:53.500 --> 46:58.500] This is our four-hour info marathon night, so please go ahead and get in line. [46:58.500 --> 47:04.500] We have a little over an hour left in the show. Randy, you want to go ahead and pull up our next caller? [47:04.500 --> 47:10.500] Okay, now we're going to go to Fred in California. [47:10.500 --> 47:27.500] Hi, Randy. Hi there. I have a situation where my wife was given a ticket for letting me drive her car without license, driver license. [47:27.500 --> 47:48.500] And, of course, there was no allegation that there was any commercial activity, but we were stopped in a distant county in California by a highway patrol officer. [47:48.500 --> 48:12.500] We demanded, we both got tickets. We demanded administrative hearing from the highway patrol, their office in that county that the officer was working out of. [48:12.500 --> 48:26.500] We appeared at the date and time that we scheduled the hearing for at their office, and they acted at first as if they knew nothing about it. [48:26.500 --> 48:36.500] Then they found our letter and the commander came to the counter and said, yeah, they had their letter. [48:36.500 --> 48:49.500] And he didn't know anything about giving anybody an administrative hearing, but said he would call an attorney in Sacramento, which he apparently did and came back after a while, [48:49.500 --> 49:00.500] and said that he was told to tell us to go to court because it was a criminal matter and you had to go to court. [49:00.500 --> 49:11.500] And I said, well, how about... In California, they're actually civil. They're not criminal. [49:11.500 --> 49:28.500] Yeah, I know. And so I asked them to sign something with a date and time on it that said that we were present at this time and date, and he did. [49:28.500 --> 49:55.500] So we sent a motion to dismiss to the court and the district attorney, which after the date of our hearing, they had sent us a letter saying that we would be... [49:55.500 --> 50:10.500] that the district attorney had filed a complaint charging in the case of my wife with allowing an unlicensed driver to drive her vehicle. [50:10.500 --> 50:26.500] And so we appeared in court in that county at this time. This was in December of 2009, and we appeared... [50:26.500 --> 50:50.500] both of us, first me and then her and her case, appeared specially and not generally, and we had filed with the court by mail a motion to dismiss for failure to give us due process [50:50.500 --> 51:03.500] by way of the administrative hearing. And the evidence that we had demanded the administrative hearing and attended and that it had been not given. [51:03.500 --> 51:23.500] So the judge said... The prosecutor said he said we had promised to appear, and now we were refusing to appear generally, and he wanted to warrant out for failure to appear. [51:23.500 --> 51:44.500] And the judge said that he agreed, and we both in our turn objected that none of that could be discussed because the case was over and done with and had to be dismissed as a matter of law. [51:44.500 --> 51:59.500] And the judge finally issued... said he was going to issue a warrant for our arrest and that we would not be arrested in the court. [51:59.500 --> 52:07.500] And I said, what does that mean? And he said, well, the warrant will be outstanding. [52:07.500 --> 52:26.500] Okay, so we left, and the other day my wife got stopped in a nearby city for driving a few blocks without her headlights on at night, and she didn't even notice it because of all the street lights and everything. [52:26.500 --> 52:53.500] And the highway patrolman gave her a ticket for that, and then he came back to the car and said that there was a warrant out and that it was a site and release warrant, so she signed a ticket agreeing to appear in that distant county on about a month from now. [52:53.500 --> 53:07.500] Okay, you need to file criminal charges against that judge for charging you with failure to appear when you were standing before him. [53:07.500 --> 53:09.500] Yep. [53:09.500 --> 53:25.500] Then they bar grieve the attorney, file criminally against the attorney for acting in concert and collusion. In California, you have a good grand jury system. [53:25.500 --> 53:37.500] Worked a grand jury system. Since your wife was arrested in this county that you're at, file the criminal charges in this county. [53:37.500 --> 53:43.500] Okay, that's where the harm occurred. [53:43.500 --> 53:48.500] That jerk could not in the shorts and then file suit in this county. [53:48.500 --> 54:12.500] But they had told us after that trial, I thought that maybe they were bluffing and didn't issue the warrant, so my wife called them and asked them if they had issued the warrant, and they said, and the clerk said yes, and she said, well, we want copies of the warrants. [54:12.500 --> 54:27.500] And the clerk said, no, we can't send you any copies of the warrants. And so we did send a letter asking for copies of the warrants and the affidavit that goes with it and all that. [54:27.500 --> 54:41.500] Okay, you need to go down to the police station and see if they have one on you and get the same site and release order so you both have a claim in the county where you live. [54:41.500 --> 54:42.500] Yeah. [54:42.500 --> 54:50.500] And then once the warrant has been executed, then they must produce it. [54:50.500 --> 54:58.500] So then send another letter once they both been executed in demand production. [54:58.500 --> 55:15.500] And now you have proof, then file criminal charges against the judge and the attorney bar grieve, the attorney judicial conduct complaint the judge and just run the routine on your local prosecutor. [55:15.500 --> 55:32.500] And you file with the, I would suggest you file with a local magistrate and get the magistrate to refuse to act and then you file against the magistrate with the prosecutor. [55:32.500 --> 55:40.500] You file the complaints against the foreign magistrate and the local magistrate as well. [55:40.500 --> 55:50.500] And then to refuse to prosecute. That's what you want. And then you go up to the district judge, you file them with him and he'll do his little song and dance. [55:50.500 --> 55:56.500] Now you come back to the grand jury in California. [55:56.500 --> 56:09.500] You can ask the grand jury to examine into most anything and ask them to examine into a pattern of criminal conduct. [56:09.500 --> 56:20.500] And this will get everybody moving and send the judge and the prosecutor a tort letter because their actions were beyond scope. [56:20.500 --> 56:21.500] Yes. [56:21.500 --> 56:24.500] Have you ever read a warrant? [56:24.500 --> 56:26.500] What it says? [56:26.500 --> 56:30.500] Well, it wouldn't be fresh in my mind if I have. [56:30.500 --> 56:40.500] This is what a warrant will always say. Arrest this person and bring him before me. [56:40.500 --> 56:49.500] So you were standing in front of the judge and he used you to warrant that said arrest this person and bring him before me. [56:49.500 --> 56:53.500] What do you call that, Bubba? [56:53.500 --> 57:02.500] OK. And oh, by the way, when you agreed to appear, you did not agree to a general appearance. [57:02.500 --> 57:07.500] You did not agree to a special appearance. [57:07.500 --> 57:13.500] You didn't agree to appear before the court at all. [57:13.500 --> 57:17.500] You agreed to appear before a magistrate. [57:17.500 --> 57:18.500] No. [57:18.500 --> 57:30.500] At the time you were before the judge, you were there in accordance with your agreement to appear before a magistrate for the purpose of an examining trial. [57:30.500 --> 57:31.500] No. [57:31.500 --> 57:36.500] Not a general or special appearance. [57:36.500 --> 57:40.500] So the prosecutor had to know that. [57:40.500 --> 57:42.500] If he doesn't, he's screwed. [57:42.500 --> 57:43.500] Yeah. [57:43.500 --> 57:48.500] He's screwed down. [57:48.500 --> 57:51.500] Just run a search on that. [57:51.500 --> 57:54.500] Just any search engine and you'll get a hit on it. [57:54.500 --> 58:02.500] It says that a private citizen cannot claim ignorance of the law as a defense to prosecution. [58:02.500 --> 58:10.500] A public official acting under the color of his authority is held to a much higher standard. [58:10.500 --> 58:15.500] If a public official violates the ruling of this court, he be sane. [58:15.500 --> 58:19.500] He may not be heard to say he knows not what he does. [58:19.500 --> 58:23.500] You got the prosecutor and the judge get that. [58:23.500 --> 58:29.500] This is Randy Colston, Debbie Stevens, Eddie Craig, rule of law radio. [58:29.500 --> 58:33.500] We're into the third hour of our info marathon. [58:33.500 --> 58:35.500] We're talking to Fred in California. [58:35.500 --> 58:40.500] When we come back, we'll continue taking your calls. [58:40.500 --> 58:45.500] Our call in number is 512-646-1984. [58:45.500 --> 59:07.500] We'll be right back on the other side. [59:07.500 --> 59:16.500] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:16.500 --> 59:18.500] Enter the recovery version. [59:18.500 --> 59:27.500] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:27.500 --> 59:37.500] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:37.500 --> 59:42.500] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:42.500 --> 59:57.500] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:57.500 --> 01:00:00.500] That's freestudybible.com. [01:00:00.500 --> 01:00:04.500] This news brief brought to you by the International Newsnet. [01:00:04.500 --> 01:00:14.500] Blackberry UK said Thursday it would work with mobile operators to switch off its popular messenger service if authorities ordered the company to do so during civil unrest. [01:00:14.500 --> 01:00:18.500] Police singled out Blackberry as a key tool in last month's London riots. [01:00:18.500 --> 01:00:25.500] Blackberry Messenger was preferred over Twitter and other social media sites because its messages are encrypted. [01:00:25.500 --> 01:00:32.500] The US Supreme Court Thursday halted the execution of a black man convicted 16 years ago of a double murder in Texas. [01:00:32.500 --> 01:00:37.500] The justices stayed the lethal injection, Duane Buck, pending a review of his appeal. [01:00:37.500 --> 01:00:41.500] He was sentenced to death for gunning down his ex-girlfriend and a man in her apartment. [01:00:41.500 --> 01:00:48.500] During Buck's trial, a psychologist testified black people were more prone to violence. [01:00:48.500 --> 01:00:56.500] Eight Amish men were jailed by a Kentucky judge recently after refusing to pay fines for not putting orange safety triangles on their horse-drawn buggies. [01:00:56.500 --> 01:01:01.500] The men explained their religion and its bright colors. [01:01:01.500 --> 01:01:10.500] Tens of thousands of Yemenis rallied in the southern city of Taiz Friday the day after security forces opened fire on demonstrators, leaving 10 people dead. [01:01:10.500 --> 01:01:19.500] Huge crowds marched from Tagir Square, a focal point of protests, to the directorate of security to protest against the violence and shelling in the city. [01:01:19.500 --> 01:01:27.500] On Thursday, security forces opened fire at demonstrators, rallying to demand an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule. [01:01:27.500 --> 01:01:34.500] Taiz is Yemen's second largest city and a flashpoint of the anti-Saleh protests that have gripped the country since February. [01:01:34.500 --> 01:01:41.500] Saleh has been recovering in the Saudi capital Riyadh from injuries sustained in an attack on the presidential palace in June. [01:01:41.500 --> 01:01:48.500] At least 400 people have been killed in the government crackdown since the demonstrations began. [01:01:48.500 --> 01:02:01.500] Columns of Libyan fighters sped toward the desert enclave of Bani Walid Friday as forces loyal to the Transitional National Council closed in on one of Muammar Gaddafi's last bastions, 110 miles south of Tripoli. [01:02:01.500 --> 01:02:10.500] Bani Walid has been under siege for two weeks, with hundreds of Gaddafi loyalists dug into its steep valleys and hills, resisting advancing interim government forces. [01:02:10.500 --> 01:02:24.500] Anti-Gaddafi forces also stormed the altitude ruler's birthplace of cert Thursday coming under heavy fire. Meanwhile in Tripoli, masses of dark-skinned people, many of them African migrant workers, have been rounded up on suspicion of being pro-Gaddafi mercenaries. [01:02:24.500 --> 01:02:49.500] Throughout Libya, there have been reports of atrocities committed on both sides. Analysts believe Gaddafi's fall is just the beginning of a new Libya, as numerous forces including western interests vie for power. [01:02:49.500 --> 01:02:59.500] You are listening to the Rural Law Radio Network at RuralLawRadio.com. Live free speech talk radio at its best. [01:03:49.500 --> 01:04:15.500] Hi folks, we are back. This is RuralLaw Radio. This is our Friday night for our marathon. We have one hour left in the show. We have a whole slew of callers on the board. [01:04:15.500 --> 01:04:25.500] We're going to go ahead and finish up with Fred in California and then we're going to get Jim, Chris, Doug and Michelle. So y'all hang in there and we'll get to you momentarily. [01:04:25.500 --> 01:04:33.500] Alright Fred, please continue. Randy, you were giving some advice on what it needs to do in that county about filing a suit. [01:04:33.500 --> 01:04:50.500] Yes, if you get yourself arrested here and get that warrant cleared, then go after the judge for issuing the warrant because you had agreed to appear for the purpose of an examining trial. [01:04:50.500 --> 01:05:06.500] And for this prosecutor to raise this stupid argument and ask the judge to issue a warrant against a person who's standing in front of the judge and he issues a warrant for failure to appear, they got to be out of their minds. [01:05:06.500 --> 01:05:18.500] So you want to file against them criminally in your county because you were harmed in your county by their actions. You were subjected to false imprisonment. [01:05:18.500 --> 01:05:31.500] In other words, if I turn myself into them, let them write me a site and release ticket to appear in that other county and then file the charges. [01:05:31.500 --> 01:05:36.500] Yes. Go ahead. I'm sorry. [01:05:36.500 --> 01:05:39.500] Yeah, that's correct Fred. That's what he's talking about. [01:05:39.500 --> 01:05:49.500] Okay. Yeah. Then you file them in that county and you run the routine on the county. Don't give them to a police officer. Take them to a magistrate. [01:05:49.500 --> 01:05:51.500] Right. [01:05:51.500 --> 01:06:13.500] And then when the magistrate fails to act, then you take them to the J.P., I mean to the district attorney, including charges against the magistrate. You kind of wind up the whole county. You get the phones ringing. Everybody's getting a bunch of grief because of what some yokels did and some pulled up county and they are not going to be happy about it. [01:06:13.500 --> 01:06:15.500] Right. [01:06:15.500 --> 01:06:23.500] Okay. Thank you very much. Would it be okay if I sent you an email with some related questions? [01:06:23.500 --> 01:06:29.500] Absolutely. Send it to randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:06:29.500 --> 01:06:42.500] Got it. One thing that I might mention about an earlier discussion you were having. I remember reading years ago in Alfred Addis magazine out of Texas, [01:06:42.500 --> 01:07:00.500] where a guy had been gone after on a GMAC loan by a firm in Los Angeles and they took him into court in Texas. [01:07:00.500 --> 01:07:20.500] And when he went to court, he demanded to see the attorneys, I forget the term right now, but his authority, and all the attorney had was a contract with his firm. [01:07:20.500 --> 01:07:27.500] He did not have a contract with GMAC and the case was thrown out. [01:07:27.500 --> 01:07:30.500] Wonderful. [01:07:30.500 --> 01:07:45.500] So that's just kind of another angle that might come up and don't be fooled. Whatever attorney is standing there apparently has to have a contract with the entity that he claims to be collecting for. [01:07:45.500 --> 01:07:46.500] Exactly. [01:07:46.500 --> 01:07:47.500] Yes. [01:07:47.500 --> 01:07:49.500] Okay. Thank you very much. [01:07:49.500 --> 01:07:53.500] Thank you very much. I sure do appreciate your programming, all of you. [01:07:53.500 --> 01:07:58.500] Okay. Thank you. Now we're going to go to Jim in Illinois. [01:07:58.500 --> 01:08:01.500] So I can get it done muted. There we go. [01:08:01.500 --> 01:08:02.500] Hello, Jim. [01:08:02.500 --> 01:08:04.500] Hello. [01:08:04.500 --> 01:08:05.500] Hi, Randy. [01:08:05.500 --> 01:08:07.500] Hi, Eddie. [01:08:07.500 --> 01:08:09.500] Aiden. [01:08:09.500 --> 01:08:14.500] My brother is Mark from Wisconsin. We've been working with you on our office. [01:08:14.500 --> 01:08:17.500] Oh, you know you're a kid to Mark. [01:08:17.500 --> 01:08:18.500] Okay. [01:08:18.500 --> 01:08:21.500] We're not going to hold that against you. [01:08:21.500 --> 01:08:29.500] I just want to ask you, my brother Mark wants to use a recording law for summary judgment. [01:08:29.500 --> 01:08:34.500] I can't find any case where the owner used this law in a defense. [01:08:34.500 --> 01:08:43.500] The purpose seems to be to protect subsequent purchasers against unrecorded prior instruments. [01:08:43.500 --> 01:08:48.500] I don't know if we should use that. [01:08:48.500 --> 01:08:53.500] That is a little too complex for me to answer directly. [01:08:53.500 --> 01:08:59.500] I need it framed a little better. [01:08:59.500 --> 01:09:07.500] Okay. You're assuming I know everything about it, but we're on the radio and our listeners don't know deadly about what we're talking about. [01:09:07.500 --> 01:09:13.500] This is a case where a lender has foreclosed. [01:09:13.500 --> 01:09:15.500] Right. [01:09:15.500 --> 01:09:24.500] But they had to file the lien with the county and they haven't filed it with the county. [01:09:24.500 --> 01:09:28.500] This is relatively consistent across the country. [01:09:28.500 --> 01:09:32.500] And it's also in the real estate settlement procedures act. [01:09:32.500 --> 01:09:51.500] We talked about this earlier where the if a assignee receives the assignment of the interest in the note and they're only going to hold it for 30 days or less than 30 days. [01:09:51.500 --> 01:09:55.500] Then they're not required to file it with the county registrar. [01:09:55.500 --> 01:10:02.500] But if they're going to hold it for more than 30 days, they are required to file it in the public record. [01:10:02.500 --> 01:10:06.500] This is a consumer mortgage. [01:10:06.500 --> 01:10:13.500] You need to be able to know who is the holder of your security instrument. [01:10:13.500 --> 01:10:31.500] If you can't tell who the holder is, your title is clouded and your only purpose in entering into a loan contract was to achieve quiet title at the consummation of the contract. [01:10:31.500 --> 01:10:42.500] If the note is assigned to another party, you need to know who that party is so you know who to pay your payments to. [01:10:42.500 --> 01:10:45.500] You don't want to pay your payments for 30 years. [01:10:45.500 --> 01:10:50.500] And then when you ask for title, they don't give it to you. [01:10:50.500 --> 01:10:57.500] We have people in exactly that position that paid off the note and the bank won't send them clear title. [01:10:57.500 --> 01:11:00.500] They won't because they can't. [01:11:00.500 --> 01:11:02.500] And this is the problem. [01:11:02.500 --> 01:11:08.500] If they had filed every transfer with the clerk of the court, there would be no question. [01:11:08.500 --> 01:11:12.500] And in Illinois, you have a special statute requiring it. [01:11:12.500 --> 01:11:37.500] If it's not in there, if there is no lien in the county recorder's office, or even if there is, and you have reason to believe that that lien, the one who's registered with that lien is not the current holder, then file a lien of your own. [01:11:37.500 --> 01:11:40.500] How do you file a lien of your own? [01:11:40.500 --> 01:11:42.500] Okay, we can talk about that tomorrow. [01:11:42.500 --> 01:11:43.500] That's pretty simple. [01:11:43.500 --> 01:11:47.500] You just make up just a lien. [01:11:47.500 --> 01:11:52.500] The lien doesn't even have to be supported to be filed in the county record. [01:11:52.500 --> 01:11:54.500] You just file a notice of a lien. [01:11:54.500 --> 01:12:03.500] You notice the court that you have, the clerk that you have a claim against this property. [01:12:03.500 --> 01:12:12.500] And then if someone else comes and tries to file their lien, then there's one that stands between them. [01:12:12.500 --> 01:12:15.500] And they're going to say, oh, we had to lien before that. [01:12:15.500 --> 01:12:19.500] Not if you didn't file it with the clerk. [01:12:19.500 --> 01:12:25.500] This is the reason for things being filed with the clerk so that the title is not clouded. [01:12:25.500 --> 01:12:44.500] So we can talk about that in more detail tomorrow, but as to the statute, the statute was put there primarily so that anyone can purchase property in this country and be sure of achieving quiet title. [01:12:44.500 --> 01:12:51.500] That is primarily what made this country a primary source of foreign investment. [01:12:51.500 --> 01:13:01.500] Because unlike other countries, you could come here, purchase property, and get a guarantee of quiet title when the property was paid for. [01:13:01.500 --> 01:13:09.500] With what the banks have been doing, they've created a situation where you can't get quiet title. [01:13:09.500 --> 01:13:19.500] Now granted, it's in the note that the bank is authorized to transfer the ownership of the note to someone else. [01:13:19.500 --> 01:13:29.500] However, if they do that in a way that clouds title, then they violated the contract. [01:13:29.500 --> 01:13:35.500] That part's not a crime, but it violates the contract because now you can't achieve quiet title. [01:13:35.500 --> 01:13:47.500] So by making this claim that whoever's doing the foreclosure is not registered in the county, that is a very important issue. [01:13:47.500 --> 01:13:59.500] Without that stipulation, nobody can buy property and expect to get a quiet title when they're done. [01:13:59.500 --> 01:14:12.500] We had a second one in California foreclosed on by Wells Fargo, took the house, a month later Chase came to foreclose again. [01:14:12.500 --> 01:14:18.500] This is the problem we've been complaining about. Nobody knows who owns the note. [01:14:18.500 --> 01:14:28.500] Before anybody tries to foreclose on the note, they have a duty to show that they absolutely hold it to the exclusion of all others. [01:14:28.500 --> 01:14:32.500] That's what that filing is all about. [01:14:32.500 --> 01:14:44.500] I want to ask you about nears. I think we can't attack nears in our case. Nears have signed the morris to the U.S. bank, but they didn't record it. [01:14:44.500 --> 01:14:48.500] Other places have been ruling against nears' assignments. [01:14:48.500 --> 01:15:03.500] I think nears, they like to deny they can assign when being sued. On the other hand, they assert that they can assign when they're involved in a foreclosure. [01:15:03.500 --> 01:15:14.500] There was a recent ruling on nears, and people were saying that nears was exonerated. It wasn't. [01:15:14.500 --> 01:15:24.500] Somebody had sued nears themselves, and that you can't do because nears didn't harm you. [01:15:24.500 --> 01:15:30.500] Nears is not the one trying to collect. Nears just made an assignment. [01:15:30.500 --> 01:15:37.500] What you can do is go back and void the assignment. [01:15:37.500 --> 01:15:44.500] You can show that nears doesn't have beneficial interest in the property so they can't make the assignment. [01:15:44.500 --> 01:15:54.500] This case that come out where they were jumping up and down, waving their arms and saying nears is exonerated, absolutely not. [01:15:54.500 --> 01:16:01.500] They're just saying you can't sue nears directly because nears didn't directly harm you. [01:16:01.500 --> 01:16:17.500] There was a Nebraska case where some government authority was going after nears, and nears was saying that they couldn't assign mortgages and really didn't have any rights in it. [01:16:17.500 --> 01:16:19.500] Wait, nears was saying that? [01:16:19.500 --> 01:16:21.500] Yeah. [01:16:21.500 --> 01:16:28.500] I would very much like to see that because that would go to collateral estoppel. [01:16:28.500 --> 01:16:42.500] If nears has made that assertion in a court, then they cannot go to another court and make a diametrically opposed assertion. [01:16:42.500 --> 01:16:44.500] They are subject to collateral estoppel. [01:16:44.500 --> 01:16:49.500] Okay, we'll touch on that when we get back, and then we'll be going through this in Arizona. [01:16:49.500 --> 01:17:01.500] Thank you very much. [01:17:01.500 --> 01:17:27.500] Thank you. [01:17:27.500 --> 01:17:53.500] Thank you. [01:17:53.500 --> 01:18:09.500] If you entered into a mortgage agreement after the year 2000, you were subjected to the largest fraud ever perpetrated on the American public. [01:18:09.500 --> 01:18:27.500] Banks plotted not only to steal the equity in your home, they also planned to scam you out of your retirement funds and leave you homeless and penniless. [01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:36.500] If you have been foreclosed on or facing foreclosure or are up to date on your payments, there is something you can do to set things to right. [01:18:36.500 --> 01:18:45.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:18:45.500 --> 01:18:55.500] You can stop these thieving bankers from destroying this country and from forcing your children and grandchildren onto the streets as slaves to them. [01:18:55.500 --> 01:19:02.500] Call 855-588-8501 now. [01:19:02.500 --> 01:19:27.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:19:27.500 --> 01:19:56.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:19:56.500 --> 01:20:25.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:20:25.500 --> 01:20:51.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:20:51.500 --> 01:21:20.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:21:20.500 --> 01:21:46.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:21:46.500 --> 01:22:12.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:22:12.500 --> 01:22:39.500] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:22:39.500 --> 01:22:44.500] Okay. Do you have any other questions or comments? [01:22:44.500 --> 01:22:54.500] Just one more question. We filed an appearance in the case that we noticed the state court of a removal and filed a petition for a removal. [01:22:54.500 --> 01:23:01.500] Do we need to file an answer to their complaint within a certain amount of time in state court or do they need to... [01:23:01.500 --> 01:23:09.500] Wait a minute, wait a minute. Complaint? What was their complaint in the state court? [01:23:09.500 --> 01:23:13.500] That was their foreclosure. [01:23:13.500 --> 01:23:15.500] When was it filed? [01:23:15.500 --> 01:23:20.500] This was not sure. [01:23:20.500 --> 01:23:32.500] Yes, you absolutely need to file an answer to a foreclosure in a judicial state because it's an original petition. [01:23:32.500 --> 01:23:38.500] Yeah, we didn't file an answer. We just filed an appearance and put in our petition to remove it. [01:23:38.500 --> 01:23:47.500] Okay. How long from the time of the original filing did you file the removal? [01:23:47.500 --> 01:23:52.500] Oh, it was like 29 days right before it was up. [01:23:52.500 --> 01:23:58.500] Okay. Do we need to get an answer into the foreclosure immediately? [01:23:58.500 --> 01:24:02.500] And we'll talk about that tomorrow. We'll just file the... [01:24:02.500 --> 01:24:12.500] We will file your suit as a counters claim in the state issue. It may work better in the state anyway. [01:24:12.500 --> 01:24:14.500] All right. [01:24:14.500 --> 01:24:18.500] And Mark and I were talking about that today. [01:24:18.500 --> 01:24:24.500] That may be the better place to go because of the politics. [01:24:24.500 --> 01:24:28.500] The politics is turning quickly against the lender. [01:24:28.500 --> 01:24:34.500] And politics is generally always more intense in the state than it is in the Fed. [01:24:34.500 --> 01:24:45.500] The federal judge sits for life. The state district judges are re-elected. So there are a lot more politically sensitive creatures. [01:24:45.500 --> 01:24:50.500] So we filed the same suit in the state court and see how this shakes out. [01:24:50.500 --> 01:24:52.500] Okay. [01:24:52.500 --> 01:24:53.500] Okay. [01:24:53.500 --> 01:24:56.500] All right. Thanks, Randy. [01:24:56.500 --> 01:25:02.500] Okay. Thank you, Jim. And now we're going to go to Chris in Arizona. [01:25:02.500 --> 01:25:04.500] Chris, what's on your mind tonight? [01:25:04.500 --> 01:25:09.500] Hey, I thank you for all the work that you guys are doing. I listen to you all the time. [01:25:09.500 --> 01:25:11.500] I've been listening to you for about a month now. [01:25:11.500 --> 01:25:19.500] And I've basically downloaded all the podcasts and I've gone back for like five months and listened to all your shows to learn things. [01:25:19.500 --> 01:25:23.500] I have four issues right now before the court. [01:25:23.500 --> 01:25:26.500] I grew up in California. I moved to Arizona. [01:25:26.500 --> 01:25:30.500] When I was in California in 2004, I had a ticket. [01:25:30.500 --> 01:25:38.500] I never paid it and then my license got suspended and then it expired. That was in 2004. [01:25:38.500 --> 01:25:44.500] Now I lived in Vegas for two years, got a ticket there for not having a license. [01:25:44.500 --> 01:25:47.500] I didn't forgot about the ticket completely. [01:25:47.500 --> 01:25:56.500] Recently pulled my credit report, found out that there was a notation in there for a collection from Las Vegas for that. [01:25:56.500 --> 01:26:01.500] That was one thing. Anyhow, in 2005, I'm in Arizona. [01:26:01.500 --> 01:26:07.500] I'm driving, I'm traveling down the street in a sports car, [01:26:07.500 --> 01:26:12.500] exceeding the posted limit, get pulled over, don't have a license, get signed for that. [01:26:12.500 --> 01:26:16.500] A car gets towed, have to get it out of impound. [01:26:16.500 --> 01:26:20.500] Okay. So because I'm irresponsible, I never paid that ticket. [01:26:20.500 --> 01:26:26.500] So Arizona was looking for me. I've moved a couple of times within the state. They couldn't find me. [01:26:26.500 --> 01:26:30.500] Sounds forward to last year, driving down the street at two in the morning. [01:26:30.500 --> 01:26:35.500] I don't drink or anything, but apparently they thought I had been drinking so I got pulled over. [01:26:35.500 --> 01:26:40.500] That pesky warrant pops up for the speeding ticket here in Arizona. [01:26:40.500 --> 01:26:46.500] I get taken to jail. I bail out on my own or cognizance. [01:26:46.500 --> 01:26:50.500] I immediately go back to California to get a license and pay that ticket. [01:26:50.500 --> 01:26:58.500] So now I have a license. I come back to Arizona and then the process of rectifying that, I get pulled over. [01:26:58.500 --> 01:27:03.500] Immediately, again, I get pulled over with my license and the car. I'm driving her car. [01:27:03.500 --> 01:27:15.500] I get taken back to the original city here in Arizona and it asks to pay $500 to get bailed out on the warrant for the original. [01:27:15.500 --> 01:27:19.500] But when I got pulled over, I showed them I have a California license. [01:27:19.500 --> 01:27:26.500] What they tell me is that my driving privileges have been suspended in Arizona because of the warrant and the ticket. [01:27:26.500 --> 01:27:30.500] So they don't recognize my California license. [01:27:30.500 --> 01:27:35.500] Well, later on, before I went to court, I got the notice in the mail and everything. [01:27:35.500 --> 01:27:45.500] I got the notice in California of the driver's license to start with a C, the letter C. And in Arizona, they start with a D. [01:27:45.500 --> 01:27:53.500] Turns out the license on the citation of Arizona, the criminal citation for driving with suspended license, has a D on it. [01:27:53.500 --> 01:28:01.500] I called the Department of Motor Vehicles here and found out that they have fraudulently assigned me a driver's license number and then they, [01:28:01.500 --> 01:28:12.500] they called me over. So now I'm fighting out here because they cited me for driving without a suspended license in two separate cities. [01:28:12.500 --> 01:28:16.500] So I had two separate cases and that's kind of what happened. [01:28:16.500 --> 01:28:24.500] I went to court. I fought both of them. I followed motions in both courts for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:28:24.500 --> 01:28:31.500] In the first case, the judge, I didn't realize I was supposed to compel the court to set a hearing date for my motion. [01:28:31.500 --> 01:28:39.500] So I brought the motion with me to the date of the trial and they said because I hadn't filed it two weeks in advance that they weren't going to hear my motion. [01:28:39.500 --> 01:28:44.500] So they went ahead and had a trial. I ended up billing a couple hundred dollars on that. [01:28:44.500 --> 01:28:49.500] On the second one, I figured it out. So I filed the motion two weeks in advance. [01:28:49.500 --> 01:28:54.500] And again, I didn't realize I should compel them to have a separate date for the hearing of the motion. [01:28:54.500 --> 01:29:03.500] We go to the trial date. I go to court. The judge says it's not, it's going to disregard my motion and go straight into court. [01:29:03.500 --> 01:29:09.500] Again, I lose part of all those charges and I basically owe three or four hundred dollars there. [01:29:09.500 --> 01:29:17.500] And now I've filed appeals in both those cases and that's where I am today. [01:29:17.500 --> 01:29:19.500] So what's the question? [01:29:19.500 --> 01:29:29.500] The question is what causes of action do I have against the police first for arresting me since I didn't, since I didn't know I don't have to have a license. [01:29:29.500 --> 01:29:34.500] And again, I want to do something against the department of motor vehicles. [01:29:34.500 --> 01:29:41.500] Okay, hang on just a minute. We'll try to deal with that on the other side. Hang on just a second. We'll be back to try to answer that for you. [01:29:41.500 --> 01:29:47.500] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio. We're going to break 512-646-1984. [01:29:47.500 --> 01:29:59.500] We do have a full call board at the moment, so hang in there, folks, and we'll be right back with the show. [01:29:59.500 --> 01:30:04.500] Top 10 reasons to question the official story of the Oklahoma City bombing, reason number five, [01:30:04.500 --> 01:30:12.500] by millions of viewers, the rescue efforts were interrupted several times due to the presence of other explosives. Government log entries indicate in witnesses report [01:30:12.500 --> 01:30:18.500] that after the initial devastating blast, a bomb complete with timer was discovered and removed from the wreckage by the bomb squad. [01:30:18.500 --> 01:30:22.500] Yet we are told it's all due to baseless bomb scares or other contrivances. [01:30:22.500 --> 01:30:28.500] So while officials try to sort out their stories, all we ask is who planted these bombs and why is the government lying about them? [01:30:28.500 --> 01:30:33.500] For more information, go to okcbombingtruth.com. [01:30:33.500 --> 01:30:38.500] When two-bit dictators feel threatened, their standard tactic is to shut down lines of communication. [01:30:38.500 --> 01:30:42.500] You probably know it's been done in Egypt, but can you guess where else it's happened? [01:30:42.500 --> 01:30:46.500] I've got your account for an Albright and I'll be back with the unsettling answer. [01:30:46.500 --> 01:30:52.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:52.500 --> 01:30:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:56.500 --> 01:31:02.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:31:02.500 --> 01:31:08.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:31:08.500 --> 01:31:15.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Start Page. [01:31:15.500 --> 01:31:21.500] When barrier rapid transit or BART police shot and killed a man named Charles Blair Hill [01:31:21.500 --> 01:31:26.500] for allegedly approaching officers with a knife, a 200-person protest followed. [01:31:26.500 --> 01:31:32.500] Understandably, in my opinion, since Hill was not the first person to be fatally shot by trigger-happy BART police. [01:31:32.500 --> 01:31:37.500] A few days later, transit officials got wind that a second protest was being planned, [01:31:37.500 --> 01:31:42.500] so they took the extraordinary step of shutting down all cell phone service to the station. [01:31:42.500 --> 01:31:47.500] Protesters and commuters alike found themselves in a cell phone dead zone with no internet, [01:31:47.500 --> 01:31:53.500] no text messages, no dial tone, no nothing. I'm guessing Hosni Mubarak would be proud. [01:31:53.500 --> 01:31:58.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32:23.500 --> 01:32:49.500] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. We are in the last half hour of our four-hour marathon Friday night show. [01:32:49.500 --> 01:32:53.500] Right now we are talking to Chris in Arizona about a traffic issue. [01:32:53.500 --> 01:32:58.500] Okay, Chris, let me see if I can round this up for you short and sweet here. [01:32:58.500 --> 01:33:05.500] In order for Arizona to create a license in the computer system for you without you making an application, [01:33:05.500 --> 01:33:10.500] that seems to me to be fabrication or falsification of a government record, [01:33:10.500 --> 01:33:16.500] because by definition an application is something one must apply for. [01:33:16.500 --> 01:33:19.500] If you never applied for an Arizona license, [01:33:19.500 --> 01:33:29.500] then where in the law is the authority for them to create one simply for the purpose of suspending it and holding you accountable under it? [01:33:29.500 --> 01:33:36.500] That seems to go against all sense of logic. I can't see how a law like that could even be written. [01:33:36.500 --> 01:33:46.500] Okay, now, the other thing is, is you've got a home, you've made a tin of worms out of this by not taking care of each thing as it comes up. [01:33:46.500 --> 01:33:51.500] It's a little bit more difficult to answer your question as to what to do and what causes of action you have, [01:33:51.500 --> 01:33:58.500] simply because up to this point I don't know what you may have done right or wrong in what you've done so far. [01:33:58.500 --> 01:34:03.500] So I don't have a definitive answer for you in either respect there. [01:34:03.500 --> 01:34:10.500] The first thing I would however recommend you do is tear apart the licensing statute to see how they came up with the idea [01:34:10.500 --> 01:34:19.500] that they could issue a fraudulent license record simply for the purpose of fabricating it for an arrest. [01:34:19.500 --> 01:34:22.500] Okay, all right. [01:34:22.500 --> 01:34:34.500] As I understand, if you are a resident in California and you're in Arizona or Nevada, they can't sue... [01:34:34.500 --> 01:34:46.500] Oh, stop, let me back up. The automobile you were in when you received the ticket in Las Vegas, was it plated in Las Vegas? [01:34:46.500 --> 01:34:48.500] Yes, sir. [01:34:48.500 --> 01:34:58.500] Okay, that changes that. If you were in automobile plated in California and you had an expired California license, [01:34:58.500 --> 01:35:05.500] Nevada couldn't prosecute you for violating any California law. [01:35:05.500 --> 01:35:06.500] Okay. [01:35:06.500 --> 01:35:13.500] But since you had Nevada plates and if you had Arizona plates when you recited, you won't have that defense. [01:35:13.500 --> 01:35:16.500] Well, at least they'll try to make it appear like you don't have it. [01:35:16.500 --> 01:35:20.500] The first idea is still there, but you still have to be able to make it fly. [01:35:20.500 --> 01:35:24.500] And in order to do that, there's a certain procedure you go through when you go to court. [01:35:24.500 --> 01:35:30.500] The problem is you've managed to evade court and cause yourself more trouble. [01:35:30.500 --> 01:35:38.500] So you don't have anything to fall back on in regards to the proper procedure in court. [01:35:38.500 --> 01:35:39.500] Okay. [01:35:39.500 --> 01:35:47.500] So just an FYI, folks, if you're listening, the fact that you don't have to have a license, if they write you tickets, [01:35:47.500 --> 01:35:50.500] does not give you grounds not to show up. [01:35:50.500 --> 01:35:55.500] All that does is muddy the water for your defense. Don't do that. [01:35:55.500 --> 01:35:59.500] Go to court, make them regret it later. [01:35:59.500 --> 01:36:05.500] Because every time you have to go in to deal with something that you shouldn't have to be dealing with, [01:36:05.500 --> 01:36:08.500] that develops a cause of action for you. [01:36:08.500 --> 01:36:13.500] You negate your cause of action by giving them other grounds to come after you. [01:36:13.500 --> 01:36:16.500] So don't do it. [01:36:16.500 --> 01:36:20.500] No, I learned that one. [01:36:20.500 --> 01:36:23.500] I was going to ask, did you learn anything? [01:36:23.500 --> 01:36:25.500] So you already answered that. [01:36:25.500 --> 01:36:26.500] Okay. [01:36:26.500 --> 01:36:28.500] Thank you, Chris. [01:36:28.500 --> 01:36:31.500] We're going to get a lot of calls, so we kind of need to move along. [01:36:31.500 --> 01:36:36.500] We're going to go to Doug in Texas. [01:36:36.500 --> 01:36:39.500] Doug, what do you have for us tonight? [01:36:39.500 --> 01:36:49.500] Well, I was just going to sort of agree with you and kind of disagree with Eddie about having a driver's license. [01:36:49.500 --> 01:36:57.500] I have a fishing license, a hunting license, which I've never, never used. [01:36:57.500 --> 01:37:07.500] And I have a driver's license, which I never used, but I might as well have one to relieve, yes, a lot of problems [01:37:07.500 --> 01:37:14.500] when I go in Home Depot and rent a tool or do this or that or the other. [01:37:14.500 --> 01:37:20.500] It's kind of smooth things out a little bit that I would make any official, [01:37:20.500 --> 01:37:27.500] why this stopped once in the last 25 years, so that's not a big deal. [01:37:27.500 --> 01:37:31.500] But I would tell them, yes, I have this. [01:37:31.500 --> 01:37:33.500] It's not applicable. [01:37:33.500 --> 01:37:40.500] It's good for identification purposes only. [01:37:40.500 --> 01:37:45.500] What say you or Eddie? [01:37:45.500 --> 01:37:46.500] Okay. [01:37:46.500 --> 01:37:48.500] I carry a license. [01:37:48.500 --> 01:37:52.500] And it's because that's not a fight I want to get into. [01:37:52.500 --> 01:37:56.500] I've got more fights than I can keep up with. [01:37:56.500 --> 01:38:03.500] I am never in commerce, but we all have to pick our battles. [01:38:03.500 --> 01:38:20.500] And if I get a, I have some citations for safety stickers and such in Austin, and I will absolutely use the defense that I was not operating in commerce. [01:38:20.500 --> 01:38:30.500] Now, the fact that I have a license may create that presumption, but I also have a registration with the Department of Transportation. [01:38:30.500 --> 01:38:36.500] I am registered as a private operator, not in commerce. [01:38:36.500 --> 01:38:40.500] So there goes their presumption. [01:38:40.500 --> 01:38:44.500] Their presumption is refuted by my registration. [01:38:44.500 --> 01:38:48.500] So we'll have that fight when we get to it. [01:38:48.500 --> 01:38:49.500] Okay. [01:38:49.500 --> 01:38:50.500] Thank you, Doug. [01:38:50.500 --> 01:38:52.500] I appreciate your input. [01:38:52.500 --> 01:38:53.500] We need to move along. [01:38:53.500 --> 01:38:57.500] We've got a bunch of callers and time is running out. [01:38:57.500 --> 01:39:00.500] We're going to go to Jim from Washington. [01:39:00.500 --> 01:39:03.500] I think you were on earlier and we lost you. [01:39:03.500 --> 01:39:05.500] Jim, what do you have for us tonight? [01:39:05.500 --> 01:39:06.500] Hi. [01:39:06.500 --> 01:39:07.500] No, you didn't lose me. [01:39:07.500 --> 01:39:09.500] I just thought of some more questions. [01:39:09.500 --> 01:39:11.500] A little background. [01:39:11.500 --> 01:39:16.500] I filed a complaint with the NLRB against my union. [01:39:16.500 --> 01:39:30.500] The attorney for the NLRB, who was investigating the case, told my main witness to have his testimonial and stuff in by August 31st. [01:39:30.500 --> 01:39:38.500] Then the NLRB turned around and gave a ruling on the 24th of August before the time limit was up for him to turn in his stuff. [01:39:38.500 --> 01:39:43.500] And I'm wondering what grounds I have to go after them. [01:39:43.500 --> 01:39:49.500] Okay, I don't understand enough about the nature of the hearing. [01:39:49.500 --> 01:39:51.500] It's NARB. [01:39:51.500 --> 01:39:52.500] What is that acronym? [01:39:52.500 --> 01:39:55.500] NLRB is the National Labor Relations Board. [01:39:55.500 --> 01:39:58.500] Okay, so this is an administrative hearing. [01:39:58.500 --> 01:39:59.500] Well, there was no hearing. [01:39:59.500 --> 01:40:00.500] It never got to that point. [01:40:00.500 --> 01:40:05.500] This was an investigation that would have led up to a hearing had they allowed all the proof in. [01:40:05.500 --> 01:40:06.500] Oh, okay. [01:40:06.500 --> 01:40:12.500] So they closed out an investigation without receiving all of the information? [01:40:12.500 --> 01:40:17.500] Yes, after telling my witness that he had to have his in seven days after the ruling was made. [01:40:17.500 --> 01:40:26.500] Okay, it may be that in their investigation they developed enough evidence to make their determination. [01:40:26.500 --> 01:40:36.500] I seriously doubt that there's anything direct if the information he... [01:40:36.500 --> 01:40:39.500] Okay, was the ruling against your... [01:40:39.500 --> 01:40:41.500] It was against me. [01:40:41.500 --> 01:40:50.500] Okay, would the evidence they failed to wait for have mitigated the evidence against you? [01:40:50.500 --> 01:40:52.500] Absolutely. [01:40:52.500 --> 01:40:56.500] Then go after them for due process violations. [01:40:56.500 --> 01:41:02.500] Okay, the other question I have is, as a federal attorney working for the government, [01:41:02.500 --> 01:41:06.500] are required to have a bond and an oath? [01:41:06.500 --> 01:41:12.500] Is it required to have an oath? The bond is not carried by the attorney himself. [01:41:12.500 --> 01:41:14.500] It's carried by the federal government. [01:41:14.500 --> 01:41:16.500] Okay, but there will be a bond somewhere. [01:41:16.500 --> 01:41:22.500] I think they are essentially self-insured by the federal government. [01:41:22.500 --> 01:41:23.500] I'm not sure. [01:41:23.500 --> 01:41:25.500] I can't really answer that question. [01:41:25.500 --> 01:41:34.500] I know it's not like a normal insurance policy, but I do believe they have some type of underwriter. [01:41:34.500 --> 01:41:40.500] Okay, and how would I go about getting the bond and oath information? [01:41:40.500 --> 01:41:42.500] Request it under FOIA. [01:41:42.500 --> 01:41:44.500] Under FOIA? Okay, thank you very much. [01:41:44.500 --> 01:41:54.500] If they fail to respond, one of the things about FOIA, if they send you a letter doing song and dance and celture down your pants, [01:41:54.500 --> 01:42:01.500] and they have a requirement to produce it in a certain amount of time, just go ahead and file against them for violating the act. [01:42:01.500 --> 01:42:04.500] You don't care about their excuses. [01:42:04.500 --> 01:42:11.500] You know, I'm in Texas, and every time I file an information request, I get this song and dance letter. [01:42:11.500 --> 01:42:13.500] Well, I don't care what the letter says. [01:42:13.500 --> 01:42:23.500] If they are required to produce the records, and there is no pre-existing determination telling them that they can withhold these records, [01:42:23.500 --> 01:42:27.500] and say they make a request for an opinion. [01:42:27.500 --> 01:42:33.500] If they make a request for an opinion when there is a pre-existing opinion, they get a criminal complaint. [01:42:33.500 --> 01:42:37.500] If they fail to make it in time, they get a criminal complaint. [01:42:37.500 --> 01:42:41.500] If they break any of those laws, they get a criminal complaint. [01:42:41.500 --> 01:42:49.500] If they respond with information that is not the information I ask for, they get a criminal complaint. [01:42:49.500 --> 01:42:54.500] That's one of their primary ploys, as you ask for one thing to give you something else. [01:42:54.500 --> 01:43:05.500] I suggest you file against them, and take out your micrometer, and measure the legal limit of the law, and when they cross it, you file, every time. [01:43:05.500 --> 01:43:10.500] Okay. One other question real quick. Should I go after the respondent superior also? [01:43:10.500 --> 01:43:17.500] Oh, always. That's always more fun to go after the one who doesn't know anything about it, and who's essentially innocent. [01:43:17.500 --> 01:43:19.500] They'll scream the loudest. [01:43:19.500 --> 01:43:20.500] Okay. Thank you very much. [01:43:20.500 --> 01:43:27.500] You are most welcome. Okay. This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stephens, Eddie Craig with La Radio. [01:43:27.500 --> 01:43:34.500] We were talking to Jim in Washington. We're going to go to Michelle in Texas as soon as we come back from break. [01:43:34.500 --> 01:43:59.500] We're going into our last segment. We've got two collars. We try to get to both of those when we get back on the other side. [01:43:59.500 --> 01:44:08.500] At hempusa.org, we offer chemical-free products to people around the world detoxifying, self-healing, while rebuilding the immune system. [01:44:08.500 --> 01:44:14.500] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:44:14.500 --> 01:44:22.500] Our micro-plant powder is rich in silica and probiotics to help rebuild the immune system and to create a healthy stomach flora. [01:44:22.500 --> 01:44:27.500] Micro-plant powder is excellent for daily intake and is perfect to add to your storage shelter. [01:44:27.500 --> 01:44:31.500] We urge our listeners to please visit us at hempusa.org. [01:44:31.500 --> 01:44:35.500] And remember, all of our products are chemical-free and healthy to eat. [01:44:35.500 --> 01:44:40.500] We constantly strive to give you the best service, highest quality, and rapid shipping anywhere. [01:44:40.500 --> 01:44:44.500] And we offer free shipping on orders over $95 in the U.S. [01:44:44.500 --> 01:44:50.500] Please visit us at hempusa.org or call 908-6912608. [01:44:50.500 --> 01:44:58.500] That's 908-6912608. See what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you at hempusa.org. [01:45:20.500 --> 01:45:23.500] It's too late. They have all of his books and many of the books he talks about. [01:45:23.500 --> 01:45:28.500] They also have t-shirts, bumper stickers, and yard signs so that you can show your support for him during the campaign. [01:45:28.500 --> 01:45:31.500] Brave New Books? Did they have Harry Potter and Twilight? [01:45:31.500 --> 01:45:37.500] No, but they do carry a large selection of survival and preparedness books to protect your family in time of emergency. [01:45:37.500 --> 01:45:40.500] Ugh, that sounds like that show in the Discovery Channel. [01:45:40.500 --> 01:45:47.500] Yeah, there's even a wilderness survival expert that teaches classes called Earth Skills School that you can sign up for on the website bravenewbookstore.com. [01:45:47.500 --> 01:45:48.500] What are you doing? [01:45:48.500 --> 01:45:54.500] I'm tweeting all my friends that they should go to bravenewbookstore.com or down to the bookstore in person. Where's it located? [01:45:54.500 --> 01:45:56.500] 1904 Guadalupe Street. [01:45:56.500 --> 01:45:58.500] There, it's sent. I even made a smiley face. [01:45:58.500 --> 01:46:21.500] Great. [01:46:21.500 --> 01:46:25.500] Alright folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:25.500 --> 01:46:30.500] We are on the last segment of our 4-Hour Friday Night Marathon. [01:46:30.500 --> 01:46:36.500] We are taking your calls, trying to get them finished up before we get off the board here. [01:46:36.500 --> 01:46:40.500] Let's see, who do we have here next? Michelle in Texas. [01:46:40.500 --> 01:46:43.500] Ian and Michelle, what can we do for you? [01:46:43.500 --> 01:46:52.500] Hi, I have a quick question. I am writing a complaint and I was trying to figure out how to label it if you think. [01:46:52.500 --> 01:46:54.500] Okay, what kind of complaint are you writing? [01:46:54.500 --> 01:47:00.500] I am writing a complaint. Let's see which one am I writing now. [01:47:00.500 --> 01:47:03.500] Right now I'm doing the kidnapping one. [01:47:03.500 --> 01:47:05.500] You're writing a criminal complaint? [01:47:05.500 --> 01:47:07.500] Yes, I'm writing a criminal complaint. [01:47:07.500 --> 01:47:10.500] Okay, so what is the question? [01:47:10.500 --> 01:47:18.500] I'm writing it for a third party though. I was told by Randy that I should do a third party complaint. [01:47:18.500 --> 01:47:28.500] So I'm writing it for him. And in the beginning I say I, the Steven person, hearing after, refer to as complainant. [01:47:28.500 --> 01:47:34.500] So I'm trying to figure out though, what would I label myself? [01:47:34.500 --> 01:47:36.500] You are the complainant. [01:47:36.500 --> 01:47:38.500] Well no, since it's a third party complaint. [01:47:38.500 --> 01:47:58.500] No, you can't write it in the other person's name. You can just cite that I have good reason to believe and do believe based upon information received from whoever that third party is that the following crime was committed on this date at this time and this place by this person. [01:47:58.500 --> 01:48:06.500] Have you looked at the juris imprudence? I have blank Texas complaint forms there. [01:48:06.500 --> 01:48:17.500] Yeah, that's where I'm actually getting all these complaints from. I pretty much went to all your complaints and then did a blank one and I'm just kind of switching it over to my case. [01:48:17.500 --> 01:48:20.500] Yeah, don't forget the spelling grammar check if you got it from Randy. [01:48:20.500 --> 01:48:24.500] Oh, yes, I've done that already. [01:48:24.500 --> 01:48:32.500] Okay, so I, I actually, he's actually the complainant then. So he, so I... [01:48:32.500 --> 01:48:37.500] If you're making it on your behalf, yes, he's the complainant. If you're making it on his behalf, you're the complainant. [01:48:37.500 --> 01:48:42.500] He's making it on my behalf. So... [01:48:42.500 --> 01:48:50.500] Yeah, he is the complainant. Anyone can file a complaint if they have knowledge that a crime has been committed. [01:48:50.500 --> 01:49:00.500] It doesn't have to be first knowledge. That's the first hand knowledge. That's why it says, I have reason to believe and I do believe. [01:49:00.500 --> 01:49:02.500] That's all you need. [01:49:02.500 --> 01:49:09.500] But Jenny says, I have reason to believe and do believe based on the following. You state your reasons. [01:49:09.500 --> 01:49:10.500] Okay, got that. [01:49:10.500 --> 01:49:22.500] Yeah, that's it. Then you try to write it in the verbiage of the statute as closely as you can. [01:49:22.500 --> 01:49:27.500] Right. I pretty much just took your examples and kind of, again, suited them to some reason. [01:49:27.500 --> 01:49:39.500] If you will look in like Cherokee County, some of those folders, I have complaints for aggravated kidnapping and the whole works. [01:49:39.500 --> 01:49:42.500] That's what I, that's exactly what I'm using. [01:49:42.500 --> 01:49:47.500] Oh, good. Wait, wait a minute, wait a minute. You plagiarized my work? [01:49:47.500 --> 01:49:49.500] Maybe. [01:49:49.500 --> 01:49:53.500] You plagiarized the work I plagiarized? Wonderful. [01:49:53.500 --> 01:49:55.500] You did tell me to. [01:49:55.500 --> 01:49:58.500] Absolutely. [01:49:58.500 --> 01:50:09.500] Write as little of your own as you can get away with. I look for attorneys who do good work and I steal their work. [01:50:09.500 --> 01:50:17.500] Okay. My only question then after that then is, how do I word it in the actual meat of the complaint? [01:50:17.500 --> 01:50:21.500] So where it says like, complainant was assaulted, blah, blah, blah, blah. [01:50:21.500 --> 01:50:27.500] You know, what would I post? Essentially a statement of facts. [01:50:27.500 --> 01:50:35.500] Only the facts necessary to establish the elements of the crime. [01:50:35.500 --> 01:50:50.500] The defendant on about a certain day restricted third party in their freedom of movement while prominently displaying it as a [01:50:50.500 --> 01:50:56.500] weapon that is addressing the elements. And that's really all it needs. [01:50:56.500 --> 01:51:12.500] It's best if you include an affidavit of statement of facts in the form of an affidavit and kind of explain to the, these are written always for a grand jury. [01:51:12.500 --> 01:51:21.500] To the grand jury what the facts are that led you to this, that gives you reason to believe this crime was committed. [01:51:21.500 --> 01:51:29.500] But try to restrict yourself to facts and not opinion. [01:51:29.500 --> 01:51:33.500] Only the things that actually happened is not what you think about them. [01:51:33.500 --> 01:51:42.500] But you try to construct your facts in a way that if a reasonable person walked down these facts they would come to the conclusion that you've come into. [01:51:42.500 --> 01:51:45.500] Right. [01:51:45.500 --> 01:51:47.500] Okay. [01:51:47.500 --> 01:51:50.500] Again, really quick though. [01:51:50.500 --> 01:51:54.500] I, what I'm trying to figure out is, oh I'm sorry. [01:51:54.500 --> 01:51:56.500] Okay, well never mind. [01:51:56.500 --> 01:52:02.500] I'm just trying to figure out how to word though the part where I say that it's, that you... [01:52:02.500 --> 01:52:05.500] Send it to me in an e-mail. [01:52:05.500 --> 01:52:07.500] I'm sorry? [01:52:07.500 --> 01:52:10.500] E-mail it to me at Randy at Remedies and Real Estate. [01:52:10.500 --> 01:52:13.500] No, Randy at Read of Law Radio. [01:52:13.500 --> 01:52:16.500] I'll look it over, make suggestions, get it back to you. [01:52:16.500 --> 01:52:18.500] That'd be fantastic. [01:52:18.500 --> 01:52:19.500] Thank you. [01:52:19.500 --> 01:52:22.500] That part's my favorite pastime. [01:52:22.500 --> 01:52:25.500] Well, I have a lot to say to look at a substitute. [01:52:25.500 --> 01:52:27.500] Okay. [01:52:27.500 --> 01:52:29.500] Thank you very much. [01:52:29.500 --> 01:52:36.500] Most welcome. Okay, now we're going to go to Michael in Texas. [01:52:36.500 --> 01:52:38.500] Hi. [01:52:38.500 --> 01:52:39.500] Howdy, Michael. [01:52:39.500 --> 01:52:40.500] Good evening, Randy. [01:52:40.500 --> 01:52:47.500] I was in your show often and I appreciate what you guys do and I'll make this quick because I know you're getting short here. [01:52:47.500 --> 01:52:54.500] A couple of months ago, my car was parked at the side of my girlfriend's apartment where I parked. [01:52:54.500 --> 01:52:57.500] I've been parking there for about a year. [01:52:57.500 --> 01:53:02.500] On a Friday afternoon, I walked out there to get into my car and it was gone. [01:53:02.500 --> 01:53:06.500] I called the police and I knew they had been stolen or towed. [01:53:06.500 --> 01:53:11.500] It turns out that they had towed it and I wasn't sure why. [01:53:11.500 --> 01:53:17.500] I guess what had happened was somebody had come by and clipped my car. [01:53:17.500 --> 01:53:19.500] They had hit the mirror on the side of it. [01:53:19.500 --> 01:53:24.500] Consequently, I guess a police officer drove by and saw it. [01:53:24.500 --> 01:53:35.500] I had my car towed without me knowing it and left a ticket on my windshield for trucking traffic. [01:53:35.500 --> 01:53:40.500] There are several other people that parked on this area on the street on the curb. [01:53:40.500 --> 01:53:44.500] There were two other people parked in front of me at the time that it happened. [01:53:44.500 --> 01:53:46.500] Neither of them, obviously. [01:53:46.500 --> 01:53:48.500] Hold on. [01:53:48.500 --> 01:53:52.500] Did they knock your car out into traffic? [01:53:52.500 --> 01:53:54.500] Yes, sir. The car was not actually hit. [01:53:54.500 --> 01:53:55.500] It was just my side view mirror. [01:53:55.500 --> 01:53:57.500] It was broken and that was it. [01:53:57.500 --> 01:54:00.500] My car was still parked very close to the curb, I'm assuming. [01:54:00.500 --> 01:54:02.500] So it was legally parked? [01:54:02.500 --> 01:54:04.500] Yes, sir. [01:54:04.500 --> 01:54:10.500] File criminal charges against the officer and sue him. [01:54:10.500 --> 01:54:16.500] Sue him and the best one to sue is the towing company. [01:54:16.500 --> 01:54:17.500] All right. [01:54:17.500 --> 01:54:19.500] They will get really unhappy. [01:54:19.500 --> 01:54:22.500] They will initially give them a tort letter. [01:54:22.500 --> 01:54:24.500] Okay. [01:54:24.500 --> 01:54:32.500] You were harmed by their towing your car and all the time it took you to find it and then go retrieve it and all this stuff. [01:54:32.500 --> 01:54:34.500] And it was taken illegally. [01:54:34.500 --> 01:54:41.500] They would say, well, we were ordered by the police to tow it and you tell them your problem? [01:54:41.500 --> 01:54:44.500] Not my problem. [01:54:44.500 --> 01:54:48.500] My problem is I was legally parked and you towed my car. [01:54:48.500 --> 01:54:53.500] Yes. [01:54:53.500 --> 01:54:57.500] And definitely file criminal charges against the officer. [01:54:57.500 --> 01:54:58.500] Yes, sir. [01:54:58.500 --> 01:55:10.500] You probably won't get him adjudicated, but you assure give him some grief and make him wish he hadn't done that and get him more careful next time. [01:55:10.500 --> 01:55:14.500] Yes, sir. I sure do appreciate that. [01:55:14.500 --> 01:55:19.500] I will start out with that and I really appreciate your advice and I'll check it on the next caller. [01:55:19.500 --> 01:55:20.500] Thank you very much. [01:55:20.500 --> 01:55:22.500] Okay, thank you. [01:55:22.500 --> 01:55:26.500] Okay, now we're going to go to Tony in Illinois. [01:55:26.500 --> 01:55:29.500] Tony, what do you have for us? [01:55:29.500 --> 01:55:36.500] How would you word a request if you're requesting presentment in the three dash files on one? [01:55:36.500 --> 01:55:42.500] How would you word that letter to say it's a request for presentment in the three dash five on one? [01:55:42.500 --> 01:55:47.500] Please make available to me the original contract that I signed. [01:55:47.500 --> 01:55:50.500] Okay, wait a minute. Hold on. I don't know what you're talking about. [01:55:50.500 --> 01:55:53.500] A request, is this a real estate issue? [01:55:53.500 --> 01:56:06.500] Well, actually for like if you were up to date on your mortgage or a car note, because I believe I know a lady that has a car note that she got behind on, but I believe it was sold. [01:56:06.500 --> 01:56:09.500] So I was wondering if perhaps that... [01:56:09.500 --> 01:56:13.500] Okay, three dash five on one, uniform commercial code. [01:56:13.500 --> 01:56:18.500] Check Illinois commercial code, it'll probably be numbered the same. [01:56:18.500 --> 01:56:33.500] When the debt, when the creditor makes demand for payment of the debtor and the debtor demands production of the original security instrument, the creditor must make the original security instrument available for inspection. [01:56:33.500 --> 01:56:36.500] That's what you requested under. [01:56:36.500 --> 01:56:40.500] Right, but how would you word that? [01:56:40.500 --> 01:56:41.500] You've got the original security... [01:56:41.500 --> 01:56:43.500] Just use the word now to statute. [01:56:43.500 --> 01:56:51.500] Now, just tell them I want to examine the original security instrument on this alleged note. [01:56:51.500 --> 01:56:52.500] Yeah. [01:56:52.500 --> 01:56:54.500] There's no special wording. [01:56:54.500 --> 01:56:57.500] I prefer not to give them legal advice. [01:56:57.500 --> 01:57:02.500] In this case, if I'm writing a criminal complaint, I want them to do it in the statute. [01:57:02.500 --> 01:57:14.500] But if I'm doing something civil like this, where they have a duty to do something, and if they don't to get in trouble, then I try to word it so that they don't know that I know the statute. [01:57:14.500 --> 01:57:21.500] So I just tell them I want you to make this available for me so I can inspect it. [01:57:21.500 --> 01:57:24.500] Let me know of a time and place where I can see this document. [01:57:24.500 --> 01:57:27.500] So don't let them know that they're legally obligated to do it? [01:57:27.500 --> 01:57:28.500] No. [01:57:28.500 --> 01:57:31.500] You're not their attorney, they want an attorney, go hire one. [01:57:31.500 --> 01:57:36.500] We have no duty to give them legal advice when they fail to produce it. [01:57:36.500 --> 01:57:43.500] Then under the uniform commercial code, their statutory is stopped from further collections. [01:57:43.500 --> 01:57:51.500] I have another friend who has a credit card that he's being sued for. [01:57:51.500 --> 01:57:55.500] So it's already past the collection stage. [01:57:55.500 --> 01:57:57.500] Okay, kind of. [01:57:57.500 --> 01:57:59.500] Easy solution for him. [01:57:59.500 --> 01:58:03.500] Send him to rule of law radio. [01:58:03.500 --> 01:58:07.500] Click on the blue banner and get Michael Morris. [01:58:07.500 --> 01:58:09.500] Michael Meares. [01:58:09.500 --> 01:58:11.500] Michael Meares. [01:58:11.500 --> 01:58:17.500] He'll show him how to kick the creditors behind. [01:58:17.500 --> 01:58:19.500] Okay. [01:58:19.500 --> 01:58:22.500] We are running out of time. [01:58:22.500 --> 01:58:24.500] This has been a great show. [01:58:24.500 --> 01:58:26.500] I appreciate you guys. [01:58:26.500 --> 01:58:28.500] Great questions. [01:58:28.500 --> 01:58:31.500] And I appreciate all you listeners. [01:58:31.500 --> 01:58:36.500] This is Randy Tells, Deputy Chief of the Press. [01:58:36.500 --> 01:58:38.500] We live long with you. [01:58:38.500 --> 01:58:39.500] We'll be back. [01:58:39.500 --> 01:58:41.500] It is definitely not late. [01:58:41.500 --> 01:58:43.500] It's 8 p.m. Central. [01:58:43.500 --> 01:58:45.500] I'll be back Thursday. [01:58:45.500 --> 01:58:47.500] We'll all be back Thursday. [01:58:47.500 --> 01:58:49.500] 8 p.m. Central. [01:58:49.500 --> 01:58:50.500] Friday. [01:58:50.500 --> 01:58:51.500] 8 p.m. at that. [01:58:51.500 --> 01:58:53.500] Thank you for listening. [01:58:53.500 --> 01:58:58.500] We'll be back Thursday. [01:59:23.500 --> 01:59:30.500] BFF at 8-888-551-0102 or visit us online at BFA.org. [01:59:30.500 --> 01:59:36.500] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:36.500 --> 01:59:40.500] plus charts and maps and and outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:40.500 --> 01:59:43.500] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:43.500 --> 01:59:51.500] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:51.500 --> 01:59:58.500] 851-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.