[00:00.000 --> 00:05.440] What's your privacy worth? [00:05.440 --> 00:09.360] Well, it's hard to put a dollar figure on it, but so entrepreneurs want to help people [00:09.360 --> 00:12.880] earn money when marketers pluck their personal data off the web. [00:12.880 --> 00:16.960] Under Catherine Albright, back with details in a moment. [00:16.960 --> 00:18.720] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.720 --> 00:22.320] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.320 --> 00:27.320] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.320 --> 00:32.280] But protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.280 --> 00:35.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:35.080 --> 00:40.600] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [00:40.600 --> 00:42.400] Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.400 --> 00:44.400] Start over with StartPage. [00:44.400 --> 00:50.600] In these times of vanishing privacy, marketers are monitoring our behavior on the internet, [00:50.600 --> 00:53.800] aggregating our clicks, taps, and swipes to make fortunes. [00:53.800 --> 00:56.840] But what if you got paid every time your data was sold? [00:56.840 --> 01:02.240] A startup called Personal thinks it's not only possible but profitable, how? [01:02.240 --> 01:07.560] By creating a web marketplace where people could sell access to their personal information. [01:07.560 --> 01:12.160] Users would upload intimate details of their lives to an online vault and then charge companies [01:12.160 --> 01:14.760] to access the data to market to them directly. [01:14.760 --> 01:20.840] Now, I'm all for making privacy vultures pay, but fighting for privacy by removing it feels [01:20.840 --> 01:21.840] like the wrong approach. [01:21.840 --> 01:31.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31.840 --> 01:38.440] Listen up brainiacs, chewing gum may not be so good the night before a test. [01:38.440 --> 01:42.680] In fact, new research shows it could actually impair your short-term memory. [01:42.680 --> 01:48.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back to burst your bubble gum bubble right after this. [01:48.280 --> 01:50.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:50.000 --> 01:53.600] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:53.600 --> 01:58.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:58.600 --> 02:03.720] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:03.720 --> 02:06.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:06.360 --> 02:11.960] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [02:11.960 --> 02:13.720] Yahoo, and Bing. [02:13.720 --> 02:17.440] Start over with StartPage. [02:17.440 --> 02:21.160] You might have read studies saying that chewing gum improves your memory. [02:21.160 --> 02:25.640] Students have taken that to heart, gum-chewing nonstop while cramming for final exams. [02:25.640 --> 02:29.960] But new research suggests that chewing gum may not help with memory after all, and could [02:29.960 --> 02:31.800] actually make it worse. [02:31.800 --> 02:35.720] British scientists gave volunteers memory challenges with and without gum. [02:35.720 --> 02:40.400] They found the gum-chewers had a harder time with tasks like memorizing phone numbers than [02:40.400 --> 02:42.160] those who didn't chew gum. [02:42.160 --> 02:46.160] One interesting difference, though, is this time around volunteers were given flavorless [02:46.160 --> 02:47.160] gum. [02:47.160 --> 02:51.600] They still insist on chomping before a quiz, pick a tasty flavor, and make sure you spit [02:51.600 --> 02:53.240] it out once the thrill is gone. [02:53.240 --> 03:21.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:21.240 --> 03:46.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage, the world's most private search engine. [03:46.240 --> 04:12.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [04:12.240 --> 04:41.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [04:41.240 --> 05:10.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [05:10.240 --> 05:39.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [05:39.240 --> 06:08.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [06:08.240 --> 06:37.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [06:37.240 --> 07:06.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [07:06.240 --> 07:33.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [07:33.240 --> 08:01.240] I'm Dr. Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [08:01.240 --> 08:30.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [08:30.240 --> 08:59.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht, the world's most private search engine. [09:00.240 --> 09:29.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [09:29.240 --> 09:58.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [09:58.240 --> 10:27.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [10:27.240 --> 10:56.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [10:56.240 --> 11:23.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [11:23.240 --> 11:52.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [11:52.240 --> 12:21.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [12:21.240 --> 12:47.240] I'm Dr. Gaffer Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [12:47.240 --> 12:59.240] Now, you wrote the mortgage, or the borrower wrote the mortgage, and the mortgage gave the lender a claim against the property. [12:59.240 --> 13:23.240] And in writing the mortgage, you gave concessions with conditions. And if MERS was included in the mortgage, and MERS was named as beneficiary for the lender, and as nominee for the lender, you have no power to do that. [13:23.240 --> 13:44.240] Now, you have power to grant concessions for your own part, but the lender is the beneficiary and the one to whom the deed of trust, the legal title of the property would go to. [13:44.240 --> 14:03.240] In the mortgage, when they added MERS to it, they added a concession by the lender that the lender would not be the mortgagee or the beneficiary, but MERS would be the beneficiary. [14:03.240 --> 14:23.240] You have no power to grant that. The lender would have to do that. The only way for that to be valid was if the lender signed the mortgage and affirmed the appointment of MERS as beneficiary and the appointment of MERS as an agent for the lender. [14:23.240 --> 14:38.240] You have no power to hire an agent for the lender. He would have to do that. Did anybody else sign the mortgage other than you or whoever created the mortgage or the borrower was? [14:38.240 --> 14:42.240] I'm the only signature on it. [14:42.240 --> 15:02.240] Then the section of appointing MERS is invalid because it wasn't affirmed by the lender. For 200 years, the only concessions in a mortgage or a deed of trust were concessions by the borrower to the lender with conditions. [15:02.240 --> 15:12.240] When they added MERS, that added concessions by the lender. In order for those to be valid, the lender would have had to have affirmed the contract. [15:12.240 --> 15:27.240] This is contract law 101. First day, first hour, this is what constitutes the contract. There is no meeting of minds in this contract. [15:27.240 --> 15:37.240] There is a concession, but it's not agreed to. So MERS has no standing. Does that make sense? [15:37.240 --> 15:41.240] Absolutely. [15:41.240 --> 15:46.240] Okay. Do you have anything else for us? [15:46.240 --> 15:58.240] Well, I got only one other question and it relates to the FDCPA and I don't know how much expertise you have on that one. [15:58.240 --> 16:00.240] I have a bit. [16:00.240 --> 16:22.240] Okay. A debt collector who fails to perform a requirement under the FDCPA but is no longer attempting to collect the debt when they commit the violation, is that a cause of action? [16:22.240 --> 16:33.240] Okay. What do you mean by no longer attempting to collect the debt? Okay, wait. Hang on. We're about to go to break. [16:33.240 --> 17:00.240] This is Randy Kelton, Debra Steven, J.D. Craig with our radio, our call-in number. It's 512-646-1984. We'll be right back on the other side. [17:00.240 --> 17:16.240] I hope that I was doing well, but the truth to you I'll tell MSGs and GMO really ain't the way to go. [17:16.240 --> 17:40.240] There's a better way of seeing. It's called Tangy Tangerine and we're all drinking Tangy Tangerine. [17:40.240 --> 17:48.240] Order beyond Tangy Tangerine and other great young Jevity products at LogosRadioNetwork.com by clicking on the Tangy Tangerine banner. [17:48.240 --> 17:55.240] Sign up as a preferred customer for wholesale prices or become a distributor and support LogosRadioNetwork.com. [17:55.240 --> 17:57.240] So what do you say, Elvis? [17:57.240 --> 18:21.240] Tangy Tangerine. Tangy Tangerine. [18:21.240 --> 18:29.240] What do you want to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? How to answer letters and phone calls? How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:29.240 --> 18:34.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:34.240 --> 18:41.240] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.240 --> 18:51.240] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [18:51.240 --> 19:01.240] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:01.240 --> 19:12.240] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the father can deliver you. I don't let back-mine people hurt you. Until it says I'm getting behind you. [19:12.240 --> 19:17.240] You know what I mean? My friend, Nala Jatya. [19:17.240 --> 19:41.240] C'mon, don't speak behind me crazy, Telling me a problem every day, Callin' his name once a day, Every day you know he will stay in, Don't speak behind me crazy, Telling me a problem every day, Callin' his name once a day, Every day you know he will stay in, [19:41.240 --> 19:53.240] Hey, I'm making money, He's everything, He's everything to me, That's why I call him, Don't talk to me, I may pray to him, Because he's the only one could answer him, [19:53.240 --> 20:12.240] Hey, I'm making money, He's everything to me, That's why I call him, Don't talk to me, I may pray to him, Telling me a problem every day, Callin' his name once a day, Every day you know he will stay in, Don't speak behind me crazy, [20:12.240 --> 20:23.240] Okay, we are back, Manny Kelton, Debbie Steven, Debbie Craig, we live on our radio, and we are talking to Rob in New Mexico. [20:23.240 --> 20:45.240] Okay, Rob, you had a question about FDCPA, about whether or not someone who's no longer collected, and my question was, how did he get to the no longer collecting status? [20:45.240 --> 20:56.240] Well, I'm close foreclosure, they've already stolen my house, and there is no deficiency judgment against me, so they're not any longer. [20:56.240 --> 21:03.240] Okay, FDCPA no longer applies, he's not collecting it there anymore. [21:03.240 --> 21:07.240] Okay. [21:07.240 --> 21:10.240] So I need to remove that from my federal complaint? [21:10.240 --> 21:12.240] Yes, yes. [21:12.240 --> 21:20.240] Okay, well that was my question on that, I'm about to amend it now, going into discovery. [21:20.240 --> 21:37.240] One other question we discussed the other day about adding wrongful foreclosure in, I don't know that I feel like I can handle that myself in federal court, [21:37.240 --> 21:46.240] I don't know that I have enough knowledge of what's necessary to, what necessary elements there are to prove for wrongful foreclosure. [21:46.240 --> 21:55.240] I mean, I've got all this stuff that's blatantly fraudulent, but I don't know how to get that evidence in. [21:55.240 --> 22:01.240] Okay, you may want to do that in the state court. [22:01.240 --> 22:02.240] Okay. [22:02.240 --> 22:10.240] You go into the state court and petition for a declaratory judgment saying this document was filed in the county record, [22:10.240 --> 22:22.240] but this document was insufficient for filing because of these problems and asked the state court to rule that this document is insufficient. [22:22.240 --> 22:29.240] You get the state court ruling, then you can bring that into the federal court as risk to Dakota. [22:29.240 --> 22:31.240] Okay. [22:31.240 --> 22:34.240] So we can talk about that off the air. [22:34.240 --> 22:40.240] This is primarily where we're going with the actions that we're taking. [22:40.240 --> 22:43.240] That's why we go after the notary so hard. [22:43.240 --> 22:52.240] And you send a letter to every signatory to their, to who they're signing for, not the law firm, [22:52.240 --> 23:02.240] but if they're a lawyer in a law firm and the law firm claims to be representing a bank, you send it to the bank, [23:02.240 --> 23:10.240] then you're not likely to get the power of attorney and then you bring that as an issue. [23:10.240 --> 23:14.240] If it is a law firm, they will probably be able to prove a power of attorney. [23:14.240 --> 23:21.240] But if you have a document signed on behalf of MERS, [23:21.240 --> 23:23.240] it's not going to come up with that. [23:23.240 --> 23:30.240] And that would be the one that would assign the note to, is it Bank of America that's foreclosing? [23:30.240 --> 23:31.240] Yeah. [23:31.240 --> 23:33.240] Yeah, it was Bank of America that foreclosed today. [23:33.240 --> 23:39.240] Was Bank of America the entity with whom you entered into the loan with originally? [23:39.240 --> 23:41.240] No, it was not. [23:41.240 --> 23:49.240] In fact, Bank of America claims to have taken it over from countrywide, but they never... [23:49.240 --> 23:52.240] It had to be an assignment. [23:52.240 --> 23:56.240] You can maintain no assignment, no standing. [23:56.240 --> 24:01.240] Well, and they came in as Bank of America, formerly known as countrywide, [24:01.240 --> 24:06.240] but then they assigned the mortgage from the original lender straight to Bank of America. [24:06.240 --> 24:12.240] Bank of America was not ever countrywide. [24:12.240 --> 24:18.240] Countrywide was wholly owned subsidiary of Bank of America. [24:18.240 --> 24:20.240] Bank of America owned it, but it was a separate company. [24:20.240 --> 24:22.240] And they're trying to pretend like it's one company. [24:22.240 --> 24:30.240] There had to be an assignment between from countrywide to Bank of America. [24:30.240 --> 24:33.240] I got one more piece of good news before I let you go. [24:33.240 --> 24:37.240] Checking these records, getting ready to mend my complaint, putting my discovery together. [24:37.240 --> 24:43.240] I found in Bank of America's own documents and their initial disclosures, [24:43.240 --> 24:51.240] 85 auto dial calls to my cell phone. [24:51.240 --> 24:56.240] After you've sent them the debt validation letter and the order to stop? [24:56.240 --> 24:59.240] Yes. [24:59.240 --> 25:01.240] Okay, good. [25:01.240 --> 25:03.240] In your... [25:03.240 --> 25:05.240] Okay, if they claim... [25:05.240 --> 25:08.240] If they try to claim that... [25:08.240 --> 25:12.240] If they try to claim a statute of limitations, [25:12.240 --> 25:16.240] look in your deed of trust in your mortgage, [25:16.240 --> 25:21.240] it will probably be at Covenant 14 or 15, [25:21.240 --> 25:31.240] where they are required to abide by all law. [25:31.240 --> 25:37.240] It's a serviceability covenant. [25:37.240 --> 25:42.240] So if they violated one of the consumer protection laws [25:42.240 --> 25:44.240] and the statute of limitations is run, [25:44.240 --> 25:50.240] it doesn't make any difference because they breach the contract [25:50.240 --> 25:55.240] and the breach of the contract caused voluntary rescission. [25:55.240 --> 25:57.240] So you can go back and say, [25:57.240 --> 26:01.240] you want to make all the claims on Covenant that you can. [26:01.240 --> 26:05.240] They failed to mail you all of the notices. [26:05.240 --> 26:07.240] That's a breach of the contract. [26:07.240 --> 26:11.240] They sold the note [26:11.240 --> 26:17.240] and they didn't sell the note together with the securities for a breach of contract. [26:17.240 --> 26:22.240] Now they can't come back and exercise the privilege of a claim against your property [26:22.240 --> 26:24.240] after breaching the contract. [26:24.240 --> 26:27.240] The first law is contract. [26:27.240 --> 26:31.240] Second law, uniform commotion code. [26:31.240 --> 26:34.240] Third law, statute rules and regulations. [26:34.240 --> 26:37.240] Go to the first law, which is the contract. [26:37.240 --> 26:41.240] Argu it. [26:41.240 --> 26:42.240] Okay. [26:42.240 --> 26:47.240] Go home to your wife before she breaks your neck. [26:47.240 --> 26:49.240] Is that what? [26:49.240 --> 26:53.240] Go home to your wife and get there before her birthday is over [26:53.240 --> 26:55.240] before she breaks your neck. [26:55.240 --> 26:57.240] All right. [26:57.240 --> 26:58.240] Okay. [26:58.240 --> 26:59.240] Thanks, Rob. [26:59.240 --> 27:05.240] Thank you, Rob. We'll go into Paul in Texas [27:05.240 --> 27:07.240] and then Leslie will come back to you. [27:07.240 --> 27:09.240] Hello, Paul in Texas. [27:09.240 --> 27:11.240] What do you have for us? [27:11.240 --> 27:13.240] A question or a comment? [27:13.240 --> 27:15.240] A question. [27:15.240 --> 27:18.240] Number one, I'd like to appreciate y'all's talk today. [27:18.240 --> 27:22.240] Once again, I called last week and kind of pulled for the team [27:22.240 --> 27:24.240] and then, you know, started donating. [27:24.240 --> 27:29.240] But Mr. Bagnaris, what is his website so we can consider purchasing [27:29.240 --> 27:32.240] his book that he's looking to release here? [27:32.240 --> 27:33.240] Okay, wait, wait. [27:33.240 --> 27:37.240] Hold on, Paul, can you back away from the mic a little bit [27:37.240 --> 27:39.240] and talk a little bit slower? [27:39.240 --> 27:40.240] Okay. [27:40.240 --> 27:43.240] I don't know if Michael can hear you, [27:43.240 --> 27:46.240] but you're really booming in the headset. [27:46.240 --> 27:48.240] Okay, try again. [27:48.240 --> 27:51.240] Okay, we're hoping to get some information regarding [27:51.240 --> 27:56.240] Mr. Bagnaris' website so we can purchase his book. [27:56.240 --> 28:04.240] The website is constitutionpreservation.org. [28:04.240 --> 28:06.240] The book is not in print right now. [28:06.240 --> 28:11.240] I'm not, you know, advertising heavily for it yet, [28:11.240 --> 28:15.240] but it should be available in print by Thanksgiving. [28:15.240 --> 28:19.240] Awesome, awesome. [28:19.240 --> 28:23.240] One of the things there, Randy, was wondering if it's possible. [28:23.240 --> 28:27.240] I don't know if you heard or not, but on the MERS conversation [28:27.240 --> 28:31.240] you were just talking about right now, there was law that just passed [28:31.240 --> 28:34.240] on the MERS website. [28:34.240 --> 28:38.240] The Federal Court of Texas rules, MERS mortgage, assignment, [28:38.240 --> 28:43.240] or valid was posted on the 28th of September. [28:43.240 --> 28:46.240] And I thought that you may want to look into that [28:46.240 --> 28:51.240] because more information, there's law that just passed. [28:51.240 --> 28:56.240] Okay, have you read the law? [28:56.240 --> 29:01.240] Yes, it's posted on their website. [29:01.240 --> 29:03.240] Where was the law passed? [29:03.240 --> 29:05.240] Was it a federal statute? [29:05.240 --> 29:08.240] It's a federal court. [29:08.240 --> 29:15.240] The Texas Rules, MERS mortgage, assignment, and valid. [29:15.240 --> 29:17.240] Okay, okay. [29:17.240 --> 29:19.240] You're kind of breaking up. [29:19.240 --> 29:21.240] I'm having a little trouble understanding you, [29:21.240 --> 29:26.240] but there's a lot of issues here concerning MERS. [29:26.240 --> 29:29.240] So we'll try to kind of address a little of those [29:29.240 --> 29:31.240] when we come back to try to make sense of this. [29:31.240 --> 29:34.240] This is Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Eddie Craig. [29:34.240 --> 29:40.240] We move our radio, our call in number, 512-646-1984. [29:40.240 --> 29:42.240] Give us a call, get in line. [29:42.240 --> 29:47.240] It's getting later in the show and it generally fills up at the end. [29:47.240 --> 29:50.240] We'll be right back on the other side. [30:00.240 --> 30:03.240] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [30:03.240 --> 30:05.240] that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [30:05.240 --> 30:07.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [30:07.240 --> 30:11.240] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded [30:11.240 --> 30:13.240] that there was a controlled demolition. [30:13.240 --> 30:16.240] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:16.240 --> 30:18.240] 1,000 of my fellow force responders have died. [30:18.240 --> 30:20.240] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:20.240 --> 30:21.240] I'm a structural engineer. [30:21.240 --> 30:22.240] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:22.240 --> 30:23.240] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:23.240 --> 30:25.240] I'm a father who lost his son. [30:25.240 --> 30:27.240] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [30:27.240 --> 30:52.240] Let's go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [30:58.240 --> 31:03.240] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, [31:03.240 --> 31:06.240] but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy, [31:06.240 --> 31:09.240] and neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [31:09.240 --> 31:12.240] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [31:12.240 --> 31:13.240] Brave New Books? [31:13.240 --> 31:14.240] Yes. [31:14.240 --> 31:17.240] Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for [31:17.240 --> 31:20.240] by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, and G. Ebert Griffin. [31:20.240 --> 31:24.240] They even stock hander food, Burkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [31:24.240 --> 31:27.240] There's no way a place like that exists. [31:27.240 --> 31:28.240] Go check it out for yourself. [31:28.240 --> 31:32.240] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street just south of UT. [31:32.240 --> 31:36.240] Oh, by UT, there's never anywhere to park down there. [31:36.240 --> 31:39.240] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers [31:39.240 --> 31:43.240] at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [31:43.240 --> 31:47.240] It does exist, but when are they open? [31:47.240 --> 31:52.240] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [31:52.240 --> 31:56.240] So give them a call at 512-480-2503 [31:56.240 --> 32:22.240] or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [32:22.240 --> 32:27.240] Yeah, I won't. [32:27.240 --> 32:32.240] Oh, I won't. [32:32.240 --> 32:40.240] I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes. [32:40.240 --> 32:47.240] They must refuse your noose or soak up your life. [32:47.240 --> 32:55.240] Seems you like a space, but please take some words to the wise. [32:55.240 --> 33:21.240] Stop trying to pull the wool over my eyes. [33:21.240 --> 33:32.240] Ooh. [33:32.240 --> 33:40.240] That orange is an orange and will never be an apple. [33:40.240 --> 33:42.240] This image is enough. [33:42.240 --> 33:47.240] It is no tough concept to grapple. [33:47.240 --> 33:50.240] It's just too much to fair. [33:50.240 --> 33:55.240] I won't wear your evil shackles. [33:55.240 --> 34:07.240] A bluebird is a bluebird and will never be a crackle. [34:07.240 --> 34:17.240] Yeah. [34:17.240 --> 34:24.240] Please stop this. [34:24.240 --> 34:26.240] Okay, we're back. [34:26.240 --> 34:31.240] Randy Kelkin, David Stevens, Andy Craig, move our radio. [34:31.240 --> 34:37.240] And we're talking to Paul in Texas. [34:37.240 --> 34:40.240] Okay, Paul. [34:40.240 --> 34:54.240] Okay, I'll go look at it. [34:54.240 --> 34:59.240] We did a lot of stuff coming down this way. [34:59.240 --> 35:03.240] And then we get people, they start jumping up and down, [35:03.240 --> 35:05.240] especially in the Patriot community. [35:05.240 --> 35:08.240] And then when I go look at it, it's not his big deal. [35:08.240 --> 35:14.240] I have reached a point in the research when it comes to MERS. [35:14.240 --> 35:23.240] MERS is not a big deal because we'll attack MERS on the contract. [35:23.240 --> 35:28.240] Once it's passed the contract, if you accept what's in the contract, [35:28.240 --> 35:35.240] then MERS has a standing because the lender granted them standing [35:35.240 --> 35:39.240] and appointed them as an agent for the lender. [35:39.240 --> 35:43.240] And so they can act as an agent. [35:43.240 --> 35:51.240] I have the impression that early on the banks waved MERS at us like a red flag [35:51.240 --> 35:56.240] and said, oh, look at MERS, look how vulnerable MERS is. [35:56.240 --> 36:03.240] And they sent us exactly to the briar patch they wanted us in. [36:03.240 --> 36:11.240] So I'm not too concerned about MERS as a company or what they're doing. [36:11.240 --> 36:17.240] I'm more concerned about how MERS gets standing in the case. [36:17.240 --> 36:22.240] We need to go back and look at that mortgage or deed of trust. [36:22.240 --> 36:28.240] Whoever constructed that thing had no clue. [36:28.240 --> 36:32.240] The way they constructed it, [36:32.240 --> 36:37.240] they seemed to have no understanding of contract law. [36:37.240 --> 36:41.240] That's where their biggest weakness appears to be. [36:41.240 --> 36:50.240] That's something you can take to a court and say, basic contract law 101. [36:50.240 --> 36:54.240] The lender didn't sign the contract. [36:54.240 --> 37:01.240] If the court says the lender doesn't have to sign the contract, [37:01.240 --> 37:05.240] they change everything. [37:05.240 --> 37:08.240] They change the world as they know it. [37:08.240 --> 37:15.240] Now you and I could enter into a contract and I can put in concessions for you [37:15.240 --> 37:20.240] and you're bound by it. [37:20.240 --> 37:28.240] You see, for 200 years, the lender wrote the note [37:28.240 --> 37:38.240] and took a promise to pay in the form of the note and asked for a claim against the property. [37:38.240 --> 37:46.240] So the borrower granted the claim against the property with conditions. [37:46.240 --> 37:51.240] The lender granted nothing so the lender didn't have to sign it. [37:51.240 --> 38:00.240] They put MERS in the mix and to where the lender granted MERS, [38:00.240 --> 38:10.240] the lender's position is beneficiary and the lender appointed MERS as an agent. [38:10.240 --> 38:13.240] Well, borrower can't do that. [38:13.240 --> 38:19.240] So in order for the contract to be valid, the lender had to sign it. [38:19.240 --> 38:28.240] The courts say, oh no, somebody could loan me money and I can write a document that says, [38:28.240 --> 38:33.240] oh yeah, I appreciate that, but I don't want you to be paid back. [38:33.240 --> 38:37.240] I want all the payments to go to this other person over here. [38:37.240 --> 38:41.240] And I don't like your agent that you've got representing you. [38:41.240 --> 38:46.240] I want you to have this agent over here. [38:46.240 --> 38:53.240] If you have a problem, they will undermine 200 years of contract law. [38:53.240 --> 38:58.240] Judges do not like to change the world they live in. [38:58.240 --> 39:06.240] And the banks seem to have successfully sent everybody chasing down the rabbit hole. [39:06.240 --> 39:10.240] Whether MERS has authority to do what it's doing or not, [39:10.240 --> 39:14.240] that is a really complex issue if you look at some of these court cases. [39:14.240 --> 39:23.240] So if they say MERS can be a mortgagee, I don't care if they can be a mortgagee or not. [39:23.240 --> 39:25.240] It can be. [39:25.240 --> 39:27.240] I totally agree with you. [39:27.240 --> 39:28.240] I apologize. [39:28.240 --> 39:31.240] That's like a fake path. [39:31.240 --> 39:35.240] That's kind of like for Texas to go ahead and say, well, you know what? [39:35.240 --> 39:37.240] We're going to go out and allow that. [39:37.240 --> 39:39.240] That's just a fake path. [39:39.240 --> 39:40.240] They still have the ball. [39:40.240 --> 39:47.240] And I'm glad you slapped me out of it and you're right on. [39:47.240 --> 39:53.240] I was right first time and you got to be here to see it. [39:53.240 --> 39:56.240] Thank you so much. [39:56.240 --> 39:57.240] Thank you. [39:57.240 --> 40:04.240] And now we're going to go back to Leslie in Pennsylvania and thank you for hanging on Leslie. [40:04.240 --> 40:05.240] You're welcome. [40:05.240 --> 40:06.240] Okay. [40:06.240 --> 40:10.240] It's interesting that you said that about MERS because do you know what we did? [40:10.240 --> 40:16.240] We filed in the court, not in the court, in the county record a revocation on mortgage. [40:16.240 --> 40:18.240] And do you know why we said we revoked it? [40:18.240 --> 40:24.240] Because it was not counter signed by the mortgagee or the mortgagee. [40:24.240 --> 40:25.240] Good. [40:25.240 --> 40:26.240] By those. [40:26.240 --> 40:27.240] Okay. [40:27.240 --> 40:28.240] Now. [40:28.240 --> 40:29.240] Putting it all about. [40:29.240 --> 40:36.240] It's iffy as to whether you can rescind the mortgage. [40:36.240 --> 40:44.240] What may be more appropriate is you file an action maintaining that the lender rescinded [40:44.240 --> 40:51.240] the mortgage because the lender breached the covenant. [40:51.240 --> 40:56.240] If you could show a breach of covenant of one of the covenants, then you could say that [40:56.240 --> 41:08.240] the lender voluntarily sold the note but did not sell it together with the security instrument. [41:08.240 --> 41:17.240] Therefore, the lender of its own volition voluntarily breached the covenant of the privilege granted [41:17.240 --> 41:21.240] under the mortgage or deed of trust. [41:21.240 --> 41:31.240] And thereby repudiated the contract which constitutes voluntary rescission. [41:31.240 --> 41:34.240] That's a contract law. [41:34.240 --> 41:35.240] Right. [41:35.240 --> 41:39.240] If you reach the contract, you repudiate the contracts. [41:39.240 --> 41:48.240] And all this says is they don't get to exercise the privilege of a confessed claim against [41:48.240 --> 41:49.240] our property. [41:49.240 --> 41:53.240] That's in a mortgage state. [41:53.240 --> 42:01.240] In a deed of trust state, they don't get the privilege of exercising a confessed claim [42:01.240 --> 42:06.240] against the property and a confessed judgment against the property. [42:06.240 --> 42:10.240] Now they have to come back and sue the lender. [42:10.240 --> 42:12.240] Get a claim against the lender. [42:12.240 --> 42:19.240] Then petition for a judgment against the property and then petition for permission to liquidate the property [42:19.240 --> 42:21.240] to satisfy the judgment. [42:21.240 --> 42:27.240] Just like they would in any normal civil action for violation of a contract. [42:27.240 --> 42:28.240] Right. [42:28.240 --> 42:32.240] All it does is deny the privilege. [42:32.240 --> 42:33.240] Right. [42:33.240 --> 42:34.240] Michael, you did it. [42:34.240 --> 42:35.240] We're going to be too quiet. [42:35.240 --> 42:36.240] Oh, no. [42:36.240 --> 42:38.240] We're going to be too quiet. [42:38.240 --> 42:39.240] Go ahead. [42:39.240 --> 42:41.240] Go ahead. [42:41.240 --> 42:42.240] Okay. [42:42.240 --> 42:45.240] We have this new thing that's been coming out. [42:45.240 --> 42:47.240] And I found it on the Internet. [42:47.240 --> 42:54.240] It's under nsea.us. [42:54.240 --> 43:00.240] And what they're doing is they have a package of documents that you fill out and send back [43:00.240 --> 43:01.240] to them. [43:01.240 --> 43:07.240] And what it does is it gives them power of attorney to obtain funds on your behalf for [43:07.240 --> 43:15.240] the Clean Water Act, but it puts a lien against your property for violations of the Clean [43:15.240 --> 43:29.240] Water Act in amounts of $11,324 per day since A, the house was built, or B, since July 1, [43:29.240 --> 43:31.240] 1977. [43:31.240 --> 43:33.240] Whoa. [43:33.240 --> 43:38.240] Now, that's scary business. [43:38.240 --> 43:42.240] It sounds like they're asking you to give your property to the government. [43:42.240 --> 43:43.240] Hang on. [43:43.240 --> 43:44.240] We're about to go to break this. [43:44.240 --> 43:45.240] This is Randy Kelton. [43:45.240 --> 43:46.240] Dennis Stevens. [43:46.240 --> 43:47.240] Eddie Craig. [43:47.240 --> 43:48.240] We live on radio. [43:48.240 --> 43:49.240] Our call in number 5126461984. [43:49.240 --> 43:50.240] Give us a call. [43:50.240 --> 43:51.240] We'll be right back. [43:51.240 --> 44:04.240] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:04.240 --> 44:07.240] Win your case without an attorney with jurisdictionary. [44:07.240 --> 44:13.240] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [44:13.240 --> 44:14.240] step-by-step. [44:14.240 --> 44:18.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.240 --> 44:22.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.240 --> 44:28.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [44:28.240 --> 44:34.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [44:34.240 --> 44:39.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [44:39.240 --> 44:43.240] principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.240 --> 44:49.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [44:49.240 --> 44:52.240] prosa tactics, and much more. [44:52.240 --> 44:56.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [44:56.240 --> 45:01.240] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:01.240 --> 45:03.240] The Oklahoma City Bombing. [45:03.240 --> 45:05.240] Top 10 reasons to question the official story. [45:05.240 --> 45:09.240] Reason number one, John Doe number two, and other accomplices. [45:09.240 --> 45:13.240] On the day of the bombing, nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the [45:13.240 --> 45:17.240] Ryder Truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. [45:17.240 --> 45:22.240] The FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the Ryder Truck [45:22.240 --> 45:25.240] Bomb to the Murrah Building and detonated it. [45:25.240 --> 45:29.240] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, [45:29.240 --> 45:33.240] Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, testified that [45:33.240 --> 45:38.240] she saw McVeigh with another man, the fateful John Doe number two, exiting the Ryder Truck. [45:38.240 --> 45:42.240] While at least 15 other witnesses claim to have seen McVeigh with other perpetrators [45:42.240 --> 45:48.240] the day of the bombing, no less than 226 witnesses placed him with other men in the [45:48.240 --> 45:53.240] days before the bombing, including when he rented the Ryder Truck, and in some cases, [45:53.240 --> 45:56.240] have positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:56.240 --> 46:09.240] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:26.240 --> 46:36.240] Thank you for watching. [46:56.240 --> 47:09.240] Okay, we are back. [47:09.240 --> 47:14.240] We're here with Calvin Davis Stevens, Eddie Craig, the rule of law radio, and we're talking [47:14.240 --> 47:20.240] to Leslie in Pennsylvania, and we're getting down toward the end of the show. [47:20.240 --> 47:27.240] We would like to, just one more time, plug the fundraiser. [47:27.240 --> 47:32.240] Sure would like to see us get caught up here in the next week or two. [47:32.240 --> 47:41.240] So if you have an extra 10 bucks, 20 bucks, we would very much like to see it. [47:41.240 --> 47:45.240] And I was seeing some really cool soap. [47:45.240 --> 47:48.240] I think you'll find the soap well worth it. [47:48.240 --> 47:53.240] Let's go back to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [47:53.240 --> 47:55.240] Okay, Leslie. [47:55.240 --> 48:05.240] Okay, before we start, this sounds like these guys are trying to generate a really, really [48:05.240 --> 48:10.240] large claim by a government agency against your property. [48:10.240 --> 48:16.240] How do they intend to liquidate that claim without liquidating your property? [48:16.240 --> 48:20.240] Okay, this isn't a government agency, number one. [48:20.240 --> 48:26.240] They're using federal laws, but they're a clean water activist group. [48:26.240 --> 48:30.240] And they have, what do you call it? [48:30.240 --> 48:34.240] He's an inventor, the man that's in charge of all this. [48:34.240 --> 48:40.240] He's an inventor, and he invented a way to get the clean water out into the septic systems [48:40.240 --> 48:45.240] itself so that it would clean the water, you know, with his invention. [48:45.240 --> 48:51.240] Anyway, the thing is, is that he's, you're giving him power of attorney to get the bank [48:51.240 --> 48:56.240] against him, you know, because if they ever want to change the title, they're going to [48:56.240 --> 49:01.240] have to go to them to lift the lien. [49:01.240 --> 49:09.240] Okay, is there, okay, hold on, is there, okay, hold on a second. [49:09.240 --> 49:18.240] Is there law that would cause the lien that's created here to stand in front of the bank's lien? [49:18.240 --> 49:21.240] Yes. [49:21.240 --> 49:32.240] Okay, the problem, the concern I have is that if it's not a government agency creating the lien, who is? [49:32.240 --> 49:36.240] Okay, it's a clean water activist group. [49:36.240 --> 49:46.240] And so a clean water activist group is able to create a lien that stands before a bank's lien? [49:46.240 --> 49:49.240] Mm-hmm, because it doesn't comply. [49:49.240 --> 49:55.240] It makes, actually what it is, is every house that has a toilet, every house that has a toilet [49:55.240 --> 50:01.240] creates toxic waste, and it makes your house so that it can't be transferred. [50:01.240 --> 50:07.240] The title can't be transferred because of the toxic waste facility. [50:07.240 --> 50:10.240] And what we do... [50:10.240 --> 50:14.240] Okay, give me the... [50:14.240 --> 50:15.240] N-S-E-A. [50:15.240 --> 50:17.240] Give me the... [50:17.240 --> 50:19.240] Okay, wait a minute, stop, stop, stop. [50:19.240 --> 50:25.240] Give me the webpage for that, the link to that again, will you? [50:25.240 --> 50:30.240] N-S-E-A dot Q-S. [50:30.240 --> 50:35.240] N-S-E-A dot U-S, okay. [50:35.240 --> 50:38.240] Mm-hmm. [50:38.240 --> 50:44.240] National Standards Enforcement Agency. [50:44.240 --> 50:47.240] Okay, it's a dot U-S. [50:47.240 --> 50:49.240] Okay, I got no hit. [50:49.240 --> 50:54.240] Eam, Michael, Sarah, Echo, Alpha. [50:54.240 --> 50:57.240] No, Anne is in Nancy. [50:57.240 --> 51:03.240] Sam, National Standards Enforcement Agency. [51:03.240 --> 51:08.240] Oh, okay, National Standards, okay. [51:08.240 --> 51:19.240] So, could you explain that again, how they create this without getting a lien against your property that you can't pay off? [51:19.240 --> 51:21.240] Okay. [51:21.240 --> 51:29.240] And what they want to do is get this lien on there so the banks cannot transfer the lien without paying it off. [51:29.240 --> 51:35.240] And then what they do is they have power of attorney to collect on your... [51:35.240 --> 51:37.240] Oh, before I go any further, before I forget. [51:37.240 --> 51:39.240] You are the victim. [51:39.240 --> 51:42.240] You are not the perpetrator. [51:42.240 --> 51:51.240] You are the government that allowed the septic system to be put in that did not comply with the Clean Water Act or the Co-Princess. [51:51.240 --> 51:54.240] And they're the ones that are being sued. [51:54.240 --> 51:55.240] Oh, wait a minute. [51:55.240 --> 51:57.240] Hold on. [51:57.240 --> 51:59.240] I'm looking through... [51:59.240 --> 52:06.240] I'm looking through a website and this is scary business. [52:06.240 --> 52:07.240] Yeah. [52:07.240 --> 52:18.240] In the face of their website, they have a SEAL Article III Court of Record. [52:18.240 --> 52:26.240] If these guys are not a government agency, they are treading incredibly deep water. [52:26.240 --> 52:27.240] Yeah. [52:27.240 --> 52:32.240] That's one of the things that I was talking about. [52:32.240 --> 52:40.240] That SEAL on there can get them put in a federal prison if they're not, if they're actually not a government agency. [52:40.240 --> 52:45.240] Now, they're coming up on.us. [52:45.240 --> 52:48.240] Now, anybody can get it at.us. [52:48.240 --> 52:50.240] I have one that's.us. [52:50.240 --> 52:55.240] It's called shysterproof.us. [52:55.240 --> 53:00.240] It was great fun, however. [53:00.240 --> 53:04.240] It did not pretend to be a government site. [53:04.240 --> 53:19.240] This thing's got a SEAL of the Article III Court in D.C. on it and claiming to be National Standards Enforcement Agency. [53:19.240 --> 53:22.240] Man, this is scary. [53:22.240 --> 53:29.240] And until I did a lot of vetting out, I wouldn't touch this thing with a 10-foot pole. [53:29.240 --> 53:36.240] You know, when things don't, it doesn't sound right. [53:36.240 --> 53:46.240] They're creating a lien against your property, a rather large lien, and they have a power of attorney to do it. [53:46.240 --> 53:52.240] I just clicked on their lien to attorney package and it come up blank. [53:52.240 --> 53:58.240] Now, go to the America's Remedy Package and then there's foreclosure. [53:58.240 --> 54:00.240] There's another separate link. [54:00.240 --> 54:03.240] This is from America's Remedy. [54:03.240 --> 54:10.240] And then they have an America attorney package next to it and that didn't come up blank. [54:10.240 --> 54:11.240] Yeah. [54:11.240 --> 54:16.240] Now, the foreclosure remedy has got all the information in there. [54:16.240 --> 54:19.240] The site is scaring me. [54:19.240 --> 54:23.240] I'll know more about it at our next show. [54:23.240 --> 54:25.240] I'll look into it. [54:25.240 --> 54:40.240] The idea of creating a lien, I don't see how a non-governmental agency would be able to create such a lien. [54:40.240 --> 54:41.240] Have a document here. [54:41.240 --> 54:51.240] Notice a lien recording information in S-E-A association. [54:51.240 --> 54:58.240] You're giving some private party a lien against your property. [54:58.240 --> 55:03.240] Right. [55:03.240 --> 55:04.240] Okay. [55:04.240 --> 55:05.240] I'll look at it off the air. [55:05.240 --> 55:11.240] This is not something I can address here because I haven't been able to look at all of it. [55:11.240 --> 55:22.240] Just looking at the website, it certainly doesn't look like any kind of government site, [55:22.240 --> 55:28.240] but that seal of Article III Court of Record, that's scaring business. [55:28.240 --> 55:30.240] I'm going to talk to them about it. [55:30.240 --> 55:33.240] It seems different here, too. [55:33.240 --> 55:34.240] Yeah. [55:34.240 --> 55:37.240] If the feds see that, they're going to call them. [55:37.240 --> 55:40.240] They better be a government agency. [55:40.240 --> 55:43.240] They're going to end up in a federal penitentiary. [55:43.240 --> 55:47.240] But there is one other thing I didn't want to talk about with you. [55:47.240 --> 55:54.240] I don't know if you weren't on our calls, so you might not have heard some of the stuff that's been going on. [55:54.240 --> 56:03.240] In your cases, have you requested the sequential lecture from all of the notaries? [56:03.240 --> 56:04.240] No. [56:04.240 --> 56:11.240] The one thing that that was my next step, because I'm going through the things for discovery and things that I want, [56:11.240 --> 56:13.240] and that's on the list there. [56:13.240 --> 56:14.240] Okay. [56:14.240 --> 56:18.240] Do not do that in discovery. [56:18.240 --> 56:19.240] No. [56:19.240 --> 56:21.240] Do that separate. [56:21.240 --> 56:29.240] Actually, since you're already in court with them, you might have somebody else request the ledger. [56:29.240 --> 56:34.240] The ledgers of these notaries are open records. [56:34.240 --> 56:40.240] The notaries are a public official, and the records they create are open records. [56:40.240 --> 56:43.240] So you ask court under Open Records Act. [56:43.240 --> 56:50.240] If you're in court with them, it sometimes interferes with your ability to use the Open Records Act. [56:50.240 --> 56:55.240] So instead of using the Open Records Act, you use it, and you get somebody else to do it. [56:55.240 --> 57:00.240] Under different names, so they don't know what record you're looking for. [57:00.240 --> 57:04.240] Ask for a day before to day after. [57:04.240 --> 57:07.240] So three days. [57:07.240 --> 57:11.240] The first thing to do is check with the Secretary of State. [57:11.240 --> 57:18.240] We're finding a lot of them that the Secretary of State doesn't know anything about the notary. [57:18.240 --> 57:26.240] And then if they do know about the notary, then a lot of times they don't have a working address on the notary. [57:26.240 --> 57:29.240] And that's enough to revoke their license. [57:29.240 --> 57:40.240] And then if they do, if they don't produce the ledger, then the Secretary of State's likely to come after them. [57:40.240 --> 57:42.240] They did in Colorado. [57:42.240 --> 57:50.240] And the Secretary of State, one of the people filed a complaint with the Secretary of State. [57:50.240 --> 57:56.240] And three days later, a loan broker called her, asked her if she could work this out. [57:56.240 --> 58:05.240] And then a week later, the notary disappeared, pulled her website down, moved it out of her house and was gone. [58:05.240 --> 58:08.240] This turns out to be a big deal. [58:08.240 --> 58:12.240] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to our top of the hour break. [58:12.240 --> 58:16.240] We're about to go into our last hour of the show. [58:16.240 --> 58:20.240] So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [58:20.240 --> 58:26.240] Call in number is 512-646-1984. [58:26.240 --> 58:29.240] We've got one more hour. It generally builds up toward the end. [58:29.240 --> 58:34.240] So get in line quickly if you have a question or comment. [58:34.240 --> 58:39.240] We'll be right back on the other side. [59:05.240 --> 59:13.240] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.240 --> 59:18.240] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.240 --> 59:27.240] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.240 --> 59:40.240] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.240 --> 59:44.240] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.240 --> 59:49.240] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.240 --> 59:59.240] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:19.240 --> 01:00:23.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:23.240 --> 01:00:28.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:28.240 --> 01:00:33.240] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:33.240 --> 01:00:36.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:00:36.240 --> 01:00:43.240] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.240 --> 01:00:46.240] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:46.240 --> 01:00:53.240] Fingerprints have always been associated with crime scenes, but now, thanks to a military contractor called ID Air, [01:00:53.240 --> 01:00:59.240] we may all soon surrender our prints to big brother-like scanners everywhere without even knowing it's happening. [01:00:59.240 --> 01:01:06.240] ID Air's devices capture images of fingerprints from 20 feet away with enough detail to match the prints and databases. [01:01:06.240 --> 01:01:13.240] At the moment, they're scanning soldiers at high security bases, but they envision a day when these long-range snoops will be everywhere, [01:01:13.240 --> 01:01:17.240] in stores, office buildings, on public streets, and in the hands of police. [01:01:17.240 --> 01:01:22.240] Imagine, the feds, marketers, and stalkers all grabbing your prints as you stroll down the street. [01:01:22.240 --> 01:01:25.240] Yikes, I'm buying some gloves. [01:01:25.240 --> 01:01:31.240] This is Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:01:31.240 --> 01:01:39.240] Google and Apple are at it again, this time with spy claims that can photograph objects as small as iPhones. [01:01:39.240 --> 01:01:46.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and if the thought of an airborne camera leering at your backyard creeps you out, stay tuned. [01:02:09.240 --> 01:02:20.240] The next time you go sunbathing in your backyard, check the sky first. [01:02:20.240 --> 01:02:26.240] Google or Apple may have spy planes with cameras buzzing overhead, and they could be filming you. [01:02:26.240 --> 01:02:32.240] Google's airborne cameras capture images so detailed they can almost count the hairs on your head. [01:02:32.240 --> 01:02:38.240] And Apple has military-grade cameras so powerful they can spy into your home through skylights and windows. [01:02:38.240 --> 01:02:45.240] Google says it needs all this power to produce new 3D maps with more detail than Google Earth's satellite images. [01:02:45.240 --> 01:02:47.240] But who really needs this? [01:02:47.240 --> 01:02:52.240] I say we need to shut down Google's big eyes before there's no place left to hide from the watchers. [01:02:52.240 --> 01:03:02.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:03:02.240 --> 01:03:27.240] Music [01:03:27.240 --> 01:03:29.240] Okay, we are back. [01:03:29.240 --> 01:03:39.240] I'm Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevenson, Tita Craig, new vlog radio, and we're talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [01:03:39.240 --> 01:03:44.240] Leslie, let me bring you up. [01:03:44.240 --> 01:03:51.240] On the break, I was looking at that site, and the more I look at it, the more concerned I am with it. [01:03:51.240 --> 01:04:00.240] They claim to be enforcing the Clean Water Act, 1972. [01:04:00.240 --> 01:04:11.240] What they don't do is indicate any authority to enforce the Clean Water Act of the 1972. [01:04:11.240 --> 01:04:19.240] I suspect these guys, I don't know what they're doing, but I suspect before long, [01:04:19.240 --> 01:04:29.240] you're going to have some news stories about these guys that the offense are going to be coming after them. [01:04:29.240 --> 01:04:40.240] And in reading their complaint, their complaint doesn't read like, this is a notice of violation, [01:04:40.240 --> 01:04:47.240] steps and procedures to stop or recover from foreclosures and gain remedy. [01:04:47.240 --> 01:04:53.240] This sounds like a kind of an argument a pro se would make. [01:04:53.240 --> 01:04:57.240] It doesn't read like a legal argument. [01:04:57.240 --> 01:05:05.240] It certainly doesn't read like a legal notice of violation. [01:05:05.240 --> 01:05:13.240] It reads like they're trying to convince you that of what this position is. [01:05:13.240 --> 01:05:21.240] And they say pursuant to 33 U.S.C. 1311A, it has been unlawful for any person to discharge pollutants [01:05:21.240 --> 01:05:26.240] since adoption of the Clean Water Act on October 18, 1972. [01:05:26.240 --> 01:05:37.240] Okay, 33 U.S. Code, who has jurisdiction to enforce the Clean Water Act? [01:05:37.240 --> 01:05:43.240] Somehow I bet it's not these people. [01:05:43.240 --> 01:05:49.240] So I will look this over for the next show. I'll know a lot more about it. [01:05:49.240 --> 01:06:01.240] Any time somebody asks you to sign your property over to them or give them power of attorney concerning your property, [01:06:01.240 --> 01:06:05.240] I would suggest you run like a rabbit. [01:06:05.240 --> 01:06:13.240] Now, we are working the program where we do ask people to write us a warranty deed. [01:06:13.240 --> 01:06:20.240] But we're only asking people to do that once they've been foreclosed on, if they're out of their property. [01:06:20.240 --> 01:06:26.240] And it's generally been six months a year since they were foreclosed on, [01:06:26.240 --> 01:06:30.240] and they don't feel like they have any claim in the property. [01:06:30.240 --> 01:06:35.240] So maybe, maybe you don't, but maybe you do. [01:06:35.240 --> 01:06:38.240] Because they tell us, well, I don't know any anymore. [01:06:38.240 --> 01:06:49.240] I said, well, maybe write me a warranty deed and I'll go in and adjudicate the issues we found in the foreclosure [01:06:49.240 --> 01:06:53.240] and we'll split whatever we take. [01:06:53.240 --> 01:07:02.240] So if you get a adjudication, then you get money back that you otherwise wouldn't get. [01:07:02.240 --> 01:07:12.240] But if somebody's in their property and trying to save it, you know, I have a lot of people that were trying to help save their property. [01:07:12.240 --> 01:07:22.240] I've had people offer to write me a warranty deed or a claim on their property. [01:07:22.240 --> 01:07:28.240] I'll tell them absolutely not, not going there. [01:07:28.240 --> 01:07:32.240] That is very, very deep water. [01:07:32.240 --> 01:07:39.240] That'll get these regulatory guys after you really, really fast because we have shysters out there [01:07:39.240 --> 01:07:45.240] that are convincing people to turn their property over to these guys and they will help you out. [01:07:45.240 --> 01:07:47.240] Yeah, they'll help you out. [01:07:47.240 --> 01:07:50.240] They'll help you out of your properties, what they'll do. [01:07:50.240 --> 01:07:58.240] So for me, that was the first red flag, but they wanted a power of attorney. [01:07:58.240 --> 01:08:11.240] Go over all the paperwork because they're also saying something about the suspect he trusts and that they would access on behalf of that one man to clear that up. [01:08:11.240 --> 01:08:15.240] Okay, I'll go in and read that. [01:08:15.240 --> 01:08:17.240] I'll look it over. [01:08:17.240 --> 01:08:33.240] And I'm not, I won't go in and read it with the jaunty style. I'll read with cautious eye because it would tickle me if we found a way to stick it to them. [01:08:33.240 --> 01:08:36.240] But I will be, I'll be real careful. [01:08:36.240 --> 01:08:46.240] As far as I know, nobody's ever gotten trouble doing what I suggested that they do. [01:08:46.240 --> 01:08:53.240] And that's because I have always been extremely careful in what I suggested. [01:08:53.240 --> 01:09:00.240] So before I would suggest anything here, I'm going to look at it very, very close. [01:09:00.240 --> 01:09:02.240] And I'll do that over the weekend. [01:09:02.240 --> 01:09:07.240] And so my next week, I'll have it up. [01:09:07.240 --> 01:09:21.240] But there was another, one other thing is I kind of wanted to explain to you the process concerning the notary and the [01:09:21.240 --> 01:09:25.240] signatories on any of your documents. [01:09:25.240 --> 01:09:30.240] We've been backing up and generally that's what engineers do. [01:09:30.240 --> 01:09:33.240] They start out with something complex. [01:09:33.240 --> 01:09:46.240] Somebody will give me a project and I'll sit down and I'll design the project and whatever they need and then it won't work. [01:09:46.240 --> 01:09:48.240] That's what I expect. [01:09:48.240 --> 01:09:50.240] There's always something you miss. [01:09:50.240 --> 01:09:52.240] The first one never works, right? [01:09:52.240 --> 01:09:54.240] You don't expect it to. [01:09:54.240 --> 01:10:00.240] The first sweeper that I built, my son and I built it for his senior project. [01:10:00.240 --> 01:10:02.240] It kind of sort of worked. [01:10:02.240 --> 01:10:13.240] I ran it for 30 minutes and we've had about 40,000 in the building it and run it for 30 minutes and told the guy, okay, you can cut it up now. [01:10:13.240 --> 01:10:17.240] Because all it was for is to tell me where I'd screwed up. [01:10:17.240 --> 01:10:22.240] And then we built another one and we're ready to build a third one and that one should work. [01:10:22.240 --> 01:10:28.240] So in doing that, we back up from the complex to the more simple. [01:10:28.240 --> 01:10:33.240] There's a tiny little simple thing doing this and that's what we're doing here with the market. [01:10:33.240 --> 01:10:40.240] We started out taking on bifurcation, taking on false fees, taking on show me the note. [01:10:40.240 --> 01:10:50.240] All the standard issues that it appears as though the banks throughout in front of us to send us after. [01:10:50.240 --> 01:10:57.240] And gradually we worked around those to more simple and more less sophisticated issues. [01:10:57.240 --> 01:11:05.240] And all the ways I was looking for a way to bushwack them and finally found it. [01:11:05.240 --> 01:11:17.240] The last couple of weeks on my Wednesday night show I was talking about trying to promote the county clerks to get them to go after these guys to kind of bushwack them. [01:11:17.240 --> 01:11:22.240] We found our own bushwack and it's the Secretary of State. [01:11:22.240 --> 01:11:29.240] The Secretary of State lives in a whole different house. [01:11:29.240 --> 01:11:32.240] He doesn't care anything about the banks. [01:11:32.240 --> 01:11:41.240] He doesn't have anything to do with the courts and adjudication of these cases. [01:11:41.240 --> 01:11:46.240] He deals with interstate and international relations. [01:11:46.240 --> 01:11:56.240] So he lives the whole other house but he does oversee notaries because their notary will be sent to another state or to another country. [01:11:56.240 --> 01:12:02.240] And it is the Secretary of State who validates these notaries. [01:12:02.240 --> 01:12:10.240] So it appears as though the Secretary of State is not the least bit bashful about going after a notary. [01:12:10.240 --> 01:12:26.240] In the overall scheme of things, municipal judges and justice of the peace judges, the inferior court judges, the judicial conduct commissions tend to use them as cannon fodder [01:12:26.240 --> 01:12:34.240] to so that they could look like they're doing something and not have to go after the higher level elected judges. [01:12:34.240 --> 01:12:40.240] That's what these judges at those levels think and they're absolutely right. [01:12:40.240 --> 01:12:56.240] We look through the sanctions filed by the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct and they never ever sanction a sitting judge unless he's indicted. [01:12:56.240 --> 01:12:58.240] That's it. [01:12:58.240 --> 01:13:06.240] Notaries, they're even lower than these judges. They're only kind of sort of public officials. [01:13:06.240 --> 01:13:14.240] So it looks like Secretary of State is not the least bit bashful about hammering one of them. [01:13:14.240 --> 01:13:28.240] And if we can, and then we had someone, Francis is listening, she filed a request for the sequential ledger, didn't get it. [01:13:28.240 --> 01:13:36.240] She filed a complaint with the Attorney General three days later that the broker called her wanting to make a deal, she wouldn't make a deal. [01:13:36.240 --> 01:13:48.240] The Secretary of State noticed they were convening a license revocation hearing because they asked for the ledgers and didn't get them. [01:13:48.240 --> 01:13:56.240] She filed a suit, the process server goes out, the notaries hit the road, pulled her website down. [01:13:56.240 --> 01:14:05.240] Notaries terrified and with good cause. Each one of these is felony. [01:14:05.240 --> 01:14:13.240] It's a class A misdemeanor when they do the improper notary, but when it's filed, it becomes a felony from the government document. [01:14:13.240 --> 01:14:22.240] And this would be a felony in the Fed and in almost every state, at least everyone that I've looked at. So that is a big deal. [01:14:22.240 --> 01:14:31.240] One of the cases that I'm working with, they have a notary that's under indictment now. [01:14:31.240 --> 01:14:38.240] They're going to be under indictment. Are you saying none of them have notaries that are under indictment? [01:14:38.240 --> 01:14:44.240] No, there's one notary that is in one of the cases that I had consulted with. [01:14:44.240 --> 01:14:55.240] They sent in for the notary thing and they got back from the Secretary of State that particular notary has been under investigation and is under indictment now. [01:14:55.240 --> 01:15:05.240] This is what I found when we started in here. We're not the first one to go here. [01:15:05.240 --> 01:15:13.240] A friend of mine went to a bank in Austin to do business with 30 years and to get a notary. [01:15:13.240 --> 01:15:25.240] And the notary made him fill out every line, put his thumbprint on the ledger, and he said, what's going on? He had to swear it on his oath. [01:15:25.240 --> 01:15:31.240] He said, what's going on here? I've been coming here 30 years. You never did all this. Oh, no, we got new rules down. [01:15:31.240 --> 01:15:41.240] We got to fill out every single thing on this ledger. That tells me somebody's been hammered big time. [01:15:41.240 --> 01:15:50.240] The problem, and we know how they've been doing this, nobody's been paying attention to it. [01:15:50.240 --> 01:15:59.240] The judge is going to understand exactly what we're talking about because when he was a lawyer, he did it. [01:15:59.240 --> 01:16:04.240] He just had to notice, sign a whole stack of documents, and he pulled them off the shelf as he needed them. [01:16:04.240 --> 01:16:15.240] The lawyer gets a notary, he knows his bogus. He's not going to complain about it because the other lawyer's got one of his that he knows his bogus. [01:16:15.240 --> 01:16:20.240] So nobody writes about it and it kind of becomes just the way to do business. [01:16:20.240 --> 01:16:32.240] Now they run into the process from hell. The process from hell who haven't been doing that nonsense and don't have that problem and the sky's falling in [01:16:32.240 --> 01:16:38.240] and it falls in from the secretary of state that has nothing to do with the banks. [01:16:38.240 --> 01:16:42.240] They don't even know it's coming until it's too late. That's the bushwhack part I like. [01:16:42.240 --> 01:16:48.240] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, we'll leave the low radio. Hang on, Leslie. [01:16:48.240 --> 01:16:51.240] We'll be right back on the other side. 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[01:19:25.240 --> 01:19:33.240] If I can't get everything I want, yeah, I'll get a ranger. [01:19:33.240 --> 01:19:44.240] If I can't get everything I need, yeah, I'll never get a ranger. [01:19:44.240 --> 01:19:55.240] If I can't get everything I need, yeah, I'll never get a ranger. [01:19:55.240 --> 01:20:06.240] If I can't get everything I need, yeah, I'll never get a ranger. [01:20:06.240 --> 01:20:17.240] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:20:17.240 --> 01:20:26.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Calton, Debbie Steven, Jeddy Craig, who's on radio and talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [01:20:26.240 --> 01:20:35.240] And the point of this is what was so good about it is, like in Francis's case, [01:20:35.240 --> 01:20:40.240] it was the Secretary of State who went after the notary. [01:20:40.240 --> 01:20:48.240] And then Francis had almost exhausted her remedies with the courts and bankruptcies and such. [01:20:48.240 --> 01:20:52.240] And she was expecting to get tossed last Tuesday. [01:20:52.240 --> 01:21:03.240] And she went into the court and showed the eviction court the letters from the Secretary of State. [01:21:03.240 --> 01:21:09.240] And the court looked at it and said, holy crap. [01:21:09.240 --> 01:21:17.240] You need to file this in with your wrongful foreclosure suit. I can't adjudicate this. [01:21:17.240 --> 01:21:27.240] When they saw the Secretary of State's name on there, the judge did not want to touch that with a 10 foot pole. [01:21:27.240 --> 01:21:37.240] And I have no doubt that the lawyer standing there has had no clue this was this train wreck was coming at him. [01:21:37.240 --> 01:21:47.240] And he's there totally bushwhacked. I do so like bushwhacked. [01:21:47.240 --> 01:21:50.240] So did she get to stay in her house at all? [01:21:50.240 --> 01:22:00.240] Yes, she's still in the house. And now they're going through the wrongful foreclosure process. And if the Secretary of State evokes this license, [01:22:00.240 --> 01:22:07.240] then the document that is based on that notary is history. [01:22:07.240 --> 01:22:11.240] Good. [01:22:11.240 --> 01:22:16.240] So it kind of comes to a matter of the blue. They can't see it coming. [01:22:16.240 --> 01:22:26.240] They don't have a chance to. Now what the lawyer is looking at, whoever filed this document is looking to felony charges. [01:22:26.240 --> 01:22:27.240] Right. [01:22:27.240 --> 01:22:32.240] And it's dead bang. I mean, you already got that established that the... [01:22:32.240 --> 01:22:34.240] You got a question for you. [01:22:34.240 --> 01:22:35.240] Okay. [01:22:35.240 --> 01:22:37.240] You got a question for you. [01:22:37.240 --> 01:22:44.240] In my quiet title, the original lender was screaming that they had no current interest since 2007. [01:22:44.240 --> 01:22:52.240] The day after the court hearing where she was hollering that, even with the judge, we have no interest. [01:22:52.240 --> 01:22:58.240] The next day they assigned the mortgage to the servicer. [01:22:58.240 --> 01:23:02.240] Okay. That's collateral estoppel. [01:23:02.240 --> 01:23:03.240] Okay. [01:23:03.240 --> 01:23:10.240] You can't take one position and then take a diametrically opposed position. [01:23:10.240 --> 01:23:11.240] Right. [01:23:11.240 --> 01:23:15.240] So why would they say they had no claim? [01:23:15.240 --> 01:23:24.240] Well, because I had originally sued them in federal court a couple of years back and they made the mistake of giving me the MERS milestone report. [01:23:24.240 --> 01:23:27.240] And they wanted as a way of getting out of the lawsuit. [01:23:27.240 --> 01:23:30.240] We're sorry. We don't have no interest in this. [01:23:30.240 --> 01:23:34.240] Because it was under televiolations and RESPA, all that kind of crap. [01:23:34.240 --> 01:23:36.240] We're not part of this anymore. [01:23:36.240 --> 01:23:45.240] That's why I'm quiet title against them because I said, well, if they haven't had it for five years, how come there's no assignment? [01:23:45.240 --> 01:23:48.240] And I got a default judgment. [01:23:48.240 --> 01:23:54.240] Well, they ignored it till, you know, till the very last minute. [01:23:54.240 --> 01:24:01.240] And they asked me, well, would you sign a consent order and get a receipt? [01:24:01.240 --> 01:24:05.240] Open it up and we'll sign a consent order for this. [01:24:05.240 --> 01:24:08.240] And I said, well, for consent order, we consider. [01:24:08.240 --> 01:24:09.240] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:24:09.240 --> 01:24:10.240] What is the consent order? [01:24:10.240 --> 01:24:12.240] What are they consenting to? [01:24:12.240 --> 01:24:14.240] Well, that's what I wanted to see. [01:24:14.240 --> 01:24:16.240] They never sent me a consent order. [01:24:16.240 --> 01:24:18.240] What they sent me was a stipulation for dismissal. [01:24:18.240 --> 01:24:20.240] I'm not fine in that. [01:24:20.240 --> 01:24:21.240] They argue... [01:24:21.240 --> 01:24:22.240] Wait a minute. [01:24:22.240 --> 01:24:23.240] Wait a minute. [01:24:23.240 --> 01:24:26.240] You're going at 90 miles an hour about a case. [01:24:26.240 --> 01:24:27.240] You know everything about it. [01:24:27.240 --> 01:24:29.240] I have no idea what you're talking about. [01:24:29.240 --> 01:24:30.240] Okay. [01:24:30.240 --> 01:24:31.240] You lost me. [01:24:31.240 --> 01:24:36.240] Well, they argued with me that I should have...I should sign this stipulation of dismissal [01:24:36.240 --> 01:24:43.240] and reopen the quiet title case because they didn't want to have a default judgment against them. [01:24:43.240 --> 01:24:46.240] But, you know, you ignored it till it went into default. [01:24:46.240 --> 01:24:49.240] Why are you, you know, that makes no sense? [01:24:49.240 --> 01:24:50.240] I'm not going to sign that. [01:24:50.240 --> 01:24:56.240] So they...and they finally filed a petition in the court to reopen the case. [01:24:56.240 --> 01:25:00.240] Now, in Pennsylvania, there's four requirements. [01:25:00.240 --> 01:25:05.240] Number one, you have to call the court why you were in default in the first place. [01:25:05.240 --> 01:25:08.240] They were served by the sheriff. [01:25:08.240 --> 01:25:13.240] They had no excuse for not answering the complaint. [01:25:13.240 --> 01:25:21.240] Then you have to say why it took you so long to reopen the default judgment because you have 10 days to do it. [01:25:21.240 --> 01:25:29.240] If you forgot and you get the notice that you have 10 days and you filed something to keep the case open, that's fine. [01:25:29.240 --> 01:25:35.240] But 10 days later, you know, you have to have a reason for not doing it. [01:25:35.240 --> 01:25:40.240] And then the other thing is you have to have a meritorious defense. [01:25:40.240 --> 01:25:47.240] That means that you have to have a defense that's going to say that we made a mistake, [01:25:47.240 --> 01:25:53.240] but this is our loan and this is going to change the outcome of this decision, okay? [01:25:53.240 --> 01:25:58.240] Because if the decision is in default and it says they have no title, [01:25:58.240 --> 01:26:03.240] and they can't come back and say we have no title, we have no interest, [01:26:03.240 --> 01:26:06.240] that's not a meritorious defense. [01:26:06.240 --> 01:26:08.240] You understand what I'm saying? [01:26:08.240 --> 01:26:14.240] Well, the fourth thing is there has to be an equitable change. [01:26:14.240 --> 01:26:23.240] If the defense was where it would be, you know, meritorious, that it would make sense [01:26:23.240 --> 01:26:29.240] because they have to file an answer with the courts to show that it was a meritorious defense, [01:26:29.240 --> 01:26:33.240] that they, you know, they have to answer the complaint itself and show that they would have, [01:26:33.240 --> 01:26:37.240] they may have won the case if they had had the open case. [01:26:37.240 --> 01:26:43.240] Then the other thing they have to show is if there would be an equitable difference in the outcome of the case, [01:26:43.240 --> 01:26:49.240] that means that if they did have equity and I said they didn't, that would be a difference in equity. [01:26:49.240 --> 01:26:53.240] They're saying the same thing that I'm saying, that they have no equity. [01:26:53.240 --> 01:26:57.240] Well, the judge said, well, that doesn't matter. [01:26:57.240 --> 01:27:06.240] Okay, this sounds like a perfect case to argue before a grand jury. [01:27:06.240 --> 01:27:08.240] Yeah. [01:27:08.240 --> 01:27:15.240] Yeah, you know, instead of appealing to the corrupt federal court of appeals, [01:27:15.240 --> 01:27:17.240] this isn't a federal estate court. [01:27:17.240 --> 01:27:25.240] In addition, in the estate court, you can only do a quiet title without a jury. [01:27:25.240 --> 01:27:28.240] No, no, that's not what I'm talking about. [01:27:28.240 --> 01:27:30.240] Oh. [01:27:30.240 --> 01:27:33.240] I'm not talking about a petty jury. [01:27:33.240 --> 01:27:37.240] I'm talking about a grand jury. [01:27:37.240 --> 01:27:39.240] Oh. [01:27:39.240 --> 01:27:45.240] Accused the judge of misfeasance in office. [01:27:45.240 --> 01:27:55.240] Failing to perform a duty he's required to perform and denying you in your right under Marbury v. Somebody [01:27:55.240 --> 01:28:01.240] in your right to a fair and honest jurist in the first instance. [01:28:01.240 --> 01:28:09.240] If the judge failed to apply the law to the facts and denied you in your right, he committed a crime [01:28:09.240 --> 01:28:16.240] and let's stop pussyfooting around these corrupt judges and go to a grand jury and argue it to a grand jury. [01:28:16.240 --> 01:28:25.240] You give it to the prosecutor and when he doesn't give it to the grand jury, you file against the prosecutor. [01:28:25.240 --> 01:28:27.240] You just walk him up the line. [01:28:27.240 --> 01:28:29.240] Yeah. [01:28:29.240 --> 01:28:34.240] Run the routine on him and create lots of difficulty. [01:28:34.240 --> 01:28:40.240] In Texas, we have a provision for a court of inquiry. [01:28:40.240 --> 01:28:45.240] You might look to see if you have something similar. [01:28:45.240 --> 01:28:47.240] Okay. [01:28:47.240 --> 01:28:59.240] It's like a, it reads like an examining trial, but it's designed to go after public officials who are abusing their office. [01:28:59.240 --> 01:29:06.240] It's used to go after people who are misappropriating funds or public property. [01:29:06.240 --> 01:29:13.240] But it also applies to anything that the public officials are doing. [01:29:13.240 --> 01:29:16.240] And you ask the court to look into it. [01:29:16.240 --> 01:29:25.240] They probably won't and that's okay because then we'll go after the judge for not doing it and just create a lot of really negative [01:29:25.240 --> 01:29:28.240] politics for them. [01:29:28.240 --> 01:29:34.240] You get people with negative politics coming at them that don't have anything to do with this issue. [01:29:34.240 --> 01:29:37.240] I have a dog in this hot and they're getting beat up. [01:29:37.240 --> 01:29:40.240] That's when you start getting results. [01:29:40.240 --> 01:29:41.240] Okay. [01:29:41.240 --> 01:29:44.240] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevenson. [01:29:44.240 --> 01:29:46.240] Craig, you live on radio. [01:29:46.240 --> 01:29:49.240] Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:49.240 --> 01:29:51.240] We're going into the last half hour. [01:29:51.240 --> 01:29:55.240] If you have a call, a question or a comment, give us a call. [01:29:55.240 --> 01:30:00.240] Right back on the other side. [01:30:00.240 --> 01:30:06.240] A noble lie in Oklahoma City, 1995 will change forever the way you look at the true nature of terrorism. [01:30:06.240 --> 01:30:10.240] Based on the damage pattern to the building, but the government says it's impossible. [01:30:10.240 --> 01:30:14.240] The grand jury did not want to hear anything I had to say. [01:30:14.240 --> 01:30:17.240] The decision was made not to pursue any more of those individuals. [01:30:17.240 --> 01:30:22.240] Some of these columns were ripped up, shredded, tossed around. [01:30:22.240 --> 01:30:26.240] The people that did the things they did moved on well what they were doing. [01:30:26.240 --> 01:30:31.240] Expose the cover up now at anoblelive.com. [01:30:31.240 --> 01:30:37.240] The Rule of Law Radio Network is proud to present a due process of law seminar hosted by our own Eddie Craig. [01:30:37.240 --> 01:30:42.240] Eddie is a former Nakadotchi sheriff's deputy and for the past 21 years he's been studying the due process of law [01:30:42.240 --> 01:30:48.240] and now offers his knowledge to you at a seminar every Sunday from 2 o'clock to 5 o'clock at Brave New Books, [01:30:48.240 --> 01:30:54.240] located at 1904 Guadalupe Street. Admission is $20, so please make plans to come by and sit with Eddie [01:30:54.240 --> 01:31:00.240] and learn for yourself what the true intent of law really is. [01:31:00.240 --> 01:31:08.240] At hempusa.org we offer chemical-free products to people around the world, detoxifying, self-healing while rebuilding the immune system. [01:31:08.240 --> 01:31:14.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:31:14.240 --> 01:31:21.240] Our micro-plant powder is rich in iodine, probiotics, zinc and silica to help rebuild the immune system [01:31:21.240 --> 01:31:26.240] and to create a healthy stomach flora. Micro-plant powder is excellent for daily intake [01:31:26.240 --> 01:31:32.240] and is perfect to add to your storage shelter. We urge our listeners to please visit us at hempusa.org [01:31:32.240 --> 01:31:36.240] and remember all of our products are chemical-free and healthy to eat. [01:31:36.240 --> 01:31:41.240] We constantly strive to give you the best service, highest quality and rapid shipping anywhere [01:31:41.240 --> 01:31:45.240] and we offer free shipping on orders over $95 in the U.S. [01:31:45.240 --> 01:31:51.240] Please visit us at hempusa.org or call 908-6912608. [01:31:51.240 --> 01:32:12.240] That's 908-6912608. See what our powder, seeds and oil can do for you at hempusa.org. [01:32:21.240 --> 01:32:31.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:32:31.240 --> 01:32:41.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:32:41.240 --> 01:32:51.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:32:51.240 --> 01:33:01.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:33:01.240 --> 01:33:11.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:33:11.240 --> 01:33:21.240] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest-selling product, micro-plant powder. [01:33:21.240 --> 01:33:34.240] Pennsylvania is a commonwealth but it's the only one where the prosecutor has prosecutorial discretion by statute. [01:33:34.240 --> 01:33:43.240] The rest of the states, the prosecutors exercise prosecutorial discretion but there's nothing in law that gives it to them. [01:33:43.240 --> 01:33:53.240] They just decide they're going to have it and they exercise it and I get to beat them up with it just that way in Texas. [01:33:53.240 --> 01:34:07.240] I just got some open records requests answered by the county of Galveston and the Galveston Prosecute Attorney. [01:34:07.240 --> 01:34:24.240] I asked them for their practices and procedures for handling criminal complaint accusations against public officials. [01:34:24.240 --> 01:34:38.240] They sent me this package that says that they don't accept criminal complaints from private citizens because they're not an investigating agency. [01:34:38.240 --> 01:34:42.240] So we have to file those with the police department. [01:34:42.240 --> 01:34:55.240] But if you file a complaint against a public official, then they have a public integrity unit to investigate into the sufficiency of the complaint. [01:34:55.240 --> 01:34:58.240] And I said, wait a minute, hold on here. [01:34:58.240 --> 01:35:09.240] You're not an investigating agency so you won't take complaints from citizens because you don't have the resources to investigate any of the issues. [01:35:09.240 --> 01:35:17.240] And for some reason you can't take the complaint and then give it to the police department to investigate. [01:35:17.240 --> 01:35:28.240] However, if it's a complaint against a public official, you can take it and you do have the resources to investigate those. [01:35:28.240 --> 01:35:35.240] The problem is you're statutorily prohibited from investigating those. [01:35:35.240 --> 01:35:45.240] Article 2.03 says when a prosecuting attorney has made no need of matter to the public, citizens violating law related to his office and I'm paraphrasing here, [01:35:45.240 --> 01:35:50.240] he shall reduce complaint when information is submitted to the grand jury. [01:35:50.240 --> 01:35:52.240] Does not say made, might or can't. [01:35:52.240 --> 01:35:54.240] If he wants to, says shall. [01:35:54.240 --> 01:36:12.240] So as they have a public integrity unit, that public integrity unit is there for no other reason than to violate Article 2.03 code of criminal procedure. [01:36:12.240 --> 01:36:16.240] Conspiracy to commit. [01:36:16.240 --> 01:36:25.240] So they stipulated to me if there are a bunch of criminals. [01:36:25.240 --> 01:36:28.240] For me, that was wonderful. [01:36:28.240 --> 01:36:39.240] And now I go and beat them up and this creates a lot of politics, especially right before an election. [01:36:39.240 --> 01:36:48.240] We can do this because like what Michael and I talked about earlier is we are the sovereigns. [01:36:48.240 --> 01:36:59.240] I can take on Galveston County and I have no issues in Galveston County because I am the sovereign. [01:36:59.240 --> 01:37:02.240] And these are my public officials and the violating my laws. [01:37:02.240 --> 01:37:08.240] We have a caller Garrett in Oklahoma. [01:37:08.240 --> 01:37:11.240] Michael Garrett, what do you have for us today? [01:37:11.240 --> 01:37:15.240] Hey, hey, I had a brief question. [01:37:15.240 --> 01:37:22.240] Well, the first one was, you know, I understand that. [01:37:22.240 --> 01:37:24.240] Oops. [01:37:24.240 --> 01:37:28.240] Alice Jones has a money bomb show going on a 48 hour deal. [01:37:28.240 --> 01:37:34.240] And I think if you guys, I know Eddie Craig was on once before. [01:37:34.240 --> 01:37:43.240] And there we go. I know Eddie Craig was on there once before and I'm not sure if y'all have got the opportunity to get a plug in for your website. [01:37:43.240 --> 01:37:48.240] So you get some more listeners tonight. [01:37:48.240 --> 01:37:58.240] Well, we didn't want to draw listeners from Alex Jones. [01:37:58.240 --> 01:38:09.240] We weren't going out on the 90.1 in Austin and that's okay because we are going out to a lot of other places and that's why we went ahead and did the show. [01:38:09.240 --> 01:38:13.240] So we're not trying to pull anything from Alex Jones. [01:38:13.240 --> 01:38:21.240] We just wanted to keep the show going. [01:38:21.240 --> 01:38:32.240] I'm not sure what your point was. I have been on Alex Jones and so has Eddie, but go ahead. [01:38:32.240 --> 01:38:41.240] Yeah, I caught your show through the YouTube angle of the Alex Jones show. [01:38:41.240 --> 01:39:01.240] And so I figured that'd be great if Eddie got back on again and then you guys could get your situation, maybe listeners, some donations and get your situation in a better place. [01:39:01.240 --> 01:39:11.240] Well, we don't press Alex to put us on the show. The only time we go on the show is if he asks us. [01:39:11.240 --> 01:39:16.240] And that's just etiquette. If he wants us on the show, he will ask us. [01:39:16.240 --> 01:39:27.240] I wouldn't want to use Alex's good nature and abuse his good nature in order to promote another radio show. [01:39:27.240 --> 01:39:38.240] But Alex has been very good and would do nothing to cause any kind of difficulty. [01:39:38.240 --> 01:39:50.240] So we haven't mentioned him on this show because the places where that would be appropriate would be Austin and we're not going out in Austin. [01:39:50.240 --> 01:39:55.240] So did you have any questions or comments for us? [01:39:55.240 --> 01:40:17.240] Yeah, if I was going to go about just the beginnings of wanting to learn law on my own or, you know, well, yeah, go about learning law, what would be the best way to start at a community college level? [01:40:17.240 --> 01:40:38.240] Yeah, that is a really good question. If I were going to do that, the first place I would start, you can go to community colleges, but the problem you have is most of the community colleges will have a criminal justice course. [01:40:38.240 --> 01:40:49.240] And that's for police officers. And a lot of what they teach you is not law, but procedure. [01:40:49.240 --> 01:40:55.240] And a lot of those procedures are blatantly illegal. [01:40:55.240 --> 01:41:06.240] So that's not a good place to actually learn law. That's a good place to learn improper procedures, even though everybody's doing them. [01:41:06.240 --> 01:41:16.240] My first suggestion is, is get a copy of the penal code, code of criminal procedure, read through those, just cruise through them. [01:41:16.240 --> 01:41:23.240] Don't try to understand them. Just cruise right through them and go back and read through it quickly again. [01:41:23.240 --> 01:41:28.240] And that'll give you a good overview of what constitutes crimes. [01:41:28.240 --> 01:41:36.240] And then code of criminal procedure will give you. Go ahead. [01:41:36.240 --> 01:41:45.240] Well, I'm figuring, you know, first you got to kind of get acclimated and be able to kind of, where would I, you want to kind of start. [01:41:45.240 --> 01:41:53.240] I recall back at one of your shows back, you're all talking about how to get the books from the lawyers, you know, if you want to get. [01:41:53.240 --> 01:42:04.240] That was the next place. That was the next place I was going. You can go to the community, community colleges who have a criminal justice program, [01:42:04.240 --> 01:42:14.240] and they will have a condensed volume of penal code, code of criminal procedure, family law, generally property code, [01:42:14.240 --> 01:42:23.240] I have a whole bunch of codes in one small book. Generally it'll be paperback and it's relatively inexpensive. [01:42:23.240 --> 01:42:35.240] And then you talk to, call a couple of lawyers and see if they have any old litigation guides. [01:42:35.240 --> 01:42:40.240] 90% of what the lawyer does, he does have that litigation guide. [01:42:40.240 --> 01:42:52.240] And it's not just because they're lazy. They may be, but they want their documents to look like everybody else's documents. [01:42:52.240 --> 01:42:58.240] They want all their arguments to land in the same place as everybody else's does. [01:42:58.240 --> 01:43:04.240] They want to use the same case law that everybody else uses. [01:43:04.240 --> 01:43:10.240] This will keep the judge from having to read all that case law because he'll recognize it. [01:43:10.240 --> 01:43:17.240] And it'll certainly keep the judge from questioning the case law. [01:43:17.240 --> 01:43:21.240] It's all in the litigation guide, so that's where they look to find it. [01:43:21.240 --> 01:43:28.240] And lawyers always want to quote the latest litigation guides. [01:43:28.240 --> 01:43:34.240] So when a new one comes out, they get rid of the old ones and they don't always throw them away. [01:43:34.240 --> 01:43:40.240] Good chaps, two or three lawyers and you come down with a pickup truck to get them. [01:43:40.240 --> 01:43:43.240] Hang on, this is Randy Calton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Quigg. [01:43:43.240 --> 01:43:48.240] We're leaving the law radio. I'm getting ready for our last break. [01:43:48.240 --> 01:44:00.240] To call 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.240 --> 01:44:06.240] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy. [01:44:06.240 --> 01:44:09.240] And neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [01:44:09.240 --> 01:44:12.240] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [01:44:12.240 --> 01:44:13.240] Brave New Books? [01:44:13.240 --> 01:44:20.240] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, and G. Edward Griffin. [01:44:20.240 --> 01:44:24.240] They even stock Interfood, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [01:44:24.240 --> 01:44:26.240] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:44:26.240 --> 01:44:32.240] Go check it out for yourself. It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:44:32.240 --> 01:44:35.240] Oh, by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [01:44:35.240 --> 01:44:43.240] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [01:44:43.240 --> 01:44:46.240] It does exist, but when are they open? [01:44:46.240 --> 01:44:51.240] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [01:44:51.240 --> 01:45:00.240] So give them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:45:00.240 --> 01:45:03.240] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.240 --> 01:45:13.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [01:45:13.240 --> 01:45:18.240] step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.240 --> 01:45:22.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.240 --> 01:45:27.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.240 --> 01:45:34.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.240 --> 01:45:43.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.240 --> 01:45:52.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.240 --> 01:46:01.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:53.240 --> 01:46:55.240] Okay, we are back. [01:46:55.240 --> 01:46:58.240] My name is John Debra Steed and I'm Daddy Craig. [01:46:58.240 --> 01:47:00.240] This is rule of law radio. [01:47:00.240 --> 01:47:05.240] And we're talking to Garrett in Oklahoma. [01:47:05.240 --> 01:47:15.240] And yeah, we had someone in Amarillo that called two lawyers, two law firms, and the second law firm. [01:47:15.240 --> 01:47:23.240] And she told him she's doing a legal class, she's homeschooling, she wanted to do a class on law for the kids, [01:47:23.240 --> 01:47:28.240] and asked if he had any old litigation guides, and he said, [01:47:28.240 --> 01:47:32.240] do you have a station wagon or a pickup truck? [01:47:32.240 --> 01:47:39.240] And she came down and got all this old stuff, and she got all kinds of stuff, and it's great. [01:47:39.240 --> 01:47:48.240] The best thing to learn civil is O'Connor's civil trials. [01:47:48.240 --> 01:48:00.240] If you get some litigation guides, or you could look on eBay and for a used copy of O'Connor's civil trials. [01:48:00.240 --> 01:48:13.240] It has the codes in the back, but the first, probably two-thirds of the book, is it contains every motion you can think of, [01:48:13.240 --> 01:48:23.240] how to write the motion, all the case law, when to write the motion, how to argue for it in case law and support, [01:48:23.240 --> 01:48:28.240] how to argue against it in case law and support. [01:48:28.240 --> 01:48:35.240] And this is the way it even has forms. [01:48:35.240 --> 01:48:40.240] You can get O'Connor's forms, and there's a trick way of doing that. [01:48:40.240 --> 01:48:47.240] And if O'Connor hears me, she might want to come out and beat me up, but go to the public library, [01:48:47.240 --> 01:48:57.240] and look in the back of the book, when you get O'Connor's civil trials, you can download the forms. [01:48:57.240 --> 01:49:04.240] And there's a code in the back of the book that you can use on O'Connor's websites to download the forms. [01:49:04.240 --> 01:49:09.240] You just pull that code out of the library's book and download the forms. [01:49:09.240 --> 01:49:11.240] A quick story. [01:49:11.240 --> 01:49:16.240] I had a friend who's very good at civil. [01:49:16.240 --> 01:49:18.240] He gets in a foreclosure issue. [01:49:18.240 --> 01:49:24.240] He needs a temporary restraining order, so he writes once and sends it to me and asks me what I thought. [01:49:24.240 --> 01:49:26.240] I told him, it's a piece of crap. [01:49:26.240 --> 01:49:28.240] He said, you think you could do better? [01:49:28.240 --> 01:49:30.240] darn right I could. [01:49:30.240 --> 01:49:32.240] So I sent him one. [01:49:32.240 --> 01:49:34.240] He went to court with it. [01:49:34.240 --> 01:49:38.240] They didn't expect the other attorney to show up, but he did. [01:49:38.240 --> 01:49:40.240] They went into court. [01:49:40.240 --> 01:49:44.240] The judge handed the attorney his hat. [01:49:44.240 --> 01:49:49.240] Dave can the restraining order. [01:49:49.240 --> 01:49:53.240] And the lawyer come out and said, are you a lawyer? [01:49:53.240 --> 01:49:56.240] He said, no, I'm not. My brother is. [01:49:56.240 --> 01:49:58.240] He said, did you write this? [01:49:58.240 --> 01:50:00.240] He said, well, I had some help. [01:50:00.240 --> 01:50:05.240] The lawyer said, this is really good. [01:50:05.240 --> 01:50:11.240] He tells me that and I'm thinking what on earth is going on. [01:50:11.240 --> 01:50:18.240] I took that right out of O'Connor's forms and filled in the blanks. [01:50:18.240 --> 01:50:23.240] Now, I didn't tell Ken that because I wanted Ken to think I was really smart. [01:50:23.240 --> 01:50:30.240] Well, I was smart enough to use the form, but it took a while to realize what had happened. [01:50:30.240 --> 01:50:35.240] They always give the proceeds to the new lawyers. [01:50:35.240 --> 01:50:37.240] So this is a new lawyer. [01:50:37.240 --> 01:50:47.240] He just getting started up and he gets this motion temporary restraining order and it looks exactly like the ones they use. [01:50:47.240 --> 01:50:52.240] You see, they don't teach this part in law school. [01:50:52.240 --> 01:51:02.240] So he didn't realize that Ken handed him a document built on O'Connor's forms. [01:51:02.240 --> 01:51:05.240] That's why it looked exactly like theirs. [01:51:05.240 --> 01:51:07.240] That's why I had the same case law. [01:51:07.240 --> 01:51:11.240] That's why the judge liked it because he recognized all this. [01:51:11.240 --> 01:51:14.240] It looked like a lawyer wrote it. [01:51:14.240 --> 01:51:18.240] That is really important to understand. [01:51:18.240 --> 01:51:20.240] I believe it was a... [01:51:20.240 --> 01:51:27.240] I delivered a restraining order in Van Nuys, California and I had to deliver it to the police department. [01:51:27.240 --> 01:51:33.240] Now, you know, and all that requires is just a form and a judge's signature. [01:51:33.240 --> 01:51:36.240] You can catch them on lunch, whatever. [01:51:36.240 --> 01:51:37.240] Isn't that right? [01:51:37.240 --> 01:51:38.240] No, no, no. [01:51:38.240 --> 01:51:41.240] You don't want to use that pro-say form. [01:51:41.240 --> 01:51:45.240] The lawyers don't use that form. [01:51:45.240 --> 01:51:48.240] The lawyers have a motion. [01:51:48.240 --> 01:51:49.240] They all use the same one. [01:51:49.240 --> 01:51:50.240] They're going to have a... [01:51:50.240 --> 01:51:58.240] The lawyers will pull theirs out of the practice guides. [01:51:58.240 --> 01:52:00.240] You won't see those. [01:52:00.240 --> 01:52:05.240] The forms you get from the courts and stuff, the lawyers tend not to use those. [01:52:05.240 --> 01:52:16.240] Theirs will look like those, but the lawyers' documents will have case law in it that these don't have. [01:52:16.240 --> 01:52:21.240] And they always wanted to be the same case law for the same issue, so the judge don't have to read it. [01:52:21.240 --> 01:52:24.240] They get some pro-say in there that started from scratch. [01:52:24.240 --> 01:52:27.240] His arguments are all out of place. [01:52:27.240 --> 01:52:30.240] And he uses case law the judge has never seen. [01:52:30.240 --> 01:52:36.240] And he gets this, he's got 20 cases cited that he's never seen before, and he says, [01:52:36.240 --> 01:52:43.240] you really think I'm going to sit down and read all of these cases denied? [01:52:43.240 --> 01:52:50.240] Now, that may not be right, but that's how it actually works. [01:52:50.240 --> 01:52:55.240] And we could argue that all of these things are injustices, yeah, and it would be right. [01:52:55.240 --> 01:52:58.240] They are injustices. [01:52:58.240 --> 01:53:04.240] But in the end, we can't fight every battle. [01:53:04.240 --> 01:53:09.240] So let's avoid as many as we can. [01:53:09.240 --> 01:53:15.240] Let's find out how it works and do it that way. [01:53:15.240 --> 01:53:22.240] And if we run out of important battles, then we can go back and fight these battles that aren't so important. [01:53:22.240 --> 01:53:27.240] They're just annoying, or they're just philosophical. [01:53:27.240 --> 01:53:30.240] But avoid that. [01:53:30.240 --> 01:53:35.240] Get the forms, get the standard forms, and always build your document. [01:53:35.240 --> 01:53:41.240] You will absolutely love O'Connor's, no matter what state you're in. [01:53:41.240 --> 01:53:48.240] Because you can get O'Connor's federal practice guide. [01:53:48.240 --> 01:53:52.240] And it's absolutely wonderful the way they've done. [01:53:52.240 --> 01:53:55.240] They've done an incredible job. [01:53:55.240 --> 01:54:00.240] They've saved you a tremendous amount of time. [01:54:00.240 --> 01:54:09.240] So that's where I, if I were starting out, I think the litigation guide would be the first place I'd go to. [01:54:09.240 --> 01:54:10.240] Just go get O'Connor's. [01:54:10.240 --> 01:54:17.240] If you're dealing with criminal, then correct understanding any of the codes. [01:54:17.240 --> 01:54:22.240] If you're having issues with the evidence, just get the rules of evidence. [01:54:22.240 --> 01:54:27.240] It's just 60 pages, and it's outlined, so there's a whole lot of white space in it. [01:54:27.240 --> 01:54:31.240] And just quickly go through it. [01:54:31.240 --> 01:54:32.240] Front to back. [01:54:32.240 --> 01:54:33.240] Don't try to understand it. [01:54:33.240 --> 01:54:34.240] Just read it. [01:54:34.240 --> 01:54:37.240] And then go back and go through it a second time. [01:54:37.240 --> 01:54:43.240] And you'll make the links back and forth from front to back, and you'll see how these fit together. [01:54:43.240 --> 01:54:47.240] And you'll understand it better than most lawyers. [01:54:47.240 --> 01:54:51.240] Then only do the code when you get to that code, when you need it. [01:54:51.240 --> 01:54:53.240] And you just cruise through it twice. [01:54:53.240 --> 01:54:55.240] Won't take long. [01:54:55.240 --> 01:55:04.240] Then when you need something, you'll think, you know, I remember something about that, and you'll be able to go right through it. [01:55:04.240 --> 01:55:16.240] You hear me on here, and I'm spitting out these cases and these statutes, and you think, boy, I must have the legal library memorized. [01:55:16.240 --> 01:55:28.240] Not what you don't realize is I keep spitting out the same cases and the same case law over and over and over. [01:55:28.240 --> 01:55:32.240] Lawyers are the same way. [01:55:32.240 --> 01:55:39.240] You just got to find the right ones to spit out, and that's what the litigation guides you for. [01:55:39.240 --> 01:55:42.240] Does that sound like fun, Garrett? [01:55:42.240 --> 01:55:49.240] Yeah, yeah, I mean, you've kind of got like, you know, how you can make him dance, and you've got, you know, this and one way and another way. [01:55:49.240 --> 01:56:03.240] And you can basically go from that, you know, like early on in the court room, you know, you're able to do what you do. [01:56:03.240 --> 01:56:15.240] And once you know what to do and know how to do it right, you know, you kind of, it's a pattern that you kind of repeat, and you get good at repeating that pattern. [01:56:15.240 --> 01:56:22.240] There's other avenues that it can take you down, but, you know, that's kind of like a structure that was talking about earlier. [01:56:22.240 --> 01:56:35.240] Yeah, once you kind of get the idea of how it goes, and the most important thing to realize is there's always something you can do. [01:56:35.240 --> 01:56:41.240] No matter what the other side does, it is extremely where that you run into sudden death. [01:56:41.240 --> 01:56:47.240] The only place you run into sudden death is with the Supreme Court. [01:56:47.240 --> 01:56:50.240] That's the end of the line. [01:56:50.240 --> 01:56:54.240] But everything below that is always something you can do. [01:56:54.240 --> 01:57:06.240] They pull something, there's always things you can do, and it won't take long till there is a general set of steps you can take, [01:57:06.240 --> 01:57:13.240] and those steps will change slightly depending on the different cases and the different circumstances. [01:57:13.240 --> 01:57:17.240] But the basic things that you do is really not that much. [01:57:17.240 --> 01:57:25.240] It sounds complex, but once you've done it a little bit, it's really straightforward. [01:57:25.240 --> 01:57:27.240] It's easier than you think. [01:57:27.240 --> 01:57:34.240] Lawyers want you to think the law is much more complex than it is, and that's how you'll pay them a lot of money. [01:57:34.240 --> 01:57:40.240] I've sat on the trial, and I've found these trial lawyers can be very persuading, very, very good at what they do, [01:57:40.240 --> 01:57:47.240] and that is just such a beautiful thing to be able to go in and persuade a whole jury to believe you. [01:57:47.240 --> 01:57:48.240] Do you understand? [01:57:48.240 --> 01:57:49.240] Believe you. [01:57:49.240 --> 01:57:51.240] It's so amazing. [01:57:53.240 --> 01:57:55.240] Excuse my cost here. [01:57:55.240 --> 01:57:58.240] We sat on things, and it is a skill. [01:57:58.240 --> 01:58:01.240] And some of these guys are really good at what they do. [01:58:01.240 --> 01:58:10.240] And in itself, I believe I have that talent, but I just got to get on the right path to be able to harness my abilities [01:58:10.240 --> 01:58:15.240] and really implement, you know, get going. [01:58:15.240 --> 01:58:21.240] OK, well, that's a good way to start, and then maybe take a paralegal course. [01:58:21.240 --> 01:58:24.240] OK, we are out of time. [01:58:24.240 --> 01:58:27.240] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig. [01:58:27.240 --> 01:58:36.240] This has been our four-hour info marathon, and let me apologize for that problem with the first segment. [01:58:36.240 --> 01:58:39.240] It was all my bad. [01:58:39.240 --> 01:58:43.240] I goofed up big time, so I take full blame. [01:58:43.240 --> 01:58:46.240] We'll be back Monday and on Thursday and Friday. [01:58:46.240 --> 01:58:47.240] Thank you for listening. [01:58:47.240 --> 01:58:48.240] Good night. 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