[00:00.000 --> 00:10.000] You're listening to the Liberty Beat. Your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates. [00:10.000 --> 00:15.000] Online at thelibertybeats.com. [00:15.000 --> 00:19.000] John Bush here with your Liberty Beat for Friday, October 4th, 2013. [00:19.000 --> 00:28.000] Gold opened today at $1,318. Silver at $21.76 and Bitcoin is trading at $122. [00:28.000 --> 00:32.000] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Brave New Books, Austin's only brick-and-mortar store, [00:32.000 --> 00:37.000] carrying Tangy Cangerine 2.0. Online at BraveNewBookstore.com. [00:37.000 --> 00:42.000] And from Sons of Liberty Mint, where every week you have the opportunity to win up to 4 ounces of silver [00:42.000 --> 00:45.000] by simply guessing the spot price of silver. [00:45.000 --> 00:49.000] Contest details at sonsoflibertymint.com slash contest. [00:49.000 --> 00:53.000] That's S-U-N-S of libertymint.com. [00:53.000 --> 00:59.000] And now, the news. A woman with no history of violence was shot dead in a hail of gunfire [00:59.000 --> 01:01.000] by Capitol Police Thursday afternoon. [01:01.000 --> 01:07.000] Following the death of 34-year-old Mariam Carey, her 18-month-old daughter was removed safely from the car [01:07.000 --> 01:12.000] that drove over a set of barricades and sped onto a driveway leading to the White House. [01:12.000 --> 01:14.000] A high-speed chase then ensued. [01:14.000 --> 01:19.000] According to the Associated Press, Carey's mother questions why her daughter, a dental hygienist, [01:19.000 --> 01:26.000] was in Washington. Her boss says Carey was always happy and voices disbelief that she would intentionally attempt violence. [01:26.000 --> 01:34.000] Capitol Police, despite opening fire and leaving Carey dead, say they don't believe it was an act of terrorism. [01:34.000 --> 01:39.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has reindicted New Orleans resident Herman Wallace [01:39.000 --> 01:46.000] in the 1972 murder of a prison guard just two days after a federal judge overturned the terminally ill man's conviction [01:46.000 --> 01:53.000] and ordered him released from prison after serving more than 42 years in solitary confinement for armed robbery and murder. [01:53.000 --> 02:01.000] Herman Wallace and two others known as the Angola Three were placed in solitary in 1972 following the murder of a prison guard. [02:01.000 --> 02:06.000] The Angola Three and their supporters say they were framed for the murder over their political activism [02:06.000 --> 02:09.000] as members of one of the first prison chapters of the Black Panthers. [02:09.000 --> 02:16.000] U.S. District Chief Judge Brian Jackson ordered Wallace released Tuesday and ordered a new trial because women were unconstitutionally excluded [02:16.000 --> 02:20.000] from the grand jury that indicted Wallace and the fatal stabbing of Brent Miller. [02:20.000 --> 02:23.000] Wallace's legal team said it hasn't been released yet. [02:23.000 --> 02:27.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has said it has not been released yet. [02:27.000 --> 02:31.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has said it hasn't been released yet. [02:31.000 --> 02:35.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has said it hasn't been released yet. [02:35.000 --> 02:40.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has said it hasn't been released yet. [02:40.000 --> 02:43.000] A New Orleans parish grand jury has said it has been released yet." [02:43.000 --> 02:47.000] This just in, according to activists and longtime friend of Herman Wallace, [02:47.000 --> 02:50.000] Scott Crowe, Mr. Wallace has passed away. [02:50.000 --> 02:54.000] He will be remembered for his bravery and commitment to the struggle for justice. [02:54.000 --> 02:58.000] 13 members of Anonymous were indicted by U.S. grand jury alleging that [02:58.000 --> 03:00.000] the members carried out worldwide cyber attacks. [03:00.000 --> 03:03.000] This is the Liberty Beat. [03:03.000 --> 03:26.000] Well, I received my remedy today, came in a box, guessed like the same, I accepted for [03:26.000 --> 03:37.000] value right away. Not sooner, not later, we are originators, and the pathway seems to get straighter [03:37.000 --> 03:47.760] every day. And I could take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use. Well, I was good for [03:47.760 --> 04:01.960] the gander, going to work for the goose. I know some architects, I know some engineers. They see me [04:01.960 --> 04:12.200] evidence. They know certain things, please. What's up with the blatant deception? What is the nature [04:12.200 --> 04:18.480] of what you might gain? Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Joe Esquivel, Jeff Stevens, [04:18.480 --> 04:28.120] World Wide Radio. And Rosanna, I realize you're frustrated. I listened to your email today. It [04:28.120 --> 04:36.960] kind of tugged at my heart because I could feel the frustration and the betrayal that you were [04:36.960 --> 04:48.480] feeling. And even worse than that, I understand that this is what they try to generate. They try [04:48.480 --> 04:56.720] to wear you down by playing on your emotions. And that's why I suggest a different way of going [04:56.720 --> 05:06.200] about this. Instead of trying to get them to do what they're supposed to do, because they're not [05:06.200 --> 05:12.000] going to do what they're supposed to do. Right. Try to get them to do something so you can kick [05:12.000 --> 05:20.200] them right square when you're behind when they don't. So that when you come before them and they [05:20.200 --> 05:26.400] look at you, they see you there with this big sledgehammer you're waiting to clobber them with. [05:26.400 --> 05:34.760] I had a friend who got a job in the county I live in, with the county assessor's office. And they [05:34.760 --> 05:39.760] put him through all of the introductions. They're showing him how to do everything. And they took [05:39.760 --> 05:43.760] him to the front desk and they're showing him how to do everything. And they told him, they didn't [05:43.760 --> 05:49.960] know he knew me. They told him there's this one guy that come to here, this Randy Kelton. Watch [05:49.960 --> 06:00.120] this SOB. He's always joking and laughing and really watch this SOB. He's just trying to get [06:00.120 --> 06:05.880] you to do something so he can take out his cell phone and call 911 and try to get you arrested. [06:05.880 --> 06:14.040] And George said he was trying to keep from chuckling because he knew me. And he knew that [06:14.040 --> 06:22.440] was true. Yeah, I am. So go ahead, screw with me. I will kick your behind every way from Sunday. [06:22.440 --> 06:31.640] Okay. If you can get the judge to the position to where he believes that everything you're [06:31.640 --> 06:38.840] doing is designed to get him to rule against you so that you can take action against him. [06:38.840 --> 06:51.200] Everything is political. I know. I agree. If you expect them to do what you're asking them to do, [06:51.200 --> 07:00.080] they will use that against you or to invoke your emotional responses and physically drain you. [07:00.080 --> 07:10.600] When you turn the tables on them, they have no idea how to deal with it. It makes them crazy. [07:10.600 --> 07:16.120] I had a sheriff's deputy come to me and say, what did you do to the sheriff? I said, well, [07:16.120 --> 07:21.320] I hadn't done anything to him lately. Why? Well, we had a roll call this morning and he asked who [07:21.320 --> 07:28.360] here do Randy Kelton? About half of us raised our hand. And he said, look, you are not to stop him. [07:29.320 --> 07:36.040] You are not to cite him. And whatever you do, don't put that SOB in my jail. [07:36.040 --> 07:46.440] Yeah. This is what happens. I'm going to suggest stop asking these guys to do what you want them [07:46.440 --> 07:59.440] to do. Go back and look at the law that says what they are supposed to do. Go in and demand [07:59.440 --> 08:08.320] that they do something that they're supposed to do, hoping they won't do it. If it's something [08:08.320 --> 08:14.880] you want them to do, that's all the better. But it doesn't matter. Ask them to do something. [08:15.840 --> 08:21.840] Never, ever expect them to do what you want them to do. So when you go in the door, [08:21.840 --> 08:32.080] this is a chess game. Always have your hand on the next piece. When I go in and ask a public official [08:32.080 --> 08:38.640] to do something, I have my hand on the next chess piece. And I'm holding that piece saying, [08:38.640 --> 08:45.840] go ahead, Bubba, make your move. Because when you make your move, I'm going to make mine. [08:45.840 --> 08:52.800] I'm going to land on you like a ton of bricks. Now, if you make the move I want you to make, [08:54.320 --> 09:01.200] then I can go to the next guy. If you make the move I expect you to make, I'm fixing land right [09:01.200 --> 09:08.240] on top of you. I'm ready for you. There is something very important about that. [09:08.240 --> 09:17.920] There was a TV program called Lie to Me. And that was about micro expressions. And the pilot [09:17.920 --> 09:25.360] program was about where the hero goes in. And he's questioning this guy who had apparently planted [09:25.360 --> 09:32.160] some bombs in black churches. And he was a white supremacist and he had all the swastika tattoos [09:32.160 --> 09:38.480] and such. And the lawyer said, well, he's not going to answer any of your questions. And the guy says, [09:38.480 --> 09:43.520] well, you're going to have to. And he asks him questions and he pays attention to his micro [09:43.520 --> 09:50.480] expressions. He asked him about, what about this church here? And the guy just frowns. What about [09:50.480 --> 09:54.800] this church here? And he frowns. Well, they think you're going to, what about this church here? And [09:54.800 --> 10:04.560] he gives a slight really quick 15th of a second smile and then it goes away. Normally you don't [10:04.560 --> 10:15.760] even see that. But this is what he was trained to do. We give away how we feel. And human beings [10:15.760 --> 10:21.840] are extremely acute at detecting how we feel and how we respond internally. [10:21.840 --> 10:27.120] David Wethey, he's someone I was working with. He was with me in Tarrant County recently. [10:27.120 --> 10:31.920] When I asked, when I was going to photograph a document at the clerk's office and they told me [10:31.920 --> 10:38.560] I couldn't do it, I asked him for the rule, regulation, law, statute, whatever, for bad [10:38.560 --> 10:43.120] need to do it. And he refused to produce it. I asked him his name. He refused to tell me I called [10:43.120 --> 10:52.560] 9-1-1. When the police got there, I told them to take a complaint, take a voluntary statement from [10:52.560 --> 11:01.040] me, go in and take a statement from them and file that statement in the record so it's memorialized [11:01.040 --> 11:06.640] so I can refer to it later. And the policeman said, well, we're not going to do anything here [11:06.640 --> 11:15.760] today. I said, oh, okay, then why the heck did they send you? You're worthless. If you're not [11:15.760 --> 11:21.520] going to do anything, I'm done with you. You're dismissed. Get lost. And they stood there looking [11:21.520 --> 11:31.600] at me and it's clear they're thinking, what the hell is going on? This guy didn't get upset. [11:31.600 --> 11:39.280] This guy didn't get upset. He didn't tell us what his rights are. He didn't give us legal advice [11:39.280 --> 11:44.960] and tell us what our duties were. He dismissed us like a couple of errant stepchildren. [11:47.200 --> 11:52.560] They did not, yet they didn't see any of the responses in me they expected to see. [11:52.560 --> 12:01.200] And it is absolutely clear what they were thinking is, what the heck is going on? This guy's setting [12:01.200 --> 12:09.280] us up. So they leave, they come back 10 minutes later with their sergeant. It was clear they got [12:09.280 --> 12:14.880] it. This guy set us up for this. He called us knowing full well what we were going to do. [12:15.920 --> 12:20.960] So what's he setting us up for? And the sergeant came in and he said, well, I'm just going to [12:20.960 --> 12:26.880] like to talk to you. There seems to be a problem here. There's no problem. Well, Mr. Cullen, there [12:26.880 --> 12:31.120] seems to be a disagreement. I would like to settle this disagreement. Sorry, sergeant. [12:32.240 --> 12:40.000] That bell has already been rung and you can't unwing it. I don't need you. You are dismissed. [12:40.000 --> 12:47.280] You can go. And the sergeant stood there looking at me thinking, it is clear what he's thinking. [12:47.280 --> 12:56.400] What the hell is going on here? This guy set us up. And that's right, I did. [12:58.720 --> 13:05.920] And they knew it immediately. This is why when you ask that judge to do something, [13:05.920 --> 13:12.000] you already have your next step in mind. You don't care what he does. You want to do your job, [13:12.000 --> 13:17.520] you want to do your job, Bubba. I go to the next step. I ask you to do something you're required [13:17.520 --> 13:22.320] to do by law. You don't want to do it. I've already got the petition for writ of mandamus, [13:22.320 --> 13:26.320] the judicial conduct complaint. I'm going to file against you and the criminal complaint. I'm going [13:26.320 --> 13:32.160] to file against you for denying me and my rights. So you go ahead. You do whatever you want to, Bubba. [13:32.160 --> 13:42.800] Bubba, it will change everything. And all this anger and frustration you're feeling, [13:44.320 --> 13:49.120] I guarantee you, it will change. But we have turned this stuff in, Randy. [13:49.920 --> 13:55.360] We have filed disciplinary counsel issues on various judges. This one judge, everyone in my [13:55.360 --> 14:04.240] family filed one on him. Okay, you have to understand. They're not going to come to you [14:04.240 --> 14:12.400] and say, hey, you filed this complaint against me. And it goes on my record and stays on my record [14:12.400 --> 14:20.000] forever. And it really hurt me. You know, that's like if you're getting into a fight with somebody, [14:20.000 --> 14:24.880] they're not going to walk up to you and hold their shoulder up to you and point at their shoulder [14:24.880 --> 14:32.480] and say, see this spot right here? This spot really, really hurts. Please don't hit me here. [14:34.320 --> 14:36.720] They're not going to tell you when you hurt them. [14:39.360 --> 14:47.680] You have to understand that when you hurt them the most, they're going to be the quietest about it. [14:49.440 --> 14:53.600] If you do something that doesn't hurt them, then they'll jump up and down, [14:53.600 --> 14:59.760] wave their arms, rail in righteous indignation. When you start filing judicial condo complaints, [14:59.760 --> 15:05.280] bar grievances, criminal complaints against them, you're not going to hear a word from them [15:07.360 --> 15:14.640] because they are absolutely forbidden to make one peep about it. [15:14.640 --> 15:22.640] Well, that's not what he did in one of our hearings. Oh, that's Dameron with a witness [15:22.640 --> 15:27.840] obstruction of justice. Are you kidding me? He's got to be crazy. It's in the transcript. [15:29.040 --> 15:33.760] Did you file criminal charges against him for that? No, I didn't know about it then. [15:34.800 --> 15:42.240] Yeah. Okay. If they do anything, once you go after them, you become a protected class. [15:42.240 --> 15:48.240] One word out of them, Joe, I was talking to Joe, he's on here and he was talking about being on [15:48.240 --> 15:54.640] the stand and the judge told him, I don't like what you're saying, Mr. Esquivel. You're about [15:54.640 --> 16:04.640] five minutes from contempt of court. If that was me, Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [16:04.640 --> 16:13.200] Arrest that judge. That's Dameron with a witness obstruction of justice. He's threatening me in [16:13.200 --> 16:25.120] order to alter my testimony before this tribunal. I want him arrested. It's about shifting gears. [16:25.120 --> 16:37.360] It's about shifting gears. You are the sovereign. I know. And they are not to forget it. If that [16:37.360 --> 16:44.240] judge said one word about any complaints you filed against him, you filed criminally against him for [16:44.240 --> 16:50.240] obstruction of justice, tampering with a witness. See how he likes that. Hang on. We'll be right [16:50.240 --> 16:57.760] back on the other side. Randy Kelly, Kevin Stevens, we will go radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. [16:57.760 --> 17:04.240] We'll be right back. 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The Michael Mears proven method is the solution [18:36.800 --> 18:41.600] for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more [18:41.600 --> 18:46.800] information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:46.800 --> 18:56.320] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [18:56.320 --> 19:00.480] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:56.560 --> 20:03.440] That's why I call him. I talk to me and I pray to him. Because he's the only one who could answer him. [20:03.440 --> 20:26.400] It ain't no business what we killin' man sayin'. Mankind, you know, is just leadin' me. [20:33.440 --> 20:39.200] It ain't no business what you call him. You call him Buhuda. You call him an Allah. Or you call him Jeovia. [20:39.200 --> 20:44.800] Cop on his name and you call Rasta. Pray to him and he'll deliver. [20:44.800 --> 20:50.640] Miracle he work and he work it all over. Make the blind flee and the deaf hear we. [20:50.640 --> 20:56.560] Even make the cripple man get up what you see. Thank your father because you believe in me. [20:56.560 --> 21:05.360] Don't steal God, me friend. Tell him your father has been. Call on his name once again. [21:05.360 --> 21:09.120] Make the blind flee and the deaf hear we. [21:09.120 --> 21:18.240] Okay, we are back. Ben Kelton, David Stevens, ruleoflawradio, and we're talking to Rosanna in Ohio. [21:18.240 --> 21:26.320] And Rosanna, you know, I've kind of chastised on the air. I can't let you get away with it edgewise. [21:26.320 --> 21:35.760] I'm going to shut up now. And you have a question or a comment for us and I will not interrupt you. [21:35.760 --> 21:37.440] Well, um. [21:37.440 --> 21:38.880] Maybe. [21:38.880 --> 21:40.080] Yeah, I mean. [21:40.080 --> 21:42.560] Okay, just joking. Go ahead. [21:42.560 --> 21:50.880] Just on this bond thing with this guardian, January the 22nd, I put in the removal of the guardian [21:50.880 --> 21:56.960] because of breach of fiduciary duty and the theft of the estate. And then he was ordered to have a bond [21:57.680 --> 22:03.680] by October the 14th of last year. And he didn't get it till July of this year. That's nine months later. [22:04.240 --> 22:07.680] This is a court order now. The judge. [22:07.680 --> 22:10.720] Wait a minute. Who ordered him to get a bond? [22:10.720 --> 22:11.840] The court, the judge. [22:12.640 --> 22:15.600] Okay, and who was this that was ordered to get a bond? [22:15.600 --> 22:22.880] The guardian, the lawyer, the attorney. And he didn't get it till July because I brought it up in court. [22:22.880 --> 22:24.000] I found out he didn't have it. [22:25.120 --> 22:33.200] Okay, so if you have you filed, has he done anything for which you could make a claim [22:33.200 --> 22:35.600] against him prior to getting the bond? [22:36.800 --> 22:39.840] Yeah, there's money missing out of the estate. [22:39.840 --> 22:47.360] Good. Then have you sent a tort letter to him ordering him to replace that money or be sued? [22:49.040 --> 22:49.360] No. [22:50.800 --> 22:51.280] Do so. [22:51.280 --> 22:51.920] A letter to him. [22:53.040 --> 22:59.840] Okay, tort letters they really pay attention to. People complaining, if you call them on the phone [22:59.840 --> 23:07.040] or you talk to them in court and you complain about this, they don't pay that much attention to it. [23:07.040 --> 23:13.280] If you send them a letter and I suggest that all your communication with them should be in writing. [23:14.560 --> 23:16.080] To the court or directly? [23:17.120 --> 23:17.600] Pardon me? [23:18.240 --> 23:19.680] To the court or directly? [23:21.520 --> 23:24.080] To the court case or directly to the person? [23:25.600 --> 23:26.800] To the person. [23:27.600 --> 23:29.760] Directly to the person, not to the court case. Okay. [23:29.760 --> 23:39.600] Right, if the person has performed an act that gives you a right to a claim against him, [23:41.040 --> 23:43.840] this is separate from whatever action is going on. [23:45.600 --> 23:52.160] If you have reason to believe that he has illegally appropriated funds from an account, [23:52.800 --> 23:55.040] you send him a tort letter. [23:55.040 --> 24:00.160] Tort letters really get their attention. You tell them, you have damaged this account. [24:00.160 --> 24:05.120] I have a claim against this account. You have damaged this account to this amount. [24:05.120 --> 24:07.920] Make me or this account whole or be sued. [24:09.920 --> 24:17.280] Now, if he brings that up in the court, then you file for petition for sanctions against him [24:18.080 --> 24:21.760] for trying to inappropriately influence the court. [24:21.760 --> 24:26.560] You file a bar grievance against him, which would double his malpractice insurance, [24:27.600 --> 24:32.480] and then you file suit against him for misappropriation of funds. [24:34.000 --> 24:36.160] You don't care what happens to that suit. [24:37.760 --> 24:42.400] If the court gets it, if whatever court you filed in gets that suit and they throw it out, [24:43.200 --> 24:49.920] you don't care because his insurance company is not going to care either. [24:49.920 --> 24:54.640] They're going to go ballistic. And if he didn't have a bond at the time, [24:56.080 --> 25:01.840] then all of the costs of defending this case goes to him personally. [25:01.840 --> 25:02.880] On his insurance. [25:02.880 --> 25:08.560] And you don't care what they do. The trial court, you don't care what the trial court does. [25:10.240 --> 25:13.760] Have you ever looked at Jewish dictionary? [25:13.760 --> 25:14.960] Yeah, I have it. [25:14.960 --> 25:17.840] Oh, good, good. Did you understand what I mean? [25:17.840 --> 25:22.400] Oh, good, good. Did you understand? You don't care what that judge does. [25:22.960 --> 25:27.760] Let him do anything he wants to. All you're doing is setting the record for appeal. [25:29.520 --> 25:39.440] And if you always go before the court from the frame of mind, I don't care what you do. [25:40.400 --> 25:42.800] I'm going to object to everything you do [25:42.800 --> 25:49.120] just for the purpose of perfecting my right to appeal. I'm just here setting the record. [25:49.120 --> 25:55.040] So you just do whatever you want to, Bubba. I'm going to file judicial conduct complaints against [25:55.040 --> 25:59.040] you. I'm going to make your life a living hell. And I don't care what you do. [25:59.040 --> 26:04.800] They threaten me with the appeals court. Well, then you can just take it up with appeals. [26:04.800 --> 26:06.240] I mean, they do this to me all the time. [26:06.240 --> 26:11.840] Oh, yeah, no problem. That's, then you tell them, no problem, Your Honor. That's why I'm here. [26:11.840 --> 26:17.360] Your Honor, that's why I'm here. That's my purpose. I'm just setting the record for appeal. [26:17.360 --> 26:25.040] You just do anything you want to. When you let them know that they don't have any leverage over [26:25.040 --> 26:30.000] you, you don't care what they do. That's when they start getting nervous. [26:32.000 --> 26:35.520] The last thing they want to think is that you're setting them up, [26:35.520 --> 26:41.680] is that you absolutely do not care what they do. My favorite thing to ever happen to me was a [26:41.680 --> 26:48.080] district attorney in Randall County called me about criminal complaints I had filed with the [26:48.080 --> 26:52.080] grand jury and sent them to the district attorney's office, because that's the only address I had. [26:53.120 --> 26:56.960] She had called me and said, Mr. County, you don't even need to file these with the Sheriff's [26:56.960 --> 27:02.080] Department. No, ma'am, I'll be filing these with the grand jury. The only thing you get to do is [27:02.080 --> 27:07.360] decide if you're going to interfere with the process or not. She said, well, Mr. Kelton, [27:07.360 --> 27:14.320] you really need to see the Sheriff's Department. Well, a week later, she called me. Mr. Kelton, [27:14.320 --> 27:19.600] I sent your complaints to the Sheriff's Department. He sent them back to me, said he couldn't do [27:19.600 --> 27:25.440] anything with them because there were complaints against him in there. And I said, well, yes, [27:25.440 --> 27:33.760] ma'am. As a matter of fact, there were. And she said, Mr. Kelton, I get the impression [27:33.760 --> 27:44.160] you planned this this way. Yes. That's exactly what I wanted to hear. She got it. I said, [27:44.160 --> 27:54.080] well, Miss Wyatt, I'm impressed. You're very astute. I hope you don't think this is my first [27:54.080 --> 28:01.920] rodeo. She said, no, Mr. Kelton, somehow I don't think this is your first rodeo. If you can get [28:01.920 --> 28:09.840] them to think that you are trying to get them to do things so that you can land on them like a ton [28:09.840 --> 28:21.200] of bricks, you dramatically change the political landscape. You will not win your case because you [28:21.200 --> 28:26.960] have the law and the facts on your side. Right. I know. I get that. I've had the law and facts [28:26.960 --> 28:35.440] on my side. And you don't. So let's get the politics on your side. Right. You are a pro se [28:35.440 --> 28:44.880] litigant. You can do all of this obnoxious, outrageous stuff. You can violate all of their [28:44.880 --> 28:53.440] professional courtesies with impunity. And if they say one word, if that judge or anyone mentioned [28:54.240 --> 28:58.960] a complaint that you filed against them in the court, you need to move for a mistrial. [29:00.560 --> 29:06.640] You need to move to disqualify the judge and file criminal charges against whoever mentioned that [29:06.640 --> 29:22.000] issue. This will make them crazy. This is the fun part. You take criminal charges against the judge [29:22.000 --> 29:31.200] to the district attorney. And he's going to refuse to act. This goes to our philosophy. [29:31.200 --> 29:38.640] Never ask somebody to do something you want them to do. You don't want him to act on those complaints. [29:38.640 --> 29:43.040] You want him to refuse to act because you're standing here with a sledgehammer fixing to [29:43.040 --> 29:48.080] whack him when he does. So when he refuses to act, then you file criminal charges against [29:48.080 --> 29:54.880] him for misfeasance in office. We start up the chain. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, [29:54.880 --> 30:03.680] Wheel of Law Radio. I call it number 512-646-984. We'll be right. Your smartphone may be snooping [30:03.680 --> 30:08.640] on you as new applications turn these devices into stealthy spies and the intelligence they [30:08.640 --> 30:13.440] gather is downright shocking. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. I'll be back to explain how your phone [30:13.440 --> 30:19.440] may be taking liberties with your privacy. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data [30:19.440 --> 30:24.480] about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your [30:24.480 --> 30:30.240] freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your [30:30.240 --> 30:35.840] information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement [30:35.840 --> 30:41.440] is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and [30:41.440 --> 30:49.840] Bing. Start over with StartPage. Lights, camera, action. Using certain smartphone applications [30:49.840 --> 30:55.200] could turn you into an unwitting star and the set could be your kitchen, office or even your [30:55.200 --> 31:01.280] bedroom. One such app called Color activates your phone's microphone to gather sound. It combines [31:01.280 --> 31:06.800] this with GPS coordinates and images from your camera to determine who is nearby. The idea is [31:06.800 --> 31:12.080] to generate impromptu social networks. Well, that's creepy. It's perfectly legal since you agree to [31:12.080 --> 31:16.800] this invasion when you download it. But even if you never plan to download Color, you should know [31:16.800 --> 31:22.160] that cell phones can be programmed to watch and listen. When you need total privacy, remove the [31:22.160 --> 31:27.680] battery. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.320 --> 31:35.840] This is building seven, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [31:35.840 --> 31:41.360] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [31:41.360 --> 31:45.680] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [31:45.680 --> 31:50.480] and thousands of my fellow first responders apply. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural [31:50.480 --> 31:54.400] engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an air force pilot. I'm the father who lost [31:54.400 --> 32:00.720] his son. We're Americans and we deserve the truth. Go to rememberbuildingseven.org today. [32:00.720 --> 32:06.080] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? Are you confused by words [32:06.080 --> 32:10.800] like the constitution or the federal reserve? What? If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest [32:10.800 --> 32:16.960] disease known today, stupidity. Hi, my name is Steve Holt. And like millions of other Americans, [32:16.960 --> 32:22.080] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. I had no idea that the number one cause of the [32:22.080 --> 32:27.360] disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. Unfortunately, that puts most [32:27.360 --> 32:32.240] Americans at risk of catching stupidity. But there is hope. The staff at Brave New Books have [32:32.240 --> 32:36.800] helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [32:36.800 --> 32:41.280] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [32:41.280 --> 32:46.800] without feeling tired or uninterested. So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [32:46.800 --> 32:55.280] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [32:55.280 --> 32:58.720] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [32:58.720 --> 33:07.120] and an overall increase in mental functioning. Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:28.720 --> 33:49.120] I won't, oh I won't, I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes. [33:49.120 --> 34:10.080] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Joe Esquivel with the radio. And we're talking [34:10.080 --> 34:16.560] to Roseanne in Ohio. Roseanne, I hope what I'm talking about makes sense and I'm hoping that it [34:16.560 --> 34:26.880] gives you some remedy. Well, yeah, I'm just, you know, you look up these statutes, you look up [34:26.880 --> 34:31.360] the constitution, you know the laws, put up these before them and they just put the blinders on and [34:31.360 --> 34:38.880] rule right around it. It's word magic. They're going to do that every time because 90% of the [34:38.880 --> 34:47.440] public are so focused on their lives and other things that they never raise these issues. [34:48.160 --> 34:55.920] Right. And all through history, if you look back through history, great change has never occurred [34:55.920 --> 35:04.160] because of the will of the masses. Great change has occurred because the very small percentage [35:04.160 --> 35:13.600] of the masses rose up, raised the issue, and the masses follow. I know. We're trying to be 2%. [35:16.720 --> 35:18.960] Say that again. We're trying to be the 2%. [35:20.560 --> 35:25.120] Yes, and that's, it only takes a couple of percent. I know, that's why we're trying to learn [35:25.120 --> 35:29.440] this. That's why I asked you about the insurances and the bonds. Get me to somebody that we back [35:29.440 --> 35:34.240] here, we're trying to really dig into this and study this. I believe that's where we're going [35:34.240 --> 35:40.240] to hit them. I really do. And that's what- And I think you're right. The insurance and the bond, [35:41.120 --> 35:48.640] I tell people to file bar grievances. And it's not because I expect the state bar to do anything. [35:49.520 --> 35:55.520] It's because they're an insurance company. And with the bond, it is the insurance company [35:55.520 --> 36:02.160] that backs the bond. Now, while the insurance company is refusing to do anything, [36:03.360 --> 36:09.520] they're still going to raise his bond rating. Now, he's not going to come to you and tell you [36:09.520 --> 36:17.440] that you got his bond rating raised, but that's what happens. And there's a lot more you can do. [36:17.440 --> 36:25.360] If you look at, look at his caseload, look at his history, if you can get other people to start [36:25.360 --> 36:31.360] having his bond, the only way I know to get rid of a federal judge is to get his bond revoked. [36:32.640 --> 36:36.320] You get his bond revoked by getting a lot of people to file complaints against him. [36:36.320 --> 36:46.080] You can be the most dangerous thing to this judge. And if this judge thinks that you are in there [36:46.080 --> 36:52.800] setting him up so you can hammer him, the only way he can get rid of you is give you what you want. [36:54.000 --> 36:59.680] That's the politics we're talking about. He's the second one gone. He left on his own in August. [36:59.680 --> 37:04.480] He got to walk away. He got to go to the hospital. He got to go to the hospital. He got to go to the [37:04.480 --> 37:08.720] hospital on his own in August. He got to walk away with a clean slate after I filed the affidavit of [37:08.720 --> 37:15.840] disqualification. Yeah, he probably wanted to get the heck out of here. That was probably a smart [37:15.840 --> 37:20.400] judge. He saw the railroad train coming at him. Well, I believe so too, because that bond that's [37:20.400 --> 37:27.840] nine months late, he's never signed that yet. Signed that bond. Wait a minute. I don't know [37:27.840 --> 37:33.440] what you're talking about. This bond and the money missing, it's like, this can't, and so now [37:33.440 --> 37:39.200] he's jumped out of a frying pan, August the 12th. I just want to get somebody else. I'm not going [37:39.200 --> 37:43.440] to be here. But now we've got a new judge coming in and I don't think it's being any better. [37:44.400 --> 37:48.720] Yeah, it's going to get worse for each judge that comes in because they're going to know what you [37:48.720 --> 37:53.840] did to the ones before them. I suggest you file criminal charges against the judge with the district [37:53.840 --> 37:58.720] attorney. Can I ask you one thing here real quick before we go? On our higher rules of criminal [37:58.720 --> 38:03.840] procedures, did you know the clerk of, I have complaint forms, we have complaint forms on ours, [38:03.840 --> 38:08.960] prosecutors and the people. So these complaint forms that you fill out, I'm underneath rule four, [38:08.960 --> 38:13.760] warrant or summons upon complaint. Did you know that the clerk of court can actually [38:15.040 --> 38:21.520] issue those? Wait a minute, say that again. I missed the last part. The clerk of the court can what? [38:22.240 --> 38:27.920] The warrant or the arrest of the defendant or summons in lieu of a warrant shall be issued [38:27.920 --> 38:32.880] by a judge, magistrate, clerk of court or officer of the court, defendant of the judge, [38:33.440 --> 38:39.440] any law enforcement officer authorized. Oh, wonderful. Go to the clerk and demand that [38:39.440 --> 38:47.920] the clerk issue a warrant. And when the clerk refuses, file against the clerk for misfeasance [38:47.920 --> 38:52.480] in office. And she's really the nice one too. Do that to the nice one. [38:52.480 --> 38:56.400] Well, that's the best one to go after. [38:58.000 --> 39:00.640] Yeah, so we got that. In fact, the prosecution- [39:00.640 --> 39:07.440] I know that sounds rotten. I told my justice of the peace, who's a personal friend of mine, [39:08.080 --> 39:14.320] that I was filing criminal charges against him. He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I thought we were [39:14.320 --> 39:21.680] friends. I said, yeah, we are, Mark. And I respect you highly. I tell people on the air all the time [39:21.680 --> 39:28.320] that Mark Autry will do what he thinks is right. If it hairlifts the Pope, if there's any honest [39:28.320 --> 39:35.680] magistrate I've ever seen, it's Mark Autry. Why are you filing against me? I said, well, your [39:35.680 --> 39:41.840] honor, it's because no one will claim that I'm filing against you out of anger or avarice. [39:42.640 --> 39:50.160] Oh, yeah. Right. Yeah. I'm taking this action because it's the right thing to do to correct [39:50.160 --> 39:56.480] or wrong. And no one will say that I'm doing this out of anger or to harm you because the [39:56.480 --> 40:03.200] last thing I want to do is to harm you. And he said, Mr. Kelton, that doesn't help. [40:04.800 --> 40:09.920] Yeah. But you go after the innocent party, they'll scream the loudest. [40:11.600 --> 40:16.960] And then they will invoke more politics than anyone else in the building. [40:16.960 --> 40:20.160] It's insane because I just saw, I mean, I was looking at all this, trying to really read this [40:20.160 --> 40:25.040] if I turn in these criminal complaints, you know, on Michael's platform, they're right there on our [40:25.040 --> 40:30.560] rules. And then it says judge, magistrate, comma, clerk of courts, comma, you know, [40:30.560 --> 40:37.760] clerk of courts is in here, shall be issued by. Yeah, go to them. Invoke their duty. When they [40:37.760 --> 40:44.160] don't do it, go to the prosecutor. You jump up and down, wave your arms in righteous indignation, [40:44.160 --> 40:49.360] order. You know, when you go to the prosecutor and he refuses to act, then you go to the attorney [40:49.360 --> 40:58.000] general and ask him to arrest the prosecutor. Yeah. Yeah. When you, for misfeasance in office, [40:58.000 --> 41:02.800] fail to perform his duty. And when the attorney general refuses to act, you go to the chief [41:02.800 --> 41:09.440] justice of the state Supreme court and invoke his duty as a magistrate and order him to have them [41:09.440 --> 41:16.400] all arrested. And when he refuses you file against him and he's going to be calling down there and [41:16.400 --> 41:23.520] say, what the heck is going on? Get this woman off my case. How far up can we go? You can't, [41:23.520 --> 41:33.120] you are the sovereign. You are the ultimate authority. Yeah. But who do you get to do it? [41:33.120 --> 41:40.080] They're all your sub, your public servants. If you'll read in your code of criminal procedure, [41:40.880 --> 41:47.360] they will designate who are magistrates. And I can guarantee you the very first one, [41:49.120 --> 41:56.960] the justices of the tech, of the state Supreme court. They are everybody, every judge is a [41:56.960 --> 42:04.000] magistrate. They list them in order of hierarchy. The Supreme court justices are the first ones in [42:04.000 --> 42:10.080] the list. They are magistrates. And when you go to them and give them a verified criminal [42:10.080 --> 42:15.600] affidavit, it invokes his duty as a magistrate. I don't care if he wants to perform it or not. [42:16.240 --> 42:21.040] Okay. Well, I'll keep you up on this process so you know where I'm at and where I'm going. [42:21.040 --> 42:27.680] Yeah. I'm telling you, you'll be amazed. You start going after these high-level officials. [42:27.680 --> 42:34.480] They are going to have a fit. I got all the highest judges in Texas put in front of a grand jury. [42:35.680 --> 42:42.240] Had nothing to do with me. Had to do with the district attorney, 25 year prosecutor. He's the [42:42.240 --> 42:47.760] guy that got Tom DeLay indicted. And there never was a criminal complaint. His conviction just got [42:47.760 --> 42:55.520] thrown out because it was trash. He got him indicted illegally. I filed complaints against [42:55.520 --> 43:00.800] him, against all of the court of criminal appeals judges in Texas. There's 15 of them. [43:00.800 --> 43:06.560] They're all Democrats. I'm saying they're all Republicans. This guy's a Democrat, [43:06.560 --> 43:14.240] 25 years in office. He's not running again. He took my complaints and used them to try to take [43:14.240 --> 43:21.760] these judges out of office with him. He used my complaints as political cannon fodder. [43:22.560 --> 43:27.840] They will not be afraid of you. They will be afraid of the political cannon fodder you'll [43:27.840 --> 43:33.600] create that their political enemies can use against them. That's where the power is. [43:34.480 --> 43:41.200] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue of Law Radio. I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [43:41.200 --> 43:47.840] We are moving toward our third hour. Rosanna, we'll try to finish up on the other side and [43:47.840 --> 43:55.280] I'll try to kind of shut up and let you bring your questions and issues so we can take care [43:55.280 --> 44:04.160] of what you have. We'll be right back. Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from [44:04.160 --> 44:12.160] naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. [44:12.160 --> 44:17.280] I'm Brave New Books and Chase Pank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.000 --> 44:22.400] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.400 --> 44:26.560] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, [44:26.560 --> 44:34.960] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. Call 512-264-4043 or find us [44:34.960 --> 44:42.960] online at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.960 --> 44:46.400] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:46.400 --> 44:59.280] naturespureorganics.com [45:01.120 --> 45:06.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney [45:06.000 --> 45:12.000] with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, poor CD course that will show you [45:12.000 --> 45:19.280] how in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.280 --> 45:22.480] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.200 --> 45:29.600] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created [45:29.600 --> 45:35.440] by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. Even if you're not [45:35.440 --> 45:41.120] in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices [45:41.120 --> 45:46.800] that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [45:46.800 --> 45:55.200] tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [45:55.200 --> 46:11.680] and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:25.360 --> 46:34.400] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to know what I'm fishing [46:34.400 --> 46:43.760] for. I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. I'm just here making my living, [46:43.760 --> 46:55.280] pushing buttons. I get my message out in one shot and distance. I'm both for bravery and against [46:55.280 --> 47:16.720] slavery, showing resistance. First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting. I'm just so glad to make my living, pushing buttons. [47:16.720 --> 47:25.920] That break was way too much fun. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, they're Steve and Drew of our radio. And Rosanna, you're [47:27.280 --> 47:36.880] trying to attack the bond and you know, for a long time we've talked about bonds and I've tried to get [47:37.600 --> 47:45.360] specific information about bonds and how to adjudicate them, but I've never got as much [47:45.360 --> 47:51.200] information as I would like to have. Right. Okay, go ahead. For 1099s with accounting, [47:51.920 --> 47:56.800] you ask for a complete and full accounting. You know, that's what I'm doing right now with [47:56.800 --> 48:01.120] this guardian. I've already put it in. I've asked for complete and full accounting with everything. [48:02.000 --> 48:07.200] Wait a minute, 1099, that's an IRS file form. Right, and when they're making money, [48:07.200 --> 48:19.200] shouldn't they be filing 1099? Well, okay, did you? Yeah, I'm sure they do, but IRS records tend to be [48:19.200 --> 48:27.200] not public. That's a good issue. Since this is a government agency, it would seem that there would [48:27.200 --> 48:34.960] be no expectation of privacy as concerns the financial arrangements of a public agency. [48:34.960 --> 48:39.760] Right, when you're a guardian. So where are you going with the 1099? [48:40.400 --> 48:46.000] Well, first of all, I need a full complete accounting of all of this because he just gave [48:46.000 --> 48:53.360] us one year and guess what? Wait a minute, a complete accounting of all this. What does this [48:53.360 --> 48:59.040] refer to? My father's estate, you know, what he's been doing, what he's been using out of it and for [48:59.040 --> 49:08.000] what? I want itemized receipt. What governmental agency is dealing with his finances? [49:09.760 --> 49:16.960] The guardian? The guardian, he's separate. He's not a governmental entity. [49:16.960 --> 49:25.280] We're in probate court. Yeah, he's an entity, so he's not like the county registrar [49:25.280 --> 49:37.280] or the clerk or any of those. He's kind of separate. So, okay, is a guardian, are the records [49:37.280 --> 49:44.480] handled by a guardian public records or they're court records? They're supposed to be public records. [49:45.760 --> 49:51.280] We just got an accounting, a yearly accounting, you know, for like a yearly of what he's supposed [49:51.280 --> 49:59.280] to be spending. Did you give that accounting to a CPA? No, I haven't done that yet because I want [49:59.280 --> 50:05.280] a complete and full accounting first. This is just group figures, Randy. I'm going to suggest that [50:05.280 --> 50:18.560] you engage a CPA because a CPA for them will change everything. If you engage a CPA, the CPA [50:18.560 --> 50:28.320] will come in as a third party who doesn't have a dog in the hunt and who is very well aware [50:28.320 --> 50:36.720] of all of their requirements and they will have to deal with that CPA. If you have contracted the CPA [50:36.720 --> 50:48.320] to do her job, then she's going to have to do her job in terms of enforcing the laws concerning the [50:48.320 --> 50:58.080] executor or the, what you call it, or the estate. Then that gives them a third party that they can't [50:58.080 --> 51:08.560] screw with. That might be a real good place to change the politics of the issue. They're always [51:08.560 --> 51:15.040] going to feel like they can manipulate you and they can handle and deal with you. I know. But when [51:15.040 --> 51:24.320] you bring in a third party, essentially a contractor, which the CPA would be, the CPA doesn't have a dog [51:24.320 --> 51:30.080] in the hunt. The CPA does not care what the court thinks. They don't care about any of that stuff. [51:30.880 --> 51:36.080] So I got these rules. You're going to follow these rules or I'm going to kick your behind because if [51:36.080 --> 51:47.040] I don't, my client's going to kick my behind. Changes everything. So if you have issues with [51:47.040 --> 51:58.800] finances, I would suggest that you bring in a CPA and specifically if you can find a CPA who specializes [51:58.800 --> 52:04.320] in this area. Well, I'm not going to do anything until I get a full and complete accounting because [52:04.320 --> 52:10.400] I can't do anything with bulk numbers. Go to the CPA and get the CPA to seek it accounting in your [52:10.400 --> 52:17.440] name. They will know the right questions to ask and they'll know when they get the wrong answer [52:18.160 --> 52:25.120] and how to enforce the right answer. The courts will pay attention to a CPA in a way they won't [52:25.120 --> 52:31.760] pay attention to you. And while that would create more fights, we're going to have more fights and [52:31.760 --> 52:35.200] you can keep up with. And they always end up butting up. This is the thing. I'm sitting here [52:35.200 --> 52:39.760] listening to you, but let me tell you something. Everything I've done, they come in and before you [52:39.760 --> 52:44.880] know it, they're sleeping with the lawyers. I don't know how this works. I know that. Okay, [52:44.880 --> 52:50.640] you hire a CPA. If you have reasons to believe the CPA is sleeping with the lawyer to sue the CPA. [52:51.520 --> 52:56.800] I know. And that'll make the CPA crazy. If you think this is going to be easy, [52:56.800 --> 53:01.760] if you think anybody's going to do what they're supposed to, forget about that noise. Nope, [53:01.760 --> 53:08.640] don't. This is a dog fight. Yeah, it is. Nobody's going to do what they're supposed to unless you [53:08.640 --> 53:13.680] kick their behinds and make them. You put a CPA in there, the CPA doesn't do what you want to. You [53:13.680 --> 53:22.640] file a complaint against the, whatever the licensing agency they are under and everybody [53:22.640 --> 53:29.520] except the bar, all of the licensing agencies, they are bad news for these licensed professionals. [53:30.240 --> 53:35.440] The only ones who are protected are the bar. And the problem the bar has is the insurance [53:35.440 --> 53:42.400] companies hammer the lawyers anyway. But if you got a CPA and you go to the board under which [53:42.400 --> 53:53.200] they're registered, they will kick your CPAs behind. That gives you politics. You're bringing [53:53.200 --> 54:00.240] in people that you can have leverage over. Yeah, that's what we need. Don't expect them to do it [54:00.240 --> 54:07.680] because they're supposed to or just because you pay them to. Get them to not do their job and then [54:07.680 --> 54:15.280] hammer them big time. Now they have to come in and do their job and they can go to the court [54:15.280 --> 54:22.960] and say, guys, I'm going to kick your behind. I'm sorry I got to do this, but my client's kicking [54:22.960 --> 54:31.120] my behind. So they have plausible deniability. It's the only way you're going to beat this. [54:31.120 --> 54:35.200] You know, it'd be nice if I could say, oh, this is a piece of cake. Here's a silver bullet. [54:35.200 --> 54:38.880] Yeah, you just go shoot your silver bullet and everything's taken care of. It doesn't work that [54:38.880 --> 54:51.360] way. The only ones who win are the belligerent litigants. The only ones who win are the last [54:51.360 --> 54:58.320] ones standing. They'll do everything they can to wear you down. And when you won't be worn down [54:58.320 --> 55:07.040] and everything they do, you turn against them, they'll come to the table. You just cannot allow [55:07.040 --> 55:15.680] yourself the indulgence of being frustrated and angry and disappointed. The children do that. [55:15.680 --> 55:26.400] We're the grownups. We are the guardians of this system. This system is in our care [55:27.280 --> 55:33.760] and we will bequeath this to our children. Are we going to go to our children and say, [55:33.760 --> 55:44.240] it was just too hard? I didn't have the heart to fix it for you. So now I dump it on you [55:44.240 --> 55:52.560] dump it on you in a horrible mess and you have to fix it. I told my prosecuting attorney once [55:52.560 --> 56:00.080] when I'm trying to get him to go after a couple of judges, I said, Danny, you know, I'm a, [56:00.080 --> 56:06.400] I'm a combat veteran. I went to Vietnam and I listened to all those people that told me I [56:06.400 --> 56:15.040] should go there and do that because I did that. These hands have wrongful blood on them, but no [56:15.040 --> 56:24.400] more. When my grandchildren come to me and say, grandpa, what did you do to make this system better [56:24.400 --> 56:35.120] for me? I'm going to be able to say that to them, I did everything I could. I don't know if I made [56:35.120 --> 56:42.400] it better for you or not, but I did everything I could. And I said, Danny, what are you going to [56:42.400 --> 56:51.360] tell your grandkids? And he looked up at me and said, Mr. Kelton, I really wish you wouldn't have [56:51.360 --> 57:01.920] put it that way. But that, that's the only way to put it. Rosanna, do you really think you were put [57:01.920 --> 57:15.360] in this position by mistake? You were, this is your job. I once told a district judge when he [57:15.360 --> 57:24.160] asked me why I was doing all this, I said, your honor, you kick this soap box up under my feet. [57:24.160 --> 57:32.800] You don't get the one that I stand squarely on it. Life kicked this soap box up under your feet [57:32.800 --> 57:43.040] because you were the right person to do this. You're just, you're not just going to seek justice [57:44.080 --> 57:49.040] for those people that are being, what is this, you're a father-in-law or your father didn't? [57:49.040 --> 57:54.720] No, it's my father and my mother's murder. Remember I called you in about them. You were [57:54.720 --> 58:05.120] here not just to fix it for them, but for the other people who will wind up in this position. [58:05.760 --> 58:12.880] If you don't do your job, this is not a problem. This is an opportunity. [58:12.880 --> 58:18.480] And we get to do things that when we reach the end of our lives and look back and say, [58:18.480 --> 58:27.520] what did I do of importance? We get to look back and say, it was better that I was here. [58:28.160 --> 58:31.600] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [58:32.320 --> 58:35.760] Rosanna, we really need to move on. We've got a bunch of colleagues building up. [58:35.760 --> 58:43.360] I hope I've handled your issues. Hang on, we'll pick you up when we come back on the other side, [58:43.360 --> 59:12.960] but we do need to move quickly. We'll be right back. [59:13.360 --> 59:18.800] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter [59:18.800 --> 59:24.320] by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation [59:24.320 --> 59:30.800] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. To order your free New Testament recovery version [59:30.800 --> 59:40.480] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.480 --> 59:49.120] That's 888-551-0102, or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:52.480 --> 59:58.640] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.960 --> 01:00:09.920] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, [01:00:09.920 --> 01:00:18.160] online at thelibertybeat.com. John Bush here with your Liberty Beat for Friday, October 4th, [01:00:18.160 --> 01:00:27.440] 2013. Gold opened today at $1,318, silver at $21.76, and Bitcoin is trading at $122. [01:00:28.240 --> 01:00:32.560] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Brave New Books, Austin's only brick and mortar store [01:00:32.560 --> 01:00:38.800] carrying Tangy Green 2.0, online at bravenewbookstore.com. And from Sons of Liberty Mint, [01:00:38.800 --> 01:00:43.360] where every week you have the opportunity to win up to 4 ounces of silver by simply [01:00:43.360 --> 01:00:49.520] guessing the spot price of silver. Contest details at sonsoflibertymint.com slash contest. [01:00:49.520 --> 01:00:57.200] That's S-U-N-S of libertymint.com. And now the news. A woman with no history of violence [01:00:57.200 --> 01:01:01.760] was shot dead in a hail of gunfire by Capitol Police Thursday afternoon. [01:01:01.760 --> 01:01:07.440] Following the death of 34-year-old Mariam Carey, her 18-month-old daughter was removed safely from [01:01:07.440 --> 01:01:12.480] the car that drove over a set of barricades and sped onto a driveway leading to the White House. [01:01:12.480 --> 01:01:17.920] A high-speed chase then ensued. According to the Associated Press, Carey's mother questions why her [01:01:17.920 --> 01:01:23.280] daughter, a dental hygienist, was in Washington. Her boss says Carey was always happy and voices [01:01:23.280 --> 01:01:28.240] disbelief that she would intentionally attempt violence. Capitol Police, despite opening fire [01:01:28.240 --> 01:01:31.760] and leaving Carey dead, say they don't believe it was an act of terrorism. [01:01:31.760 --> 01:01:40.960] A New Orleans Paris grand jury has re-indicted New Orleans resident Herman Wallace in the 1972 [01:01:40.960 --> 01:01:45.840] murder of a prison guard just two days after a federal judge overturned the terminally ill [01:01:45.840 --> 01:01:50.720] man's conviction and ordered him released from prison after serving more than 42 years in [01:01:50.720 --> 01:01:56.240] solitary confinement for armed robbery and murder. Herman Wallace and two others known as the Angola [01:01:56.240 --> 01:02:02.000] Three were placed in solitary in 1972 following the murder of a prison guard. The Angola Three [01:02:02.000 --> 01:02:06.480] and their supporters say they were framed for the murder over their political activism as members [01:02:06.480 --> 01:02:11.200] of one of the first prison chapters of the Black Panthers. Herman Wallace and two others known as [01:02:11.200 --> 01:02:16.640] the Angola Three were placed in solitary in 1972 following the murder of a prison guard. [01:02:16.640 --> 01:02:21.280] The Angola Three and their supporters say they were framed for the murder over their political [01:02:21.280 --> 01:02:26.560] activism as members of one of the first prison chapters of the Black Panthers. U.S. District Chief [01:02:26.560 --> 01:02:31.280] Judge Brian Jackson ordered Wallace released Tuesday and ordered a new trial because women [01:02:31.280 --> 01:02:36.080] were unconstitutionally excluded from the grand jury that indicted Wallace in the fatal stabbing [01:02:36.080 --> 01:02:40.640] of Brent Miller. Wallace's legal team said it hasn't received notice of the new indictment. [01:02:40.640 --> 01:02:44.800] This just in, according to activists and longtime friend of Herman Wallace, [01:02:44.800 --> 01:02:49.520] Scott Crowe, Mr. Wallace has passed away. He will be remembered for his bravery and [01:02:49.520 --> 01:02:54.320] commitment to the struggle for justice. 13 members of Anonymous were indicted by a U.S. [01:02:54.320 --> 01:03:22.320] grand jury alleging that the members carried out worldwide cyber attacks. This is the Liberty Beat. [01:03:54.320 --> 01:04:23.360] Okay, we are back with our radio. Okay, Rosanna, we really have to move ahead. [01:04:23.360 --> 01:04:32.480] I'm going to finish up here. I think you said don't put the statute numbers on with your [01:04:32.480 --> 01:04:38.080] complaint. Didn't you say that or not? Wait a minute, you were moving in and out. [01:04:38.080 --> 01:04:43.600] You need to be closer to your mic. Say that again. I said the statute on a complaint. [01:04:43.600 --> 01:04:51.200] Didn't you say don't put them on? No, no. On a complaint, it generally starts out, [01:04:51.200 --> 01:04:57.600] I'm not familiar with how the complaints are structured in Ohio. Most states structure a [01:04:57.600 --> 01:05:04.640] complaint like they do a motion or something. But first you state that you have reason to [01:05:04.640 --> 01:05:12.160] believe and do believe based on the following. And then you state a set of facts. And then [01:05:12.160 --> 01:05:21.440] you state, therefore, I charge that only before the date of this filing, you put in the date, [01:05:21.440 --> 01:05:29.200] this person committed a violation of this statute. You name the statute. They committed [01:05:29.200 --> 01:05:36.960] this act in violation of a certain statute. You do have to name the statute that you accused [01:05:36.960 --> 01:05:50.480] him of violating. And read the statute. You have to allege all of the elements of the crime. [01:05:50.480 --> 01:05:56.800] The statutes I have picked out. I was just thinking you said don't put the statute numbers [01:05:56.800 --> 01:06:02.320] down. No, no, no. You put the statutes in. The only place they don't want you to put [01:06:02.320 --> 01:06:06.960] the only place they don't want you to put case law statute is in bar grievances and [01:06:06.960 --> 01:06:11.040] judicial conduct complaints. And I say screw them. I put it in there anyway. [01:06:11.040 --> 01:06:17.600] Do you? Okay. Yeah. I was one. Yeah. I think so too. I do. [01:06:17.600 --> 01:06:21.280] Yeah. Yeah. I don't care what they want. I give it to them anyway. [01:06:22.960 --> 01:06:26.400] Okay. Okay. Is that it? Because we need to move along. [01:06:27.040 --> 01:06:32.000] Okay. Hey, have a good night. And thank you. Okay. Thank you, Suzanne. Okay. We're going [01:06:32.000 --> 01:06:39.120] to go to Jeff in Mississippi. Hello, Jeff. Hello. I'm sorry you had such a long wait. [01:06:39.120 --> 01:06:43.920] That's okay. Can you guys hear me all right? Can't hear a word you're saying. [01:06:45.440 --> 01:06:49.600] Can you hear me now? Okay. Okay. I lied. Yeah. I can hear you just fine. Go ahead. [01:06:49.600 --> 01:06:52.240] Now. Yeah. I get to be the guy on the commercial. Can you hear me now? [01:06:53.200 --> 01:06:59.440] Can you hear me now? Can you hear me now? Okay. Well, okay. Just to take the listeners back. [01:06:59.440 --> 01:07:04.720] I was going to Mississippi State University, and I had an apartment. I had my own apartment. [01:07:05.360 --> 01:07:10.160] And believing that I had my own apartment off campus, I brought my hunting rifle into my bedroom [01:07:10.160 --> 01:07:16.480] closet, got arrested for weapon on campus, got found guilty, got sent to prison for a year. [01:07:17.200 --> 01:07:24.800] And I'm out. And I am, I have looked up the property on the internet, and the property [01:07:24.800 --> 01:07:30.880] and the property is not owned by campus. It's actually owned by a private company. And I also [01:07:32.000 --> 01:07:38.960] found out that there didn't seem to be a grand jury hearing. So I talked to a friend, and he had [01:07:38.960 --> 01:07:47.520] me write up a FOIA, a public request, public records request. And I sent one to the land records [01:07:48.240 --> 01:07:53.120] and to the clerk of the court asking for the minutes of the jury. And neither one of them [01:07:53.120 --> 01:07:57.920] have written me back. And this has been over a month ago. Okay, what does the [01:07:59.360 --> 01:08:01.840] Open Records Act for Mississippi [01:08:04.000 --> 01:08:08.880] claim state as the duty of the custodian of the record? [01:08:11.680 --> 01:08:19.680] I don't have that in front of me. Okay, here's where I'm going. In Texas, a violation of the [01:08:19.680 --> 01:08:27.120] Open Government Act is designated as a Class A misdemeanor and act of official misconduct. [01:08:27.120 --> 01:08:36.640] Okay. If you don't have that, if there is a statutory requirement for the custodian [01:08:36.640 --> 01:08:46.480] of the record to produce the documentation, then look for a official misconduct statute. [01:08:46.480 --> 01:08:55.760] Most every state has a statute that reflects 18 U.S. Code 242. That's the Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:08:56.800 --> 01:09:05.120] The Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 had two provisions, two primary provisions. The second [01:09:06.000 --> 01:09:14.080] has been codified into 42 U.S. Code 1983, which gave you the right to sue a public official if they [01:09:14.080 --> 01:09:22.080] failed to perform a duty they required to perform. But that's the second part. The first part has been [01:09:22.080 --> 01:09:30.240] codified into 18 U.S. Code 242, which makes it a Class A misdemeanor for a public official acting on [01:09:30.240 --> 01:09:36.720] the code of his authority to fail to perform a duty he's required to perform or to exert or [01:09:36.720 --> 01:09:42.400] purport to exert an authority he does not expressly have that makes that a Class A misdemeanor. [01:09:42.400 --> 01:09:49.840] It makes that a Class A misdemeanor. You almost certainly have a corresponding statute in [01:09:49.840 --> 01:09:58.560] Mississippi. It's probably going to be titled Official Misconduct or Official Oppression. [01:09:58.560 --> 01:10:08.720] In Texas, we have both. In Texas, official oppression generally goes to misappropriation [01:10:08.720 --> 01:10:16.080] of public funds. I'm sorry, official misconduct goes to misappropriation of public funds. [01:10:16.080 --> 01:10:22.400] Official oppression goes to denying a citizen full free access to enjoyment of right. [01:10:23.280 --> 01:10:30.480] But most states, official misconduct covers both. It is a catch-all. [01:10:30.480 --> 01:10:37.440] If a public official violates any law relating to their office and denies you the right that's [01:10:37.440 --> 01:10:47.520] crime. So if you can't find in the open records law a designation that a violation of the act is [01:10:47.520 --> 01:10:56.400] a specific crime, then you can back up to the catch-all official misconduct where they were [01:10:56.400 --> 01:11:02.800] required to perform a duty and they failed to do so. So whoever didn't respond to you, [01:11:02.800 --> 01:11:06.320] you go to the district attorney and file criminal charges against them. [01:11:07.280 --> 01:11:10.800] Okay. And that would be the same district attorney that sent me away. [01:11:11.680 --> 01:11:18.880] Exactly. And when that jerk doesn't do his job, then you go to the attorney general and file [01:11:18.880 --> 01:11:22.720] criminal charges against him. Now, how do you file criminal charges? [01:11:22.720 --> 01:11:29.440] Now, how do you file criminal charges? You just make up a look at the complaint against you. [01:11:30.880 --> 01:11:39.440] Look at the form of the complaint. Take out the specifics of that complaint and put in the [01:11:39.440 --> 01:11:49.600] specifics of this complaint and take it to a notary, have your signature authenticated by a notary [01:11:49.600 --> 01:11:58.080] and give it to the, forward it by certified mail, return receipt to the attorney general. [01:11:58.080 --> 01:12:04.080] Okay. I don't have a complaint. And that's one of the deals that I wrote for in one of my letters. [01:12:04.080 --> 01:12:08.080] I have no direct complaint, if that's what you're talking about. I just have the indictment. [01:12:09.280 --> 01:12:15.440] You have an information. You should file a petition for a habeas corpus. [01:12:15.440 --> 01:12:18.080] And I would file that with the same court clerk. [01:12:18.960 --> 01:12:24.720] You'd file that. I would file, you can file a habeas with any court. I would file it with the state supreme. [01:12:27.360 --> 01:12:33.360] Okay. So file this habeas corpus with the state supreme court. Okay. [01:12:34.480 --> 01:12:38.640] And claim that you were prosecuted and no one ever filed a complaint against you. [01:12:39.840 --> 01:12:40.320] Really good. [01:12:40.320 --> 01:12:45.520] You could, you couldn't challenge the sufficiency of the complaint because it never existed. [01:12:45.520 --> 01:12:49.520] And apparently you have reason to believe that there was never a proper indictment. [01:12:51.520 --> 01:13:01.280] It is a practice of the United States attorney to gather information sufficient to present to a [01:13:01.280 --> 01:13:12.240] grand jury, to get an indictment over a minor and essentially unimportant issue that he will pick the [01:13:12.240 --> 01:13:20.240] thing that's easiest to get an indictment for. And then he will start doing his investigation. [01:13:21.120 --> 01:13:27.920] And once he finds the information he wants, that he thinks will give him a claim on a more serious [01:13:27.920 --> 01:13:33.200] accusation, then he will produce what they call it superseding indictment. [01:13:34.720 --> 01:13:41.840] And that presentation never goes before the grand jury. The U.S. attorney just produces it himself. [01:13:42.480 --> 01:13:48.240] The reason I went there, very good chance your local district attorney is doing the same thing. [01:13:48.240 --> 01:14:03.680] He's, one thing you should request, the billing from the, from the court reporter who did this [01:14:03.680 --> 01:14:09.120] transcript for the grand jury hearing on the day of your indictment. [01:14:09.840 --> 01:14:14.000] Well, I'm already a step ahead of you. I've already written her and she says that she's [01:14:14.000 --> 01:14:18.400] not there and there was no court reporter for my grand jury hearing. [01:14:19.120 --> 01:14:25.520] Okay. Does the statute require there to be a court reporter in Mississippi? [01:14:25.520 --> 01:14:30.720] In Mississippi, there's an appendix and it does not say that a court reporter needs to be in there, [01:14:30.720 --> 01:14:35.120] but it does say that the foreman of the grand jury is taking minutes. [01:14:36.640 --> 01:14:40.240] Did you request the minutes of the foreman of the grand jury? [01:14:40.240 --> 01:14:44.800] Did you request the minutes of the foreman of the grand jury? [01:14:49.280 --> 01:14:53.120] And I do this in the form of a public request for you? [01:14:53.120 --> 01:15:02.880] Yes, in the form of information request in that the, you request the minutes for the [01:15:02.880 --> 01:15:10.080] grand jury hearing concerning the presentment against you and you claim it under authority [01:15:10.080 --> 01:15:15.920] of special interest. Got it. Okay. [01:15:17.920 --> 01:15:24.000] So if you can't get it, then you maintain that one doesn't exist and that would be grounds for your [01:15:24.000 --> 01:15:33.600] habeas. And you should file criminal charges against a prosecuting attorney for prosecuting [01:15:33.600 --> 01:15:38.880] you without a proper indictment. Who would I file those with? [01:15:40.320 --> 01:15:50.720] Look at the law in Mississippi. In Texas, the attorney general up until 1997, I mean 2007, [01:15:50.720 --> 01:15:58.640] 2007 did not have prosecutorial authority. In 2007, the law was changed so that the attorney [01:15:58.640 --> 01:16:03.440] general had concurrent jurisdiction in the matter of a complaint against a public official. [01:16:04.640 --> 01:16:11.600] Pennsylvania, the prosecuting attorney has, I'm sorry, the attorney general has prosecutorial [01:16:11.600 --> 01:16:21.040] authority. So look in Mississippi law to see if the prosecutor, if the attorney general has [01:16:22.240 --> 01:16:31.120] authority to act as a prosecutor. In Texas, the attorney general is normally a lawyer for the [01:16:31.120 --> 01:16:37.760] state. Anytime the state is in illegal action, the attorney general represents the state as their [01:16:37.760 --> 01:16:43.680] lawyer. And the only time he could prosecute is in a complaint against a public official, [01:16:43.680 --> 01:16:48.400] I mean against a district attorney under open records. Otherwise he doesn't have prosecutorial [01:16:48.400 --> 01:16:53.360] authority, but other states are different. Okay. So check into that. Hang on, Randy [01:16:53.360 --> 01:16:58.640] Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [01:17:00.400 --> 01:17:06.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:17:06.320 --> 01:17:11.200] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. [01:17:11.200 --> 01:17:17.520] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:17:17.520 --> 01:17:22.240] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:17:22.240 --> 01:17:27.840] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests [01:17:27.840 --> 01:17:33.600] to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. 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[01:18:54.720 --> 01:18:59.680] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullying.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:24.720 --> 01:19:38.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, a little of our radio. Joe Esquivel had to go. [01:19:38.800 --> 01:19:45.360] He's working on three hours and he was kind of running out of steam. So it's just you and me, [01:19:45.360 --> 01:19:57.920] babe. And we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. Okay, Jeff, this may lead to something very [01:19:57.920 --> 01:20:07.840] interesting. If the district, if the prosecuting attorney in Mississippi is using the same kind of [01:20:07.840 --> 01:20:14.000] techniques the U.S. attorney used and what the U.S. attorney will do is he'll get that first [01:20:14.000 --> 01:20:23.440] indictment and then the subsequent indictments he will call superseding indictments. And those [01:20:23.440 --> 01:20:31.920] are the ones that most likely did not go before grand jury. So look at yours. If you can't find [01:20:31.920 --> 01:20:38.240] evidence that a grand jury met that day, then there's reason to believe there was no grand jury [01:20:38.240 --> 01:20:52.080] hearing. And you might look at a pre-litigation discovery. We have that in Texas. And if you [01:20:52.080 --> 01:21:02.240] filed a civil action for malicious prosecution, you would have a right to discovery. And most states [01:21:02.240 --> 01:21:10.880] have an option for pre-litigation discovery so that you think you have a claim against Joe Blow [01:21:10.880 --> 01:21:17.680] over here, but you're not sure. And the records that would determine whether or not you actually [01:21:17.680 --> 01:21:24.640] have a claim are in the exclusive control of Joe Blow over here. So the only way you can find out [01:21:24.640 --> 01:21:31.040] is to get his records. So in the interest of the judicial economy, you petition the court for [01:21:31.040 --> 01:21:36.720] pre-litigation discovery so that you can discover whether or not you actually have a cause of action. [01:21:38.000 --> 01:21:39.200] Does that make sense? [01:21:39.200 --> 01:21:49.280] Yeah. And in my documents, I have my public records request, request for public records, [01:21:49.280 --> 01:21:55.200] and it is request for the grand jury minutes. And it says, please send me a copy of the public [01:21:55.200 --> 01:21:59.840] records that evidence the legally lawfully promulgated official documents of the minutes [01:21:59.840 --> 01:22:05.600] of the grand jury convene, convenement pertaining to the indictment of Jeffrey L. Hill, my cause [01:22:05.600 --> 01:22:11.600] number, as required by the established laws of the state of Mississippi. So I do have that in [01:22:11.600 --> 01:22:16.400] there. This is over a month old and they have refused to write me back. So I want to... [01:22:16.400 --> 01:22:26.400] What, what does the open records law for Mississippi say concerning the amount of time someone has to [01:22:26.400 --> 01:22:33.600] respond or to produce records? I don't see it in here. I will have to go. Now here's the penalty. [01:22:33.600 --> 01:22:42.320] I found the penalty and it says that I can, they can be liable civilly and I can see them for $100. [01:22:42.320 --> 01:22:49.120] Any person that denies a person access to public records may be liable civilly not to [01:22:49.120 --> 01:22:58.080] exceed $100 per violation. Okay, then file suit for a hundred bucks. Okay. When you file suit, [01:22:58.080 --> 01:23:05.040] they're going to get real excited. Good. File suit for a hundred bucks and petition for [01:23:05.040 --> 01:23:10.240] declaratory judgment. Ask the court to order the person to produce the documents. [01:23:10.240 --> 01:23:16.800] Look at your law. You may have to give them notice, send them a tort letter saying, [01:23:16.800 --> 01:23:24.240] make me hold or be sued. And generally you're required to send this to the county [01:23:24.880 --> 01:23:31.360] commissioner's court. Notify them that you have been harmed. Give them 30 days [01:23:31.360 --> 01:23:38.240] to make you hold or be sued on the 31st day of your life. You may have to give them a [01:23:38.240 --> 01:23:44.160] call or be sued on the 31st day you filed suit. Stupid question, but where would you file this [01:23:44.880 --> 01:23:51.600] suit at? Cause this is the... File it in the district, the county court, depending on the [01:23:51.600 --> 01:23:56.800] amount, if you ask for declaratory judgment, you would almost certainly file it with the [01:23:56.800 --> 01:24:04.480] district court. Oh. But find out where declaratory judgments are filed. Being a hundred dollars, [01:24:04.480 --> 01:24:13.920] it'll probably be a JP court or a non inferior court, most likely a justice in the peace court. [01:24:14.720 --> 01:24:19.040] But if you petition for declaratory judgment, that'll get you into the district court, [01:24:19.680 --> 01:24:27.040] a higher level judge who knows the law better. Okay. And one last deal is I wrote, [01:24:27.040 --> 01:24:35.920] I filed an affidavit that said that the, even though they haven't answered my public request, [01:24:35.920 --> 01:24:40.880] you can look on the internet and see that the apartments are not owned by the campus. So I [01:24:40.880 --> 01:24:49.200] filed an affidavit in my case, in my appeals case. I'm up on appeal and I wrote the clerk of the [01:24:49.200 --> 01:24:56.000] appeals Supreme court of Mississippi. And I said, file this, send me back a file stamp copy, respond [01:24:56.000 --> 01:25:02.320] within 10 days. I certified it and copied that certification and she has not answered. So I want [01:25:02.320 --> 01:25:12.080] to bring charges on her too. Okay. Petition the Supreme court for writ of mandamus, ordering to [01:25:12.080 --> 01:25:21.440] ask them to order the clerk to do her duty. Since it's in their court, then this is appropriate for [01:25:21.440 --> 01:25:28.800] a writ of mandamus. Okay. So I can petition Supreme court for writ of mandamus and ask them to order [01:25:28.800 --> 01:25:36.880] her to accept this filing for record. You can also go after her criminally separate. Okay. [01:25:37.840 --> 01:25:44.000] And file a criminal complaint with the same jerk DA that prosecuted you. And then when he refuses [01:25:44.000 --> 01:25:52.080] to act, then you file against him and use this to show that the prosecuting attorney is failing to [01:25:52.080 --> 01:25:59.680] perform his duty in order to cover up for his illegal actions in prosecuting you. The two are [01:25:59.680 --> 01:26:06.160] in separate counties. Does that matter? No, that's even better. Then you get to go after a separate [01:26:06.160 --> 01:26:12.800] district attorney who's not going to want to be embroiled in your argument with whoever prosecuted [01:26:12.800 --> 01:26:19.600] you. That generates a little more politics. Okay. So the Supreme court clerk who's in Jackson, [01:26:19.600 --> 01:26:28.720] I need to find the DA in Jackson. Exactly. Yeah. Because my original court is about 200 miles away. [01:26:28.720 --> 01:26:33.840] It's all the way up in North Mississippi. So I need to go to the DA that's down in Jackson. [01:26:33.840 --> 01:26:40.400] Generally venue lies in the county in which it occurred or any county through which [01:26:40.400 --> 01:26:46.400] the infraction occurred. So if you have Jackson and you have an outlying county, [01:26:46.960 --> 01:26:53.440] good chance you could file complaints in every county in between. Oh, okay. [01:26:55.280 --> 01:27:00.240] That's fun. You get a lot of prosecutors, you know, he sends it to this prosecutor and he says he [01:27:00.240 --> 01:27:05.120] doesn't have jurisdiction. You don't care. You filed criminal charges against him for misfeasance [01:27:05.120 --> 01:27:12.320] in office. And he's going to be PO'd. Why have I got this guy beating me up, filing these complaints [01:27:12.320 --> 01:27:20.080] against me? He's going to stay on my record because you guys screwed up politics. It's all politics. [01:27:20.080 --> 01:27:24.800] And this is a county that I've never even stepped foot in. It's just some county in between [01:27:24.800 --> 01:27:33.040] Starkville and Jackson. Yeah. Look at the venue and generally it'll say in the county in which [01:27:33.040 --> 01:27:40.640] your infraction occurred or if it's multiple counties, like you're in one county, the county [01:27:40.640 --> 01:27:46.640] seats in another county, any county in between, any county through which you'd have to go to commit [01:27:46.640 --> 01:27:53.680] this act. And they'll probably claim they don't have jurisdiction. You don't care. You hammer [01:27:53.680 --> 01:27:59.680] them anyway. File bar grievances against them. File complaints, you know, professional conduct [01:27:59.680 --> 01:28:05.040] complaints claiming that, or criminal complaints claiming misfeasance in office. Let them argue [01:28:05.040 --> 01:28:11.840] that they didn't really do it. We don't care. Mark their record. Okay. This is, this is politics. [01:28:11.840 --> 01:28:21.040] It's not law. I've sent 11 bar complaints in yesterday. Bad move. One at a time, two weeks [01:28:21.040 --> 01:28:27.840] apart. Oh, really? Yeah. Okay. I did not know that. They'll treat all of those bar grievances [01:28:27.840 --> 01:28:35.040] as one. Oh. And when they send them back to you, send one at a time. Oh, I can send them back [01:28:35.040 --> 01:28:40.080] because they, they attach and say, now you can't send it now that you've already done it. [01:28:40.080 --> 01:28:45.760] Nah, just make it. You don't care what they say. You send it anyway. Just do it anyway. [01:28:45.760 --> 01:28:51.680] Yeah. Don't pay attention to those jerks. Just do whatever you want to. Oh, this is funny. [01:28:51.680 --> 01:28:55.680] This is not about them. It's about the insurance companies. Yeah. [01:28:55.680 --> 01:29:01.840] Okay. And even if, if the bar says you can't do this, the lawyer is going to have to notify [01:29:01.840 --> 01:29:11.520] his insurance company anyway. So if you have, like with one, with the DA, I had eight complaints [01:29:11.520 --> 01:29:16.640] and I sent them on separate forms, but I sent them all in the same envelope. And I shouldn't [01:29:16.640 --> 01:29:23.840] know that. They will treat it as one complaint. So just send them one at a time. One at a time. [01:29:23.840 --> 01:29:30.000] One at a time, two weeks apart. Got it. I did not know that. All right. That's my mistake. [01:29:30.880 --> 01:29:36.720] Okay. That'll drive them, that'll drive them nuts. Yeah. I'll call you when I'm done. Thank you. [01:29:37.760 --> 01:29:44.160] Okay. Thank you, Jeff. This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Joe Esquivel, Rue of Law Radio. [01:29:44.160 --> 01:29:50.880] I call in number 512-646-1984. Francis John Igor. I see you there. We'll pick you up when we come [01:29:50.880 --> 01:30:04.800] back on the other side. You might not know it yet, but your home has probably been zillowed. If [01:30:04.800 --> 01:30:09.280] you're not sure what that means, you should stay tuned and find out. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:30:09.280 --> 01:30:14.000] and I'll tell you more about this privacy nightmare in just a moment. Your search engine [01:30:14.000 --> 01:30:19.520] is watching you recording all your searches and creating a massive database of your personal [01:30:19.520 --> 01:30:25.200] information. That's creepy. But it doesn't have to be that way. Startpage.com is the world's most [01:30:25.200 --> 01:30:30.000] private search engine. Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, [01:30:30.000 --> 01:30:35.040] or use tracking cookies, and they're third-party certified. If you don't like big brother spying [01:30:35.040 --> 01:30:41.040] on you, start over with Startpage. Great search results and total privacy. Startpage.com, [01:30:41.040 --> 01:30:44.800] the world's most private search engine. 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Call 888-910-4367, [01:32:51.600 --> 01:33:00.160] 888-910-4367, and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. Only at HempUSA.org. [01:33:00.160 --> 01:33:06.560] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:30.160 --> 01:33:57.760] Okay, we are back. We're going to Kelton Davis Stevens with our radio, and we're going to [01:33:57.760 --> 01:34:03.680] Jim in Texas. Hello, Jim. Hello. What do you have for us? Oh, you asked me to call back. I [01:34:03.680 --> 01:34:12.800] talked to you last night about the Texas Constitution on the limit. Yes. Five percent [01:34:12.800 --> 01:34:17.120] without a contract. Yeah, five and ten percent. I didn't get time to look that up today. [01:34:17.680 --> 01:34:24.560] I had three really large documents I had to get out, and they gave me a headache. [01:34:24.560 --> 01:34:30.240] Oh, I can understand that. I've been working on some stuff myself. Yeah, they were about 50 pages, [01:34:30.240 --> 01:34:35.440] and I get about halfway through them, and I forget what I've done already, and [01:34:36.240 --> 01:34:41.280] I repeat myself, and, ah, give me a headache. Oh, I know. That gives me a headache, too. I'm [01:34:41.280 --> 01:34:48.640] working on a couple motions right now. That was interesting. I didn't have time to look at it. [01:34:48.640 --> 01:34:57.280] Okay. But apparently, what section of the Constitution is that in? I don't have it in [01:34:57.280 --> 01:35:02.480] front of me, and I cannot find my copy of the Constitution. It's the Constitution. [01:35:05.120 --> 01:35:14.320] Interest. I can look up interest on Constitution. Five percent and ten percent with a contract [01:35:14.320 --> 01:35:23.120] without a contract. That is interesting as it goes to usury. I seem to remember usury in Texas [01:35:24.240 --> 01:35:35.440] being set at like 14 or 15 percent. So, considering that there's a Constitutional [01:35:35.440 --> 01:35:41.280] provision, I would certainly like to see how they got there. As a matter of fact, [01:35:41.280 --> 01:35:48.640] I think it was 19 percent, but that was probably for a specific circumstance, [01:35:50.080 --> 01:35:56.880] so that is definitely something I'll have to look at. Okay. Well, that was all I had there on it, [01:35:56.880 --> 01:36:03.360] and then I had commented that also whenever you deposit anything in the bank, then it becomes [01:36:03.360 --> 01:36:14.480] the bank's property. Well, not exactly their property, but they do accrue certain rights [01:36:14.480 --> 01:36:25.760] over those amounts, and they're allowed to use those amounts to invest or loan out and do other [01:36:25.760 --> 01:36:30.480] things with them. This is, you know, Deborah and I, last night we were talking about some issues, [01:36:30.480 --> 01:36:37.280] and I mentioned this parable, and I'm afraid I didn't give enough background so it made sense. [01:36:38.160 --> 01:36:41.600] The parable of the talents, I'm sure everybody's familiar with them, [01:36:43.040 --> 01:36:49.760] but what that essentially goes to, that's essentially a banking system or the [01:36:49.760 --> 01:37:00.480] reference to the fact that life was intended for enterprise and not for ease, but when we [01:37:00.480 --> 01:37:07.120] spoke of it last night, we were talking about the silver business, I was hoping to get some [01:37:07.120 --> 01:37:15.280] kind of banking system to where when they put a mark on a ledger, instead of putting a mark [01:37:15.280 --> 01:37:21.840] instead of putting a mark on a ledger in value as compared to green [01:37:24.640 --> 01:37:33.600] reserve bank notes, they put a mark on a ledger of an amount of value based on [01:37:34.560 --> 01:37:43.760] a weight of silver or gold or some other commodity. I don't need the gold, and I don't care to have [01:37:43.760 --> 01:37:51.600] it. It's kind of like the way I do business now, most of the income I receive goes directly into [01:37:51.600 --> 01:37:58.080] my bank account, and they put this little mark on the ledger, and then I take my little [01:37:58.960 --> 01:38:05.680] plastic card and I slide it through this little deal, and they subtract a certain amount from [01:38:05.680 --> 01:38:16.480] that ledger, and what I was hoping to find was a place where I could store my value in a [01:38:19.840 --> 01:38:28.960] system based on something other than a fiat currency, because fiat currencies have [01:38:28.960 --> 01:38:35.520] pressures on them that affect their value in ways that a coffee cup does not. [01:38:36.560 --> 01:38:42.320] Coffee cup is a coffee cup. It's always going to be a coffee cup, it's always going to take a certain [01:38:42.320 --> 01:38:50.080] amount of materials, a certain amount of labor to produce a coffee cup, so it has intrinsic value. [01:38:50.080 --> 01:38:58.400] When there is a fiat currency, the fiat currency only has value in relation to something else, [01:38:59.440 --> 01:39:06.560] and the fiat currency, since they can just print as much as you want to, that value of the fiat [01:39:06.560 --> 01:39:16.000] currency is really determined by public confidence. What am I willing to accept? Right now, [01:39:16.000 --> 01:39:23.920] because the last time I looked, silver was like 31 dollars an ounce, so I would trade my silver [01:39:23.920 --> 01:39:33.520] for 31 green pieces of paper, but as the dollar becomes more unstable, people are going to say, [01:39:33.520 --> 01:39:40.400] whoa, hold on here, I got this hard silver, I can bite it, I can polish it, I can set it on my table [01:39:40.400 --> 01:39:48.480] and bang on it, I can see it, I can feel it, and you want me to trade you this for something that [01:39:49.360 --> 01:39:56.240] really doesn't have a real existence, I've only got this piece of paper that refers to it, [01:39:57.360 --> 01:40:03.360] and you want me to accept this piece of paper? Well, I don't trust that piece of paper, [01:40:03.360 --> 01:40:11.280] so I don't think I will accept this 31 of those pieces of paper at this point, I think I want 50. [01:40:13.920 --> 01:40:18.960] If I could get someone who would store my value in gold, silver, platinum, palladium, [01:40:19.680 --> 01:40:25.520] something hard, then I don't have to worry about what happens to the fiat currency, [01:40:25.520 --> 01:40:31.440] because my value essentially never changes, the coffee cup is always going to take the same [01:40:31.440 --> 01:40:37.760] amount of labor and material, no matter how much labor and material costs, does that make sense, [01:40:37.760 --> 01:40:50.880] Jim? Oh, yes, but I think it was Gladstone in 1712 that said that the value of the fiat currency [01:40:50.880 --> 01:41:08.720] becomes the bank's property, and then you are considered an unsecured creditor. Okay, Gladstone [01:41:08.720 --> 01:41:16.800] said that back then, but that doesn't necessarily carry weight, and this is not really my area of [01:41:16.800 --> 01:41:24.560] expertise, so I can't speak definitively. Okay, another question now, if I remember correctly, [01:41:24.560 --> 01:41:30.000] the Federal Reserve notes originally were only for transfers between Federal Reserve banks, [01:41:30.000 --> 01:41:37.600] is that correct? No, no, I don't know about that, that's a good issue. I think it is out there, [01:41:39.680 --> 01:41:43.440] since you don't know, you wouldn't know, because I wonder when they had changed that [01:41:43.440 --> 01:41:54.320] regulation or that law. Yeah, and I struggle with understanding the difference between what I think [01:41:54.320 --> 01:42:02.880] and what I know, so I tend to try to be careful about that, and that is a question I don't know, [01:42:02.880 --> 01:42:08.960] I haven't had that question before. See, one of the problems is that the Federal Reserve notes are [01:42:08.960 --> 01:42:18.000] based upon the full faith and credit of the United States, that's all their value is based upon. [01:42:19.040 --> 01:42:26.240] Yeah, and that's what I was going to earlier about, it's only worth what I'm willing to accept it for. [01:42:27.840 --> 01:42:34.560] If it was a silver certificate, that's a whole different animal, because I can take that silver [01:42:34.560 --> 01:42:45.520] certificate and trade it for 3.71 and a quarter ounces of silver, but we don't have that anymore, [01:42:45.520 --> 01:42:53.840] so now it floats, now it's fiat, and it became fiat in 65, and according to Dr. Beath, no fiat [01:42:53.840 --> 01:43:06.080] currency has ever existed for longer than 50 years. If Nixon took the silver out and replaced [01:43:06.080 --> 01:43:16.480] the silver certificates with Federal Reserve notes, that was 65, so 2005 would have been 50, [01:43:16.480 --> 01:43:26.480] 2015 would be 50 years. So we got two years, and it looks like the dollar is going to crash [01:43:27.440 --> 01:43:44.240] right on schedule. Now we're going to the 1931 bankruptcy, and that gets a lot more complex. [01:43:44.240 --> 01:43:51.840] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, the Wheel of Law Radio, I call in number 512-646-1984, [01:43:51.840 --> 01:43:57.600] with Francis, I see you, Gary in New York, we'll try to get to everybody, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.080 --> 01:44:03.760] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.760 --> 01:44:04.240] Sorry! [01:44:04.240 --> 01:44:07.520] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.520 --> 01:44:08.000] What? [01:44:08.000 --> 01:44:12.800] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.800 --> 01:44:16.240] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.240 --> 01:44:21.360] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. I had no idea that the number one cause of the [01:44:21.360 --> 01:44:25.920] disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. Unfortunately, [01:44:25.920 --> 01:44:31.040] that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. The staff at Brave [01:44:31.040 --> 01:44:36.080] New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports-zombie-ism recover, [01:44:36.080 --> 01:44:40.560] and because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.560 --> 01:44:46.160] without feeling tired or uninterested. So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.160 --> 01:44:54.560] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.560 --> 01:44:58.000] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:58.000 --> 01:44:59.680] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:01.040 --> 01:45:05.920] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney [01:45:05.920 --> 01:45:12.320] with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how [01:45:12.320 --> 01:45:19.200] in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.200 --> 01:45:24.480] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our [01:45:24.480 --> 01:45:30.400] step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed [01:45:30.400 --> 01:45:36.480] attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [01:45:36.480 --> 01:45:41.760] you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control [01:45:41.760 --> 01:45:48.480] our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for [01:45:48.480 --> 01:45:55.680] civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on [01:45:55.680 --> 01:46:00.640] the banner, or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.680 --> 01:46:52.320] Okay, we are back. We're going to talk to Stephen through our radio. And Jim, I'm sorry, [01:46:52.320 --> 01:46:57.760] we really need to move along. We've got two more callers. I didn't realize we were at the last [01:46:57.760 --> 01:47:03.280] segment. Well, I'll get off then. Have a good evening. Thank you, Jim. Okay, now we're going [01:47:03.280 --> 01:47:12.480] to go to Ms. Francis in Colorado. Hello, Ms. Francis. Hi, Randy. How are you? I am good. [01:47:12.480 --> 01:47:20.320] What do you have for us tonight? Okay, let's see. What I have tonight is my husband, Galen, [01:47:20.320 --> 01:47:25.760] and he's telling me that I've really thrown him underneath the bus because, you know, [01:47:25.760 --> 01:47:30.800] I stepped right up when things started going south in his mom's place to try to get her out [01:47:30.800 --> 01:47:42.000] of South Dakota and up here. And so on Monday, he is supposed to be able to argue pro se, [01:47:42.000 --> 01:47:51.120] but by phone. And the issue is standing. And so basically, in a nutshell, his mother lacked [01:47:51.120 --> 01:47:59.440] mental capacity to sign a contract with the alleged attorney. We challenged that standing [01:48:00.720 --> 01:48:08.320] and his capacity and his agency. And out of his own mouth, with absolutely no evidence, [01:48:08.320 --> 01:48:17.440] he responded that Galen's mom signed a contract last October the 12th, and she lacked capacity [01:48:17.440 --> 01:48:23.520] since about March of last year, you know, at the very latest. Okay, he, you're talking about the [01:48:23.520 --> 01:48:31.600] lawyer, the custodian? Yes, the lawyer, her alleged attorney. Okay, and her lawyer knows [01:48:31.600 --> 01:48:40.560] full well that that attorney, that that contract is void in a no-fortune effect. Okay, yes. Now, [01:48:40.560 --> 01:48:47.440] could you just, he's listening, but I asked the question, it's a little better. Could you just [01:48:48.640 --> 01:48:55.120] tell him and everyone else, of course, because this is such a pivotal foundational issue, [01:48:55.120 --> 01:49:04.560] how you would handle that in the court on Monday to challenge that and move the court to dismiss [01:49:04.560 --> 01:49:09.920] the case with prejudice and void out all of the judgments, because that's what we've asked for. [01:49:10.640 --> 01:49:16.720] Is there evidence already before the court that his mother was incompetent, [01:49:18.480 --> 01:49:22.640] was ruled incompetent before the signing of this alleged contract? [01:49:22.640 --> 01:49:29.680] We think that his former attorney did file those documents. We have documents from her doctor [01:49:29.680 --> 01:49:39.600] to his former attorney, who has now stepped aside. Okay, that's important to know. You can't accuse [01:49:39.600 --> 01:49:48.560] this lawyer if you can't show that he had knowledge of this information, but you can if you have this [01:49:48.560 --> 01:49:54.800] verified information that you can put before the court showing that she was incompetent prior to the [01:49:55.360 --> 01:50:01.680] entering into this contract, then you can have the contract stricken. You can move to have the [01:50:01.680 --> 01:50:07.600] contract stricken, but you won't necessarily have a claim against the lawyer unless you can [01:50:07.600 --> 01:50:19.200] show that the information was before the lawyer. Okay. Well, in Galen's response to the attorney's [01:50:20.960 --> 01:50:29.200] feeble response, there were exhibits showing that the doctor had multiple times in 2012, [01:50:29.200 --> 01:50:36.000] actually just 11 days prior to her supposed allegedly signing this contract, that she was [01:50:36.000 --> 01:50:42.800] incapable of signing it. Okay, so this information is before this other lawyer at the present? [01:50:43.520 --> 01:50:53.120] It is. If he comes before the court and argues his position, then Galen needs to move for sanctions [01:50:53.120 --> 01:51:03.280] against this lawyer. He cannot come before this court and argue his position if he has in his hand [01:51:04.080 --> 01:51:12.080] evidence that he has no power to refute. He is not a doctor. He cannot make this determination. [01:51:12.800 --> 01:51:19.040] A doctor has made this determination. He has been given knowledge that the doctor has been [01:51:19.040 --> 01:51:25.440] determined. He has been given knowledge that the doctor has made this determination. He's [01:51:25.440 --> 01:51:33.440] responsible for that knowledge. If he brings an issue before the court that would be mitigated by [01:51:33.440 --> 01:51:43.840] this determination, then he acts knowingly and deliberately and that is it be fraudulent on his [01:51:43.840 --> 01:51:53.920] part. So once he has knowledge, he had a duty to notice the court to withdraw any motions he had [01:51:53.920 --> 01:52:00.160] based on the competence of the mother when he has evidence to show that the mother was not competent [01:52:00.160 --> 01:52:09.200] at the time. That would be failure to speak with candor to the court. So he had to notice the court [01:52:09.200 --> 01:52:17.120] even going all the way back to the last or the earlier this year. Exactly. Go back to my [01:52:18.160 --> 01:52:24.640] bar grievance site, pull up the model standards, say go to these issues. He's required to notice [01:52:24.640 --> 01:52:33.840] the court of anything that's opposing his particular position and then he must show cause as to why [01:52:33.840 --> 01:52:42.960] that apparent information would not be applicable in this case. If he hasn't notified the court of [01:52:43.760 --> 01:52:48.720] information that would tend to contradict his position, that's failure to speak with candor [01:52:48.720 --> 01:52:59.680] to the court and that's actionable. Okay. It is intended that in civil actions that justice be [01:52:59.680 --> 01:53:07.360] found and the lawyers or officers of the court, they may not just simply come to the court and [01:53:07.360 --> 01:53:14.800] present their client's side. They're required to present both sides. They're required to present [01:53:14.800 --> 01:53:24.800] facts and law that support their client's position, facts and law that do not support or are [01:53:24.800 --> 01:53:34.560] antagonistic to their client's position and then show the court why that antagonistic information [01:53:34.560 --> 01:53:42.400] does not apply. And that's a duty they have as an officer to the court. Now you're a pro se, [01:53:42.400 --> 01:53:49.520] you don't have to do that. But he's an officer of the court, he has to. And if he doesn't, [01:53:49.520 --> 01:53:57.680] that's malpractice. Okay. Send him a tort letter and tell him we'll see what a jury of my peers [01:53:57.680 --> 01:54:07.440] thinks about that. Okay. Now he has commented in a conversation with Galen after he went to see [01:54:07.440 --> 01:54:16.240] Mrs. Amerson in the nursing home on the 9th of September that, and Galen, he took another [01:54:16.240 --> 01:54:22.560] attorney. This attorney took another attorney and they basically ganged up on Mrs. Amerson who lacks [01:54:22.560 --> 01:54:29.440] the ability to discern what was going on. I can't even imagine with my own head that two attorneys [01:54:29.440 --> 01:54:34.240] ganging up on me, you know, you would just basically not answer. But of course she didn't [01:54:34.240 --> 01:54:40.800] even know who they were. And her doctor has submitted a notice, a letter that, you know, [01:54:40.800 --> 01:54:45.360] depending on how the question was asked, she could basically be led to answer anything. [01:54:45.360 --> 01:54:50.320] And when Galen challenged why there was not a neutral social worker or someone else, [01:54:50.320 --> 01:54:57.440] a medical personnel, and why he was not inquiring with his mother's doctor, the attorney responded, [01:54:58.080 --> 01:55:02.080] we are not interested in anyone who is already in bed with your mother. [01:55:04.880 --> 01:55:10.800] How's that? Okay, good. Then have you filed a [01:55:10.800 --> 01:55:17.680] a law agreements against the attorney? Well, I did one today and I used that [01:55:17.680 --> 01:55:21.120] and I did elder abuse, but what else should I have called it? [01:55:22.480 --> 01:55:27.040] Malpractice. You should send him a tort letter for malpractice. [01:55:28.880 --> 01:55:32.640] Let him know that you intend to sue him personally. Okay. [01:55:32.640 --> 01:55:36.480] In Colorado, you're in Colorado. Okay. [01:55:36.480 --> 01:55:41.280] And then let him object to Colorado and bring it to the federal court. [01:55:44.960 --> 01:55:49.120] Lawsuit is the only thing they pay attention to. In a malpractice suit, [01:55:49.120 --> 01:55:53.280] win, lose, or draw his malpractice insurance to go bananas. [01:55:54.640 --> 01:55:59.680] Okay. Well, I'll go ahead to bar grievance. It was a slow day. I only did four bar grievances today. [01:56:00.480 --> 01:56:02.560] Good, good, good. Get some more. [01:56:02.560 --> 01:56:05.920] I will. Okay. Okay. You have anything else? [01:56:05.920 --> 01:56:11.920] Galen, did you get all that? Okay. This goes on. We'll listen to it on the replay. [01:56:11.920 --> 01:56:15.920] So I think we're good for that. Okay. Thank you very much. Have a great weekend. [01:56:15.920 --> 01:56:20.480] Okay. Thank you, Ms. Francis. Okay. Now we're going to go to Gary in New York. [01:56:20.480 --> 01:56:26.400] Hello, Gary. We've got a couple of minutes. I called on Monday to follow up on the parking [01:56:26.400 --> 01:56:32.560] violations situation in New York. And I was just re-listening to the show and Deborah brought up a [01:56:32.560 --> 01:56:41.040] case called Gonzales versus the US 553. US that apparently states that we do not have to consent [01:56:41.040 --> 01:56:49.040] to any non-judicial decision-making. So I read through the case and I have a hard time. [01:56:49.040 --> 01:56:55.040] Okay. I always file, when I have people file actions and foreclosure issues, we always include [01:56:55.040 --> 01:57:01.440] an objection to non-judicial decision-making. And that goes to the fact that the federal judges [01:57:02.080 --> 01:57:09.520] use magistrates to handle a lot of their work for them. And we object to a magistrate's [01:57:09.520 --> 01:57:15.680] intervention. If you have a traffic case, it's probably not in the federal venue. [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:20.320] Right. So I thought that I cannot use that case. No. [01:57:20.320 --> 01:57:24.880] I cannot use that for my purposes. I just wanted to, because I was reading it twice and I just can't [01:57:25.440 --> 01:57:32.640] glean anything out of it at all. Yeah. It only goes to a judge who doesn't have time to get to [01:57:32.640 --> 01:57:40.000] everything. So he appoints a magistrate or to have a magistrate appointed who can do some of the [01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:49.120] administrative things that the judge needs to do and some of the work that the judge would normally [01:57:49.120 --> 01:57:55.600] do. In the federal venue, if you let them, the magistrate would handle everything. And they tend [01:57:55.600 --> 01:58:00.960] to get the magistrates because they rule against you on everything, especially if you're a processer. [01:58:00.960 --> 01:58:05.280] We always object to them. But that objection would only go to the federal venue. [01:58:05.280 --> 01:58:09.840] But you mentioned there are two cases, two Supreme court cases that rule the transportation, [01:58:10.400 --> 01:58:14.800] actual war transportation only referred to commercial matters. [01:58:14.800 --> 01:58:21.280] Okay. Now that is something we can do a couple of shows on. That you need to listen to the Monday [01:58:21.280 --> 01:58:31.120] night show with Eddie Craig. Traffic is his area. He is on eight to 10 Mondays Saturdays, [01:58:31.120 --> 01:58:38.160] central time. And he is our resident traffic expert. Now we are out of time. This is Randy [01:58:38.160 --> 01:58:44.400] Chilton, Debra Stevens, you have our radio. We will be back next week. Thank you for listening. [01:58:44.400 --> 01:58:51.280] And good. Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called [01:58:51.280 --> 01:58:56.080] the New Testament recovery version. The New Testament recovery version has over 9,000 [01:58:56.080 --> 01:59:01.920] footnotes that explain what the Bible says, verse by verse, helping you to know God and [01:59:01.920 --> 01:59:07.760] to know the meaning of life. Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free [01:59:07.760 --> 01:59:18.480] at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. 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