[00:00.000 --> 00:05.720] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing your daily [00:05.720 --> 00:13.400] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.400 --> 00:21.240] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.240 --> 00:28.440] Markets for Friday, April 8th, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,239.45 an ounce, silver [00:28.440 --> 00:35.280] at $15.36 an ounce, Texas crude at $37.26 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting [00:35.280 --> 00:44.360] at about $419 U.S. currency. [00:44.360 --> 00:49.720] Today in history, the year 1943, then U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and Executive [00:49.720 --> 00:55.400] Order 9328 froze all wages and prices, prohibited workers from changing jobs unless the war [00:55.400 --> 01:00.200] effort called for it, and barred rate increases to common carriers and public utilities. [01:00.200 --> 01:04.440] All this interventionism was allowed in order to freeze inflation, which is itself caused [01:04.440 --> 01:06.120] by intervening in the money supply. [01:06.120 --> 01:12.760] FDR froze the economy today in history. [01:12.760 --> 01:16.680] In recent news, Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, had a shooting today involving [01:16.680 --> 01:18.520] two airmen who were killed. [01:18.520 --> 01:21.880] As of now, it appears media outlets at the scene are reporting that an airman shot his [01:21.880 --> 01:25.840] commanding officer and then himself, two Glocks were found at the site. [01:25.840 --> 01:29.760] U.S. Air Force said in a statement that this was a workplace violence incident and not [01:29.760 --> 01:33.520] a result of a terrorist attack, while the Bexar County Sheriff's Office did describe [01:33.520 --> 01:36.160] the deaths as a likely murder-suicide case. [01:36.160 --> 01:39.520] It's still uncertain how the Glocks made it on base, however, since individuals, including [01:39.520 --> 01:43.920] military personnel, are not allowed to carry weapons on site unless they are in security [01:43.920 --> 01:52.640] forces or the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. [01:52.640 --> 01:56.160] Inmates at seven different state prisons across Texas launched a work strike this week. [01:56.160 --> 01:59.820] It seems inmates refused to leave their cells, prompting all seven prisons to put their entire [01:59.820 --> 02:01.800] facilities on lockdown. [02:01.800 --> 02:06.840] According to the Incarcerated Workers Organization Committee, or IWOC, the problem in Texas is [02:06.840 --> 02:10.320] that prison labor does not contribute towards their parole considerations. [02:10.320 --> 02:14.240] The compensation, which doesn't even add up to cover the inmates' $100 copay associated [02:14.240 --> 02:18.200] with their medical expenses and the heat they're put through in the Lone Star State, can be [02:18.200 --> 02:19.200] deadly. [02:19.200 --> 02:23.880] The IWOC is also calling for 60 percent of the 180,000 prisoner laborers, which adds up [02:23.880 --> 02:28.760] to about 100,000 jobs, should be given back to the citizenry, which would alleviate unemployment [02:28.760 --> 02:29.760] in the state. [02:29.760 --> 02:33.760] Keep in mind that prison workers receive no benefits, no disability compensation, no social [02:33.760 --> 02:35.920] security, and no overtime pay. [02:35.920 --> 02:40.040] The Prison Policy Initiative, a nonprofit and nonpartisan research institute, describes [02:40.040 --> 02:44.400] the two billion annual prison industrial industry as nothing less than legal slavery. [02:44.400 --> 03:11.040] The list of fixes and grievances can be seen on the IWOC webpage. [03:11.040 --> 03:29.960] The Incarcerated Workers Organization Committee, or IWOC, the IWOC, the Incarcerated Workers [03:29.960 --> 03:55.680] Organization Committee, or IWOC, the IWOC, the IWOC, the IWOC, the IWOC, the IWOC, the [03:55.680 --> 04:02.720] IWOC and the IWOC. [04:02.720 --> 04:10.960] April 2016 and I'm going to turn the phones on we'll keep them on all night so if you have a [04:12.160 --> 04:20.160] question or a comment give us a call 512-646-1984 and I'm going to start out with a little trip I [04:20.160 --> 04:32.160] took to Parker County, Texas which is a county due west of Fort Worth. I've had two or three people [04:32.160 --> 04:40.560] call me out there over driving without a license. These guys have I guess they've got a judge out [04:40.560 --> 04:49.520] there that that must be a pet peeve of his because what he's doing is really kind of outrageous. [04:52.080 --> 04:54.560] This woman she gave this woman 90 days [04:54.560 --> 05:04.160] and she's in jail and apparently the jailers out there are giving her a real hard time so [05:04.160 --> 05:12.560] I went out there to kind of stir them up and that's generally not very hard to do. [05:14.000 --> 05:20.640] So I haven't had any complaints from the woman after I've done this but I didn't get arrested [05:20.640 --> 05:27.120] I only got threatened with but I did file a couple of criminal charges against these guys and [05:27.680 --> 05:32.160] the sheriff's deputy he's going to give it to the county attorney at least that's what he tells me [05:32.160 --> 05:37.760] he's going to do with my complaint and when he does I'm going to file against him with a grand jury. [05:39.280 --> 05:42.720] So we'll go out there and stir them up a little get them excited [05:42.720 --> 05:52.000] unfortunately it's way too easy to do. Okay we do have Ms. Leslie online. I haven't heard from her [05:52.000 --> 05:58.240] a while and she's having way too much fun beating up these judges. Hello Ms. Leslie. [05:58.240 --> 06:12.960] Hello Ms. Leslie. We may be having a little sound issue. Ms. Leslie you want to try again [06:12.960 --> 06:21.840] and I got one little peep and then I lost you. Oh I lost her altogether okay so I suspect she'll [06:21.840 --> 06:31.280] be back in a moment. She filed a wrongful foreclosure or a quiet title action [06:32.800 --> 06:42.320] and it took the judge five years to dismiss it because there wasn't there was a necessary [06:42.320 --> 06:49.680] party missing. Something should have been obvious on the first day since this is a foreclosure or [06:49.680 --> 06:57.680] mortgage issue and there's a man and wife involved and only the wife was on the lawsuit. It [06:57.680 --> 07:02.720] took them five years to figure that part out and then they dismissed it without prejudice. [07:05.040 --> 07:11.760] So she's going to she's filing against the judge for letting this go on so long without [07:11.760 --> 07:21.840] sort of dismissing the case. So there she is. She's back. Hello Ms. Leslie. Hi how are you? [07:23.520 --> 07:34.080] Oh much better now. Okay yeah there's two separate cases there. One was for client [07:34.080 --> 07:42.880] title and the other was for foreclosure. And I'm getting feedback. Did he dismiss both of them? [07:44.640 --> 07:51.360] Pardon? See did he dismiss both of them? Well there's two separate judges. [07:53.120 --> 07:59.120] One that was in the quiet title had dismissed it for lack of jurisdiction but even gave a [07:59.120 --> 08:06.960] statement of judgment. Wait Ms. Leslie you're kind of fading in and out. Okay well there's [08:14.560 --> 08:17.840] I think I'm losing you again if you're fading down. [08:21.600 --> 08:25.520] No you're kind of you're fading in and out. I'm just getting a few words every now and then. [08:25.520 --> 08:36.400] Let me call back in. All righty. Okay. Okay and we do have the phone lines open. We'll keep them [08:36.400 --> 08:45.760] open all night 512-646-1984 and I go back to Weatherford County. We're beginning to get a [08:45.760 --> 08:54.080] lot more traction here in North Texas because we've been kind of hammering these judges. [08:54.080 --> 09:01.040] We have a couple of judges in Dallas County that we're about to go after. I had a woman go into [09:01.040 --> 09:12.400] court and on a home equity loan in Texas home equity has to go before judges. There's no [09:12.400 --> 09:18.080] deed of trust in home equity. So they went before this judge and she filed a challenge [09:18.080 --> 09:24.800] subject matter jurisdiction and apparently the judge didn't even read it because he told the [09:24.800 --> 09:33.360] litigant that the lawyers tend not to like him because he tends to try to help people [09:33.360 --> 09:39.120] save their homes but since she challenged his subject matter jurisdiction he was going to [09:39.120 --> 09:49.360] rule against her. Is that a fact, Jack? So first thing we asked her to do was go down and ask for [09:49.360 --> 09:55.440] a transcript and then a couple days later we had a justice of the peace do the same thing. [09:56.880 --> 10:04.240] Dad all upset because we challenged subject matter jurisdiction and told the woman specifically [10:04.240 --> 10:11.520] that she was ruling against him or her, I'm not sure if it's a man or woman, [10:12.480 --> 10:18.560] because she filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction and did not read it, insisted she had [10:18.560 --> 10:26.080] subject matter jurisdiction. Well the way I read it that's criminal and we'll be taking both of [10:26.080 --> 10:33.280] these judges to a grand jury and see if a grand jury is as impressed with those judges as they [10:33.280 --> 10:40.480] seem to be with themselves. Okay we have Ms. Leslie back. Okay let's see if we got a better [10:40.480 --> 10:49.840] connection this time. Okay sounds a little better. It does but you may be moving, are you staying [10:49.840 --> 11:00.640] pretty close to the mic? Yes. Okay that's much better, that's louder. Okay. The first thing [11:00.640 --> 11:08.480] with clients and they dispute the case for jurisdiction. Wait a minute, something is wrong. [11:09.680 --> 11:19.280] Can I get you to call back in about 10 minutes? Okay. It's eight o'clock and right at this time [11:19.280 --> 11:26.080] we tend to have most people on the internet. This sounds like your bandwidth is being used up because [11:26.080 --> 11:32.240] you're drifting in and out and that's what tends to happen when there's not enough bandwidth on [11:32.240 --> 11:40.480] your signal. So if you give it about 10 or 15 minutes, a good chance it'll clear up. Okay. [11:42.720 --> 11:49.360] Thank you. Okay now we're going to go to Scott in Texas. So Scott. [11:49.360 --> 11:58.240] Scott. Well good evening everybody. Okay that sounds pretty good. [12:00.400 --> 12:12.720] What do you have for us today? Well I think you had a rogerstavildot and you wanted to go over it [12:12.720 --> 12:22.000] and kind of dive in a little bit into the hatred as far as putting some case on with it. [12:23.200 --> 12:31.520] So that was kind of one thing you wanted to talk about but obviously I'm just getting ready to [12:31.520 --> 12:48.240] go through the criminal complaints and a courthouse that wouldn't let me even have it in this area. [12:49.440 --> 12:55.840] Okay hold on a moment Scott. I don't think this was Ms. Leslie's issue but it may be myish. [12:55.840 --> 13:03.440] Yeah. Tell me Scott is my signal fading in and out or do I have a very consistent sound? [13:04.960 --> 13:11.360] Well right now it's not consistent but mine I have reverb or something. [13:12.640 --> 13:21.280] Okay you might try calling back in again. It might be that we've got a server that both of you are [13:21.280 --> 13:26.000] going through that's having a problem because you're fading in and out as well. [13:29.840 --> 13:40.080] Okay well let's just carry on. Okay call me back call back in about 10-15 minutes. [13:41.200 --> 13:47.680] Okay bye. Okay now let's just try one more now. I guess we'll find out if it's our system or not. [13:47.680 --> 13:55.440] James in Texas. Hello James. Hello Randy and I've got you five by five right and clear and you're [13:55.440 --> 14:04.480] constant and I'll just let you know that I did not hear anything back. Okay you've got a good strong [14:04.480 --> 14:08.800] signal but can you move the mic a little away from your mouth? The mic is destroying a bit. [14:08.800 --> 14:19.760] Yeah I can move it just a little bit. Okay what do you have for us today? [14:20.560 --> 14:26.000] Okay I was just starting to listen to Leslie and I'm going to make a comment to you. [14:26.560 --> 14:33.840] Uncompatible contract and adhesion contract. Look at the data trust or the mortgage and you [14:33.840 --> 14:39.920] will find in covenant 21 that they said they're going to fill a partial interest [14:39.920 --> 14:46.080] and go back into the previous covenant. They said they're going to follow all applicable laws state [14:46.080 --> 14:55.680] and federal and all not appealable opinions. Now that gets to statute 20 and common law both. [14:55.680 --> 15:08.640] So for bringing up your addiction it's interesting but it doesn't get to the heart of the matter. [15:08.640 --> 15:14.880] It's an unconscionable contract. Can you file an unconscionable contract in public records? [15:15.600 --> 15:20.720] That's like filing a contract to tell you you can come to us and you get out of jail [15:20.720 --> 15:31.680] free card. And the other thing is can you file an unconscionable contract in public records? [15:32.560 --> 15:44.800] No. Well actually you can. It's just it's up to an opposing party to challenge the document. [15:44.800 --> 15:51.120] You can file it in public records but it's it's ineligible to be filed because it's [15:52.000 --> 15:58.880] it's stating that an illegal contract has the force of law. No you can't do that. [16:01.040 --> 16:09.840] Right that's when a document is filed in the in the public record if if on its face it meets the [16:09.840 --> 16:20.720] statutory filing requirements. For instance the requirements 51901c that if you filed it has [16:20.720 --> 16:26.160] something filed in the record showing they have authority to to file something against title then [16:26.160 --> 16:35.760] on its face it's not necessarily fraudulent and the clerk will accept the document as regular [16:35.760 --> 16:43.840] until some party challenges it. So it's going to sit in the record as if it is regular to be [16:43.840 --> 16:54.080] challenged. You can file it if you're not a pro se. If you're a pro se they get real picky [16:54.080 --> 17:07.360] picking up with the next file. Hang on about to go to break we'll be right back. [17:24.080 --> 17:28.880] If you're looking for options to reduce food costs without compromising health or securing long-term [17:28.880 --> 17:35.040] 25 years storable food for an uncertain future then non-gmo solutions.com is your common sense [17:35.040 --> 17:40.720] answer. Take advantage of a 10% discount with promo code LOGOS. No longer will you compromise [17:40.720 --> 17:46.080] taste and quality for full-term shelf life or eat poor quality food due to cost. Check out our [17:46.080 --> 17:52.320] flex pay options and design a no contract plan to satisfy your needs. Go to non-gmo solutions.com [17:52.320 --> 17:59.520] today and get 10% off with promo code LOGOS. That's non-gmo solutions.com with promo code LOGOS. [18:01.920 --> 18:06.880] Did you know that the LOGOS radio network is a truly listener supported radio network on top of [18:06.880 --> 18:12.400] the on-air talent producers and other hard-working individuals work behind the scenes. LOGOS radio [18:12.400 --> 18:17.200] network is kept on the air by the generous support of listeners like you and we appreciate our loyal [18:17.200 --> 18:22.000] listeners making contributions every year in our annual fundraisers which help keep the lights on [18:22.000 --> 18:27.440] and LOGOS radio network on the air. Head over to LOGOSradioNetwork.com to make your contribution. [18:27.440 --> 18:32.560] Every $25 donation enters you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gunworks. [18:32.560 --> 18:37.840] First prize being a spiked skull lower receiver. Second prize being a Taurus curve. Ten winners will [18:37.840 --> 18:42.640] receive gift cards from All About Vapor and if you donate your $25 contribution early enough you [18:42.640 --> 18:47.760] will also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud. Donations by all major credit cards are [18:47.760 --> 18:53.120] accepted as well as contributions by bitcoin. The LOGOS radio network fundraiser now through [18:53.120 --> 18:58.160] March 17th. Head on over to LOGOSradioNetwork.com for more information and to donate to keep the [18:58.160 --> 19:18.560] LOGOS radio network on the air. You are listening to the LOGOS radio network LOGOSradioNetwork.com. [19:58.160 --> 20:09.280] Okay we are back and talking to our radio and trying to get this sound issue sorted out. [20:10.000 --> 20:17.520] Okay James go ahead we're talking about filing an unconscionable contract in the public record. [20:19.360 --> 20:26.400] Well if you file an unconscionable contract in the public record it's it's an answer against [20:26.400 --> 20:33.200] the force of law. It's so I can follow a legal contract. I'm not going to get them [20:34.080 --> 20:40.400] or you can get a contract to prosecute to check your wife. I can't be prosecuted for it. [20:43.120 --> 20:45.520] We are having I'm having a serious problem [20:47.760 --> 20:55.760] with kids reverb. I can only get about every third or fourth word and this clearly is not [20:55.760 --> 21:05.200] you and apparently it's not my signal so we probably have something going on between us [21:05.200 --> 21:11.840] and Austin. If I can't if we can't get this resolved I may have to pull the plug and put [21:11.840 --> 21:20.560] in an archive. Let's try again James but I wasn't able to get half of what you said. [21:20.560 --> 21:37.200] Okay I'm sorry James I'm only getting about every second or third word. [21:38.720 --> 21:42.800] We may have to pull the plug on this thing and I do apologize. [21:42.800 --> 21:48.800] We we don't have the we don't have the resources to fix it while we're on the air and this will make [21:48.800 --> 21:54.800] a we'll just be struggling all night trying to kind of talk to each other. [21:58.800 --> 22:04.800] Okay Robert. Robert is the the engineer. Robert call Debra see if she can fix this thing. [22:04.800 --> 22:10.800] We'll keep trying to to do it. I'll give Robert time to get over it. [22:10.800 --> 22:18.800] Maybe she can sort this out. She's our expert technical engineer. [22:18.800 --> 22:24.800] It looks like Robert dropped off. I'm sorry James dropped off. [22:24.800 --> 22:30.800] Let's try one more. Let's see if we can get Nathaniel up. Hello Nathaniel. [22:30.800 --> 22:36.800] Hello good evening. Good evening. What do you have for us tonight? [22:36.800 --> 22:50.800] I'm sorry Nathaniel we're getting some kind of reverb for you. [22:50.800 --> 23:00.800] I'm getting about every third or fourth word so I'm afraid I'm going to ask the engineer to pull the plug on this. [23:00.800 --> 23:06.800] We'll have to run an archive after that. I apologize to everybody because I really hate to run an archives [23:06.800 --> 23:12.800] but this show won't we won't have been able to do a show with this sound like this. [23:12.800 --> 23:20.800] Okay okay sorry Nathaniel and it's your first call too and this is unusual for us to get a problem like this. [23:20.800 --> 23:26.800] I think this is the first time I've asked him to pull the plug in the show since I've been doing the show. [23:26.800 --> 23:36.800] So I do apologize for it but if I try to do this show with a credit like this Debra will skin my head. [23:36.800 --> 23:44.800] Take care. Okay if you have something that needs addressed quickly Nathaniel [23:44.800 --> 23:52.800] send me an email randy at ruleoflawradio.com and I'll try to address it off the air. [23:52.800 --> 24:00.800] Thank you. Okay thank you. Bye bye. [24:00.800 --> 24:08.800] Robert if you can hear me. [24:08.800 --> 24:16.800] I'm telling him to pull the plug. I do apologize I don't know if you can hear me well or not. [24:16.800 --> 24:32.800] So I'll act as if you can until we can either get this resolved or get an archive put in. [24:32.800 --> 24:40.800] Okay I'm having a little trouble with my keyboard as well this must be a tactical issue night. [24:40.800 --> 24:46.800] I don't see what...Walk are you there? [24:46.800 --> 24:54.800] Yes since you're in New York you're in a different location I wanted to see if you came through. [24:54.800 --> 25:04.800] Yeah you're fading in and out as well. [25:04.800 --> 25:12.800] So whatever this is it's in the system and I won't be able to do a show like this. [25:12.800 --> 25:24.800] I have the call screen up. I could run the show from here but I can't hit the panic button. [25:24.800 --> 25:32.800] Oh yeah I've got a panic button. Okay I do apologize guys but we're not going to be able to do this show. [25:32.800 --> 25:42.800] I'm going to go ahead and pull the plug and we should go to an archive. [25:42.800 --> 25:48.800] Prosecuting attorneys are usually not the sharpest knives in the drawer. [25:48.800 --> 25:53.800] If they were the sharpest knife in the drawer they'd be out there making the big bucks. [25:53.800 --> 26:03.800] But to get out of law school and if a firm don't pick them up or they're having trouble building a clientele. [26:03.800 --> 26:10.800] Then they go down and run for prosecuting attorney or they go to work for the prosecutor's office. [26:10.800 --> 26:15.800] And as a prosecutor they don't have to do much all they have to do is make deals. [26:15.800 --> 26:24.800] 99.6% of all crimes across the board wind up with a deal and a plea of guilty. [26:24.800 --> 26:31.800] So they don't have to practice law all they have to do is get good at making deals. [26:31.800 --> 26:38.800] Then when the prosecuting attorney, which in your case would be the county attorney, [26:38.800 --> 26:48.800] is in a lawsuit against the county the prosecuting attorney becomes the lawyer for the county. [26:48.800 --> 27:00.800] When he's a lawyer for the county he is not a prosecutor and has zero immunity from suit. [27:00.800 --> 27:08.800] So if he stubs his little toe you bang him with a lawsuit. Now they get real excited. [27:08.800 --> 27:22.800] The prosecutor is going to get really excited because a lawsuit against him will drive their bond rating through the roof. [27:22.800 --> 27:30.800] And the bonding company, essentially that's the county's insurance company, they're going to get really unhappy. [27:30.800 --> 27:39.800] And the lawyer himself, if he leaves the prosecutor's office he won't be able to get malpractice insurance. [27:39.800 --> 27:50.800] It's not about the law. It's not about the right of things. It's all about the politics. [27:50.800 --> 28:00.800] What I understand is they're not allowed to charge a direct tax with property tax falls under that diet. [28:00.800 --> 28:08.800] Wait a minute. Hold on. Move the mic a little bit away from your face. It's distorting. [28:08.800 --> 28:13.800] The property tax is considered a direct tax but we're not supposed to have a direct tax. [28:13.800 --> 28:16.800] There's not supposed to be a law for direct tax. [28:16.800 --> 28:25.800] No, you're not going to win that fight. You'll get that one. That one they will dismiss immediately. [28:25.800 --> 28:31.800] And you'll file an appeal and the court of appeals will get it and they will dismiss immediately. [28:31.800 --> 28:40.800] It is the natural tendency to try to win your case based on the rule of law. [28:40.800 --> 28:51.800] Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way. One of the things you have to look at is even if you're dead bang right, [28:51.800 --> 29:02.800] if the court rules in your favor, then that will have the effect of rendering void all the property tax codes [29:02.800 --> 29:14.800] and will bankrupt the state of Oklahoma. What do you think the likelihood of that is? [29:14.800 --> 29:25.800] Okay. The politics is that we want to look for a claim that if they rule against you, [29:25.800 --> 29:34.800] they damage the corpus juris, the body of law. Now this trial judge, he don't much care about the body of law. [29:34.800 --> 29:43.800] He just cares about the politics of the moment. He cares about satisfying the tax assessor collector and the people in the county. [29:43.800 --> 29:51.800] The court of appeals, they have a whole other attitude. They don't want to render a ruling another lawyer can use [29:51.800 --> 29:59.800] that will disrupt the body of law. Hang on, I'll explain this better on the other side and we'll be right back. [29:59.800 --> 30:08.800] The Chicago Marathon is no tiptoe through the tulips, but a pregnant woman overdue with her second child [30:08.800 --> 30:12.800] ran the whole race before going into labor. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [30:12.800 --> 30:16.800] Back with the amazing story of the marathon mom next. [30:16.800 --> 30:22.800] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.800 --> 30:27.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.800 --> 30:32.800] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.800 --> 30:38.800] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [30:38.800 --> 30:46.800] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [30:46.800 --> 30:52.800] Amber Miller, a 27-year-old mom from suburban Chicago, gives new meaning to the word endurance. [30:52.800 --> 30:57.800] Miller was pregnant and three weeks overdue at the start of the city's marathon. [30:57.800 --> 31:01.800] She'd run seven times before, including once while pregnant with her first child. [31:01.800 --> 31:04.800] So she figured, what the heck, and planned to run only half the course. [31:04.800 --> 31:11.800] But when she got started, she just kept going, finishing the entire 26 miles in just over six hours. [31:11.800 --> 31:15.800] Then at the finish line, she had a more urgent race to run to the hospital, [31:15.800 --> 31:20.800] where she gave birth to a healthy seven-pound baby girl. Phew, I bet that was a relief. [31:20.800 --> 31:26.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:26.800 --> 31:31.800] Did you know there are three million edible food plants on Earth, [31:31.800 --> 31:34.800] and none have the nutritional value of the hemp plant? [31:34.800 --> 31:37.800] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:37.800 --> 31:42.800] It does not contain chemicals or THC, is non-GMO, and is 100% gluten-free. [31:42.800 --> 31:46.800] Hemp protein powder burns fat, builds muscle, contains 53% protein, [31:46.800 --> 31:49.800] and feeds the body the nutrients it needs. [31:49.800 --> 31:58.800] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at HempUSA.org. [31:58.800 --> 32:02.800] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:02.800 --> 32:05.800] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [32:05.800 --> 32:07.800] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:07.800 --> 32:10.800] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:10.800 --> 32:13.800] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:13.800 --> 32:15.800] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:15.800 --> 32:19.800] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.800 --> 32:21.800] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [32:21.800 --> 32:24.800] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:24.800 --> 32:27.800] Former Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:27.800 --> 32:30.800] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:30.800 --> 32:32.800] that will help you understand what due process is [32:32.800 --> 32:34.800] and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:34.800 --> 32:36.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:36.800 --> 32:39.800] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:39.800 --> 32:41.800] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:41.800 --> 32:45.800] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.800 --> 32:47.800] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.800 --> 32:50.800] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.800 --> 32:54.800] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.800 --> 33:00.800] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:00.800 --> 33:12.800] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradio.com. [33:12.800 --> 33:39.800] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, [33:39.800 --> 33:43.800] and we're talking to Gary in Oklahoma. [33:43.800 --> 33:45.800] Gary, we're having a little difficulty. [33:45.800 --> 33:51.800] My producer says you're talking too soft, but when you talk loud, your mic is distorting. [33:51.800 --> 33:59.800] So try moving your mic down so it's not in front of your mouth and talk a little bit louder. [33:59.800 --> 34:01.800] So you put it right by your chin. [34:01.800 --> 34:06.800] Maybe it will pick up better without distorting. [34:06.800 --> 34:10.800] Okay. [34:10.800 --> 34:17.800] Okay, I'm talking about finding a way to sting them and just to stop them and hold them. [34:17.800 --> 34:25.800] If they're violating a policy or if you can show that it appears that they're violating a policy, [34:25.800 --> 34:35.800] if they're collecting, if they're assessing the tax in a way that doesn't appear to be [34:35.800 --> 34:42.800] completely within their guidelines and you can always find something like that, then you sting them. [34:42.800 --> 34:51.800] You file a suit against them and ask for an injunction against the collection of the tax [34:51.800 --> 35:00.800] because if they're assessing more tax than you actually owe, that contributes to your inability to pay. [35:00.800 --> 35:07.800] So now they become partially liable for your inability to pay and you ask for an injunction [35:07.800 --> 35:14.800] against the tax assessor so that he doesn't collect any legal tax. [35:14.800 --> 35:22.800] And almost even without an injunction, when you file a suit against them, they'll stop the collection process. [35:22.800 --> 35:28.800] And then this buys you time to recover so you can begin to pay the tax back. [35:28.800 --> 35:35.800] Of course, almost certainly because it costs them so much to fight you, [35:35.800 --> 35:42.800] they're likely to come to the table and make a deal for a reduced payoff. [35:42.800 --> 35:48.800] If it's only $3,500, it's going to cost some more than that just to answer it. [35:48.800 --> 35:50.800] Absolutely. [35:50.800 --> 35:51.800] Okay. [35:51.800 --> 35:58.800] Okay. Lawyers would say, oh, it's not nice to do that to the poor tax assessor collector. [35:58.800 --> 36:00.800] Yeah, life is tough. [36:00.800 --> 36:03.800] I'm not worried about being nice, that's for certain. [36:03.800 --> 36:06.800] Yeah, he's not going to be nice when he comes after you. [36:06.800 --> 36:12.800] So let's take it back to him and you keep him honest. [36:12.800 --> 36:19.800] Okay, I hope that helps, but go through the code, read the code, and then call us back next week. [36:19.800 --> 36:22.800] And then we'll talk about what you find in there. [36:22.800 --> 36:28.800] I think you will be pleasantly surprised at what you find in there. [36:28.800 --> 36:30.800] Okay, yeah, the assessment... [36:30.800 --> 36:32.800] Okay, thank you, Gary. [36:32.800 --> 36:34.800] Okay. [36:34.800 --> 36:37.800] Wait, did you have another question? [36:37.800 --> 36:40.800] No, I was just going to make two points. [36:40.800 --> 36:47.800] For some of the information I did find out, every four years they're supposed to assess. [36:47.800 --> 36:50.800] The person is supposed to physically come out and assess. [36:50.800 --> 36:53.800] However, I've been here for 16 years in this house. [36:53.800 --> 36:58.800] I've never seen any paperwork for the assessment. [36:58.800 --> 37:01.800] And also go off of the... [37:01.800 --> 37:06.800] You mean the tax assessor collector never knocked on your door and asked to look around? [37:06.800 --> 37:08.800] Never, never. [37:08.800 --> 37:12.800] I just had one do that to me recently. [37:12.800 --> 37:15.800] He said, I understand you're doing some work in the house. [37:15.800 --> 37:17.800] And you mind if I come in and look? [37:17.800 --> 37:19.800] I said, get out of here. [37:19.800 --> 37:21.800] Oh, Mr. Kelton, we need to reassess it. [37:21.800 --> 37:25.800] Yes, yeah, I know you do, but I don't want you to. [37:25.800 --> 37:27.800] And I told him I wasn't finished yet. [37:27.800 --> 37:30.800] When I'm finished with the work, they're going to want to come and reassess it. [37:30.800 --> 37:32.800] So they looked my assessment. [37:32.800 --> 37:38.800] So if you've never seen them, then they're just doing an average tax. [37:38.800 --> 37:42.800] And if the code says they're supposed to do an assessment, [37:42.800 --> 37:47.800] that's one you can see them good. [37:47.800 --> 37:53.800] Because now they're looking at having to go out and actually assess every property. [37:53.800 --> 37:57.800] That's going to cost them a lot of money. [37:57.800 --> 38:02.800] Yes, it's due to their duty. [38:02.800 --> 38:05.800] Oh, this is great. [38:05.800 --> 38:06.800] Yeah. [38:06.800 --> 38:09.800] After all this is said and done, I found out, though, [38:09.800 --> 38:20.800] that if you own your allotium title, then you can get taken off of a tax roll. [38:20.800 --> 38:21.800] That's a lot. [38:21.800 --> 38:23.800] That's somewhat different. [38:23.800 --> 38:26.800] We had a guy out of New York. [38:26.800 --> 38:33.800] And what he did was is he sent a letter to the tax assessor collector. [38:33.800 --> 38:40.800] I'm sorry, sent a letter to the county commissioner's court [38:40.800 --> 38:51.800] and asked the court if the county or the state had a claim against his property. [38:51.800 --> 38:55.800] And they sent back a letter saying, no, they don't. [38:55.800 --> 38:57.800] But they will, in your case, they'll say this tax thing. [38:57.800 --> 39:00.800] Let me explain how this works. [39:00.800 --> 39:08.800] Originally, the state of Oklahoma gave away a whole bunch of land grants. [39:08.800 --> 39:14.800] And the part of it is that in the great land rush, [39:14.800 --> 39:16.800] that was where they gave away a bunch of land. [39:16.800 --> 39:19.800] But the rest of it they sold. [39:19.800 --> 39:23.800] And when they sold the property to someone, they took a lien against the property [39:23.800 --> 39:27.800] because they most often sold the property on time [39:27.800 --> 39:31.800] because nobody had money to pay for it all at once. [39:31.800 --> 39:38.800] So they took a lien against the property in the form of a title. [39:38.800 --> 39:42.800] The deed to your property is a lien. [39:42.800 --> 39:48.800] The warranty deed, that's a lien that the state has against your property. [39:48.800 --> 39:55.800] And once it was paid off, that title was supposed to have been eliminated. [39:55.800 --> 39:58.800] You can go back to your loyal title. [39:58.800 --> 40:00.800] But nobody did that. [40:00.800 --> 40:05.800] The only time they can tax you is if the state holds a claim against the property. [40:05.800 --> 40:09.800] So you go in and ask the county tax assessor collector [40:09.800 --> 40:14.800] if the state has a claim against your property. [40:14.800 --> 40:17.800] And if your taxes are all paid up, they're going to say no. [40:17.800 --> 40:20.800] And you need them to say no. [40:20.800 --> 40:25.800] And once they say no, then you send a letter to the tax assessor collector [40:25.800 --> 40:34.800] stating that the state has no claim against your property to the private rolls. [40:34.800 --> 40:39.800] There's a section for private property and state-claimed property. [40:39.800 --> 40:42.800] And that takes you off the tax rolls. [40:42.800 --> 40:48.800] A loyal title or getting off the tax rolls has other consequences. [40:48.800 --> 40:52.800] You live in a municipality. [40:52.800 --> 40:57.800] Okay, if you're in town, that creates other problems. [40:57.800 --> 41:02.800] If you bring forward your loyal title and get off the tax rolls, [41:02.800 --> 41:07.800] you're no longer paying for police and fire protection. [41:07.800 --> 41:12.800] They won't be allowed to protect you. [41:12.800 --> 41:14.800] If your house catches on fire, [41:14.800 --> 41:19.800] all the fire department can do is keep the houses around you from catching on fire. [41:19.800 --> 41:24.800] They can't put yours out because you're not under contract with them. [41:24.800 --> 41:27.800] If you call the police, they can't come to your property [41:27.800 --> 41:32.800] and assist you because you're not under contract with them. [41:32.800 --> 41:34.800] It's all under contract. [41:34.800 --> 41:40.800] So the loyal title is maybe an option. [41:40.800 --> 41:46.800] It's a greater option in Texas because we have our own land board [41:46.800 --> 41:53.800] and everybody else goes through the BLM, Bureau of Land Management, for the U.S. [41:53.800 --> 41:56.800] Texas has its own. [41:56.800 --> 42:01.800] So it's more difficult through the BLM, but even if you did, it has consequences. [42:01.800 --> 42:05.800] Much more difficult than just suing them and say, [42:05.800 --> 42:13.800] OK, guys, you've been bad boys, but let's make a deal. [42:13.800 --> 42:19.800] You clear up all my back taxes and I'll drop my suit against you. [42:19.800 --> 42:21.800] Otherwise, you might lose it. [42:21.800 --> 42:28.800] Now you're going to have to go out and assess every single property in the county. [42:28.800 --> 42:30.800] It's your call, guys. [42:30.800 --> 42:32.800] OK, but do your homework. [42:32.800 --> 42:34.800] Make sure you've got all your ducks in a row. [42:34.800 --> 42:43.800] Read the code twice and read the whole thing because they got hidden stuff in there. [42:43.800 --> 42:46.800] And once you've read it and you know what's there, [42:46.800 --> 42:51.800] then they can't pull any fast ones on you. [42:51.800 --> 42:52.800] All right. [42:52.800 --> 42:55.800] Well, I appreciate your time and your information. [42:55.800 --> 42:57.800] You have a great evening. [42:57.800 --> 42:58.800] OK, thank you, Gary. [42:58.800 --> 43:02.800] OK, now we're going to go to Joseph in New York. [43:02.800 --> 43:03.800] Hello, Joseph. [43:03.800 --> 43:06.800] Do you also have a tax issue? [43:06.800 --> 43:08.800] Yes, I do. [43:08.800 --> 43:14.800] We've got 50 seconds, so state it quickly and give me about 50 in front of you. [43:14.800 --> 43:29.800] OK, it has to do with a hearing that was held or supposedly held to transfer the... [43:29.800 --> 43:33.800] Wait a minute, this is not going to get done in 30 seconds. [43:33.800 --> 43:34.800] Hold on. [43:34.800 --> 43:36.800] OK, we're about to go to break. [43:36.800 --> 43:39.800] This is Randy Kelton, Arugula Radio. [43:39.800 --> 43:48.800] And this is the end of our fundraiser, and we haven't collected near enough. [43:48.800 --> 43:50.800] So check out our sponsors. [43:50.800 --> 43:52.800] We'd appreciate any help we can get. [43:52.800 --> 43:56.800] If you patronize our sponsors, that'll help support this show. [43:56.800 --> 43:57.800] We'll be right back. [43:57.800 --> 44:01.800] Thank you. [44:27.800 --> 44:48.800] Thank you. [44:57.800 --> 45:03.800] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.800 --> 45:07.800] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, [45:07.800 --> 45:14.800] easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.800 --> 45:18.800] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.800 --> 45:21.800] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:21.800 --> 45:26.800] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:26.800 --> 45:33.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.800 --> 45:38.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.800 --> 45:42.800] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.800 --> 45:48.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:48.800 --> 45:58.800] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:58.800 --> 46:17.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:17.800 --> 46:21.800] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [46:21.800 --> 46:26.800] And for those of you who don't know, that last segment was an archive [46:26.800 --> 46:30.800] because we were having some sound issues. [46:30.800 --> 46:35.800] And we're trying to go back in live to see if we have our sound issues resolved. [46:35.800 --> 46:41.800] So we're going to try them out by going to Seattle, Washington. [46:41.800 --> 46:48.800] We're on the screen, so I don't have your name up on the board. [46:48.800 --> 46:50.800] Charles White. [46:50.800 --> 46:51.800] Hello, Charles. [46:51.800 --> 46:55.800] Okay, what do you have for us today? [46:55.800 --> 47:01.800] Well, I was trying to get in touch with Andy Craig, but actually it's for Randy. [47:01.800 --> 47:10.800] My question was, I'm on YouTube a lot, and I was sent to listen to more people on the job voluntarily. [47:10.800 --> 47:13.800] It was a video back then. [47:13.800 --> 47:16.800] Okay, hold on a second. [47:16.800 --> 47:20.800] I'm not sure if this is you or if this is our sound issue. [47:20.800 --> 47:25.800] We still have a sound issue, but it's not the one we had before we pulled the plug earlier. [47:25.800 --> 47:28.800] Can you move the mic away from your mouth a little? [47:28.800 --> 47:32.800] I'm getting serious distortion in the mic. [47:32.800 --> 47:36.800] I don't really think it's you, but if you move it, make sure it's away from your mouth, [47:36.800 --> 47:40.800] then we can be certain, and try that again. [47:40.800 --> 47:43.800] Can you hear me a little clearer? [47:43.800 --> 47:47.800] Yeah, I can hear you pretty clear, but I'm still getting that distortion in the background. [47:47.800 --> 47:50.800] Go ahead. [47:50.800 --> 47:51.800] Try that. [47:51.800 --> 47:54.800] You sounded clearer, so I could maybe understand better. [47:54.800 --> 47:56.800] You know my speakerphone. [47:56.800 --> 48:02.800] I was looking at the YouTube video, and there was a video clip, I think, with you and Debbie, [48:02.800 --> 48:07.800] the young lady, was talking with a gentleman, I think the other lawyer's name was Sam. [48:07.800 --> 48:12.800] It was on a YouTube video, most people are in jail voluntarily, [48:12.800 --> 48:15.800] and there was a four-part tape a gentleman made. [48:15.800 --> 48:18.800] I believe he was Hispanic. [48:18.800 --> 48:21.800] And it was about a gentleman who had been in Seattle, Washington, [48:21.800 --> 48:27.800] and he had helped a gentleman that was in jail for no license and insurance, [48:27.800 --> 48:30.800] in other words, suspended license and insurance. [48:30.800 --> 48:35.800] And he gave him, and he told him, the court let him visit this gentleman while he was in jail, [48:35.800 --> 48:42.800] and what he did, he did a two-page document, and what it did, it cleared this person's record up. [48:42.800 --> 48:49.800] I was trying to contact that gentleman by name Sam, and he was mostly operating under the rule of law. [48:49.800 --> 48:56.800] And so I think he was talking to you and the young lady, Deborah, who was with you guys as a team, [48:56.800 --> 49:02.800] but again, it was on 09, I think it was back in March or April of that season. [49:02.800 --> 49:11.800] And I'm sure who that was, but I suspect it would be David Merlin. [49:11.800 --> 49:19.800] David Merlin. Okay. And that's David, the last spelling? [49:19.800 --> 49:27.800] M-Y-R-L-A-N-D. I always called him David Merlin because it annoyed him. [49:27.800 --> 49:30.800] M-M-A-M-Y. [49:30.800 --> 49:34.800] M-Y-R-L-A-N-D. [49:34.800 --> 49:38.800] L-A-N-D. And you think it was him? [49:38.800 --> 49:44.800] He's been, last I heard, he was in Washington State. [49:44.800 --> 49:50.800] Yes, okay. And I could just wonder that you said, Sam, on the recording. [49:50.800 --> 49:54.800] So are you still an attorney practicing law here? [49:54.800 --> 50:06.800] Oh, hold on, maybe. There was an attorney in Seattle who had been disbarred, but it was over some financial issues. [50:06.800 --> 50:17.800] Okay. I recognize the name was Sam because you guys, it was two of you with the Hispanic gentleman, and again, it was more people in jail volunteering. [50:17.800 --> 50:22.800] And I remember he was saying that he never goes by the laws, he goes strictly by the rules. [50:22.800 --> 50:27.800] And I thought I heard his name being addressed as the lady was talking to him as Sam. [50:27.800 --> 50:30.800] And Randy, I remember I heard you was on there with me. [50:30.800 --> 50:33.800] Yeah, it's been too long. [50:33.800 --> 50:37.800] I have slept since then. [50:37.800 --> 50:40.800] I know what you mean. [50:40.800 --> 50:46.800] I'm old. I sleep. Therefore, I forget. [50:46.800 --> 50:54.800] Yeah. Well, I was hoping to try to find out maybe she or you might have a document on him so I could look it up. [50:54.800 --> 51:00.800] Send me an email. Send me an email asking for him. [51:00.800 --> 51:07.800] I think if this is the guy I think it is, I know how to get a hold of him through Frank Waldo. [51:07.800 --> 51:09.800] Okay. [51:09.800 --> 51:20.800] This guy was a weightlifter and an ex-attorney and a specialist in certain areas. [51:20.800 --> 51:21.800] Yeah. [51:21.800 --> 51:32.800] Send me an email. I'll get a hold of Frank and if you'll send me an email, I'll forward it to Frank and have Frank forward it to this guy. [51:32.800 --> 51:37.800] Okay. Where would you like to go? [51:37.800 --> 51:40.800] Okay. Was that it? [51:40.800 --> 51:42.800] Yeah. I just want the email address. [51:42.800 --> 51:49.800] Okay. Randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [51:49.800 --> 51:52.800] Okay. I got it. Thank you so much, Randy. [51:52.800 --> 51:58.800] And on the property issue that you're talking about, I haven't paid taxes on my property for the last two quarters. [51:58.800 --> 52:02.800] And I was trying to get on that road that they say that you don't have to pay tax. [52:02.800 --> 52:10.800] Are you the one I could talk to about all of that because I guess it's a process in order to do that? [52:10.800 --> 52:16.800] I think Craig would be better to talk to you about that. [52:16.800 --> 52:20.800] Say that again. [52:20.800 --> 52:22.800] Maybe I misunderstood. Say that again. [52:22.800 --> 52:25.800] I'm having a terrible time understanding. [52:25.800 --> 52:27.800] My phone is breaking up right now. [52:27.800 --> 52:34.800] Okay. I was trying to get on this payroll not to pay taxes on my property. [52:34.800 --> 52:36.800] Oh, okay. [52:36.800 --> 52:42.800] That's you're trying to bring forward an alloidal title. [52:42.800 --> 52:46.800] It has advantages. It has disadvantages. [52:46.800 --> 52:57.800] The disadvantage is if you get off the tax roll, then you don't have a right to fire or police protection because you're not paid. [52:57.800 --> 52:58.800] I understand that. [52:58.800 --> 53:02.800] Yeah. But you can contract separately for that. [53:02.800 --> 53:06.800] Okay. So can I email you about that later too? [53:06.800 --> 53:10.800] Wait. I couldn't understand that last part. [53:10.800 --> 53:14.800] Can I email you about that too when I email you and bring this back? [53:14.800 --> 53:18.800] Absolutely. I've got a couple of people who are knowledgeable in that area. [53:18.800 --> 53:21.800] I'll forward it to them. [53:21.800 --> 53:26.800] Yeah, because I know you're on the radio channel right now and I take up too much time and I don't want to be rude. [53:26.800 --> 53:30.800] So I'll email you on both those topics and I appreciate you very much, Randy. [53:30.800 --> 53:32.800] Okay. Thank you. [53:32.800 --> 53:39.800] Okay. Now we're going to go to Larry and Leslie in Pennsylvania. [53:39.800 --> 53:41.800] Hello, Ms. Leslie. [53:41.800 --> 53:45.800] Hello. Is this better? [53:45.800 --> 53:47.800] I can barely hear you. [53:47.800 --> 53:49.800] Is this any better? [53:49.800 --> 53:52.800] Oh, much better. [53:52.800 --> 54:05.800] Okay. I have two judicial conduct complaints, one regarding a quiet title action with one judge and one regarding a foreclosure action with another. [54:05.800 --> 54:13.800] The one that had the quiet title action, I did not include my husband and he dismissed the case. [54:13.800 --> 54:22.800] But while he did, he gave a summary judgment in favor of the defendant and I appealed. [54:22.800 --> 54:29.800] Okay. Let me shut up. [54:29.800 --> 54:36.800] Okay. I'm thinking the judge had no subject matter jurisdiction. [54:36.800 --> 54:38.800] Exactly. [54:38.800 --> 54:43.800] I should wait to see what the summary judgment said. [54:43.800 --> 54:46.800] Let me shut up. You go ahead and talk. I'm sorry. [54:46.800 --> 54:58.800] The appeals court said he was right in dismissing the case but wrong in the summary judgment and that it was dismissed without prejudice instead of with prejudice. [54:58.800 --> 55:14.800] The thing that he did wrong was that he allowed into the case forged documents and he did not call the cops or issue a warrant for the arrest of the offending party. [55:14.800 --> 55:23.800] So I'm going to call him on that because when they see a crime committed, they're supposed to arrest somebody. [55:23.800 --> 55:27.800] Did he file criminal charges against the judge? [55:27.800 --> 55:39.800] Yes. Because he didn't issue a warrant for the arrest of the defendant who put forged documents into the record. [55:39.800 --> 55:46.800] So there's more than that. That would be misreasons in office. [55:46.800 --> 55:53.800] But he acted on the forged documents as if they were regular. [55:53.800 --> 55:54.800] Yes. [55:54.800 --> 55:58.800] That's ordination of perjury. [55:58.800 --> 56:00.800] Yes. [56:00.800 --> 56:17.800] Well, I'll let the district attorney get technical because I'm sending this Monday to the Supreme Court who handles this stuff, to the Bar Association who handles this stuff, and to the district attorney. [56:17.800 --> 56:21.800] And I'm sending him a copy too so he knows what he did wrong. [56:21.800 --> 56:33.800] Then on the second judicial conduct complaint, we have a foreclosure issue and he did a couple of things wrong. [56:33.800 --> 56:35.800] He has no jurisdiction whatsoever. [56:35.800 --> 56:40.800] And the reason he has no jurisdiction is because there's no mortgage. [56:40.800 --> 56:46.800] It was rescinded five years ago, more than that, six years ago now. [56:46.800 --> 56:51.800] But it was rescinded and nobody objected. [56:51.800 --> 56:53.800] That's one problem. [56:53.800 --> 56:57.800] They're bringing in a forged assignment of mortgage. [56:57.800 --> 57:01.800] That's the second problem. [57:01.800 --> 57:14.800] And I was specific about why it was forged because we have the assigning party saying, I had nothing whatsoever to do without assignments. [57:14.800 --> 57:25.800] The second thing was we had the MERS MIMS summary that shows that the assigning party could not have assigned it because it belonged to somebody else. [57:25.800 --> 57:40.800] And the third one was that we had the judge in the federal court who gave an opinion that said it was transferred three times and it gave the name of Fannie Mae as the party last transferred. [57:40.800 --> 57:53.800] And then we have the rescission where I own, my husband and I own the mortgage and note because it was rescinded without objection filed. [57:53.800 --> 58:11.800] And because the judge did not issue a warrant for the defendant and their attorneys for issuing all this stuff, for the forgeries, for the filing in the record, untampering with public records, [58:11.800 --> 58:27.800] for the arguing in the court of uttering a forged document, for the attempted theft of the property by the failure to dismiss all of this stuff when all of these other problems were present. [58:27.800 --> 58:30.800] Hold on, Ms. Leslie. We're about to go to break. [58:30.800 --> 58:37.800] This is Randy Kelton, Wheel of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [58:37.800 --> 58:41.800] We do have a full call board and we'll make sure we get to everybody. [58:41.800 --> 59:08.800] We'll be right back. [59:11.800 --> 59:17.800] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.800 --> 59:26.800] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:26.800 --> 59:39.800] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:39.800 --> 59:49.800] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.800 --> 59:59.800] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.800 --> 01:00:20.800] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing your deli bulletins for the commodities market. Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.800 --> 01:00:43.800] Markets for Friday, April 8th, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,239.45 an ounce, silver $15.36 an ounce, Texas crude $37.26 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting at about $419 U.S. currency. [01:00:43.800 --> 01:00:59.800] Today in history, the year 1943, then U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt and Executive Order 9328 froze all wages and prices, prohibited workers from changing jobs unless the war effort called for it, and barred rate increases to common carriers and public utilities. [01:00:59.800 --> 01:01:05.800] All this interventionism was allowed in order to freeze inflation, which is itself caused by intervening in the money supply. [01:01:05.800 --> 01:01:12.800] FDR froze the economy today in history. [01:01:12.800 --> 01:01:17.800] In recent news, Lakeland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas had a shooting today involving two airmen who were killed. [01:01:17.800 --> 01:01:23.800] As of now, it appears media outlets at the scene are reporting that an airman shot his commanding officer and then himself. [01:01:23.800 --> 01:01:25.800] Two Glocks were found at the site. [01:01:25.800 --> 01:01:35.800] U.S. Air Force said in a statement that this was a workplace violence incident and not a result of a terrorist attack, while the Bexar County Sheriff's Office did describe the deaths as a likely murder-suicide case. [01:01:35.800 --> 01:01:51.800] It's still uncertain how the Glocks made it on base, however, since individuals, including military personnel, are not allowed to carry weapons on site unless they are in security forces or the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. [01:01:51.800 --> 01:01:55.800] Inmates at seven different state prisons across Texas launched a work strike this week. [01:01:55.800 --> 01:02:01.800] It seems inmates refused to leave their cells, prompting all seven prisons to put their entire facilities on lockdown. [01:02:01.800 --> 01:02:09.800] According to the Incarcerated Workers Organization Committee, or IWOC, the problem in Texas is that prison labor does not contribute towards their parole considerations. [01:02:09.800 --> 01:02:18.800] The compensation, which doesn't even add up to cover the inmates' $100 copay associated with their medical expenses and the heat they're put through in the Lone Star State can be deadly. [01:02:18.800 --> 01:02:29.800] The IWOC is also calling for 60 percent of the 180,000 prisoner laborers, which adds up to about 100,000 jobs, should be given back to the citizenry, which would alleviate unemployment in the state. [01:02:29.800 --> 01:02:35.800] Keep in mind that prison workers receive no benefits, no disability compensation, no Social Security, and no overtime pay. [01:02:35.800 --> 01:02:43.800] The Prison Policy Initiative, a non-profit and nonpartisan research institute, describes the 2 billion annual prison industrial industry as nothing less than legal slavery. [01:02:43.800 --> 01:02:49.800] The list of fixes and grievances can be seen on the IWOC webpage. [01:02:49.800 --> 01:02:59.800] This is Rick Roady with your Lowdown for April 8, 2016. [01:03:19.800 --> 01:03:45.800] Okay, we are back. [01:03:45.800 --> 01:03:55.800] Okay, what all are you filing against this second judge? [01:03:55.800 --> 01:04:06.800] Okay, I'm filing that he failed to be faithful to the law under rules of the judicial code of conduct under two counts. [01:04:06.800 --> 01:04:35.800] But I'm also charging him in a way, let me find the page here, that he failed to issue, it said the court failed to be faithful to the law when the court, as accomplished after the fact, failed to issue warrants for the arrest of the plaintiff and learned counsel for criminal forgery two counts, for tampering with public documents, for theft in the failure to return the canceled note and mortgage under rescission law, [01:04:35.800 --> 01:04:50.800] attempts of theft of real property, knowingly using a forged document in the form of assignment of mortgage to attempt unlawful foreclosure, following the response of the defendants in the preliminary objections and amended response to complaint. [01:04:50.800 --> 01:05:08.800] The sitting mortgage and the plaintiff, the representative attorneys were involved in related cases and are and were aware of the forgery. And the plaintiffs, the pleading of the defendants were very clear of the crimes committed and attempted and the court did nothing. [01:05:08.800 --> 01:05:21.800] And how the judge came to the conclusion made in his rule of appellate procedure in 1925 opinion can only be explained if the pleadings of the defendants were not read. [01:05:21.800 --> 01:05:23.800] How's that? [01:05:23.800 --> 01:05:38.800] I read that thing and when I was done, for all of those who haven't seen Ms. Leslie's documents, I aspire to be able to write documents as well as she does. [01:05:38.800 --> 01:05:46.800] If anything can get these judges jacked around, Ms. Leslie is going to do it. [01:05:46.800 --> 01:05:53.800] And being Pennsylvania, there's a chance you could get a shot at the judge. [01:05:53.800 --> 01:06:01.800] Because unlike Texas, I have a duty to give notice of crime. [01:06:01.800 --> 01:06:04.800] But that's it. [01:06:04.800 --> 01:06:13.800] I only have a duty to give notice. I have no standing concerning the prosecution of a criminal act. [01:06:13.800 --> 01:06:16.800] Now, if I file a civil action, I have standing. [01:06:16.800 --> 01:06:25.800] But it is the prosecuting attorney and the state itself that has standing to litigate a criminal action. [01:06:25.800 --> 01:06:29.800] It's a little bit different in Pennsylvania. [01:06:29.800 --> 01:06:38.800] In Pennsylvania, the legislature granted the prosecuting attorney first blush prosecutorial discretion. [01:06:38.800 --> 01:06:45.800] Here, they give the prosecutor discretion, but that's not in statutes. [01:06:45.800 --> 01:06:48.800] They just give it to her. [01:06:48.800 --> 01:06:54.800] Okay. I said they, my apologies, the courts. [01:06:54.800 --> 01:07:02.800] All prosecutorial discretion in Texas is court-created discretion. [01:07:02.800 --> 01:07:07.800] In Pennsylvania, it's statutorily created. [01:07:07.800 --> 01:07:14.800] So it appears as though it puts prosecution in the hands of the prosecutor. [01:07:14.800 --> 01:07:21.800] But because they made it statutory, they also put in a caveat. [01:07:21.800 --> 01:07:24.800] Prosecutor gets first blush. [01:07:24.800 --> 01:07:32.800] But if he elects not to pursue prosecution, then you have standing as the complaintant [01:07:32.800 --> 01:07:38.800] to then file with the court of common pleas, the district court, and all the way up to the supreme. [01:07:38.800 --> 01:07:41.800] District court appeals and supreme. [01:07:41.800 --> 01:07:49.800] And the attorney general in the state of Pennsylvania has prosecutorial powers. [01:07:49.800 --> 01:07:59.800] I'm like Texas, where the only time he has prosecutorial powers for the most part is when he's asked to assist the prosecuting attorney. [01:07:59.800 --> 01:08:02.800] Not so in Pennsylvania. [01:08:02.800 --> 01:08:06.800] In Pennsylvania, he's a prosecutor in his own right. [01:08:06.800 --> 01:08:13.800] So when I was there, what we did is we filed a complaint with the prosecuting attorney. [01:08:13.800 --> 01:08:20.800] And of course, he did not want to pursue prosecution because it was politically costly. [01:08:20.800 --> 01:08:27.800] So we filed with the court of common pleas, the district court, the court of appeals, and the supreme. [01:08:27.800 --> 01:08:34.800] At the same time, we filed criminal charges against the district attorney with the attorney general. [01:08:34.800 --> 01:08:44.800] And when the attorney general exercised the same discretion the prosecutor did, we filed against him with the court of common pleas. [01:08:44.800 --> 01:08:47.800] And then we appealed it on up. [01:08:47.800 --> 01:08:50.800] So we had them all hopping up and down. [01:08:50.800 --> 01:08:54.800] The one who's most sensitive is the attorney general. [01:08:54.800 --> 01:08:57.800] Now, he's a statewide official. [01:08:57.800 --> 01:09:08.800] And when you start filing criminal charges against him, accusing him of shielding a corrupt judge from prosecution, the next time he runs for office, [01:09:08.800 --> 01:09:14.800] he can count on his opponent pulling that out and waving it in front of everybody. [01:09:14.800 --> 01:09:17.800] Now, go ahead. [01:09:17.800 --> 01:09:26.800] Yeah, you're absolutely correct because my attorney, he was stoked when he read this. [01:09:26.800 --> 01:09:29.800] He said, this is unbelievable. [01:09:29.800 --> 01:09:34.800] He said, this is very much needed. [01:09:34.800 --> 01:09:37.800] That is good to hear. [01:09:37.800 --> 01:09:48.800] And whether you get him or not, I could almost guarantee you that every judge in the state is going to see this. [01:09:48.800 --> 01:09:49.800] Oh, yeah. [01:09:49.800 --> 01:09:54.800] The judge is going to say, holy mackerel, look what they're trying to do to me. [01:09:54.800 --> 01:09:57.800] Guys, how do I keep this from happening to me? [01:09:57.800 --> 01:10:00.800] Judges do this stuff all the time. [01:10:00.800 --> 01:10:11.800] I'm going to, until 21st, I'll be filing criminal charges against a Texas ranger for following Texas ranger policies. [01:10:11.800 --> 01:10:16.800] And I told my prosecutor that I really don't want him indicted. [01:10:16.800 --> 01:10:24.800] But when I file against him criminally for following policy, every ranger in the state is going to know about it. [01:10:24.800 --> 01:10:33.800] The prosecutor said, yeah, they're going to know about it about 45 minutes after you file it. [01:10:33.800 --> 01:10:38.800] You know, I tell people we file these complaints and we don't get an indictment. [01:10:38.800 --> 01:10:39.800] That's OK. [01:10:39.800 --> 01:10:42.800] This is about politics. [01:10:42.800 --> 01:10:46.800] All the judges in the state are going to look at this document. [01:10:46.800 --> 01:10:48.800] I read this document. [01:10:48.800 --> 01:10:49.800] Ms. Leslie presented it. [01:10:49.800 --> 01:10:52.800] It is powerful. [01:10:52.800 --> 01:10:56.800] It is extremely well done. [01:10:56.800 --> 01:11:03.800] This would be very nice work for a lawyer, except I never see a lawyer do this good work. [01:11:03.800 --> 01:11:11.800] So the fact that it is so well crafted will give it much more weight. [01:11:11.800 --> 01:11:23.800] You could well change the direction the judges are going in Pennsylvania just to make sure they don't wind up with one of these written against them. [01:11:23.800 --> 01:11:24.800] Exactly my point. [01:11:24.800 --> 01:11:27.800] That's what I want to accomplish. [01:11:27.800 --> 01:11:31.800] That's exactly what I want to accomplish. [01:11:31.800 --> 01:11:42.800] Wouldn't it be nice years down the road to be able to look back and say, I did that. [01:11:42.800 --> 01:11:45.800] Yes, it would be very nice. [01:11:45.800 --> 01:11:50.800] I live in a small town 35 miles northwest of Fort Worth. [01:11:50.800 --> 01:11:56.800] We had a terrible problem with rock trucks hauling gravel through here. [01:11:56.800 --> 01:12:01.800] They were killing 25 people a year out here on these highways. [01:12:01.800 --> 01:12:12.800] I went to the president of the Katy Railroad and crawled right down his throat for not using his railroad to haul these rocks. [01:12:12.800 --> 01:12:19.800] Two years later, these drivers were cutting the rails. [01:12:19.800 --> 01:12:23.800] They derailed some trains. [01:12:23.800 --> 01:12:25.800] He almost put them out of business. [01:12:25.800 --> 01:12:31.800] I had a client that I was cleaning some trucks for and we'd had a recession here. [01:12:31.800 --> 01:12:34.800] I said, that recession must have shut down all your businesses. [01:12:34.800 --> 01:12:37.800] Oh, plenty of rock moving. [01:12:37.800 --> 01:12:41.800] Trains are hauling it all. [01:12:41.800 --> 01:12:49.800] Sometimes when we're sitting here, we hear that train whistle in the background because I'm not far away from it. [01:12:49.800 --> 01:12:57.800] It may irritate my listeners, but I just sit here and grin from ear to ear. [01:12:57.800 --> 01:13:07.800] I don't know if what I did caused that, but I sure get to think I did. [01:13:07.800 --> 01:13:13.800] And we don't have 24 people a year killed out on this highway anymore. [01:13:13.800 --> 01:13:19.800] This is worse than trouble. I'm really pleased with that document you sent. [01:13:19.800 --> 01:13:28.800] I'm going to study it to improve my technique and technology. [01:13:28.800 --> 01:13:39.800] But absolutely keep us abreast of how this goes because what you just filed, that's just the first shot at them. [01:13:39.800 --> 01:13:48.800] If the state commission, whatever your governing commission for judges is called, here it's Commission on Judicial Conduct. [01:13:48.800 --> 01:13:53.800] If they don't act, then you file against them. [01:13:53.800 --> 01:14:02.800] And if they're like Texas, they have judges on the board. [01:14:02.800 --> 01:14:14.800] And those judges, when they're made known in the normal performance of their duty that a crime has been committed, [01:14:14.800 --> 01:14:24.800] just because what they're doing is not on the bench when they're handling judicial conduct, they're still magistrates. [01:14:24.800 --> 01:14:26.800] Right. [01:14:26.800 --> 01:14:34.800] And they have a duty, especially if you include with that a verified criminal, David. [01:14:34.800 --> 01:14:40.800] And then when they don't act, you file the same thing against them. [01:14:40.800 --> 01:14:43.800] It's all political. [01:14:43.800 --> 01:14:45.800] Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. [01:14:45.800 --> 01:14:52.800] Well, like I said, these are all felonies, and there's five of them on the second judge. [01:14:52.800 --> 01:14:57.800] And one felony, one felony is enough to getting suspended. [01:14:57.800 --> 01:14:59.800] He's got five. [01:14:59.800 --> 01:15:00.800] Suspended. [01:15:00.800 --> 01:15:06.800] It's called co-warranto removal. [01:15:06.800 --> 01:15:08.800] They have a special term for that. [01:15:08.800 --> 01:15:18.800] Once they're indicted, most every state has a statute that not when you're accused, [01:15:18.800 --> 01:15:22.800] but once you're indicted, it calls for co-warranto removal. [01:15:22.800 --> 01:15:26.800] They should have removed the governor, but they didn't. [01:15:26.800 --> 01:15:30.800] They removed co-warranto from office. [01:15:30.800 --> 01:15:34.800] So this judge, he's going to really, really take this seriously. [01:15:34.800 --> 01:15:36.800] He should. [01:15:36.800 --> 01:15:45.800] And I suspect from the quality of the document that every judge in the state is going to take this really, really serious. [01:15:45.800 --> 01:15:46.800] Yeah. [01:15:46.800 --> 01:15:55.800] When I was in Pennsylvania last time, I sent a letter to every federal judge in Pennsylvania [01:15:55.800 --> 01:16:02.800] because we had FBI agents making up warrants. [01:16:02.800 --> 01:16:07.800] They'd go show it to the local police department, have them go in and run security. [01:16:07.800 --> 01:16:12.800] They'd go into your house, drag you out in the street at two in the morning, [01:16:12.800 --> 01:16:19.800] and they'd all get out of the house, and the FBI would go in, and they'd steal computers and cash and guns, [01:16:19.800 --> 01:16:23.800] and then go away, just disappear. [01:16:23.800 --> 01:16:30.800] And I did some research, figured out what it was doing, and sent a letter to every magistrate in the state, [01:16:30.800 --> 01:16:41.800] every federal magistrate demanding a copy of all the warrants they had issued and that had been executed. [01:16:41.800 --> 01:16:46.800] Not one magistrate responded to it. [01:16:46.800 --> 01:16:49.800] But I never practiced again. [01:16:49.800 --> 01:16:52.800] Hang on, Randy Kelton, the rule of law radio. [01:16:52.800 --> 01:16:56.800] I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:56.800 --> 01:17:11.800] We'll be right back. [01:17:26.800 --> 01:17:31.800] We'll be right back. [01:17:56.800 --> 01:17:59.800] We'll be right back. [01:17:59.800 --> 01:18:26.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:18:26.800 --> 01:18:29.800] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:18:29.800 --> 01:18:33.800] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:33.800 --> 01:18:38.800] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.800 --> 01:18:40.800] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.800 --> 01:18:46.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [01:18:46.800 --> 01:18:49.800] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.800 --> 01:19:01.800] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:01.800 --> 01:19:30.800] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:30.800 --> 01:19:32.800] Okay, we are back. [01:19:32.800 --> 01:19:41.800] We're at the Kelton Law Radio on this Friday, the eighth day of April 2016, [01:19:41.800 --> 01:19:44.800] and we're talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [01:19:44.800 --> 01:19:49.800] Okay, Leslie, do you have anything more for us? [01:19:49.800 --> 01:19:53.800] No, I just wanted to share that with you, and I'm really stoked, [01:19:53.800 --> 01:19:58.800] and this is being filed on Monday morning, so here's the Monday. [01:19:58.800 --> 01:19:59.800] Let's see where it goes. [01:19:59.800 --> 01:20:01.800] I'm going to send him a copy. [01:20:01.800 --> 01:20:03.800] I'm going to send the DA a copy. [01:20:03.800 --> 01:20:12.800] I'm going to send the Board of Association and the Supreme Court that is in charge of the Judicial Conduct Board. [01:20:12.800 --> 01:20:14.800] So we'll see how that goes. [01:20:14.800 --> 01:20:21.800] Okay, one thing to watch for, and you wouldn't think this would happen, but it does. [01:20:21.800 --> 01:20:27.800] Sometimes you get officials telling you, oh, well, you better be careful. [01:20:27.800 --> 01:20:31.800] You could get in a lot of trouble doing that. [01:20:31.800 --> 01:20:34.800] That's witness tampering. [01:20:34.800 --> 01:20:45.800] If any official says anything to you that you can in any way construe as a threat or a warning, [01:20:45.800 --> 01:20:49.800] that should get witness tampering. [01:20:49.800 --> 01:20:57.800] Just a thought, you know, I've done that several times, and it's great fun because they don't see it coming. [01:20:57.800 --> 01:21:01.800] They're used to threatening people, public officials are. [01:21:01.800 --> 01:21:04.800] They're not used to those threats coming back at them. [01:21:04.800 --> 01:21:14.800] Okay, thank you very much, Ms. Leslie, and make sure you keep us up to date on all the fun and games this causes. [01:21:14.800 --> 01:21:19.800] Okay, one question before I leave. [01:21:19.800 --> 01:21:28.800] Is it necessary to keep this confidentiality kind of stuff the way they say? [01:21:28.800 --> 01:21:32.800] They have to keep it confidential. [01:21:32.800 --> 01:21:38.800] You don't. [01:21:38.800 --> 01:21:41.800] They think all this applies to everybody. [01:21:41.800 --> 01:21:42.800] No, no, no, no. [01:21:42.800 --> 01:21:44.800] They're the public servants. [01:21:44.800 --> 01:21:45.800] You're the master. [01:21:45.800 --> 01:21:49.800] You don't have to keep anything confidential. [01:21:49.800 --> 01:21:51.800] Because everything's a matter of public record. [01:21:51.800 --> 01:21:56.800] There's not a single thing that could be slanderous in there. [01:21:56.800 --> 01:21:59.800] Yeah, they lied to you. [01:21:59.800 --> 01:22:02.800] You made criminal accusations. [01:22:02.800 --> 01:22:06.800] You're absolutely protected. [01:22:06.800 --> 01:22:08.800] Okay, so then I can leak this to the press? [01:22:08.800 --> 01:22:11.800] Oh, yeah, absolutely. [01:22:11.800 --> 01:22:17.800] If I don't let it out, it won't see the light of day. [01:22:17.800 --> 01:22:25.800] It will see the light of every judge's desk in the step eight. [01:22:25.800 --> 01:22:27.800] This is all politics. [01:22:27.800 --> 01:22:31.800] I got all the highest judges in Texas put in front of a grand jury. [01:22:31.800 --> 01:22:42.800] And I thought it was my great plagiarizing skills and my eloquent oratory and all the pressure I put on them. [01:22:42.800 --> 01:22:46.800] They didn't have anything to do with that. [01:22:46.800 --> 01:22:52.800] It had to do with a prosecuting attorney, 25-year district attorney, not running for office again. [01:22:52.800 --> 01:22:53.800] He's a Democrat. [01:22:53.800 --> 01:22:58.800] All 15 of these judges were Republicans. [01:22:58.800 --> 01:23:10.800] The best you can hope for is that those judges consider this kind of a complaint as cannon fodder [01:23:10.800 --> 01:23:16.800] that their next opponent will use against them when they try to run for office again. [01:23:16.800 --> 01:23:20.800] It's all about the politics. [01:23:20.800 --> 01:23:27.800] No matter what the Judicial Conduct Commission does, no matter what a grand jury does or other judges, [01:23:27.800 --> 01:23:35.800] these complaints have been filed against them and they can expect their next opponent to use it against them. [01:23:35.800 --> 01:23:42.800] And he's going to say, oh, well, these complaints were baseless. [01:23:42.800 --> 01:23:47.800] The problem is perception is everything. [01:23:47.800 --> 01:23:55.800] When he's trying to run for reelection and has to defend himself over accusations of criminal behavior [01:23:55.800 --> 01:24:02.800] from the bench, good luck. [01:24:02.800 --> 01:24:03.800] Okay. [01:24:03.800 --> 01:24:04.800] Okay. [01:24:04.800 --> 01:24:06.800] Thank you very much, Ms. Leslie. [01:24:06.800 --> 01:24:07.800] Okay. [01:24:07.800 --> 01:24:11.800] Now we're going to go to Larry in Arizona. [01:24:11.800 --> 01:24:17.800] Hello, Larry. [01:24:17.800 --> 01:24:19.800] Larry, are you there? [01:24:19.800 --> 01:24:21.800] No. [01:24:21.800 --> 01:24:22.800] There we go. [01:24:22.800 --> 01:24:26.800] What do you have for us today? [01:24:26.800 --> 01:24:28.800] Can you hear me? [01:24:28.800 --> 01:24:30.800] I'm here. [01:24:30.800 --> 01:24:31.800] Talk to me. [01:24:31.800 --> 01:24:32.800] Okay. [01:24:32.800 --> 01:24:33.800] Well, I guess we got mixed up. [01:24:33.800 --> 01:24:36.800] I'm Adam, not Larry. [01:24:36.800 --> 01:24:42.800] We have a terrible distortion in your mic. [01:24:42.800 --> 01:24:44.800] I said this is Adam, not Larry. [01:24:44.800 --> 01:24:46.800] I just wanted to clarify. [01:24:46.800 --> 01:24:47.800] Oh, okay. [01:24:47.800 --> 01:24:50.800] Well, that's what I'm seeing on my caller board. [01:24:50.800 --> 01:24:53.800] You may be in the database wrong. [01:24:53.800 --> 01:24:56.800] Okay. [01:24:56.800 --> 01:25:02.800] So you're incognito today. [01:25:02.800 --> 01:25:04.800] You're here on an alias. [01:25:04.800 --> 01:25:07.800] I guess so. [01:25:07.800 --> 01:25:08.800] God bless Texas, Randy. [01:25:08.800 --> 01:25:12.800] What do you say to that? [01:25:12.800 --> 01:25:14.800] I'm having a terrible time understanding you. [01:25:14.800 --> 01:25:18.800] Try moving the mic a little bit away from your mouth. [01:25:18.800 --> 01:25:20.800] God bless Texas, Randy. [01:25:20.800 --> 01:25:22.800] What do you think about that? [01:25:22.800 --> 01:25:23.800] Oh, yeah. [01:25:23.800 --> 01:25:24.800] God loves Texas. [01:25:24.800 --> 01:25:26.800] My favorite place on earth. [01:25:26.800 --> 01:25:27.800] Oh. [01:25:27.800 --> 01:25:31.800] There's a good reason why Texas is my favorite place on earth. [01:25:31.800 --> 01:25:32.800] Yeah. [01:25:32.800 --> 01:25:34.800] What the night for me to put... [01:25:34.800 --> 01:25:40.800] It's because Texas has the best-looking women on earth. [01:25:40.800 --> 01:25:43.800] Man has to keep his priorities straight. [01:25:43.800 --> 01:25:48.800] But it also gives me the privilege of your most potent purview. [01:25:48.800 --> 01:25:57.800] So what I'm calling about the seeding is we're all quiet on our fronts. [01:25:57.800 --> 01:26:02.800] I've got the domestics pretty much beat down to a standstill. [01:26:02.800 --> 01:26:06.800] However, I've got a problem coming on from the inside, [01:26:06.800 --> 01:26:15.800] and that has to do with my wife's inheritance. [01:26:15.800 --> 01:26:17.800] So it's concerning probate. [01:26:17.800 --> 01:26:22.800] I wondered if you would be able to comment on something like that this evening. [01:26:22.800 --> 01:26:26.800] I have very little knowledge of probate. [01:26:26.800 --> 01:26:33.800] The one thing I know about probate is if there's any way you can avoid it [01:26:33.800 --> 01:26:39.800] because the lawyers and the trustees all try to swallow as much of the estate [01:26:39.800 --> 01:26:41.800] as they possibly can. [01:26:41.800 --> 01:26:44.800] They have created as much controversy as they can, [01:26:44.800 --> 01:26:47.800] so they can build out the entire estate. [01:26:47.800 --> 01:26:53.800] If there's any way you can get your property into a trust, [01:26:53.800 --> 01:26:57.800] if it's in a trust, it doesn't go through probate. [01:26:57.800 --> 01:27:02.800] Well, let me expand a little further. [01:27:02.800 --> 01:27:09.800] It's concerning the last will and testament of my wife's grandmother, [01:27:09.800 --> 01:27:15.800] and the only reason my wife is named as a beneficiary in the will [01:27:15.800 --> 01:27:20.800] is because her mother, who would have been the original beneficiary, [01:27:20.800 --> 01:27:22.800] died when she was eight. [01:27:22.800 --> 01:27:32.800] So what we have here, what I feel is that the law is completely on my wife's side [01:27:32.800 --> 01:27:37.800] as far as the last will and testament and the court orders. [01:27:37.800 --> 01:27:47.800] The problem is that the executrix, which is my wife's aunt, [01:27:47.800 --> 01:27:52.800] she's not fulfilling her duties as an executrix [01:27:52.800 --> 01:27:58.800] and is basically, you know, the easiest way to say it, [01:27:58.800 --> 01:28:05.800] she's committing fraud, conversion, and defocation against... [01:28:05.800 --> 01:28:10.800] Okay, you can move the court to replace her as the executor [01:28:10.800 --> 01:28:16.800] if you feel there, if you have evidence to indicate there's wrongdoing. [01:28:16.800 --> 01:28:18.800] So correct me if I'm wrong. [01:28:18.800 --> 01:28:22.800] I've called in, of course, for your opinions in politics, [01:28:22.800 --> 01:28:27.800] but I mean, of course, I can go hire a lawyer. [01:28:27.800 --> 01:28:30.800] I've talked to a couple firms and this and that, [01:28:30.800 --> 01:28:34.800] but I really think that, you know, [01:28:34.800 --> 01:28:37.800] a lot of this attitude might come from your teachings, [01:28:37.800 --> 01:28:42.800] but if the law is on her side, [01:28:42.800 --> 01:28:47.800] wouldn't I have to do nothing more than me not being any kind of attorney [01:28:47.800 --> 01:28:49.800] or anything, but wouldn't I have to do nothing more [01:28:49.800 --> 01:28:55.800] than petition the court for a redress of grievances [01:28:55.800 --> 01:28:58.800] and get the judge to... [01:28:58.800 --> 01:28:59.800] Hold on. [01:28:59.800 --> 01:29:07.800] When you petition the court, keep in mind the judge has two duties. [01:29:07.800 --> 01:29:11.800] He must determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, [01:29:11.800 --> 01:29:17.800] then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:29:17.800 --> 01:29:20.800] If you don't give him the facts [01:29:20.800 --> 01:29:24.800] and then give him the law as it applies to the facts, [01:29:24.800 --> 01:29:26.800] he may agree with you. [01:29:26.800 --> 01:29:30.800] You may give him the most convincing arguments [01:29:30.800 --> 01:29:36.800] and the most compelling reasons why he should rule in your favor, [01:29:36.800 --> 01:29:39.800] and he might agree with you, [01:29:39.800 --> 01:29:42.800] but if you haven't given him facts [01:29:42.800 --> 01:29:44.800] and the law as it applies to the facts, [01:29:44.800 --> 01:29:48.800] he has no power to rule in your favor. [01:29:48.800 --> 01:29:54.800] This is why someone who's not knowledgeable in law needs counsel, [01:29:54.800 --> 01:30:00.800] because the lawyer knows how to never make... [01:30:00.800 --> 01:30:04.800] Getting hitched may be one of the best moves a man can make [01:30:04.800 --> 01:30:07.800] according to new research about the health benefits of marriage. [01:30:07.800 --> 01:30:09.800] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, I'll be back in just a moment [01:30:09.800 --> 01:30:13.800] to tell you why men should be grateful for their wives. [01:30:13.800 --> 01:30:15.800] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:15.800 --> 01:30:18.800] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, [01:30:18.800 --> 01:30:20.800] and once your privacy is gone, [01:30:20.800 --> 01:30:23.800] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:23.800 --> 01:30:26.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [01:30:26.800 --> 01:30:28.800] and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:28.800 --> 01:30:31.800] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:31.800 --> 01:30:34.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:34.800 --> 01:30:38.800] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:38.800 --> 01:30:42.800] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:42.800 --> 01:30:45.800] Married men live longer, healthier lives than single men. [01:30:45.800 --> 01:30:48.800] For example, they have a lower risk of depression, [01:30:48.800 --> 01:30:50.800] they're more likely to survive about with cancer, [01:30:50.800 --> 01:30:54.800] and they have a 46% lower chance of dying from heart disease. [01:30:54.800 --> 01:30:55.800] Why is that? [01:30:55.800 --> 01:30:57.800] A study by the RAND Corporation suggests [01:30:57.800 --> 01:31:00.800] that a big reason is their overall healthier lifestyle. [01:31:00.800 --> 01:31:03.800] Married men are better cared for when they're sick, [01:31:03.800 --> 01:31:07.800] have healthier diets, and have far less stress in a happy home environment. [01:31:07.800 --> 01:31:10.800] They're also less likely to smoke, drink excessively, [01:31:10.800 --> 01:31:12.800] or engage in other risky behaviors. [01:31:12.800 --> 01:31:14.800] So despite all those jokes about married life, [01:31:14.800 --> 01:31:18.800] men, you should be grateful for that proverbial ball and chain. [01:31:18.800 --> 01:31:20.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:20.800 --> 01:31:29.800] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.800 --> 01:31:35.800] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.800 --> 01:31:37.800] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.800 --> 01:31:42.800] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.800 --> 01:31:45.800] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.800 --> 01:31:48.800] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.800 --> 01:31:49.800] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.800 --> 01:31:50.800] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.800 --> 01:31:51.800] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:51.800 --> 01:31:52.800] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.800 --> 01:31:54.800] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.800 --> 01:31:57.800] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.800 --> 01:32:00.800] Visit us at www.rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.800 --> 01:32:31.800] to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.800 --> 01:32:37.800] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:37.800 --> 01:32:39.800] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [01:32:39.800 --> 01:32:44.800] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:44.800 --> 01:32:49.800] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:49.800 --> 01:32:55.800] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:55.800 --> 01:32:57.800] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:57.800 --> 01:33:00.800] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.800 --> 01:33:03.800] Looking for some truth? [01:33:03.800 --> 01:33:04.800] You found it. [01:33:04.800 --> 01:33:32.800] LogosradioNetwork.com. [01:33:32.800 --> 01:33:34.800] Hey, we are back. [01:33:34.800 --> 01:33:35.800] Randy Kelton, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:33:35.800 --> 01:33:36.800] And I was on a roll there. [01:33:36.800 --> 01:33:38.800] I just rolled right off the cliff. [01:33:38.800 --> 01:33:41.800] I blew the outro, and I'll get it for that. [01:33:41.800 --> 01:33:54.800] But really, probate is too complex for a pro se to try to do it, frankly. [01:33:54.800 --> 01:34:01.800] Not only do you have to understand how to put these pleadings together, [01:34:01.800 --> 01:34:09.800] but pro se is, I mean, probate is something you need somebody who does it all the time to understand it. [01:34:09.800 --> 01:34:12.800] But the problem when you get somebody who does it all the time, [01:34:12.800 --> 01:34:17.800] they're very accustomed to bleeding out the estate. [01:34:17.800 --> 01:34:21.800] So it's kind of a conundrum. [01:34:21.800 --> 01:34:24.800] You don't know which you'll be better at. [01:34:24.800 --> 01:34:34.800] But if you think what the executor is doing is plainly and clearly improper, [01:34:34.800 --> 01:34:49.800] probably an explanation to the judge may be enough to get the judge to appoint either an attorney to act as executor of the state or change executors. [01:34:49.800 --> 01:34:53.800] I guess that happens all the time. [01:34:53.800 --> 01:34:55.800] Yeah. [01:34:55.800 --> 01:35:04.800] Well, let me just read you something here at the back of the notification she got, [01:35:04.800 --> 01:35:08.800] which is the order of probating will and authorizing letters of testimony. [01:35:08.800 --> 01:35:10.800] At the very end, it says, [01:35:10.800 --> 01:35:21.800] it is further ordered by the court that letters of testimony upon the will and state of blah, blah, blah, be and the same are hereby granted, [01:35:21.800 --> 01:35:31.800] but the clerk shall issue letters of testimony to blah, blah, blah, the executor as independent executor when qualified according to law, [01:35:31.800 --> 01:35:42.800] and that no other action shall be had in this court other than the return of an inventory, appraisement, and list of claims as required by law [01:35:42.800 --> 01:35:48.800] and the notice to beneficiaries required by Section 128A of the Texas Probate Code. [01:35:48.800 --> 01:36:03.800] So what we got already, just by the notification from the attorney of the estate, they're already, you know, where is that? [01:36:03.800 --> 01:36:14.800] That's supposed to be, according to 128A of the Texas Probate Code, the inventory appraisement and list of claims as required by law shall be... [01:36:14.800 --> 01:36:23.800] Now, wait a minute, you're kind of rambling here. Where are you going? What is your question or issue? [01:36:23.800 --> 01:36:31.800] My question is how do I get a hold of the inventory appraisement and list of claims as required by law? [01:36:31.800 --> 01:36:37.800] Just go ask the court. That's all public record. You can just go down and look in the file yourself. [01:36:37.800 --> 01:36:44.800] If the executor has filed it, it'll be in the file and it'll be public record. [01:36:44.800 --> 01:36:49.800] Okay. Well, what if the executor has neglected to file that? [01:36:49.800 --> 01:36:51.800] Wait, say that again. [01:36:51.800 --> 01:36:55.800] What if the executor has neglected to file that? [01:36:55.800 --> 01:37:04.800] Then you petition the court for an order directing her to produce it. [01:37:04.800 --> 01:37:06.800] Okay. [01:37:06.800 --> 01:37:13.800] You just notice the judge. You know, the judge has got lots of cases, so he puts out his order and he assumes everybody abides by him. [01:37:13.800 --> 01:37:17.800] If somebody doesn't, you have to let them know. [01:37:17.800 --> 01:37:25.800] And generally, when you let him know, he will let the other person know that when he gives an order, it better be followed. [01:37:25.800 --> 01:37:31.800] They generally get a little touchy when you don't follow their orders. [01:37:31.800 --> 01:37:37.800] Okay. Well, I guess what I'm asking is if this happened to you, what would you do? [01:37:37.800 --> 01:37:44.800] I would just, I'd follow the thunder. If the executor was required to do something and didn't do something, [01:37:44.800 --> 01:37:54.800] first thing I would do was send a certified letter to the executor asking, you know, notifying the executor of what you're supposed to do. [01:37:54.800 --> 01:38:02.800] And then if nothing happens, then you send a file in motion with the court for a, I'm trying to think of the right word. [01:38:02.800 --> 01:38:12.800] It's not writ of mandamus, just for an order ordering her to comply or asking the court to issue sanctions if she doesn't. [01:38:12.800 --> 01:38:13.800] Right. [01:38:13.800 --> 01:38:24.800] And generally it's enough to just tell the court that she's not complying and the court will generally motivate them. [01:38:24.800 --> 01:38:33.800] That's what I'm hoping for is I can kind of get the ball rolling just filing some paperwork at the courthouse instead of running to some law firm. [01:38:33.800 --> 01:38:41.800] It's probably better if you send a certified letter to the trustee or to the executor. [01:38:41.800 --> 01:38:47.800] And if it's certified, she has to sign for it, that'll get her attention and that'll tell her you mean business. [01:38:47.800 --> 01:38:51.800] And she'll know that the next one's going to the court. [01:38:51.800 --> 01:38:57.800] Oh, that's where I was at. Yeah. Should I send a copy of the same letter at the same time to the court? [01:38:57.800 --> 01:39:02.800] No. Try to do it outside the court first. [01:39:02.800 --> 01:39:07.800] And if she refuses to reply within 30 days? [01:39:07.800 --> 01:39:09.800] Then you send it to the court. [01:39:09.800 --> 01:39:11.800] Okay. [01:39:11.800 --> 01:39:20.800] The court wants you to exercise your administrative remedies rather than use the court as the remedy of first resort. [01:39:20.800 --> 01:39:24.800] They want you to use the court as the remedy of last resort. [01:39:24.800 --> 01:39:35.800] So if you take a reasonable action beforehand, the judge will look on your pleading more favorably. [01:39:35.800 --> 01:39:38.800] Right. [01:39:38.800 --> 01:39:41.800] Okay. Is that it? [01:39:41.800 --> 01:39:43.800] That's it. Thank you very much. [01:39:43.800 --> 01:39:49.800] Okay. Thank you, Larry. Now we're going to go to James in Texas. Hello, James. [01:39:49.800 --> 01:39:51.800] Hello again, Randy. [01:39:51.800 --> 01:39:59.800] Okay. We're still getting a little distortion on your mic, but I think we've got the signal problem we have. [01:39:59.800 --> 01:40:05.800] I think we figured out what it was. There is a suppressor on this system. [01:40:05.800 --> 01:40:12.800] And what that suppressor does is it listens for the host's voice. [01:40:12.800 --> 01:40:24.800] And when the host is speaking, it pushes any signal coming in from the call boards down underneath the host's voice. [01:40:24.800 --> 01:40:32.800] So sometimes when I'm talking here and trying to go by the background, well, I've got this headset on so I can't hear it. [01:40:32.800 --> 01:40:37.800] But I'm sitting here listening to someone and all of a sudden their voice sinks down. [01:40:37.800 --> 01:40:41.800] And sometimes it takes me a little while to realize there might be something going on. [01:40:41.800 --> 01:40:54.800] I take off my headsets. I hear sound behind me, so I have to mute my mic because I've got sound coming in through my mic and it pushes the caller down below me. [01:40:54.800 --> 01:41:03.800] Now, that's the kind of problem we were getting, but it was just going up and down, up and down. [01:41:03.800 --> 01:41:14.800] So we think something inside the system, after my system, and before it gets to the output, [01:41:14.800 --> 01:41:24.800] was sending a signal to the suppressor telling it had sound coming in and the suppressor was pushing your voice up and down, if that makes sense. [01:41:24.800 --> 01:41:30.800] But we think we got it sorted out. Deborah is not in the studio. She'll be back shortly. [01:41:30.800 --> 01:41:37.800] But whatever it was, we changed our levels here, so I think we got part of it handled. [01:41:37.800 --> 01:41:46.800] Okay, enough of that. Okay, James, we were talking about an unconscionable contract. [01:41:46.800 --> 01:41:59.800] Correct. Okay, if you have a contract that conceals a crime, can it be filed to record and be given the effect of law? [01:41:59.800 --> 01:42:07.800] Okay, that's a, what's the term, multifarious question. Can it be filed to record? Yes. [01:42:07.800 --> 01:42:14.800] Oh, can it be given the effect of law? Yes. If nobody challenges it. [01:42:14.800 --> 01:42:19.800] Well, if it's challenged, can it be? [01:42:19.800 --> 01:42:32.800] Legally, no. Okay, could you write a contract to kill your spouse and follow the record so that you can avoid prosecution? [01:42:32.800 --> 01:42:42.800] You can't do that. Oh, okay. No, that would not help you. That would actually act as a confession. [01:42:42.800 --> 01:42:51.800] Yeah. I'm not sure where you're going, James. How are these guys, let me think about this. [01:42:51.800 --> 01:42:56.800] We have documents being filed in the record that are fraudulent. [01:42:56.800 --> 01:43:01.800] Yeah, they carry admissions of a crime being committed. [01:43:01.800 --> 01:43:19.800] There's a tantamount to that. So are you implying that they're trying to use the fact that they file these documents publicly as a way to say we're not guilty of any wrongdoing? [01:43:19.800 --> 01:43:33.800] No, trying to sit there and say they're filing a document that contains a crime and that crime is overlooked and that document is given the force of law that that crime is okay. [01:43:33.800 --> 01:43:43.800] Okay. What it is is nobody challenges it. Are you familiar with Texas Penal Code 32.49? [01:43:43.800 --> 01:43:44.800] Yes. [01:43:44.800 --> 01:43:59.800] Okay. Okay, we're about to go to break so I can find my clock. Hang on. We'll pick this up on the other side and we'll be right back. [01:43:59.800 --> 01:44:03.800] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.800 --> 01:44:04.800] Sorry! [01:44:04.800 --> 01:44:06.800] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:06.800 --> 01:44:07.800] What? [01:44:07.800 --> 01:44:18.800] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. 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[01:45:33.800 --> 01:45:42.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.800 --> 01:45:52.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:52.800 --> 01:46:01.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.800 --> 01:46:18.800] Music. [01:46:18.800 --> 01:46:26.800] Okay, we are back in Kelcomb, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to James in Texas. [01:46:26.800 --> 01:46:34.800] Okay, I'm trying to understand the specific point that you're making. [01:46:34.800 --> 01:46:49.800] I understand that an unconscionable contract should not be enforceable and white documents shouldn't be filed but we know they do get filed. [01:46:49.800 --> 01:46:51.800] Okay, go ahead. [01:46:51.800 --> 01:47:04.800] Okay, you've got to look at throughout the country, you have all these mortgages and deed of trust that are filed that contain these burbages that they're going to commit to crime. [01:47:04.800 --> 01:47:10.800] And if you look in the bottom, if you look at the documents themselves, they follow a certain pattern. [01:47:10.800 --> 01:47:21.800] So if you go from one real estate broker to another real estate broker, you're going to have to sign a similar document which is an adhesion contract. [01:47:21.800 --> 01:47:31.800] And the Supreme Court of the United States has already ruled that no court can enforce an unconscionable contract. [01:47:31.800 --> 01:47:45.800] Now, since the county recorders are recording these documents that identify a crime they have done, does that make the records clerk, judge, jury, and executioner? [01:47:45.800 --> 01:47:51.800] No, the judge, the clerk has nothing to say about it. [01:47:51.800 --> 01:48:09.800] Well, they used to have nothing to say about it. They were given some discretion in what they would file but only to the degree that the document met the statutory filing requirements [01:48:09.800 --> 01:48:24.800] in that it was a certain type of document of which the documents that can be filed with the county recorder are specifically listed, documents affecting real property. [01:48:24.800 --> 01:48:30.800] And it must be affirmed and verified. [01:48:30.800 --> 01:48:39.800] That's pretty well what they check. And beyond that, they don't have any direct set. [01:48:39.800 --> 01:49:04.800] Section 103 tells the clerk that if they think a document is fraudulent, then they have two days to give notice to the district court and the district court will rule on whether the document shows valid in the record or if it's ruled void. [01:49:04.800 --> 01:49:14.800] But once it's filed, it stays in the record. But the court can rule whether it has any import or not. [01:49:14.800 --> 01:49:22.800] So now the clerk really doesn't have much to say and I don't want the clerk to have anything to say. [01:49:22.800 --> 01:49:33.800] When I go in and I give them a document to file and they start reading it, I say, wait a minute, wait a minute, what's in there is not your business. [01:49:33.800 --> 01:49:42.800] You stamp it, you file it, you don't like it, you notify the district judge and let the district judge handle that. [01:49:42.800 --> 01:49:57.800] But in their defense, I did find law that allowed them to refuse to file a document if it didn't meet the statutory filing requirements. [01:49:57.800 --> 01:50:03.800] And the other aspect to that is to meet the statutory requirements. [01:50:03.800 --> 01:50:11.800] Looking at the negative, can you sit down and file a statutory contract to file a document that can't be filed? [01:50:11.800 --> 01:50:20.800] Can you commit a crime? Can you file a crime to avoid prosecution? [01:50:20.800 --> 01:50:25.800] Wait a minute, can I file a crime? [01:50:25.800 --> 01:50:29.800] Yes. [01:50:29.800 --> 01:50:38.800] Okay, when you say file a crime, you're talking about file a fraudulent document to avoid prosecution. [01:50:38.800 --> 01:50:40.800] Correct. [01:50:40.800 --> 01:50:43.800] Okay. [01:50:43.800 --> 01:50:50.800] How does the filing of one of these documents allow you to avoid prosecution? [01:50:50.800 --> 01:50:59.800] Because the documents themselves define what the crime is that they're going to commit. [01:50:59.800 --> 01:51:05.800] But when it's filed a record and they come back and use that document against you, [01:51:05.800 --> 01:51:10.800] it's given the effect of law that this crime is just overlooked. [01:51:10.800 --> 01:51:22.800] And I've got to admit that most of these clerks are not lawyers or judges and they can't see the crime that's in the documents themselves. [01:51:22.800 --> 01:51:28.800] Right, and you know, I don't want the clerk trying to make a legal determination. [01:51:28.800 --> 01:51:36.800] That's what we got. There's statutory law for that in there. [01:51:36.800 --> 01:51:42.800] I'm not sure you're going somewhere that I'm not exactly sure where you're going. [01:51:42.800 --> 01:51:49.800] Well, we'll just have to wait to see how the federal courts and the state courts and other states handle this. [01:51:49.800 --> 01:52:07.800] The reason I asked you about 3249, the penal code, the Republic of Texas group, not the state itself, but the group, came up with this pretty genius strategy [01:52:07.800 --> 01:52:14.800] for filing liens against public officials using uniform commercial code. [01:52:14.800 --> 01:52:19.800] And that's the reason why 51901 was put in place. [01:52:19.800 --> 01:52:29.800] Exactly, 51901-903 and 3248 and 3249. [01:52:29.800 --> 01:52:35.800] 3248 is securing a document by deception. [01:52:35.800 --> 01:52:45.800] 3249 specifically goes to documents filed with the county recorder affecting real property. [01:52:45.800 --> 01:53:00.800] And it says that if a document is filed with the county recorder affecting real property and it is fraudulent as defined as fraudulent is defined by 51901-C. [01:53:00.800 --> 01:53:13.800] 51901-C says that if a document's filed with the county recorder affecting real property by someone who does not have a document properly filed in the record, [01:53:13.800 --> 01:53:24.800] giving them authority to make a filing against the property, then the document is presumed to be fraudulent. [01:53:24.800 --> 01:53:33.800] So that's a specific term of art, a very focused definition of fraudulent. [01:53:33.800 --> 01:53:51.800] So if one of those have been filed, any person who has standing or who has a claim against the property can send that person a letter directing them to remove that document. [01:53:51.800 --> 01:53:58.800] And if they fail to do so within 20 days, it's a Class A misdemeanor in Texas. [01:53:58.800 --> 01:54:07.800] I just gave one to the trustee on a foreclosure sale last Tuesday. [01:54:07.800 --> 01:54:10.800] That was so much fun. [01:54:10.800 --> 01:54:15.800] Nobody's been taking them to legal task. [01:54:15.800 --> 01:54:28.800] And in Texas, thanks to the Republic of Texas group, we have some laws that the legislature put in just to stop the Republic of Texas people, [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:38.800] but that we can all use against these trustees and filers of property that documents in the record. [01:54:38.800 --> 01:54:40.800] Does that make sense, James? [01:54:40.800 --> 01:54:44.800] Yes, it does. It makes a lot of sense. [01:54:44.800 --> 01:54:52.800] Really, I would have liked to have been a fly on the wall when that trustee read that document. [01:54:52.800 --> 01:55:03.800] The argument I made is that there was an original lender who went out of business and then five years later, [01:55:03.800 --> 01:55:17.800] somebody else come along and filed an assignment. In this particular case, it was JPMorgan Chase came along and said, [01:55:17.800 --> 01:55:21.800] oh, well, we have a lost assignment. [01:55:21.800 --> 01:55:24.800] We've got this secure vault in Louisiana. [01:55:24.800 --> 01:55:28.800] And I went through that whole vault and I couldn't find our assignment. [01:55:28.800 --> 01:55:33.800] It's been lost, an assignment from Spalding to JPMorgan Chase. [01:55:33.800 --> 01:55:37.800] But Spalding wasn't the original lender. [01:55:37.800 --> 01:55:40.800] And there was nothing from the original lender. [01:55:40.800 --> 01:55:48.800] And then they put in this notice of missing dock assignment and then they did an assignment to Wells Fargo. [01:55:48.800 --> 01:55:59.800] So my assertion was this impropriety is in the public record. [01:55:59.800 --> 01:56:04.800] So the trustee has knowledge of that problem. [01:56:04.800 --> 01:56:09.800] If he doesn't have actual, he has imputed. [01:56:09.800 --> 01:56:22.800] So he acted on a notice of acceleration and I ordered him to remove it from the records, [01:56:22.800 --> 01:56:31.800] claiming that he absolutely knew it was fraudulent because all the evidence to determine that it's fraudulent is in the public record [01:56:31.800 --> 01:56:33.800] and he knows what's in there. [01:56:33.800 --> 01:56:39.800] And that's what I'm trying to tell you is on the mortgages and the deed of trust, [01:56:39.800 --> 01:56:45.800] those documents themselves contain the elements of fraud. [01:56:45.800 --> 01:56:55.800] I think whoever wrote the Fannie Mae Freddie Mac uniform instrument was on high on coke. [01:56:55.800 --> 01:57:00.800] That thing is such a mess. [01:57:00.800 --> 01:57:06.800] Yeah, but when you start using uniform instruments throughout the country that contain fraud, [01:57:06.800 --> 01:57:10.800] you're getting to an adhesion contract because when you go from one person to another [01:57:10.800 --> 01:57:19.800] and you have to sign the same identical contract, that's an adhesion contract. [01:57:19.800 --> 01:57:22.800] There's so many problems with it. [01:57:22.800 --> 01:57:30.800] I'm not understanding how that becomes an adhesion contract because you actually sign it. [01:57:30.800 --> 01:57:38.800] I was under the impression that an adhesion contract is one that is an implied contract, [01:57:38.800 --> 01:57:46.800] not an actual written contract where I take advantage of a service. [01:57:46.800 --> 01:57:57.800] Like I park my car in an area with a concrete curb and asphalt and parking meters [01:57:57.800 --> 01:58:04.800] that were put there by the city, then I enter into an adhesion contract with the city [01:58:04.800 --> 01:58:07.800] by using their services. [01:58:07.800 --> 01:58:12.800] But here, this is an express contract. [01:58:12.800 --> 01:58:16.800] What part of it is adhesion? [01:58:16.800 --> 01:58:22.800] The adhesion contract is, it's a uniform instrument that's used by everybody in the country. [01:58:22.800 --> 01:58:25.800] You sign this document here or you sign it over there, [01:58:25.800 --> 01:58:29.800] but you're going to sign the same document that contains a crime. [01:58:29.800 --> 01:58:34.800] Can't do that. [01:58:34.800 --> 01:58:40.800] Okay, maybe it must be a definition of adhesion that I'm just not familiar with. [01:58:40.800 --> 01:58:42.800] Hang on, about to go to break. [01:58:42.800 --> 01:58:49.800] Randy Kelton, Radio, I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:58:49.800 --> 01:58:53.800] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:53.800 --> 01:58:57.800] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:57.800 --> 01:59:01.800] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:01.800 --> 01:59:06.800] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:59:06.800 --> 01:59:08.800] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:08.800 --> 01:59:12.800] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:12.800 --> 01:59:17.800] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:17.800 --> 01:59:21.800] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:59:21.800 --> 01:59:27.800] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. 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