[00:00.000 --> 00:07.000] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing you jelly [00:07.000 --> 00:15.000] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.000 --> 00:23.000] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.000 --> 00:29.000] Markets for Friday, the 13th of January, 2017, are currently trading with gold at $1,197.15 [00:29.000 --> 00:36.000] an ounce, silver at $16.80 an ounce, Texas crude at $53 a barrel, and Bitcoin is on its [00:36.000 --> 00:45.000] way up at $830 U.S. currency. [00:45.000 --> 00:51.000] Today in history, the year 1942, Henry Ford patents a soybean or hemp body car built with [00:51.000 --> 00:56.000] agricultural plastics, 30% lighter and therefore more fuel efficient than a regular car. [00:56.000 --> 01:00.000] It was made in part because of the rationing of steel during World War II. [01:00.000 --> 01:02.000] It was designed to run on hemp fuel. [01:02.000 --> 01:09.000] Ford's hemp car patented today in history. [01:09.000 --> 01:14.000] In recent news, Russia's ambassador in Washington, Sergei Kislyak, has invited the incoming Trump's [01:14.000 --> 01:19.000] designated national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn, to their Syrian peace talks later [01:19.000 --> 01:21.000] this month with Turkey and Iran. [01:21.000 --> 01:26.000] A spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday today that the United [01:26.000 --> 01:28.000] States would attend the talks. [01:28.000 --> 01:32.000] Syrian government and opposition representatives are also expected to attend. [01:32.000 --> 01:36.000] This comes after a year-long attempt between the Obama administration and Russia to attempt [01:36.000 --> 01:38.000] to implement a ceasefire in Syria. [01:38.000 --> 01:41.000] Both have routinely accused each other of sabotaging that effort. [01:41.000 --> 01:46.000] Russia and Iran have provided military support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his [01:46.000 --> 01:50.000] fight against U.S.-backed rebel forces and al-Qaeda allied fighters. [01:50.000 --> 01:55.000] According to Turkish media reports, Turkish Foreign Minister Mavlut Kapusoglu said Thursday [01:55.000 --> 02:00.000] that the United States should definitely be invited and that is what we agreed with Russia. [02:00.000 --> 02:03.000] Nobody can ignore the role of the United States. [02:03.000 --> 02:08.000] The peace talks are going to be held in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, and are scheduled [02:08.000 --> 02:15.000] to begin January 23rd. [02:15.000 --> 02:20.000] Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Merlin Hewson told reporters after meeting with President-elect [02:20.000 --> 02:24.000] Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York on Friday today that they were close to a new [02:24.000 --> 02:29.000] contract deal that would cut the cost of the F-35 Joint Strike Force fighter program. [02:29.000 --> 02:33.000] This meeting seems to have been sparked from a Trump tweet on December 22nd where he said [02:33.000 --> 02:38.000] that, quote, based on the tremendous cost and cost overruns of Lockheed Martin F-35, [02:38.000 --> 02:42.000] I have asked Boeing to price out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet. [02:42.000 --> 02:46.000] Each F-35 fighter jet cost the U.S. taxpayer more than $100 million. [02:46.000 --> 02:51.000] The 15-year-old program has been riddled with delays and setbacks. [02:51.000 --> 03:19.000] This is Rick Rodeo with your lowdown for January 13th, 2017. [03:21.000 --> 03:29.000] Howdy, howdy. [03:29.000 --> 03:45.000] This is Randy Kelton with the Radio on this Friday, the 13th day of January 2017. [03:45.000 --> 03:48.000] It's Friday the 13th. [03:48.000 --> 03:49.000] Oh my goodness. [03:49.000 --> 03:51.000] I didn't realize that. [03:51.000 --> 03:53.000] Okay. [03:53.000 --> 04:02.000] Friday the 13th, January 2017. [04:02.000 --> 04:04.000] I'm having a little, I seem a little distracted. [04:04.000 --> 04:15.000] I'm trying to get my system up and I'm having a slight bit of technical problems. [04:15.000 --> 04:18.000] No, I think that was an old timer's problem. [04:18.000 --> 04:20.000] Okay, I am up. [04:20.000 --> 04:22.000] We will be taking your calls all night. [04:22.000 --> 04:27.000] Our call-in number is 512-646-1984. [04:27.000 --> 04:38.000] And I want to start out tonight talking about what is going on with my grand jury [04:38.000 --> 04:43.000] pursuit of the local district judge here in Wise County. [04:43.000 --> 04:46.000] There's actually two or three things going on here. [04:46.000 --> 04:53.000] I filed the complaints with the district attorney, or I gave them to the district attorney [04:53.000 --> 04:59.000] to hand to the grand jury and he tells me that he did hand them to the grand jury. [04:59.000 --> 05:08.000] And then the next month I called to see what the disposition was and was told by [05:08.000 --> 05:21.000] the district attorney that the grand jury decided not to act on my complaints. [05:21.000 --> 05:25.000] And she said they could do that if they want to. [05:25.000 --> 05:33.000] And I thought that was interesting because I didn't understand how they could do that. [05:33.000 --> 05:41.000] I read the code and I looked in the code and I didn't see anything in the code that [05:41.000 --> 05:47.000] appeared to give discretion to the grand jury. [05:47.000 --> 05:55.000] What I read in the code said that the grand jury shall investigate into all crimes [05:55.000 --> 06:01.000] subject to indictment of which any grand jury may have knowledge or may cover their [06:01.000 --> 06:06.000] knowledge by way of the prosecuting attorney or any other credible person. [06:06.000 --> 06:13.000] It says they shall investigate into all crimes subject to indictment. [06:13.000 --> 06:17.000] Now that seemed pretty clear. [06:17.000 --> 06:37.000] So then after 2009 you got to 2010 through 2018 and those codes tell the grand jury [06:37.000 --> 06:46.000] what they will, how they will handle witnesses. [06:46.000 --> 06:50.000] I'm trying to bring this up so I'm a little bit distracted here. [06:50.000 --> 06:54.000] The computer I have doesn't spell very well. [06:54.000 --> 06:57.000] Procedure. [06:57.000 --> 07:07.000] Okay, it tells the grand jury how they will handle witnesses and subpoena evidence [07:07.000 --> 07:11.000] and all that stuff and such. [07:11.000 --> 07:18.000] Okay, 2019, I was trying to bring this up so I could read it directly. [07:18.000 --> 07:25.000] After all the testimony which is accessible to the grand jury shall have been given in [07:25.000 --> 07:28.000] respect to any criminal accusation. [07:28.000 --> 07:35.000] The vote shall be taken as to the presentment of an indictment. [07:35.000 --> 07:41.000] Now that says the vote shall be taken. [07:41.000 --> 07:48.000] It does not say the vote may, might or can be taken if they want to. [07:48.000 --> 07:52.000] Shall as I read shall is obligatory. [07:52.000 --> 07:55.000] It means must. [07:55.000 --> 07:59.000] So it begs the question. [07:59.000 --> 08:10.000] If I read the code as a reasonable person of ordinary prudence, it appears as though [08:10.000 --> 08:16.000] the grand jury is commanded to perform this duty. [08:16.000 --> 08:20.000] I don't see any discretion in there. [08:20.000 --> 08:30.000] So where would 12 reasonable people of ordinary prudence all come to the same conclusion [08:30.000 --> 08:35.000] that they don't have to do this job if they don't want to? [08:35.000 --> 08:43.000] Well, it's possible that somebody told them they didn't have to. [08:43.000 --> 08:47.000] And I wonder who that could be. [08:47.000 --> 08:50.000] The bailiff maybe? [08:50.000 --> 08:56.000] He gets to talk to them and he gets to usher them around and go buy them lunch and all [08:56.000 --> 08:58.000] these sort of things. [08:58.000 --> 09:00.000] Maybe he told them. [09:00.000 --> 09:03.000] Nah, not very likely. [09:03.000 --> 09:12.000] Most likely it was the prosecuting attorney she told them because the prosecuting attorney [09:12.000 --> 09:23.000] is required, legislatively required, by legal advice to the police, lower courts and grand [09:23.000 --> 09:25.000] jurors. [09:25.000 --> 09:33.000] So if somebody told them this, the presumption would be that it was the prosecuting attorney. [09:33.000 --> 09:37.000] It raises an interesting conundrum. [09:37.000 --> 09:44.000] When does a prosecuting attorney have immunity? [09:44.000 --> 09:49.000] It is when the prosecuting attorney is performing the prosecutorial function. [09:49.000 --> 09:53.000] But giving legal advice, that's not a prosecutorial function. [09:53.000 --> 09:59.000] Giving legal advice is lawyer-client. [09:59.000 --> 10:10.000] And there is no immunity for a prosecutor giving legal advice to the police, lower courts [10:10.000 --> 10:13.000] or grand jury. [10:13.000 --> 10:18.000] So it gives us a great way to go back at them. [10:18.000 --> 10:28.000] The whole point of this, if we have done our homework and we have examined into these issues [10:28.000 --> 10:39.000] very carefully and know our law, when we go in and ask these officials to perform a duty [10:39.000 --> 10:46.000] and they don't perform that duty, it all goes downhill for them. [10:46.000 --> 10:56.000] That is, if you and I are willing to stand up and do what needs to be done, it's not [10:56.000 --> 10:58.000] terribly difficult. [10:58.000 --> 11:01.000] It's getting much easier. [11:01.000 --> 11:10.000] I've been some 30 years working this out on how to take these guys to task, how to work [11:10.000 --> 11:17.000] the system so that it works in our best interest and not necessarily theirs. [11:17.000 --> 11:26.000] And in how to ethically and effectively adjust the system. [11:26.000 --> 11:34.000] It's not always intuitive or direct in how we can best influence the system. [11:34.000 --> 11:39.000] We would think if we went to these public officials and say, well, you know, this is [11:39.000 --> 11:43.000] what the law says you're supposed to do. [11:43.000 --> 11:52.000] And these are my rights that you have to provide me access to so that you have to do these [11:52.000 --> 11:55.000] things, otherwise you'll be violating one of my rights. [11:55.000 --> 12:01.000] You would think that would be enough, but for the most part, public officials really [12:01.000 --> 12:04.000] don't care about your rights. [12:04.000 --> 12:08.000] They care about all the work they got in front of them, how they're going to get all of [12:08.000 --> 12:12.000] that work handled, how they're going to trudge through all they got to do. [12:12.000 --> 12:17.000] And your rights are way back there on their list. [12:17.000 --> 12:18.000] So how do you get their attention? [12:18.000 --> 12:25.000] How do you give them the reason to do things that appear on the surface to make their jobs [12:25.000 --> 12:26.000] harder? [12:26.000 --> 12:30.000] Well, we stink on them. [12:30.000 --> 12:37.000] And we developed over the years of doing this show and going after these public officials [12:37.000 --> 12:39.000] and studying the system. [12:39.000 --> 12:46.000] We've worked out a procedure that is beginning to seriously bear fruit. [12:46.000 --> 12:52.000] And in that regard, I have also been working on a wee book. [12:52.000 --> 13:02.000] For a couple of reasons, I originally started the wee book to organize my own thinking. [13:02.000 --> 13:09.000] I have all of these different things that I do and all this different law that I've [13:09.000 --> 13:13.000] learned and these different procedures that we can take. [13:13.000 --> 13:24.000] I needed a way to structure them all into one coherent piece. [13:24.000 --> 13:26.000] And that's what this wee book is. [13:26.000 --> 13:32.000] It's about 250 pages at the moment, pushing close to 300. [13:32.000 --> 13:34.000] It's a lot of information. [13:34.000 --> 13:42.000] And I've tried to make it as succinct as I could. [13:42.000 --> 13:49.000] But there is a lot to this, how we do this and how we think about it. [13:49.000 --> 13:59.000] But if I've done my job right, once you go through this book, especially if you go through [13:59.000 --> 14:06.000] it twice, then your whole perspective will change on how you think about these guys. [14:06.000 --> 14:10.000] I can't tell you exactly what you should do or what you shouldn't do. [14:10.000 --> 14:18.000] But I can give you a good prescription for how to hold your mind when you deal with them, [14:18.000 --> 14:28.000] what to actually expect, and how to anticipate their behavior so that you have a good response [14:28.000 --> 14:32.000] when they do something that they're not supposed to. [14:32.000 --> 14:37.000] The hardest thing for us to try to do with them is we don't have any idea what's going [14:37.000 --> 14:38.000] on here. [14:38.000 --> 14:42.000] We know what we learned in high school, but when you get out in the real world, that's [14:42.000 --> 14:49.000] not very valuable at all, because things don't really work the way they taught you in high [14:49.000 --> 14:50.000] school. [14:50.000 --> 14:55.000] In high school, they told you how things were supposed to work. [14:55.000 --> 14:59.000] And there's a lot of nice high-minded rhetoric, but when you get out in the real world, they [14:59.000 --> 15:01.000] don't work that way. [15:01.000 --> 15:04.000] We need to understand how they really work. [15:04.000 --> 15:09.000] And I've tried to put together the e-book in a way that makes all that make sense. [15:09.000 --> 15:13.000] I will have it published by next week. [15:13.000 --> 15:20.000] We're going to sell it on the station for $100. [15:20.000 --> 15:30.000] And if you buy one during our fun drive, then we'll put four cards in our drawing for the [15:30.000 --> 15:32.000] gun drawing. [15:32.000 --> 15:42.000] If any of you have a legal issue, for the most part, these legal issues either have [15:42.000 --> 15:48.000] the prospect of costing you a lot of money or, more important, have the prospect of costing [15:48.000 --> 15:50.000] you your liberty. [15:50.000 --> 16:00.000] And I had a guy on the show once that had got his third DUI, and he wanted to know what [16:00.000 --> 16:01.000] to do. [16:01.000 --> 16:04.000] He wanted to know if he could get a lawyer for a third DUI. [16:04.000 --> 16:05.000] This is too serious. [16:05.000 --> 16:06.000] You need a lawyer. [16:06.000 --> 16:08.000] But he can't afford one. [16:08.000 --> 16:14.000] Well, does he have a pickup truck or a flat-screen TV? [16:14.000 --> 16:19.000] And he said, yes, sell them. [16:19.000 --> 16:20.000] Do what you have to. [16:20.000 --> 16:22.000] Get the money to pay this lawyer. [16:22.000 --> 16:27.000] And then, once you get the case to go away, he can go to work and buy another pickup, [16:27.000 --> 16:28.000] buy a flat-screen TV. [16:28.000 --> 16:33.000] But you're not going to buy a deadly squat if you're sitting in jail for the next year [16:33.000 --> 16:34.000] or two. [16:34.000 --> 16:37.000] With a third DUI, we're looking at 35 to life. [16:37.000 --> 16:41.000] So let's get our priority straight. [16:41.000 --> 16:46.000] We need to learn what we have to do and take the effort to do it. [16:46.000 --> 16:52.000] The e-book is about the simplest thing you can do to put yourself in a position where [16:52.000 --> 16:54.000] you'll be like Scott Richardson. [16:54.000 --> 16:58.000] We'll be back next week. [16:58.000 --> 17:00.000] We're not going to worry about it, Scott. [17:00.000 --> 17:01.000] We'll be right back. [17:01.000 --> 17:02.000] Dang, Cookie. [17:02.000 --> 17:03.000] Cookie? [17:03.000 --> 17:04.000] Me love cookies. [17:04.000 --> 17:05.000] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:05.000 --> 17:07.000] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:07.000 --> 17:08.000] Cookie? [17:08.000 --> 17:09.000] Yucky? [17:09.000 --> 17:10.000] No, no bad cookie. [17:10.000 --> 17:11.000] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:11.000 --> 17:12.000] These are cyber cookies. [17:12.000 --> 17:13.000] No can eat? [17:13.000 --> 17:14.000] No. [17:14.000 --> 17:17.000] They are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:17.000 --> 17:18.000] These have apple. [17:18.000 --> 17:19.000] Really? [17:19.000 --> 17:21.000] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:21.000 --> 17:22.000] Yummy apple. [17:22.000 --> 17:27.000] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:27.000 --> 17:33.000] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.000 --> 17:34.000] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.000 --> 17:41.000] Now I go to logosradio.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, [17:41.000 --> 17:47.000] bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [17:47.000 --> 17:49.000] No cookies for me. [17:49.000 --> 17:53.000] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, [17:53.000 --> 17:57.000] I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.000 --> 17:58.000] Fee is for Cookie. [17:58.000 --> 18:00.000] Fee is for Classified. [18:00.000 --> 18:05.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:05.000 --> 18:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.000 --> 18:15.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [18:15.000 --> 18:21.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [18:21.000 --> 18:27.000] what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [18:27.000 --> 18:31.000] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them [18:31.000 --> 18:34.000] and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.000 --> 18:39.000] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.000 --> 18:41.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.000 --> 18:47.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.000 --> 18:50.000] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:50.000 --> 18:57.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [18:57.000 --> 19:01.000] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:01.000 --> 19:11.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [19:17.000 --> 19:19.000] Okay, we are back. [19:19.000 --> 19:28.000] Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 13th day of January 2017. [19:28.000 --> 19:32.000] And we are going to go to Scott in Texas. [19:32.000 --> 19:33.000] We have the phone lines open. [19:33.000 --> 19:39.000] They will be open all night, 512-646-1984. [19:39.000 --> 19:43.000] And a little bit more about the e-book. [19:43.000 --> 19:48.000] You know, people listen to me on the air and I have people saying, [19:48.000 --> 19:52.000] oh my goodness, you know so much about law. [19:52.000 --> 19:56.000] How did you ever learn all of this? [19:56.000 --> 20:04.000] Well, frankly, the way I learned this was taking what little I started out with, [20:04.000 --> 20:11.000] just from reading the codes, and explaining it to you on the air. [20:11.000 --> 20:17.000] Because when I explained it to you on the air, it went out of my mouth [20:17.000 --> 20:20.000] and come back in my ears. [20:20.000 --> 20:26.000] And sometimes I really did not like what I heard coming back in my ears. [20:26.000 --> 20:30.000] Because when I heard what I was saying, [20:30.000 --> 20:38.000] I understood that I was not transferring information that people could make sense of. [20:38.000 --> 20:46.000] And I spent 10 years struggling with how to say these things to other human beings [20:46.000 --> 20:53.000] so that the mental image I have in my mind, [20:53.000 --> 20:59.000] I can transfer into your mind with as little distortion as possible. [20:59.000 --> 21:04.000] And that essentially is what this book is. [21:04.000 --> 21:13.000] It's a compilation of 10 years of telling people about [21:13.000 --> 21:16.000] what little bit I've learned. [21:16.000 --> 21:19.000] And every time I tell somebody about some of this stuff, [21:19.000 --> 21:24.000] I learn some more because I have to address different options. [21:24.000 --> 21:27.000] You'll be surprised how fast you pick it up. [21:27.000 --> 21:30.000] If you have this e-book and you go through it, [21:30.000 --> 21:37.000] the way to learn and understand what's in this is not so much reading the e-book. [21:37.000 --> 21:42.000] It's explaining what you read to someone else. [21:42.000 --> 21:52.000] When you start doing that, then what you've learned will begin to kill. [21:52.000 --> 21:54.000] I was just talking to Ken Max today. [21:54.000 --> 21:59.000] He was talking about years ago he was at a political rally. [21:59.000 --> 22:03.000] And there were several reporters there. [22:03.000 --> 22:05.000] And this is before the rally. [22:05.000 --> 22:09.000] And these reporters are walking around talking to themselves. [22:09.000 --> 22:12.000] And he stopped one of them who was a real famous reporter, [22:12.000 --> 22:16.000] I forgot his name now, and asked him, what are they doing? [22:16.000 --> 22:21.000] He said, oh, they're reading their reports out loud. [22:21.000 --> 22:23.000] So he said, well, why do you do that? [22:23.000 --> 22:28.000] He said, well, you can read it a dozen times and you'll never catch the mistakes. [22:28.000 --> 22:36.000] But if you read it out loud, you will catch all of the mistakes first time through. [22:36.000 --> 22:43.000] It's one thing to read this e-book and read this information and read the law. [22:43.000 --> 22:54.000] But when you explain to someone else what you've read, that exacts a separate discipline. [22:54.000 --> 23:00.000] Now you have to take what you think you know and try to formulate it [23:00.000 --> 23:07.000] so that someone else who doesn't have your experience can make sense of what you're talking about. [23:07.000 --> 23:08.000] It is a struggle. [23:08.000 --> 23:09.000] It is an art. [23:09.000 --> 23:12.000] And it is the best way we can learn anything. [23:12.000 --> 23:17.000] And Scott is working with some of our latest technologies [23:17.000 --> 23:24.000] to get out the information that he's learned here and in other places. [23:24.000 --> 23:26.000] Scott, are you there? [23:26.000 --> 23:27.000] Oh, yeah. [23:27.000 --> 23:30.000] In fact, you need to turn your microphone up. [23:30.000 --> 23:34.000] When you kind of get a little soft, it gets hard to hear you. [23:34.000 --> 23:37.000] Well, I have this voice issue. [23:37.000 --> 23:43.000] I have a rather large mixer and a ribbon microphone. [23:43.000 --> 23:48.000] I've got everything maxed. [23:48.000 --> 23:50.000] I can't get it any louder. [23:50.000 --> 23:52.000] It's a voice issue I've had. [23:52.000 --> 23:57.000] And one of the things with this voice I never expected to be doing was a radio show. [23:57.000 --> 23:58.000] And I apologize. [23:58.000 --> 24:05.000] I'll try to keep my voice up and keep close enough to the mic. [24:05.000 --> 24:09.000] Tell us about what you're doing with social media. [24:09.000 --> 24:18.000] Well, right now, I'm actually live streaming us on YouTube, on my channel, Snapoo Radio. [24:18.000 --> 24:26.000] And there's two or three viewers on there right now that are listening to this as we speak. [24:26.000 --> 24:32.000] So that's another way to get things out there. [24:32.000 --> 24:37.000] My buddy Jody, I don't think you've met him yet personally. [24:37.000 --> 24:39.000] You've talked to him on the phone. [24:39.000 --> 24:50.000] But he's getting his rule of law radio press pass together because he's been terrorizing Polk County down there. [24:50.000 --> 24:55.000] And they absolutely won't even talk to him now. [24:55.000 --> 25:01.000] And so they won't even prosecute him because they've already had their insurance company called on them. [25:01.000 --> 25:07.000] And we've been just stirring things up just right and left. [25:07.000 --> 25:12.000] Yesterday, I had to go over to Rockwall, and that was a complete fiasco. [25:12.000 --> 25:17.000] It was like two months' worth of court had been stacked up in there. [25:17.000 --> 25:27.000] It's almost like their courthouse has been shut down because, like I say, we have federal lawsuits filed on these two courts. [25:27.000 --> 25:37.000] And since doing that, now they can't really prosecute us. [25:37.000 --> 25:42.000] And it looks like their courthouse is almost, it seemingly looks like they're shut down. [25:42.000 --> 25:53.000] Well, and it may be that they're looking at this case, and your case looked like a standard run-of-the-mill, [25:53.000 --> 26:01.000] driving on invalid driver's license case, which they get hundreds of, go through over and over and over all the time. [26:01.000 --> 26:05.000] And then all of a sudden, the sky fell in on them. [26:05.000 --> 26:09.000] Nothing exceptional about this case. [26:09.000 --> 26:18.000] But all of a sudden, they've got some guys sued them in the state court, federal court, criminal charges, just winding their clocks. [26:18.000 --> 26:29.000] And they may well be taking a close look around and considering, you know, what happens if this information this guy has gets out? [26:29.000 --> 26:33.000] How do we protect ourselves? [26:33.000 --> 26:46.000] We hope that's what he asks, but one thing I can assure you, when you throw a monkey wrench into their works, everybody knows about it. [26:46.000 --> 27:03.000] Now, when you come down there with a lot of patriot mythology and fringe on the flag and man on the land and these arguments that have no basis in their law. [27:03.000 --> 27:12.000] Now, I'm not saying these arguments don't have a valid basis, but if they don't have a basis in their law, [27:12.000 --> 27:17.000] they're going to ignore them, they're not going to pay attention to them. They don't care about this. [27:17.000 --> 27:30.000] But when you come to them with claims and allegations founded directly on the very statutes that they claim to be enforcing, now they've got a problem. [27:30.000 --> 27:40.000] And when they get a good monkey wrench thrown into their works, they tend to have, actually judges, they have meetings like about once a month or maybe once every other month, [27:40.000 --> 27:49.000] but they have regular meetings where all the judges get together and talk about the kind of things that have occurred and things they have to deal with, [27:49.000 --> 27:57.000] so that everybody kind of understands what all is going on and everybody gets to take advantage of the experience of everybody else. [27:57.000 --> 28:14.000] Well, you can be sure there is a lot of talk about this scoundrel Richardson character out here in Garland and Rockwall who is busting our chops. [28:14.000 --> 28:27.000] Every time we move, he files bar grievances, judicial conduct complaints, he's filing criminal charges trying to get arrested and he's suing us every week from Sunday. [28:27.000 --> 28:35.000] This will, if we could get a few more people doing this, we'd get one or two people in every county doing this. [28:35.000 --> 28:39.000] We will very rapidly change everything. [28:39.000 --> 28:48.000] Yeah, one in every county and once one person goes and effectively does this, [28:48.000 --> 29:00.000] you will see that the county can get its butt handed to it real fast. [29:00.000 --> 29:13.000] And it's real funny because everything that they do is basically illegal. There was the court clerk, I mean, Randy had to kind of call me down this morning [29:13.000 --> 29:17.000] because I was so furious about what happened yesterday. [29:17.000 --> 29:31.000] The court clerk stood up and announced that if you were not an attorney or the name person in this case, you had to leave the courtroom and you would not be allowed back in. [29:31.000 --> 29:40.000] That is a complete violation of the state judicial conduct review. [29:40.000 --> 29:52.000] The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 1.27 reflects a provision in Article 1, Paragraph 10 of the Texas Constitution. [29:52.000 --> 29:57.000] It says all courts shall be public. [29:57.000 --> 29:58.000] What? [29:58.000 --> 30:03.000] Article 7 of the Constitution. [30:03.000 --> 30:10.000] Attention, morning coffee drinkers. The FBI says if you paid cash for that cup of Joe, you may be a potential terrorist. [30:10.000 --> 30:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you how the Feds want to track your coffee habits next. [30:16.000 --> 30:22.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.000 --> 30:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.000 --> 30:32.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.000 --> 30:35.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:35.000 --> 30:42.000] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.000 --> 30:46.000] Start over with Startpage. [30:46.000 --> 30:48.000] What does a terrorist look like? [30:48.000 --> 30:56.000] According to the FBI, it could be anyone who cares about privacy, shielding their IP address on the web and always paying with cash. [30:56.000 --> 31:01.000] No joke, pay cash for a cup of coffee and the FBI says you too may be a potential criminal. [31:01.000 --> 31:08.000] It's all on a flyer the FBI is circulating among Internet cafe owners, urging them to spy on their patrons. [31:08.000 --> 31:11.000] Are customers hiding their screens from view? [31:11.000 --> 31:16.000] Are they making voice over IP calls or using Google Earth to look at, say, train stations? [31:16.000 --> 31:21.000] Report them all, says the FBI, and become a member of the police state. [31:21.000 --> 31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:30.000 --> 31:36.000] Did you know there are 3 million edible food plants on Earth and none have the nutritional value of the hemp plant? [31:36.000 --> 31:39.000] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:39.000 --> 31:45.000] It does not contain chemicals or THC, is non-GMO, and is 100% gluten free. [31:45.000 --> 31:51.000] Hemp protein powder burns fat, builds muscle, contains 53% protein, and feeds the body the nutrients it needs. [31:51.000 --> 31:57.000] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:57.000 --> 32:01.000] Only at HempUSA.org. [32:01.000 --> 32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.000 --> 32:07.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.000 --> 32:12.000] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.000 --> 32:17.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.000 --> 32:19.000] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.000 --> 32:25.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.000 --> 32:31.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.000 --> 32:35.000] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.000 --> 32:40.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.000 --> 32:45.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.000 --> 32:50.000] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.000 --> 32:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.000 --> 32:59.000] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:04.000 --> 33:10.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [33:10.000 --> 33:16.000] Yeah, I got that warrant. [33:16.000 --> 33:20.000] Okay, we are back, Ray D'Kelton. [33:20.000 --> 33:22.000] Government them. [33:22.000 --> 33:24.000] Prosecute them. [33:24.000 --> 33:26.000] Okay. [33:26.000 --> 33:28.000] Okay. [33:28.000 --> 33:52.000] Okay. [33:58.000 --> 34:00.000] Okay. [34:00.000 --> 34:02.000] Yeah. [34:02.000 --> 34:04.000] Okay. [34:04.000 --> 34:06.000] Yeah. [34:06.000 --> 34:08.000] Okay. [34:08.000 --> 34:10.000] Okay. [34:10.000 --> 34:12.000] Yeah. [34:12.000 --> 34:14.000] Okay. [34:14.000 --> 34:16.000] Okay. [34:16.000 --> 34:18.000] Okay. [34:18.000 --> 34:20.000] Okay. [34:20.000 --> 34:22.000] All right. [34:22.000 --> 34:24.000] Okay. [34:24.000 --> 34:53.920] Okay, hold on, hold on, you're in California. [34:53.920 --> 35:17.840] Okay, you need to look at suing the lawyer for malpractice. [35:17.840 --> 35:25.440] You might consider reopening the bankruptcy and claim the property as unsecured. [35:25.440 --> 35:31.040] Yeah, it's too late, the property is gone. [35:31.040 --> 35:36.360] And the second attorney, me bad advice, changed it to a seven, which I've been told now by [35:36.360 --> 35:40.960] multiple attorneys that I should never have been put in a seven. [35:40.960 --> 35:44.800] And she, you know, a lot of things happened, which obviously we don't have time to go over [35:44.800 --> 35:45.800] this on this show. [35:45.800 --> 35:51.640] I know you've got other people, it's gone on since then from a lawsuit I've tried to [35:51.640 --> 35:56.720] do pro se, I've got a lot of residue to card and in fact, it doesn't really matter if something [35:56.720 --> 36:04.960] happened yesterday, they claim that everything that they do is barred by residue to card. [36:04.960 --> 36:10.160] But you know, can I ask you a couple of quick questions and I know I could probably call [36:10.160 --> 36:15.760] you, talk to you every week and still ask how many, as far as a bar complaint, if it [36:15.760 --> 36:24.200] is, if I do one thing, one of the attorneys, the attorney for the buyers of the property, [36:24.200 --> 36:31.080] one of the things he stated in court papers that I should be, you know, they should be [36:31.080 --> 36:39.920] allowed to get money back from me because of lost profits, because they were forced [36:39.920 --> 36:44.120] to do repairs on the property and forced to buy insurance. [36:44.120 --> 36:49.160] Well, as I wanted to say to them, but I couldn't talk because I have an attorney, I want to [36:49.160 --> 36:54.400] say who the damn hell, you know, put a gun in front of you and said, do those repairs [36:54.400 --> 36:59.080] when you had paying tenants that you kicked out, nobody forced them to do anything. [36:59.080 --> 37:03.920] They chose to buy the property, they chose to bid at the auction, they chose to kick [37:03.920 --> 37:09.080] the tenants out and they chose to do these repairs that weren't needed for habitability, [37:09.080 --> 37:11.200] they just wanted to try to flip it. [37:11.200 --> 37:16.320] So here they are telling this judge that I, you know, basically insinuating that because [37:16.320 --> 37:20.360] of me, they were forced to do all this, is that a valid complaint? [37:20.360 --> 37:27.040] No, it's not, it's a frivolous, it's a frivolous complaint and definitely should get a bar [37:27.040 --> 37:28.040] complaint. [37:28.040 --> 37:36.160] If did the fact that he made these claims cost you anything? [37:36.160 --> 37:37.160] Did it harm you? [37:37.160 --> 37:40.160] Did you get any ruling against you? [37:40.160 --> 37:47.760] Well, the property, you know, based on the buyer, I was forced to quit, basically persuaded [37:47.760 --> 37:52.840] to withdraw my list of tenants, they may have been able to sell the property to someone [37:52.840 --> 37:53.840] else. [37:53.840 --> 38:00.160] So it's really gone twice now, so there's no way I can get it back, I can only get damages [38:00.160 --> 38:06.720] and now they're trying to go after attorney's fees, but you know, that's a lie to the court, [38:06.720 --> 38:07.720] of course. [38:07.720 --> 38:13.920] Okay, then what you might consider doing is they're asking for attorney fees, you might [38:13.920 --> 38:21.400] file a counterclaim against the attorneys and sue them, sue the attorneys themselves. [38:21.400 --> 38:24.800] They're asking for attorney fees for filing a frivolous pleading. [38:24.800 --> 38:32.200] I have a rule, never interfere with somebody when they're screwing up. [38:32.200 --> 38:38.800] You want to, the lawyer want to screw up, lawyers are especially vulnerable. [38:38.800 --> 38:42.400] They don't want you to know that. [38:42.400 --> 38:49.960] You file a counterclaim against the lawyers, they have to notify their errors and emissions [38:49.960 --> 38:54.200] policies, hold the carrier. [38:54.200 --> 38:59.840] And when they notify their errors and emissions carrier, they're going to get their malpractice [38:59.840 --> 39:02.600] insurance doubled. [39:02.600 --> 39:09.360] If they don't notify their insurance carrier, they don't have any insurance. [39:09.360 --> 39:16.200] They have a real problem with the insurance and once you understand that, then you can [39:16.200 --> 39:23.920] make it cost them a whole lot more than they could ever imagine getting in attorney fees. [39:23.920 --> 39:31.680] And especially if they're doing it for the frivolous pleading. [39:31.680 --> 39:38.100] And I've got several attorneys that they awarded attorney fees to the attorney and the second [39:38.100 --> 39:42.680] time he called me about the attorney fees, I told him, Bubba, you just knock yourself [39:42.680 --> 39:43.680] out. [39:43.680 --> 39:48.880] Let's see if you can get that collected, we'll have a great fun with that and I never heard [39:48.880 --> 39:49.880] from him again. [39:49.880 --> 39:54.160] So even if they got it, it's hard for them to collect it. [39:54.160 --> 39:58.960] Well, one of the other things they've been saying in the court papers, both attorneys, [39:58.960 --> 40:10.040] both for the bank and the property purchaser, is that I did not and could not possibly have [40:10.040 --> 40:15.560] tendered the amount due, which is a flat out lie. [40:15.560 --> 40:18.360] Hold on, hold on. [40:18.360 --> 40:22.640] Why do they mention tender? [40:22.640 --> 40:27.720] Because they say that in order to abort my complaint, because I'm assuming that I had [40:27.720 --> 40:35.200] to have tendered valid legal amount, the full amount due in order to bring that complaint [40:35.200 --> 40:37.400] to overturn a foreclosure. [40:37.400 --> 40:44.440] Well, and they're saying that the tender, well, one side saying I never did tender, [40:44.440 --> 40:49.560] which they have no knowledge about, that's hearsay, they didn't see the tender. [40:49.560 --> 40:59.000] And I say that submitting a full price offer based on the amount that the notice of trustee's [40:59.000 --> 41:05.280] sale said was the total due in owing, which I don't know where they pulled the figure [41:05.280 --> 41:09.960] from, but you know, I said, okay, they pulled that figure out their butthole and they put [41:09.960 --> 41:15.600] it on a publicly recorded document and sent me 97 copies of it in one day. [41:15.600 --> 41:21.440] So I arranged for a private lender to submit an offer to purchase the property because [41:21.440 --> 41:28.880] they were then going to refinance it to me at a fair rate to allow me to keep the property. [41:28.880 --> 41:35.680] So we submitted it through a broker to the actual bank's headquarters and they just [41:35.680 --> 41:40.000] turned around three weeks later and said, well, it's too late to a foreclosure sale [41:40.000 --> 41:41.960] so we're not going to accept the short sale. [41:41.960 --> 41:47.200] Well, technically it wasn't a short sale because they put I owed 365,740. [41:47.200 --> 41:52.960] The offer said here's three, we'll offer 366,000, including, you know, interest- [41:52.960 --> 41:53.960] Okay, okay, hold on. [41:53.960 --> 41:54.960] ... closing in 10 days. [41:54.960 --> 41:56.960] Did you sue them for that? [41:56.960 --> 42:02.360] Well, that's what I've been trying to get through and the judges aren't even seeing [42:02.360 --> 42:03.360] it. [42:03.360 --> 42:04.360] They don't seem to care. [42:04.360 --> 42:05.360] You don't, okay, hold on. [42:05.360 --> 42:10.800] You don't care what the jerk judges do. [42:10.800 --> 42:15.360] You will never win your case in the trial court. [42:15.360 --> 42:22.160] Your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [42:22.160 --> 42:26.760] Once you've got that firmly in mind, then you no longer get upset because the judges [42:26.760 --> 42:27.760] are corrupt. [42:27.760 --> 42:31.720] They've been bought and paid for. [42:31.720 --> 42:36.200] Your only purpose is to set the record for appeal. [42:36.200 --> 42:40.680] Once you have that firmly in mind and that's all you're there to do, they will recognize [42:40.680 --> 42:44.560] it and then they'll know they have a bigger problem. [42:44.560 --> 42:48.240] If you're going to win your case, you're going to win it in the appeals court. [42:48.240 --> 42:50.560] That's always how it is. [42:50.560 --> 42:55.640] So as long as you're getting the facts and the law on the record, you don't care what [42:55.640 --> 42:56.640] the judge rules. [42:56.640 --> 42:57.640] Okay. [42:57.640 --> 43:03.200] Your case is complex. [43:03.200 --> 43:04.200] It is complex. [43:04.200 --> 43:05.200] Can I speak? [43:05.200 --> 43:07.000] Send me an email offline. [43:07.000 --> 43:12.720] There are some things I would like to address with you that would take too long here on [43:12.720 --> 43:13.720] the air. [43:13.720 --> 43:14.720] Yes. [43:14.720 --> 43:23.440] Send me an email to randy at ruleoflawradio.com and we'll talk off the air and I'll give [43:23.440 --> 43:43.240] you some things to look at. [43:43.240 --> 44:08.000] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by [44:08.000 --> 44:13.400] our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas, buying Brave New Books [44:13.400 --> 44:16.840] and Chase Paints to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very [44:16.840 --> 44:17.840] own eyes. [44:17.840 --> 44:22.680] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.680 --> 44:26.680] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Eme oil, [44:26.680 --> 44:30.400] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.400 --> 44:37.640] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.640 --> 45:01.360] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.360 --> 45:04.560] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.560 --> 45:11.320] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.320 --> 45:14.320] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.320 --> 45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.120 --> 45:23.320] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.320 --> 45:28.200] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:28.200 --> 45:34.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.120 --> 45:39.480] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.480 --> 45:43.760] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.760 --> 45:49.880] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.880 --> 45:52.320] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.320 --> 46:14.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.960 --> 46:38.360] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 13th, January 2017. [46:38.360 --> 46:41.800] I apologize for that last segment. [46:41.800 --> 46:45.800] My seams of my system decided it was time to do a cold booth. [46:45.800 --> 46:51.720] My whole system shut down, so the producer had to push the panic button until I could [46:51.720 --> 46:52.840] get things back up. [46:52.840 --> 46:59.520] And let's see, I'm still having a little slowness here. [46:59.520 --> 47:07.160] There we go, I've got two machines up and two mouses and I don't know which mouse to [47:07.160 --> 47:08.160] use. [47:08.160 --> 47:09.160] Okay. [47:09.160 --> 47:13.600] Scott, there you are, okay. [47:13.600 --> 47:19.120] Sorry about that problem, Scott, we should be up and ready. [47:19.120 --> 47:25.120] Well, I had to stall out and talk for a while and read a complaint while you were crashed, [47:25.120 --> 47:30.440] so that's okay, people might have got a little education. [47:30.440 --> 47:37.240] So to get back to where we were, so what part of that do you not understand free and open [47:37.240 --> 47:39.840] access to a courtroom? [47:39.840 --> 47:47.240] Yes, and what happens if a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority they [47:47.240 --> 47:54.480] do not have and in the process deny a citizen full and free access to enjoyment of rights? [47:54.480 --> 47:57.120] No. [47:57.120 --> 47:59.120] What's the crime? [47:59.120 --> 48:02.000] I call that official oppression. [48:02.000 --> 48:06.120] 39.03 Texas Penal Code. [48:06.120 --> 48:14.720] Now people listen to me, I start spouting out all these codes and they get this notion [48:14.720 --> 48:19.240] that I have the penal code and code of criminal procedure memorized. [48:19.240 --> 48:23.360] I don't have any such thing. [48:23.360 --> 48:29.440] There are very few codes that keep coming up over and over. [48:29.440 --> 48:35.480] Once you start addressing one of these issues, these same codes keep coming up and of all [48:35.480 --> 48:43.080] of them, this is the biggie, 39.03. [48:43.080 --> 48:49.920] Anytime a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority they don't have or fail [48:49.920 --> 48:55.040] to perform a duty they're required to perform and in the process deny you a right, that's [48:55.040 --> 48:57.960] a class A misdemeanor in the state of Texas. [48:57.960 --> 49:01.840] You're in jail, $10,000 fine. [49:01.840 --> 49:05.120] That's a big deal. [49:05.120 --> 49:10.160] And if you have knowledge that a crime has been committed, you have duty to report that [49:10.160 --> 49:11.160] crime. [49:11.160 --> 49:19.080] If you have knowledge that a felony has been committed and you don't report it, you commit [49:19.080 --> 49:22.480] a class A misdemeanor. [49:22.480 --> 49:33.080] So when you do what is your duty, then you can't be punished for it and in the case of [49:33.080 --> 49:39.560] filing a criminal accusation, you have the same immunity from civil suit that are judged [49:39.560 --> 49:43.680] us or a prosecutor. [49:43.680 --> 49:47.480] You're absolutely immune from suit. [49:47.480 --> 49:50.680] So you have a duty to do it because you have a duty to do it. [49:50.680 --> 49:56.520] You can't be punished for doing what you have a duty to do. [49:56.520 --> 50:04.680] And there is one other side effect and Scott's realizing this, we have Olivier on the board [50:04.680 --> 50:05.680] as well. [50:05.680 --> 50:07.480] He understands this too. [50:07.480 --> 50:15.960] It took him a while to intuitively understand it, but both of them are getting it. [50:15.960 --> 50:22.480] The side effect of this is it's fun. [50:22.480 --> 50:30.080] Once you start getting these guys doing their little chicken dance for you, your whole perspective [50:30.080 --> 50:31.080] changes. [50:31.080 --> 50:34.680] And that's the point of this ebook. [50:34.680 --> 50:40.240] Tell me Scott, when you drive down the road and you see those lights come on in your rearview [50:40.240 --> 50:48.760] mirror, do you still get that little sinking butterfly feeling in the pit of your stomach? [50:48.760 --> 50:56.480] You know, I still, it's always a natural reaction to get a little tingly and tense, but now [50:56.480 --> 51:02.840] I had a buddy of mine with me the other day and I don't have tags inspection, you know, [51:02.840 --> 51:05.640] front license plate and all that stuff. [51:05.640 --> 51:12.400] And a cop got behind me and I said, okay, let's see if this guy really wants to play. [51:12.400 --> 51:15.000] It was a Garland cop. [51:15.000 --> 51:17.480] And so this is the other day. [51:17.480 --> 51:21.200] And so I switched lanes, he switched lanes behind me. [51:21.200 --> 51:24.680] I switched lanes back over, he switched lanes back again. [51:24.680 --> 51:29.640] We got up to a lot where he could get right up on my tail and he got right up on there. [51:29.640 --> 51:34.640] And then we, as the light turned green, I pulled forward and then I got to jump back [51:34.640 --> 51:39.080] over in the right-hand lane and then I turned over into the store, that's where I was going [51:39.080 --> 51:40.080] anyway. [51:40.080 --> 51:41.080] We kept it right on and going. [51:41.080 --> 51:48.840] And I looked over at my friend, I was like, what do you think, he goes, damn. [51:48.840 --> 51:56.160] It will change your perspective and the primary thing, Scott and Olivier and everybody who [51:56.160 --> 52:03.760] does this, they come to the realization that no matter what those guys do, you got something [52:03.760 --> 52:05.880] you can do back. [52:05.880 --> 52:12.680] And in fact, you can give them a lot more grief than they ever thought about giving [52:12.680 --> 52:13.680] you. [52:13.680 --> 52:14.680] Yeah. [52:14.680 --> 52:17.800] So let's go over a few things while I got a chance here. [52:17.800 --> 52:25.520] So now since we found out about the Brady list, so I sent the full year request over [52:25.520 --> 52:34.880] to Denton County and that VA sent a letter to the attorney general asking if he, you [52:34.880 --> 52:41.720] know, does he have to release this information after we already had a letter that was sent [52:41.720 --> 52:48.760] from the DA to another sheriff down around Pope County area saying, if you don't release [52:48.760 --> 52:54.480] any information on a full year request, you better produce your exemptions or else you [52:54.480 --> 52:55.480] are non-compliant. [52:55.480 --> 52:56.480] Okay. [52:56.480 --> 53:04.400] Here's the deal with requesting an opinion from the state attorney general. [53:04.400 --> 53:11.840] Under the open records act, if you are a public official and you receive a public information [53:11.840 --> 53:20.640] request and you have reason to believe that this information falls under one of the exemptions [53:20.640 --> 53:33.120] written into the code and there are no pre-existing determinations, then you can request an opinion. [53:33.120 --> 53:38.760] Problem, there is a pre-existing determination. [53:38.760 --> 53:46.760] All of the attorney general opinions are available online, they're really easy to locate. [53:46.760 --> 53:54.560] The custodian of the record has a duty to check the database of all pre-existing determinations [53:54.560 --> 54:01.520] to see if there's already been a ruling on this before he withholds access to your records [54:01.520 --> 54:04.160] based on a request for an opinion. [54:04.160 --> 54:08.800] So when he requests an opinion, when there's a pre-existing determination, that's delayed [54:08.800 --> 54:17.480] for the delay sake and it's a violation of by 52.353 Texas government code, which is [54:17.480 --> 54:24.960] a class A misdemeanor of the designated official misconduct. [54:24.960 --> 54:28.440] And that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [54:28.440 --> 54:29.440] Right. [54:29.440 --> 54:38.640] So now basically I'm going to get to Bargreave, the Denton County DA, and then send a criminal [54:38.640 --> 54:45.640] complaint, should I send a criminal complaint to the county judge, they've already been [54:45.640 --> 54:46.640] noticing. [54:46.640 --> 54:47.640] Hold on. [54:47.640 --> 54:51.160] We've been looking at something interesting. [54:51.160 --> 54:59.720] I reread the chapter 52 of the code of criminal procedure. [54:59.720 --> 55:10.280] Chapter 52 goes to a court of inquiry and Texas is the only state that has it. [55:10.280 --> 55:15.320] There is a form of it in the Fed, but it's called something else. [55:15.320 --> 55:26.640] A court of inquiry was intended as something you can use to inquire into say a case that's [55:26.640 --> 55:29.160] already been adjudicated. [55:29.160 --> 55:36.360] These guys are working the Innocence Project, that's how they got Michael Morton released [55:36.360 --> 55:42.080] is they petitioned for court of inquiry to examine into the evidence against him. [55:42.080 --> 55:50.960] But it's primarily used to investigate public officials or groups of public officials, agencies [55:50.960 --> 55:56.200] and such for patterns of wrongdoing. [55:56.200 --> 56:03.880] So you go to a district judge and you invoke the district judge's duty as a magistrate [56:03.880 --> 56:15.720] under 2.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure titled Who Are Magistrates. [56:15.720 --> 56:20.680] District judges are listed in there, so they are magistrates by statute. [56:20.680 --> 56:30.680] And under 2.10, 2.11, 2.10 makes it a duty of the magistrate to examine into criminal [56:30.680 --> 56:31.680] accusations. [56:31.680 --> 56:38.520] 2.11 says that when a magistrate sits for the purpose of examining into a criminal accusation, [56:38.520 --> 56:40.800] that is an examining court. [56:40.800 --> 56:44.440] An examining court is held under Chapter 16. [56:44.440 --> 56:52.120] They got a whole chapter on what's done in an examining trial. [56:52.120 --> 56:59.520] So you give the judge notice of a crime, he can hold an examining trial under Chapter [56:59.520 --> 57:04.080] 16 in accordance with Article 2.10 to 2.11. [57:04.080 --> 57:13.880] Or he can petition another district judge to convene a court of inquiry. [57:13.880 --> 57:27.640] So you take it to a district judge, say a 552.353 violation of the Texas Open Government Act. [57:27.640 --> 57:32.160] It's a Class A misdemeanor, a racial misconduct. [57:32.160 --> 57:37.720] You file it with the district judge and he says he doesn't want you to file a civil [57:37.720 --> 57:40.760] suit, blah, blah, blah. [57:40.760 --> 57:47.200] And he doesn't hold an examining trial or convene a court of inquiry. [57:47.200 --> 57:48.760] Those are his two options. [57:48.760 --> 58:01.520] Then you make up a complaint against this district judge, accusing him of official oppression [58:01.520 --> 58:08.960] for failing to convene an examining trial and you file it with another district judge [58:08.960 --> 58:15.520] asking him to convene an examining trial or hold an examining trial of his own. [58:15.520 --> 58:21.800] I'm sorry, ask him to convene a court of inquiry or hold an examining trial. [58:21.800 --> 58:23.800] Does that make sense, Scott? [58:23.800 --> 58:27.000] Yeah, but what about the county judge? [58:27.000 --> 58:29.800] We'll get to him when we come back. [58:29.800 --> 58:31.440] About to go to break. [58:31.440 --> 58:36.400] Randy Kelton, Wheel of Law Radio here with Scott in Texas. [58:36.400 --> 58:39.200] William Olivier, we'll get to all of you. [58:39.200 --> 58:43.400] I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [58:43.400 --> 58:50.480] We'll be right back. [58:50.480 --> 58:54.600] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.600 --> 58:59.800] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.800 --> 59:01.120] can really help. [59:01.120 --> 59:05.600] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.600 --> 59:06.600] today. [59:06.600 --> 59:10.500] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.500 --> 59:13.600] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.600 --> 59:18.840] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.840 --> 59:23.120] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:23.120 --> 59:28.040] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:28.040 --> 59:33.060] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:33.060 --> 59:40.800] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.800 --> 59:49.160] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.160 --> 01:00:02.800] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.800 --> 01:00:07.600] You're following these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the [01:00:07.600 --> 01:00:10.600] jelly bulletins for the commodities market. [01:00:10.600 --> 01:00:23.320] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:23.320 --> 01:00:28.560] Markets for Friday the 13th of January 2017 are currently trading with gold at $1,197.15 [01:00:28.560 --> 01:00:36.960] an ounce, silver at $16.80 an ounce, Texas crude at $53 a barrel, and Bitcoin is on its [01:00:36.960 --> 01:00:45.280] way up at $830 U.S. currency. [01:00:45.280 --> 01:00:51.680] Today in history, the year 1942, Henry Ford patents a soybean or hemp body car built with [01:00:51.680 --> 01:00:56.880] agricultural plastics, 30% lighter and therefore more fuel efficient than a regular car. [01:00:56.880 --> 01:01:00.480] It was made in part because of the rationing of steel during World War II. [01:01:00.480 --> 01:01:02.880] It was designed to run on hemp fuel. [01:01:02.880 --> 01:01:09.280] Ford's hemp car patented today in history. [01:01:09.280 --> 01:01:14.640] In recent news, Russia's ambassador in Washington, Sergei Kislyak, has invited the incoming Trump's [01:01:14.640 --> 01:01:19.440] designated national security advisor, Michael T. Flynn, to their Syrian peace talks later [01:01:19.440 --> 01:01:21.720] this month with Turkey and Iran. [01:01:21.720 --> 01:01:26.880] A spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday today that the United [01:01:26.880 --> 01:01:28.520] States would attend the talks. [01:01:28.520 --> 01:01:32.440] Syrian government and opposition representatives are also expected to attend. [01:01:32.440 --> 01:01:36.480] This comes after a year-long attempt between the Obama administration and Russia to attempt [01:01:36.480 --> 01:01:38.880] to implement a ceasefire in Syria. [01:01:38.880 --> 01:01:42.360] Both have routinely accused each other of sabotaging that effort. [01:01:42.360 --> 01:01:46.800] Russia and Iran have provided military support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his [01:01:46.800 --> 01:01:51.200] fight against U.S.-backed rebel forces and al-Qaeda allied fighters. [01:01:51.200 --> 01:01:55.880] According to Turkish media reports, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Thursday [01:01:55.880 --> 01:02:01.040] that the United States should definitely be invited, and that is what we agreed with Russia. [01:02:01.040 --> 01:02:03.600] Nobody can ignore the role of the United States. [01:02:03.600 --> 01:02:08.360] The peace talks are going to be held in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, and are scheduled [01:02:08.360 --> 01:02:15.320] to begin January 23rd. [01:02:15.320 --> 01:02:19.880] Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Merlin Hewson told reporters after meeting with President-elect [01:02:19.880 --> 01:02:24.160] Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York on Friday today that they were close to a new [01:02:24.160 --> 01:02:29.360] contract deal that would cut the cost of the F-35 Joint Strike Force fighter program. [01:02:29.360 --> 01:02:33.240] This meeting seems to have been sparked from a Trump tweet on December 22nd, where he said [01:02:33.240 --> 01:02:38.800] that quote, based on the tremendous cost and cost overruns of Lockheed Martin F-35, I have [01:02:38.800 --> 01:02:42.640] asked Boeing to price out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet. [01:02:42.640 --> 01:02:46.360] Each F-35 fighter jet cost the U.S. taxpayer more than $100 million. [01:02:46.360 --> 01:02:50.120] The 15-year-old program has been riddled with delays and setbacks. [01:02:50.120 --> 01:03:20.040] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for January 13th, 2017. [01:03:21.120 --> 01:03:22.120] Okay, we are back. [01:03:22.120 --> 01:03:28.120] Randy Kelkin, the Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [01:03:28.120 --> 01:03:29.120] Okay. [01:03:29.120 --> 01:03:30.120] I lost my place, Scott. [01:03:30.120 --> 01:03:31.120] It was kind of busy on the break. [01:03:31.120 --> 01:03:32.120] Where were we? [01:03:32.120 --> 01:03:33.120] Oh, let's see. [01:03:33.120 --> 01:03:34.120] Oh, oh, oh, I remember. [01:03:34.120 --> 01:03:35.120] Court of Inquiry. [01:03:35.120 --> 01:03:36.120] Yeah. [01:03:36.120 --> 01:03:37.120] Did it make sense where I was going there? [01:03:37.120 --> 01:03:38.120] Yeah, and then we were going to talk about the county judge, because we got up to district [01:03:38.120 --> 01:03:39.120] to district. [01:03:39.120 --> 01:03:40.120] But what about the county judge? [01:03:40.120 --> 01:03:54.720] Because he's basically named in the lawsuit, because basically everything points towards [01:03:54.720 --> 01:03:55.720] him. [01:03:55.720 --> 01:04:01.400] So, should I just go ahead and drop a, yeah, criminal complaint? [01:04:01.400 --> 01:04:07.280] You could always take a complaint to the county judge first and get the complaint, the judge [01:04:07.280 --> 01:04:11.120] to refuse to take it or refuse to act on it. [01:04:11.120 --> 01:04:12.120] Right. [01:04:12.120 --> 01:04:15.120] So, here's kind of a- [01:04:15.120 --> 01:04:16.120] Well, here was the deal. [01:04:16.120 --> 01:04:23.440] Yeah, because I was wanting to start working my way towards federal charges, and that was- [01:04:23.440 --> 01:04:26.120] What we need is evidence. [01:04:26.120 --> 01:04:35.880] You file a complaint with a judge, how do you know if the judge has convened an examining [01:04:35.880 --> 01:04:36.880] trial? [01:04:36.880 --> 01:04:41.880] You don't know. [01:04:41.880 --> 01:04:53.040] Now, if he has convened an examining trial, when the trial is, examining trial is completed, [01:04:53.040 --> 01:05:00.520] he is required to issue an order under 16.17 Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:05:00.520 --> 01:05:12.800] So, you file a complaint with the judge and say it's, okay, all complaints against public [01:05:12.800 --> 01:05:18.240] officials go to the grand jury. [01:05:18.240 --> 01:05:23.560] But rather they go to the district court for district judge, I'm sorry, district attorney [01:05:23.560 --> 01:05:26.440] for adjudication, I'm not sure. [01:05:26.440 --> 01:05:36.760] I don't think so, because even if it's a judge, a county prosecutor prosecutes a misdemeanor. [01:05:36.760 --> 01:05:45.640] So, you charge the judge with a Class A misdemeanor, you file it with the district judge, and then [01:05:45.640 --> 01:05:49.440] how do you know if the district judge held an examining trial? [01:05:49.440 --> 01:05:53.520] Well, this is how you know. [01:05:53.520 --> 01:05:59.760] Under the examining trial, the judge is to issue an order stating whether he found probable [01:05:59.760 --> 01:06:06.720] cause or released the person at their liberty, set bail, committed him to the jail, whatever. [01:06:06.720 --> 01:06:17.000] And then he is to seal all documents had in the hearing under 17.30. [01:06:17.000 --> 01:06:22.240] He's to seal all documents had in the hearing, cause his name to be written across the seal [01:06:22.240 --> 01:06:27.640] of the envelope, and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction. [01:06:27.640 --> 01:06:35.280] So if you file the misdemeanor, you file it with the district judge, then you wait three, [01:06:35.280 --> 01:06:44.720] four, five, maybe days, maybe a week, and then you go to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [01:06:44.720 --> 01:06:53.800] and ask to see all documents forwarded to the clerk in accordance with 17.30. [01:06:53.800 --> 01:06:58.200] I have an information request already made up for that purpose. [01:06:58.200 --> 01:07:08.200] If you will go to jurisimprudence.website and look on the top far below the right, documents [01:07:08.200 --> 01:07:20.280] and research, there's a blanks folder in there, and in the blanks folder you will find a 17.30 [01:07:20.280 --> 01:07:21.280] information request. [01:07:21.280 --> 01:07:27.000] And all you have to do is put the dates in. [01:07:27.000 --> 01:07:35.840] What the clerk will respond with is we have no records responsive to your request. [01:07:35.840 --> 01:07:36.840] Right. [01:07:36.840 --> 01:07:45.240] So now you can say, I have reason to believe that the magistrate did not hold an examining [01:07:45.240 --> 01:07:55.880] trial because had he done so, chapter 16, 16.17 would require him to issue this order [01:07:55.880 --> 01:08:01.800] sealed in an envelope, forwarded to the clerk, but the clerk don't have it. [01:08:01.800 --> 01:08:08.320] Now once you do that, now you come back with this information and say, I have reasonable [01:08:08.320 --> 01:08:13.600] cause, probable cause to believe that this county judge or district judge failed to perform [01:08:13.600 --> 01:08:19.120] his duty as a magistrate and in the process denied me the right to petition the court [01:08:19.120 --> 01:08:21.320] for redress agreements. [01:08:21.320 --> 01:08:26.000] And now you can file against this district judge or this county, if you want to start [01:08:26.000 --> 01:08:35.640] with the county judge, with another district judge and ask them to convene a court of inquiry. [01:08:35.640 --> 01:08:41.320] Since I have a federal case going, how do I invoke the Fed? [01:08:41.320 --> 01:08:49.880] Now what you want to do first is when you go to the Fed, you want to be able to say, [01:08:49.880 --> 01:08:57.680] I came to the Fed with a procedural due process allegation. [01:08:57.680 --> 01:09:05.800] And it's not enough to say that a state actor denied me in procedural due process. [01:09:05.800 --> 01:09:11.760] The feds are going to say that is a state issue. [01:09:11.760 --> 01:09:23.720] You want to have a number of state operators acting in concert inclusion to deny you in [01:09:23.720 --> 01:09:26.720] full free access to enjoyment, right? [01:09:26.720 --> 01:09:40.600] As that is contemplated by Ku Klux Klan act, the 18 US code 243, I believe. [01:09:40.600 --> 01:09:51.200] And also this goes to Rico, but you're going to the Fed saying, I can't get remedy in [01:09:51.200 --> 01:10:00.640] the state because the state itself is acting to deny me in due process. [01:10:00.640 --> 01:10:06.560] That's a complaint against the state itself has to be made in the Fed. [01:10:06.560 --> 01:10:13.600] So now you go to the Fed to some chump FBI agent down there on the bottom. [01:10:13.600 --> 01:10:21.680] And we had a caller in last night, Don from New Mexico, and he did just exactly this. [01:10:21.680 --> 01:10:26.880] So this one was more clear than it was because there's an IRS agent that he filed against, [01:10:26.880 --> 01:10:33.440] but he filed it with a low level chump FBI agent. [01:10:33.440 --> 01:10:42.680] And instead of acting in accordance with 28 USC 535, any of you who haven't read that, [01:10:42.680 --> 01:10:43.680] read it. [01:10:43.680 --> 01:10:54.520] It goes right in line with 39.03 Texas penal code, but it's somewhat different. [01:10:54.520 --> 01:11:01.160] As I read it, it appears to be a whistleblower statute. [01:11:01.160 --> 01:11:08.520] What it says is that if a federal official has it made known to him that another federal [01:11:08.520 --> 01:11:17.400] official has violated law relating to his office or committed a crime, then he must [01:11:17.400 --> 01:11:22.000] give notice to the attorney general. [01:11:22.000 --> 01:11:28.160] Now giving notice to the attorney general bypasses the whole local process and goes [01:11:28.160 --> 01:11:30.480] straight to the head. [01:11:30.480 --> 01:11:36.200] So that tells every federal employee, you must do this thing. [01:11:36.200 --> 01:11:41.200] If you don't do this thing, you'll be in violation of law. [01:11:41.200 --> 01:11:47.680] And what you must do is bypass your boss, their boss, everybody's boss, and go straight [01:11:47.680 --> 01:11:49.040] to the attorney general. [01:11:49.040 --> 01:11:53.840] So the employee has plausible deniability. [01:11:53.840 --> 01:12:01.320] They can say, I didn't have any choice, the statute specifically orders me to do this. [01:12:01.320 --> 01:12:04.480] So you can't complain about me not doing it. [01:12:04.480 --> 01:12:11.080] And you can't stop me from doing it because that would be what? [01:12:11.080 --> 01:12:12.080] Sedition. [01:12:12.080 --> 01:12:23.000] Sedition is why you try to prevent the effect of a law. [01:12:23.000 --> 01:12:28.440] So they can't stop you from obeying law. [01:12:28.440 --> 01:12:36.400] So this opens the door so you can have internal whistleblowers, but we get to use that. [01:12:36.400 --> 01:12:43.200] You file that with the FBI agent, and you know, they're like the Brown church for Nazi [01:12:43.200 --> 01:12:50.720] Germany, and I'm not comparing them to Nazis, but the Brown church were clearly a political [01:12:50.720 --> 01:12:53.600] arm of the president. [01:12:53.600 --> 01:13:02.800] The FBI agents, in spite of what you see on TV, they are a political arm of the president. [01:13:02.800 --> 01:13:11.160] They are not going to do anything that is not politically expedient to their boss. [01:13:11.160 --> 01:13:17.720] So if it's not politically expedient, they are not going to want to do it. [01:13:17.720 --> 01:13:22.760] And you know, we keep saying everything's political. [01:13:22.760 --> 01:13:28.160] So what we do is we put them between a rock and a hard place. [01:13:28.160 --> 01:13:31.400] We don't care about their politics. [01:13:31.400 --> 01:13:36.680] While they may answer to the president, the president answers to us. [01:13:36.680 --> 01:13:45.360] This is a republic, and the president does answer to you if he violates one of our laws. [01:13:45.360 --> 01:13:49.040] Just like this FBI agent answers to you. [01:13:49.040 --> 01:13:56.640] So when the FBI agent says, heck with this, I'm not going to start a fight with the whole [01:13:56.640 --> 01:14:05.040] state of Texas over this chump pro se, all this nonsense coming out of just one little [01:14:05.040 --> 01:14:06.040] traffic ticket. [01:14:06.040 --> 01:14:11.480] I'm not going to get into a big political mess over this, so he's not going to do it [01:14:11.480 --> 01:14:12.480] again. [01:14:12.480 --> 01:14:15.880] At least you hope he doesn't. [01:14:15.880 --> 01:14:17.480] Back to the ebook. [01:14:17.480 --> 01:14:24.160] Never ask the public official to do anything you actually want him to do, because you're [01:14:24.160 --> 01:14:29.280] setting him up so you can kick his behind. [01:14:29.280 --> 01:14:38.640] Then you give it to him and wait, say, a week, then you send a letter to the US attorney [01:14:38.640 --> 01:14:48.280] general and request for the disposition of the case you filed with this FBI agent. [01:14:48.280 --> 01:14:55.840] I can almost assure you that the people working for the attorney general are not going to [01:14:55.840 --> 01:14:59.400] know why you sent that. [01:14:59.400 --> 01:15:05.160] They're not going to know about 28th US Code 535. [01:15:05.160 --> 01:15:08.800] Most likely they'll just ignore it. [01:15:08.800 --> 01:15:10.240] That'll work. [01:15:10.240 --> 01:15:17.020] If you don't get a response within a reasonable time, say seven days, then you have reason [01:15:17.020 --> 01:15:22.640] to believe that the attorney general doesn't know anything about this. [01:15:22.640 --> 01:15:37.320] So now you file a criminal complaint against the FBI agent with the US attorney, accusing [01:15:37.320 --> 01:15:47.440] the FBI agent of not forwarding your complaint to the attorney general. [01:15:47.440 --> 01:15:55.720] Now the US attorney has had it made known to him that a government official has violated [01:15:55.720 --> 01:15:57.920] the law, has committed crime. [01:15:57.920 --> 01:16:02.600] So what is he supposed to do? [01:16:02.600 --> 01:16:11.000] I can't find anything in that code that exempts a prosecuting attorney from the requirement [01:16:11.000 --> 01:16:16.240] to give notice to the attorney general. [01:16:16.240 --> 01:16:20.080] But you know he's not going to do that. [01:16:20.080 --> 01:16:25.880] So now you get to file a complaint against the US attorney with the attorney general [01:16:25.880 --> 01:16:33.040] who has that US attorney's resignation because there's a new president in office, but now [01:16:33.040 --> 01:16:39.600] he has reason to dump that US attorney and put one of his political buddies in the attorney's [01:16:39.600 --> 01:16:40.600] place. [01:16:40.600 --> 01:16:41.600] Hang on. [01:16:41.600 --> 01:16:42.600] About to go to break. [01:16:42.600 --> 01:16:50.880] We'll come back, we'll talk about how everything is political and this is a specifically sensitive [01:16:50.880 --> 01:16:53.880] or particularly sensitive political time. [01:16:53.880 --> 01:16:54.880] Hang on. [01:16:54.880 --> 01:17:00.240] Randy Kelton, you have the radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.240 --> 01:17:01.240] I love Logos. [01:17:01.240 --> 01:17:04.640] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.640 --> 01:17:07.440] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.440 --> 01:17:08.440] I need my truth fix. [01:17:08.440 --> 01:17:10.640] I'd be lost without Logos. [01:17:10.640 --> 01:17:13.240] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.240 --> 01:17:17.120] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:17:17.120 --> 01:17:20.480] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.480 --> 01:17:21.760] How can I help Logos? [01:17:21.760 --> 01:17:23.800] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.800 --> 01:17:26.880] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [01:17:26.880 --> 01:17:29.520] You can order in your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.520 --> 01:17:31.480] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.480 --> 01:17:37.880] Now go to logosregionetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.880 --> 01:17:43.520] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.520 --> 01:17:44.520] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.520 --> 01:17:45.520] No. [01:17:45.520 --> 01:17:47.120] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.120 --> 01:17:48.120] No. [01:17:48.120 --> 01:17:49.120] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:49.120 --> 01:17:50.120] No. [01:17:50.120 --> 01:17:51.120] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.120 --> 01:17:52.120] Wow. [01:17:52.120 --> 01:17:54.320] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:54.320 --> 01:17:55.320] This is perfect. [01:17:55.320 --> 01:17:56.320] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.320 --> 01:17:57.320] We are welcome. [01:17:57.320 --> 01:17:58.320] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:58.320 --> 01:18:05.320] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[01:18:41.520 --> 01:18:47.040] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:47.040 --> 01:18:50.040] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:50.040 --> 01:18:59.040] 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 [01:18:59.040 --> 01:19:02.040] collectors now. [01:19:02.040 --> 01:19:23.840] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:23.840 --> 01:19:24.840] We are back. [01:19:24.840 --> 01:19:25.840] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:25.840 --> 01:19:27.240] We're talking to Scott in Texas. [01:19:27.240 --> 01:19:32.440] Now, that was kind of a mouthful, Scott, but I wanted to kind of try to set every piece [01:19:32.440 --> 01:19:33.440] in place. [01:19:33.440 --> 01:19:35.440] Now, does that make sense where I'm going? [01:19:35.440 --> 01:19:36.440] Right. [01:19:36.440 --> 01:19:43.920] Now, my question is on this letter, this court of inquiry, is this thing going to be structured [01:19:43.920 --> 01:19:50.200] like have the regular caption, like a court case? [01:19:50.200 --> 01:19:53.560] I mean, how's this thing supposed to look? [01:19:53.560 --> 01:19:55.360] You file a complaint. [01:19:55.360 --> 01:19:56.360] Right. [01:19:56.360 --> 01:20:03.560] And based on the complaint, you simply, in the complaint, you request that the court [01:20:03.560 --> 01:20:05.480] convene a court of inquiry. [01:20:05.480 --> 01:20:12.760] Or you could file a motion with the court, and that would be on a standard motion heading. [01:20:12.760 --> 01:20:19.320] But I can't see anything in Chapter 52 that requires that. [01:20:19.320 --> 01:20:28.600] Well, it's going to the district judge, so wouldn't it just have like regular, or maybe [01:20:28.600 --> 01:20:32.760] would it have any caption at all, or would it almost be like an administrative business [01:20:32.760 --> 01:20:33.760] letter? [01:20:33.760 --> 01:20:46.800] When I read 552, it really says that the district judge may order a court of inquiry. [01:20:46.800 --> 01:20:53.440] So how do you get the district judge to order a court of inquiry? [01:20:53.440 --> 01:20:54.920] It doesn't say. [01:20:54.920 --> 01:20:58.040] So you just ask it. [01:20:58.040 --> 01:21:03.160] You can ask him in the form of a motion, you can move the court. [01:21:03.160 --> 01:21:10.520] But the problem with that is, is when you're making a criminal accusation that has been [01:21:10.520 --> 01:21:13.440] made before, there is no court case. [01:21:13.440 --> 01:21:14.440] Right. [01:21:14.440 --> 01:21:22.800] When you go to him with a criminal complaint, there is no case in which to file a motion. [01:21:22.800 --> 01:21:24.040] Right. [01:21:24.040 --> 01:21:28.840] So I'm saying, just give him a letter. [01:21:28.840 --> 01:21:32.880] It's a regular letter, doesn't have to have any special caption, there's no case number [01:21:32.880 --> 01:21:33.880] to put on it. [01:21:33.880 --> 01:21:40.160] There's no court, specific court to put on it, just say, judge, including this complaint, [01:21:40.160 --> 01:21:46.400] please hold an examining trial, or in the alternative, convene a court of inquiry. [01:21:46.400 --> 01:21:47.400] Boom. [01:21:47.400 --> 01:21:48.400] Right. [01:21:48.400 --> 01:21:52.400] And let them figure out what they're going to do. [01:21:52.400 --> 01:21:58.360] Either they hold the examining trial, or a court of inquiry, and then get back with them. [01:21:58.360 --> 01:22:02.760] Okay, hold, let me step back just, I'm being pedantic here, but that's to make sure we [01:22:02.760 --> 01:22:05.400] don't trip this up. [01:22:05.400 --> 01:22:10.920] What it says in court of inquiry is that the judge can examine into the criminal complaint [01:22:10.920 --> 01:22:21.320] or he can request that another district judge convene a court of inquiry. [01:22:21.320 --> 01:22:28.640] The judge asking for the court of inquiry cannot hold it. [01:22:28.640 --> 01:22:31.160] Another judge has to hold it. [01:22:31.160 --> 01:22:32.720] Okay. [01:22:32.720 --> 01:22:37.920] And I looked at the code and thought, well, why wouldn't they put that in there? [01:22:37.920 --> 01:22:41.640] Because everything they put in there has a good reason. [01:22:41.640 --> 01:22:47.520] And what I suspect is, is you have a judge here that has reason to believe there's corruption [01:22:47.520 --> 01:22:48.520] in his county. [01:22:48.520 --> 01:22:49.520] Right. [01:22:49.520 --> 01:22:50.520] And it's him. [01:22:50.520 --> 01:22:58.000] You can't expect him to rat out his own people. [01:22:58.000 --> 01:22:59.000] Right. [01:22:59.000 --> 01:23:01.120] Or the people that he knows. [01:23:01.120 --> 01:23:07.680] So he sends that to another county and lets the judge from another jurisdiction come back [01:23:07.680 --> 01:23:09.480] and handle it. [01:23:09.480 --> 01:23:14.000] I don't know that that's true, but when I look at why they would do that, that appears [01:23:14.000 --> 01:23:15.360] to be the only one. [01:23:15.360 --> 01:23:21.760] The reason they would say that you asked for the court of inquiry, you cannot hold it. [01:23:21.760 --> 01:23:28.680] Well, he would be impartial because he's already got a bad court going on and that's got to [01:23:28.680 --> 01:23:30.160] be part of this. [01:23:30.160 --> 01:23:31.160] Yeah. [01:23:31.160 --> 01:23:32.160] Go ahead. [01:23:32.160 --> 01:23:33.160] Yeah. [01:23:33.160 --> 01:23:34.160] And that's why I think they put that in there. [01:23:34.160 --> 01:23:40.320] But the point was the judge you asked to convene a court of inquiry can't, I mean, he can't [01:23:40.320 --> 01:23:41.320] rule over it. [01:23:41.320 --> 01:23:43.760] He has to get somebody else to do it. [01:23:43.760 --> 01:23:44.760] Exactly. [01:23:44.760 --> 01:23:49.320] So you tell the judge, you can bite the bullet or dodge it. [01:23:49.320 --> 01:23:59.920] These are your options, but technically we don't want to give the judge legal advice. [01:23:59.920 --> 01:24:07.000] So more specifically, we don't want to give him fair warning. [01:24:07.000 --> 01:24:09.240] There you go. [01:24:09.240 --> 01:24:10.880] We tell him what we want him to do. [01:24:10.880 --> 01:24:14.640] We don't explain nothing. [01:24:14.640 --> 01:24:18.760] We just tell him, do this and that's it. [01:24:18.760 --> 01:24:22.920] And this is all going to be done by mail, certify, return, receive. [01:24:22.920 --> 01:24:33.440] So this is going to be done like, yeah, from my perspective, that's not as much fun directly [01:24:33.440 --> 01:24:37.720] because I have this thing and that's my weaknesses. [01:24:37.720 --> 01:24:45.120] I really like to see the look on their face, but that's my weakness. [01:24:45.120 --> 01:24:52.320] It's better to do it through the mail, sharp shooting them. [01:24:52.320 --> 01:24:58.800] If they can look at you, they feel like they can take your measure. [01:24:58.800 --> 01:25:06.040] But if all that they're getting is envelopes with your name on it, they don't know what [01:25:06.040 --> 01:25:10.120] they're dealing with. [01:25:10.120 --> 01:25:14.120] And they will imagine what they're dealing with and what they imagine will always be [01:25:14.120 --> 01:25:18.040] worse than them. [01:25:18.040 --> 01:25:22.520] So yeah, I would say absolutely do everything by mail. [01:25:22.520 --> 01:25:26.880] Never let them see you unless you have to, because they're going to do everything they [01:25:26.880 --> 01:25:32.520] can to get you into a confrontation. [01:25:32.520 --> 01:25:33.520] Don't let them. [01:25:33.520 --> 01:25:42.160] You know, you said that I had to calm you down about the clerk and yes, you can't do [01:25:42.160 --> 01:25:43.160] that. [01:25:43.160 --> 01:25:51.640] You can't let them get you excited because they're going to call you agitated. [01:25:51.640 --> 01:25:57.080] And then they're going to use that as a reason to call the bailiff in the issue of trespass [01:25:57.080 --> 01:26:01.200] warnings thrown out courthouse. [01:26:01.200 --> 01:26:07.840] So I go in, I joke around with them, I laugh all the time, and then I lower the boom on [01:26:07.840 --> 01:26:08.840] them. [01:26:08.840 --> 01:26:17.000] But today I was in a court in Glen Rose and I'm joking with the clerks and just being [01:26:17.000 --> 01:26:26.560] as nice as I can and they know for certain they're trying to be polite back, but I can [01:26:26.560 --> 01:26:35.160] almost hear their teeth grinding together, but I'm not going to give them opportunity [01:26:35.160 --> 01:26:42.920] to say Mr. Kelton was agitated. [01:26:42.920 --> 01:26:43.920] Absolutely not. [01:26:43.920 --> 01:26:50.160] And that's why I say never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do. [01:26:50.160 --> 01:26:52.720] That protects you. [01:26:52.720 --> 01:27:00.480] It immunizes you from their favorite tactics to discredit you. [01:27:00.480 --> 01:27:06.400] They can't ever call you agitated when you're joking with them. [01:27:06.400 --> 01:27:12.800] I always ask a police officer to take his chicken suit off. [01:27:12.800 --> 01:27:16.640] Now that is very calculated. [01:27:16.640 --> 01:27:23.080] They cannot accuse me of being agitated when I'm asking the police officer to take his [01:27:23.080 --> 01:27:25.480] chicken suit off. [01:27:25.480 --> 01:27:33.280] Well, the only reason I was just agitated, I was just agitated at the people who knowingly [01:27:33.280 --> 01:27:38.800] saw a crime, especially when I pointed it out, and this is out in the hallway, and you [01:27:38.800 --> 01:27:42.680] know, it was like, do y'all know, did y'all hear that? [01:27:42.680 --> 01:27:43.680] They're like, yes. [01:27:43.680 --> 01:27:47.760] I said, well, okay, let me get your name and number, you know, because that's a crime. [01:27:47.760 --> 01:27:48.760] No. [01:27:48.760 --> 01:27:50.480] I said, you know you can file a complaint on that. [01:27:50.480 --> 01:27:52.720] No, we don't want to, they were scared. [01:27:52.720 --> 01:27:53.720] They're beat down. [01:27:53.720 --> 01:27:54.720] That's the only thing. [01:27:54.720 --> 01:27:55.720] There they are. [01:27:55.720 --> 01:28:03.400] And it took me a while to be at peace with that. [01:28:03.400 --> 01:28:10.360] The guy you're talking to may have had four kids and two by another marriage and has child [01:28:10.360 --> 01:28:19.800] support to pay, mortgage to pay, and he's barely keeping his job and you want him to [01:28:19.800 --> 01:28:23.000] take on another fight. [01:28:23.000 --> 01:28:25.640] I knows nothing about your fight. [01:28:25.640 --> 01:28:32.240] You know, the vast majority of the people are not in a position to pick up the gauntlet [01:28:32.240 --> 01:28:35.240] like you did. [01:28:35.240 --> 01:28:39.120] They don't have the temperament for it, even as they have the temperament for it, they [01:28:39.120 --> 01:28:42.880] have other obligations and things they have to handle. [01:28:42.880 --> 01:28:46.960] They don't always get to do what they want to. [01:28:46.960 --> 01:28:52.600] I keep looking for that one-tenth of a percent. [01:28:52.600 --> 01:28:58.960] Every once in a while I come across a Don in New Mexico or Scott in Texas and a Libyan [01:28:58.960 --> 01:29:02.640] in Tennessee and I jump up and down and clap my hands. [01:29:02.640 --> 01:29:06.440] That's why I keep doing this show. [01:29:06.440 --> 01:29:08.880] We keep finding these guys and firing them up. [01:29:08.880 --> 01:29:18.720] It won't take me, we can get it done, but we can't let them invoke a response in us. [01:29:18.720 --> 01:29:25.200] Not the police, not the people that they used to call them sheeple and I'm offended by that [01:29:25.200 --> 01:29:26.200] term. [01:29:26.200 --> 01:29:30.920] They're not sheeple, they just got other issues they have to deal with. [01:29:30.920 --> 01:29:39.640] If we're in a position and of a mindset that we can, I consider us to be blessed in that [01:29:39.640 --> 01:29:40.640] regard. [01:29:40.640 --> 01:29:47.560] We have to go in and have all this fun. [01:29:47.560 --> 01:29:52.320] We'll finish up with you on the other side, Scott, I've got it, William and Olivier. [01:29:52.320 --> 01:30:01.080] I want to make sure I get to them, we'll be right back. [01:30:01.080 --> 01:30:08.960] GPS is supposed to help drivers get from point A to point B, but in Australia it led a trio [01:30:08.960 --> 01:30:12.040] of Japanese tourists on a voyage into the sea. [01:30:12.040 --> 01:30:17.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back to tell you about a navigational disaster next. [01:30:17.360 --> 01:30:19.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.480 --> 01:30:23.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:23.080 --> 01:30:28.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:28.080 --> 01:30:33.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.280 --> 01:30:35.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.840 --> 01:30:41.440] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:41.440 --> 01:30:43.180] Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:43.180 --> 01:30:45.680] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.680 --> 01:30:51.880] GPS is supposed to make driving a snap, guiding motorists with the aid of satellites, but [01:30:51.880 --> 01:30:57.040] in Australia it lured a trio of students from Tokyo to drive their rental car straight into [01:30:57.040 --> 01:30:58.040] the Pacific Ocean. [01:30:58.040 --> 01:31:02.800] On their way to North Stradbroke Island, the GPS told them to cross Moreton Bay. [01:31:02.800 --> 01:31:06.720] At low tide, the coast looked clear, but then the road turned to mud. [01:31:06.720 --> 01:31:10.400] Keep going, the GPS said, and the water began rising. [01:31:10.400 --> 01:31:12.680] Keep going, the GPS said. [01:31:12.680 --> 01:31:17.040] In minutes, their car was stuck in the rising waters of the South Pacific and the students [01:31:17.040 --> 01:31:19.040] were sloshing back to shore. [01:31:19.040 --> 01:31:20.040] The moral here? [01:31:20.040 --> 01:31:23.920] When in doubt, let your common sense, not your GPS, be your guide. [01:31:23.920 --> 01:31:31.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.560 --> 01:31:36.920] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.920 --> 01:31:39.160] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.160 --> 01:31:43.960] Over 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.960 --> 01:31:46.760] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.760 --> 01:31:49.440] Thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.440 --> 01:31:50.920] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.920 --> 01:31:51.920] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.920 --> 01:31:53.240] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.240 --> 01:31:54.240] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.240 --> 01:31:55.920] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:55.920 --> 01:31:58.520] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.520 --> 01:32:00.560] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.560 --> 01:32:03.800] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.800 --> 01:32:07.080] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:07.080 --> 01:32:10.760] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [01:32:10.760 --> 01:32:11.760] them to pay for it. [01:32:11.760 --> 01:32:15.360] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:15.360 --> 01:32:19.160] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:19.160 --> 01:32:24.380] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense, and we accept Bitcoin as a multiyear A-plus [01:32:24.380 --> 01:32:27.520] member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:27.520 --> 01:32:31.880] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [01:32:31.880 --> 01:32:32.880] first time. [01:32:32.880 --> 01:32:39.120] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:39.120 --> 01:32:43.600] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos [01:32:43.600 --> 01:32:49.000] Radio Network to help continue this programming, so if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, [01:32:49.000 --> 01:32:51.320] your door should be locking. [01:32:51.320 --> 01:32:57.200] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:57.200 --> 01:32:59.200] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.200 --> 01:33:03.960] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.960 --> 01:33:04.960] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.960 --> 01:33:05.960] You found it. [01:33:05.960 --> 01:33:06.960] Logosradio.com. [01:33:06.960 --> 01:33:29.720] Okay, we are back, Brenda Kelton, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [01:33:29.720 --> 01:33:33.240] Scott, have you talked to Olivier? [01:33:33.240 --> 01:33:34.240] I know. [01:33:34.240 --> 01:33:42.880] I wish he would get in touch with me, and he could send me an email at snafuradio.gmail, [01:33:42.880 --> 01:33:48.920] and y'all are... This is being live-streamed on snafu radio, and y'all can check it out [01:33:48.920 --> 01:33:49.920] too there. [01:33:49.920 --> 01:33:50.920] Okay. [01:33:50.920 --> 01:33:52.920] Olivier, did you get that? [01:33:52.920 --> 01:33:53.920] Hello? [01:33:53.920 --> 01:33:54.920] Hello. [01:33:54.920 --> 01:33:55.920] Yeah, you're on. [01:33:55.920 --> 01:33:56.920] Oh. [01:33:56.920 --> 01:34:08.040] I wanted to introduce you and Scott, because you're both doing similar things. [01:34:08.040 --> 01:34:09.040] Okay. [01:34:09.040 --> 01:34:13.680] What did you say again? [01:34:13.680 --> 01:34:26.680] I was wanting you to email me, send me an email at snafuradio, it's S-N-A-F-U, S-N-A-F-U. [01:34:26.680 --> 01:34:30.740] S-N-A-F-U, S-N-A-F-U. [01:34:30.740 --> 01:34:37.580] Yeah, it stands for... It's an old military acronym, it stands for Situation Normal All [01:34:37.580 --> 01:34:41.340] Equal... Intercourse step. [01:34:41.340 --> 01:34:42.400] Yeah. [01:34:42.400 --> 01:34:50.840] Intercourse... It means something's broke. [01:34:50.840 --> 01:34:56.480] S-N-A-F-U, S-N-A-F-U, Situation Normal All Equal... [01:34:56.480 --> 01:35:13.600] Yeah. Okay. S-N-A-F-U-R-A-B-I-O.com. Yep. At gmail.com. Oh, gmail. Okay. Yeah. So it's [01:35:13.600 --> 01:35:20.760] snappuradio at gmail.com. And that's my YouTube channel too. And you can just Google Addison [01:35:20.760 --> 01:35:27.680] Texas cops smashing out windows. It's over 2 million views. When you see a big bright [01:35:27.680 --> 01:35:33.080] red B, you know you got to my channel. And plus I'm live streaming this, so it'll be [01:35:33.080 --> 01:35:43.760] the top one. So live with Randy Kelton today's day. So, but yeah. Uh-huh. Yeah. And you two [01:35:43.760 --> 01:35:49.560] might want to collaborate on that so that, Olivia, you can start taking advantage of [01:35:49.560 --> 01:35:59.400] the social media aspect. My phone number is 9-3-1-3-2. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. No. [01:35:59.400 --> 01:36:06.080] Don't give that out on the air. That's really not a good idea. Email it to me or I'll take [01:36:06.080 --> 01:36:14.200] one of your emails, Olivia, and send it to Scott. Okay. That way I'll get you two connected. [01:36:14.200 --> 01:36:21.040] Okay. Perfect. Okay. Hold on, Olivia. William from Texas called in before you. Let me take [01:36:21.040 --> 01:36:27.760] him. I don't think he will take as long as you will. Scott, do you want to hang on? No. [01:36:27.760 --> 01:36:34.280] I'll tell you what. Since I got in touch with Olivia, he's got my email. And I just wanted [01:36:34.280 --> 01:36:39.200] to tell everybody about the live stream and stuff. And then other than that, y'all just [01:36:39.200 --> 01:36:45.440] keep hammering away at them because I really believe that I think we have Rockwall and [01:36:45.440 --> 01:36:50.680] Polk County courthouses effectively shut down because their insurance company is saying [01:36:50.680 --> 01:36:54.960] that they can't even talk to us. I know what's happening down south in Polk County because [01:36:54.960 --> 01:37:01.360] they've got confirmation. Their courthouses effectively shut down, looks like. So this [01:37:01.360 --> 01:37:09.160] might be hammering them from way harder than everybody's even... They're not going to let [01:37:09.160 --> 01:37:15.320] us know how bad they're being hit. So it's only subjective, but just by appearances, [01:37:15.320 --> 01:37:21.680] that courthouse literally had a line from the bench, from the judge's bench, all the [01:37:21.680 --> 01:37:27.640] way out the door, all the way to the elevator. I have never seen anything like it. Okay. [01:37:27.640 --> 01:37:35.240] I have to tell this on the air. I told this to Scott earlier. I have a friend in North [01:37:35.240 --> 01:37:45.200] Carolina, Art Patton, and he has been doing the same kind of things. He went into a courtroom [01:37:45.200 --> 01:37:50.680] in Asheville, North Carolina, and he said the room was packed. People sitting on the [01:37:50.680 --> 01:37:55.360] floor, standing up against the wall. And he looked around and he said, you know, this [01:37:55.360 --> 01:38:03.880] is just not right. So he called the fire marshal. The fire marshal came down, too many people [01:38:03.880 --> 01:38:14.440] in the room. He evacuated the whole building. Art called me while it was going on and, oh, [01:38:14.440 --> 01:38:25.120] it was absolutely hilarious. Anyway, that was just something for a little live entertainment. [01:38:25.120 --> 01:38:31.560] Well, I tell you what, I'm going to get off here so you can help everybody else out and [01:38:31.560 --> 01:38:37.920] then I'll keep everybody abreast and keep up the good fight and have a good evening. [01:38:37.920 --> 01:38:44.360] Okay. Thank you, Scott. Okay. Hang on, Olivier. I'm going to take William because he called [01:38:44.360 --> 01:38:48.800] in first and we'll get back to you. I want to take you kind of at the end anyway. That [01:38:48.800 --> 01:38:55.280] way we have more time. Okay. Okay. We're going to William in Texas. Hello, William. [01:38:55.280 --> 01:39:02.200] Hey, Randy. I'm the one that's been sending you the emails about this. I got a citation [01:39:02.200 --> 01:39:08.080] and then the first judge handed off to a second judge and then they dismissed the case. So [01:39:08.080 --> 01:39:13.200] I'm calling in new waters here. Okay, wait a minute. They dismissed your case? [01:39:13.200 --> 01:39:22.720] Oh, well, let me back up. Okay. I got a citation on the eighth. What was the citation for? [01:39:22.720 --> 01:39:29.880] What was the citation for? Oh, invalid license, but I don't have a license. [01:39:29.880 --> 01:39:35.280] Okay. And so the officer pulled me over and I've [01:39:35.280 --> 01:39:40.040] been through this before so I wasn't too nervous about it. It was nice to him and everything. [01:39:40.040 --> 01:39:46.040] And they gave me a ticket for invalid license and let me go, but the original stop was for [01:39:46.040 --> 01:39:53.280] a out headlight. So I went home, started getting my paperwork all together and I guess about [01:39:53.280 --> 01:39:58.560] five days later I had gotten everything together. I mailed it off, certified mail and I received [01:39:58.560 --> 01:40:06.520] a courtesy notice from the clerk, the manager clerk down at the municipal courthouse telling [01:40:06.520 --> 01:40:12.040] me how this was a courtesy notice and was not required by law. So I filed a judicial [01:40:12.040 --> 01:40:16.920] conduct complaint immediately, but then sent a notice back to them stating hold on, hold [01:40:16.920 --> 01:40:23.200] on. I missed something. How this was not required by law. How what was not required by law? [01:40:23.200 --> 01:40:27.520] Yeah, I sent you, I sent you that notice. I thought you'd get a kick out of it. The [01:40:27.520 --> 01:40:33.120] clerk of the court sent me a, okay. Let me make one little comment. When we're telling [01:40:33.120 --> 01:40:41.240] people about something that's somewhat complex and filled with details, it's a really good [01:40:41.240 --> 01:40:51.360] strategy to never use a pronoun. I always say, instead of saying this or that, say exactly [01:40:51.360 --> 01:40:58.480] what it is. For us speaking it, it sounds like we're being redundant, but to the listener [01:40:58.480 --> 01:40:59.480] it doesn't. [01:40:59.480 --> 01:41:00.480] Okay. [01:41:00.480 --> 01:41:05.120] Well, apparently the municipal court sends a courtesy notice out to everyone who receives [01:41:05.120 --> 01:41:11.400] a citation and the citation states that for this particular fine, it's this much. In my [01:41:11.400 --> 01:41:19.560] case, it was $566. So I sent a judicial conduct complaint on the judge for the amount of the [01:41:19.560 --> 01:41:26.080] fine that they wanted. I sent a judicial complaint on the judge because of the clerk wanting [01:41:26.080 --> 01:41:32.920] to enter a plea and because that's what they were asking for was enter plea, pay this amount. [01:41:32.920 --> 01:41:40.040] I sent them back a nice little courtesy notice stating under transportation code, no driver's [01:41:40.040 --> 01:41:46.160] license is can exceed $200 except for like a $10 and $20 charge. I never got an answer [01:41:46.160 --> 01:41:47.160] back from that. [01:41:47.160 --> 01:41:53.400] Do you know what the statute is for that? [01:41:53.400 --> 01:41:59.120] Yes. I had wrote that down in the notice, gave them all of that. I also gave them the [01:41:59.120 --> 01:42:00.120] one for an invalid. [01:42:00.120 --> 01:42:04.800] No, I was asking you to tell me and all our listeners. [01:42:04.800 --> 01:42:14.920] Well, let me pull it up real quick. Under 521 for an exit driver's license down at the [01:42:14.920 --> 01:42:27.200] end for the no driver's license and then the other, let me get it real quick. Oh, I don't [01:42:27.200 --> 01:42:28.200] have it right here. [01:42:28.200 --> 01:42:35.320] Okay, we'll find it. But generally, never make a proactive statement of law out of your [01:42:35.320 --> 01:42:45.800] own mouth. You tend to be somewhat pedantic in that when we reference a law or reference [01:42:45.800 --> 01:42:53.680] a court case, we want to say what that law or court case is. It has two benefits. One [01:42:53.680 --> 01:42:58.560] benefit is there's no misunderstanding by the other person you're talking to. The other [01:42:58.560 --> 01:43:06.480] one, it really helps you memorize these cases and statutes. Okay, go ahead. [01:43:06.480 --> 01:43:15.200] So I end up going on the third to the district court to file criminal complaints against [01:43:15.200 --> 01:43:22.880] the municipal judge and the municipal clerk, which we went in the morning around 10 and [01:43:22.880 --> 01:43:27.040] by one o'clock, we were told to go home because we've been passed around to everybody. By [01:43:27.040 --> 01:43:30.840] the time we get home, we have two letters stuck in the door with the information that [01:43:30.840 --> 01:43:38.120] had been requested. And in those letters, and I emailed those to you too. Oh, I hear [01:43:38.120 --> 01:43:39.120] the music. [01:43:39.120 --> 01:43:48.480] Okay, hang on. I didn't hear the music that time. So I'm glad you did. Randy Kelton, [01:43:48.480 --> 01:43:57.680] we will radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:43:57.680 --> 01:44:06.200] Nutritious food is real body armor. 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Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case [01:45:33.440 --> 01:45:38.920] winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should [01:45:38.920 --> 01:45:44.680] understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive [01:45:44.680 --> 01:45:52.000] our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and [01:45:52.000 --> 01:46:21.640] much more. Please visit lulavlogradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.640 --> 01:46:32.800] Today we are back. Randy Kelton, Lulavlogradio and William Frankly. After reading your emails [01:46:32.800 --> 01:46:43.240] and now talking to me, I am pleased. This pleases me more than I can say. We've had [01:46:43.240 --> 01:46:50.240] three callers tonight and all of them are exactly the reason I do this show. But this [01:46:50.240 --> 01:46:55.640] one, you know, I appreciate your level of knowledge and your willingness to go after [01:46:55.640 --> 01:47:04.120] these guys. Okay. When we left off, you were filing judicial conduct complaints on everybody. [01:47:04.120 --> 01:47:10.680] It sounds like you are having way too much fun. Well, apparently I had too much fun because [01:47:10.680 --> 01:47:18.360] the original judge handed it off to another judge. And in the one email that I sent you [01:47:18.360 --> 01:47:28.240] where they sent, where the one municipal judge sent me the letter stating that he was resetting, [01:47:28.240 --> 01:47:37.080] not postponing, but resetting the case to this other judge for the 23rd of January and [01:47:37.080 --> 01:47:47.080] having a jury trial, which is also in that letter on March 24, which said a jury docket. [01:47:47.080 --> 01:47:54.520] So now the funny thing is on the 5th, I received a letter from the second judge stating that [01:47:54.520 --> 01:48:03.280] my cases had already been heard. They had changed the charging from invalid to no license. [01:48:03.280 --> 01:48:09.200] The city attorney moved to dismiss and this was all done on the 4th when they said there [01:48:09.200 --> 01:48:17.280] was not going to be any court. They snuck one in on you. [01:48:17.280 --> 01:48:24.840] Looking now at filing a notice to send to the city because I never had a 1517. I was [01:48:24.840 --> 01:48:32.360] never brought before a judge. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. 1517. [01:48:32.360 --> 01:48:36.440] The examining where you're supposed to go in front of the magistrate upon promise to [01:48:36.440 --> 01:48:41.640] I'm being pedantic here. Oh, I'm sorry. It's the code of criminal procedures. [01:48:41.640 --> 01:48:49.880] No, I'm being more pedantic than that. And I'm glad you said 1517. Here's what the code [01:48:49.880 --> 01:49:04.120] says. Chapter 14 is the code that deals with arrest without a warrant. Chapter 15 is the [01:49:04.120 --> 01:49:14.240] code that deals with arrest with a warrant. And under chapter 14 for an on-site offense, [01:49:14.240 --> 01:49:27.600] they must bring you directly before a magistrate for an examining trial or under 543.00336. [01:49:27.600 --> 01:49:35.400] That they can release you on your own recognizance on an agreement to appear before a magistrate [01:49:35.400 --> 01:49:45.080] of the county. Okay. 15.17 contains a provision for someone [01:49:45.080 --> 01:49:54.520] who is arrested on an existing warrant out of county. So the warrant always says arrest [01:49:54.520 --> 01:50:02.760] this person and bring him before me. And that's because when a warrant is issued, it is necessarily [01:50:02.760 --> 01:50:10.680] issued ex parte. The one ex parte, you'd be in front of them. There'd be no reason to [01:50:10.680 --> 01:50:15.160] go out and get you and drag them in. So you're already there. And whatever their issue is, [01:50:15.160 --> 01:50:20.760] they can deal with it. So if you're not there and somebody comes to the judge and says, [01:50:20.760 --> 01:50:25.040] I have reason to believe the crime has been committed and that this person committed it [01:50:25.040 --> 01:50:31.520] and I have evidence to support that, then the court can say, okay, I agree with you [01:50:31.520 --> 01:50:36.400] and I'm going to make a determination of probable cause based on what you gave me. But that [01:50:36.400 --> 01:50:48.040] was an ex parte examining trial. So the order almost always says arrest this person and [01:50:48.040 --> 01:50:55.920] bring him before me. The reason for that is now he, the person has a right to an examining [01:50:55.920 --> 01:51:07.520] trial where he's present and he can exercise his rights under chapter 16. You know, under [01:51:07.520 --> 01:51:13.200] after 15, where a warrant was issued ex parte for someone's arrest and they're arrested [01:51:13.200 --> 01:51:21.760] out of county and it's where they're unable to bring you immediately before the magistrate [01:51:21.760 --> 01:51:29.960] who issued the warrant. They can take you before a magistrate in that foreign county [01:51:29.960 --> 01:51:37.280] for the purpose of the magistrate issuing the warnings that are necessary under Miranda [01:51:37.280 --> 01:51:48.320] to, for you to know, to check, to, to protect your rights. But that's only applies existing [01:51:48.320 --> 01:51:57.120] warrant out of county. So when they start talking, magistration, you type magistration [01:51:57.120 --> 01:52:03.960] into Microsoft Word, it's going to put a little red light under it. It doesn't know what it [01:52:03.960 --> 01:52:16.000] is. And I don't either. They made it up. Okay. I was being pedantic and that's just for down [01:52:16.000 --> 01:52:22.640] the road. Okay. Underneath the city charter, you'll love this. Underneath this particular [01:52:22.640 --> 01:52:31.240] city's charter, it states and they're using Vernon's antidote code. Some of her visions [01:52:31.240 --> 01:52:38.040] under the VTC. Let me make a little comment about that. Vernon's annotated 1925 code. [01:52:38.040 --> 01:52:46.960] Right. And it was the intention of the legislature that that be a permanent code and that subsequent [01:52:46.960 --> 01:52:54.920] legislation should not change the 1925 code. Everything's supposed to be based on the 1925 [01:52:54.920 --> 01:53:02.120] code. And that was Vernon's, but they've since hired West for those who don't understand [01:53:02.120 --> 01:53:08.800] what that means. The legislature passes these laws and they just stick them in the national [01:53:08.800 --> 01:53:14.520] register at the state. I forget what they call it in the state. And they just pass them [01:53:14.520 --> 01:53:20.480] as they come to them. And you've got laws all over the place. So they hire a publisher [01:53:20.480 --> 01:53:29.640] to go through all the public laws and organize them into rational categories, penal code, [01:53:29.640 --> 01:53:36.720] code of criminal procedure, family law, wherever they go. And then they create a code. The [01:53:36.720 --> 01:53:45.960] code is not the law. The public law that was passed by the legislature, that is, but the [01:53:45.960 --> 01:53:57.560] code is a representation. The code is valid and enforceable so long as it accurately reflects [01:53:57.560 --> 01:54:06.160] the public law. And in this case, he's referring to Vernon's and that was Vernon's was a publisher [01:54:06.160 --> 01:54:14.440] back in 1920s. And now they refer to, now it's West that does the publishing for Texas. [01:54:14.440 --> 01:54:18.840] I know that wasn't where you were going to, but I wanted to make this clear what that [01:54:18.840 --> 01:54:23.680] is about Vernon's and why sometimes you'll hear them citing it. [01:54:23.680 --> 01:54:29.320] Now underneath the city charter, they state that there's only two times that you can give [01:54:29.320 --> 01:54:36.680] a citation. And it states the offenses specified by subsection B of this section are the only [01:54:36.680 --> 01:54:41.800] offenses for which ensuring a written notice to appear is mandatory. Now this is the city [01:54:41.800 --> 01:54:49.840] ordinance. And the two offenses of speeding and open container, which is penal code 49.03. [01:54:49.840 --> 01:54:58.760] And then underneath the transportation code under 543, subchapter C, no driver's license [01:54:58.760 --> 01:55:04.760] and valid driver's license gives them, that's not an authorized, in other words, they are [01:55:04.760 --> 01:55:10.400] unauthorized to arrest you. They don't have the authority to arrest you. It's not in C [01:55:10.400 --> 01:55:12.760] for a warrantless arrest. [01:55:12.760 --> 01:55:25.480] Okay, hold on. I think you misinterpreted some of that. Speeding and open container, [01:55:25.480 --> 01:55:27.280] they cannot arrest you for. [01:55:27.280 --> 01:55:35.160] No, no, no. They say that these are, the officer must issue a written notice to appear if, [01:55:35.160 --> 01:55:40.320] and the one is speeding, which is found underneath the 543 also, and the other one is open container. [01:55:40.320 --> 01:55:54.080] Yes. He must issue a citation. He cannot arrest you. And that's state law. So in other cases, [01:55:54.080 --> 01:56:03.120] he can arrest you or he can issue a citation, but not in this case. This is a special case. [01:56:03.120 --> 01:56:07.160] You already know that you're under arrest once they pulled you over and did that so-called [01:56:07.160 --> 01:56:08.160] detainee. [01:56:08.160 --> 01:56:16.920] Well, they call that a Terry stop in a detention and the courts have held that you can be detained [01:56:16.920 --> 01:56:23.320] for a reasonable amount of time, but the detention has to be based on probable cause. [01:56:23.320 --> 01:56:30.080] Okay. So the original reason for stopping was an out headlight. And when he stopped [01:56:30.080 --> 01:56:36.080] me, I asked him if I could turn on the lights and go look at it. And we both went up, turned [01:56:36.080 --> 01:56:41.480] on the lights. Yep. One was out. I thanked him. And at no time before that had he asked [01:56:41.480 --> 01:56:47.720] for a driver's license, insurance, registration, nothing. So that was the original stop. So [01:56:47.720 --> 01:56:53.080] I'm thinking, you know, he's postponing. And then when he pulls the arm, when I tell him [01:56:53.080 --> 01:56:58.560] I don't have it, he asked me for my name and address and I give that to him. And then on [01:56:58.560 --> 01:57:02.760] the ticket, it shows that my driver's license number is my ID number, but I never gave him [01:57:02.760 --> 01:57:03.760] my ID. [01:57:03.760 --> 01:57:10.720] Okay. That didn't make sense to me. Do you have a Texas ID? [01:57:10.720 --> 01:57:12.920] Yeah, I have a Texas ID. [01:57:12.920 --> 01:57:16.080] Okay. And he used the Texas ID number? [01:57:16.080 --> 01:57:19.000] Nope. Didn't have it on me at the time. [01:57:19.000 --> 01:57:23.440] No, I mean, you said he used the Texas ID number. [01:57:23.440 --> 01:57:27.840] Yeah. When he came back from the car after I gave him my name, my height, my date of [01:57:27.840 --> 01:57:33.840] birth and my address, when he came back with the ticket, my ID number was on there as the [01:57:33.840 --> 01:57:34.840] driver's license number. [01:57:34.840 --> 01:57:39.480] Good. That's what I wanted to find out. He looked that up in his records. So he knew [01:57:39.480 --> 01:57:49.840] if you had a Texas ID, you necessarily could not have a driver's license. New law says [01:57:49.840 --> 01:57:51.880] you can't have both. [01:57:51.880 --> 01:57:53.640] Right. [01:57:53.640 --> 01:58:01.680] So he knew you didn't have a driver's license. And okay. So go ahead. [01:58:01.680 --> 01:58:06.360] I'm asking is, I just wanted to get more. I've sent you the emails. I've sent you all [01:58:06.360 --> 01:58:12.800] the documents, all the correspondence. And then I just sent you yesterday, the police, [01:58:12.800 --> 01:58:18.320] no, today, I'm sorry. Today, the answer from the police, from the two public information [01:58:18.320 --> 01:58:23.640] requests and they sent that by email and which they said they had no knowledge and had no [01:58:23.640 --> 01:58:26.480] information to provide on those subjects. [01:58:26.480 --> 01:58:27.480] Yahoo. [01:58:27.480 --> 01:58:28.480] Yeah. [01:58:28.480 --> 01:58:37.680] Now, do you have my copy of the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction where I go into [01:58:37.680 --> 01:58:45.240] the authority of the municipality to enforce the code? Hang on. Going to break. We'll be [01:58:45.240 --> 01:58:46.240] right back. [01:58:46.240 --> 01:58:55.920] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [01:58:55.920 --> 01:59:01.120] because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying [01:59:01.120 --> 01:59:07.600] the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. 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