[00:00.000 --> 00:29.560] Today in history, the year 1945, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt passes away in office, [00:29.560 --> 00:36.560] Vice President Harry Truman became President in Roosevelt's stead to name history. [00:36.560 --> 00:41.400] In recent news, Chinese President Xi Jinping placed a call by request of and to President [00:41.400 --> 00:45.480] Donald Trump earlier Tuesday to discuss the heated buildup and militarization of the Korean [00:45.480 --> 00:46.480] Peninsula. [00:46.480 --> 00:50.360] Over the weekend, the U.S. redirected a naval strike group to the western Pacific Ocean [00:50.360 --> 00:54.280] instead of making a port visit to Australia with the word of Japanese ships meeting up [00:54.280 --> 00:55.760] with the strike group. [00:55.760 --> 00:59.720] And though the reason for doing so hasn't been revealed by President Trump or the DOD, [00:59.720 --> 01:03.960] it seems clear that the U.S. is responding to nearly half a dozen nuclear tests and multiple [01:03.960 --> 01:07.920] missile launches that have been illegally conducted by North Korea over the years. [01:07.920 --> 01:10.600] However, North Korea is claiming self-defense. [01:10.600 --> 01:15.280] Their foreign minister was quoted as saying early Sunday that what happened in Syria once [01:15.280 --> 01:19.920] again taught a bitter lesson that one can defend oneself from the imperialistic aggression [01:19.920 --> 01:21.960] only when one has one strength. [01:21.960 --> 01:26.360] Many aggression should be countered with force only, and we are entirely just when we have [01:26.360 --> 01:28.880] bolstered our nuclear force remarkably. [01:28.880 --> 01:32.640] Just last week, President Xi Jinping and President Trump held face-to-face talks in [01:32.640 --> 01:36.840] Florida where the issue of North Korea, according to Trump, was discussed. [01:36.840 --> 01:40.920] The People's Daily, the official Communist Party mouthpiece, said Xi Jinping stressed [01:40.920 --> 01:45.600] that China insists on realizing the goal of denuclearization of the peninsula, insist [01:45.600 --> 01:49.920] on maintaining peace and stability on the peninsula, advocates resolving the problem [01:49.920 --> 01:54.280] through peaceful means, and is willing to maintain communication and coordination with [01:54.280 --> 01:55.280] the U.S. [01:55.280 --> 01:59.300] The call between leaders was also made a day after Trump tweeted, North Korea is looking [01:59.300 --> 02:00.300] for trouble. [02:00.300 --> 02:02.720] If China decides to help, that would be great. [02:02.720 --> 02:05.400] If not, we will solve the problem without them. [02:05.400 --> 02:09.600] North Korean state media did warn yesterday that the Revolutionary Strong Army is keenly [02:09.600 --> 02:14.360] watching every move by U.S. elements with their nuclear sites focused on the U.S. Invasionary [02:14.360 --> 02:20.000] Bases, not only in South Korea and in the Pacific Operation Theater, but also in the [02:20.000 --> 02:21.000] U.S. [02:21.000 --> 02:22.000] mainland. [02:22.000 --> 02:24.400] To up the ante, this Saturday, North Korea is expected to hold a huge military parade [02:24.400 --> 02:29.480] to celebrate the 105th birthday of its founding president, Kim Sung, and with the 85th anniversary [02:29.480 --> 02:34.040] of the creation of the Korean People's Army on April 25, the expected customary military [02:34.040 --> 02:37.240] parade in the capital city is predictable. [02:37.240 --> 02:41.280] Let's just hope and pray that people consider the wise words of Chinese Foreign Minister [02:41.280 --> 02:47.000] Spokesman, Liu Kang, all relevant parties should exercise restraint and keep calm, ease [02:47.000 --> 03:15.800] tension instead of provoking each other and adding fuel to the fire. [03:17.000 --> 03:41.760] Okay, hurry, hurry, this is Ringo Kelkin, the leader of my radio on this, the 14th day [03:41.760 --> 03:54.680] of April, 2017, I'm having a little trouble getting my sound faded off, there we go, okay. [03:54.680 --> 04:02.280] Let me start out by, okay, the phone lines are open, we'll keep them open all night, [04:02.280 --> 04:09.600] and I want to start out by reminding everybody that we still have our fundraiser going on, [04:09.600 --> 04:16.520] and if you listen to this program because you have legal issues or you anticipate you [04:16.520 --> 04:23.040] might have a legal issue and you want to be prepared for dealing with these scandals, [04:23.040 --> 04:30.400] we have a number of tools that we make available on Logos Radio Network. [04:30.400 --> 04:38.320] We have jurisdiction area that's produced by Dr. Fredrick Graves and a bit of news about [04:38.320 --> 04:39.320] jurisdiction area. [04:39.320 --> 04:46.840] We have it on the website or Debra is in the process of getting it changed or it says [04:46.840 --> 04:51.200] that jurisdiction area is in a set of CDs, well that's no longer the case. [04:51.200 --> 04:54.520] Now it's an online course. [04:54.520 --> 05:03.280] So we have jurisdiction area, if you have a legal issue or you anticipate a legal issue, [05:03.280 --> 05:10.200] you really need to get jurisdiction area, it's just I think $250 or $275, something [05:10.200 --> 05:14.840] like that, it is well worth the cost. [05:14.840 --> 05:20.960] I get people that when they have been through jurisdiction area and they call them to the [05:20.960 --> 05:26.640] show and I talk to them, I can always tell, because I suggest that they file a certain [05:26.640 --> 05:31.160] document and they generally tell me, oh yeah, I already did that, and then I suggest something [05:31.160 --> 05:33.280] else, I already did that. [05:33.280 --> 05:41.760] It will give you a very comprehensive overview of how the system works and how to deal with [05:41.760 --> 05:43.760] the system. [05:43.760 --> 05:51.480] It is not an eight year or six to eight year jurist doctorate course, but don't cost you [05:51.480 --> 05:55.560] $180,000 either. [05:55.560 --> 06:01.880] As a non-professional, it gives you the information you know so that you will understand how to [06:01.880 --> 06:07.800] move around in the system and if you've had experience with traffic tickets, you will [06:07.800 --> 06:17.760] be well aware of how corrupt the municipal courts are and municipal and JP courts. [06:17.760 --> 06:22.840] It is all about the money, they don't care about the law, they don't care about the right [06:22.840 --> 06:23.840] of things. [06:23.840 --> 06:29.000] It's all about the money, so they're only there to get dollar flow and they're going [06:29.000 --> 06:33.320] to get it from you and they don't care what the law says about it. [06:33.320 --> 06:40.880] If we are to stop this kind of behavior, we have to start making it cost them more to [06:40.880 --> 06:46.320] prosecute traffic tickets than they make from them. [06:46.320 --> 06:52.680] You can do that by getting a Craig's traffic seminar. [06:52.680 --> 07:01.400] He goes through the code step by step, he provides sample documents of how to use them [07:01.400 --> 07:10.040] to wind these local municipal and JP courts clocks. [07:10.040 --> 07:21.280] Then there's my ebook, jurisdictionary shows you how the system works from the perspective [07:21.280 --> 07:23.000] of a jurist doctorate. [07:23.000 --> 07:31.120] Dr. Graves is a long time practicing attorney and he lives inside the system and he shows [07:31.120 --> 07:35.760] you how the system works from inside the system. [07:35.760 --> 07:41.840] I don't live inside the system, I live outside the system and in dealing with the system [07:41.840 --> 07:47.920] I come to some realizations about how it actually works. [07:47.920 --> 07:55.720] Now I'm not a lawyer, I'm an engineer, I'm not a philosopher either, so if I'm not a [07:55.720 --> 08:03.080] philosopher I don't have a bunch of notions about how things should work. [08:03.080 --> 08:10.120] I'm an engineer, I care about how they actually work as opposed to the nonsense they taught [08:10.120 --> 08:17.120] me in high school and there wasn't much value in any of that. [08:17.120 --> 08:24.520] Even when I read the codes, we get people on the show all the time who complain that [08:24.520 --> 08:33.960] the courts don't follow code, okay, I got that. [08:33.960 --> 08:41.120] So we can be upset because the courts don't follow and we can rant and rave and rail in [08:41.120 --> 08:47.400] righteous indignation but they're still not going to follow the code. [08:47.400 --> 08:56.480] So we need to understand how it really works and in order to describe how it really works [08:56.480 --> 09:00.200] I've got a bunch of tools. [09:00.200 --> 09:08.000] What I start out with is addressing some of the common fallacies about the nature of [09:08.000 --> 09:15.120] this country and the nature of law that are instilled into everybody in high school. [09:15.120 --> 09:20.480] They tell us that we live in a land of laws governed by the Constitution and the statutes [09:20.480 --> 09:24.120] and everybody has to follow the law and the rules. [09:24.120 --> 09:31.520] Well that's a bunch of nonsense, that is absolutely not the case. [09:31.520 --> 09:37.360] Now the less money you have the more laws you have to follow, the more money you have [09:37.360 --> 09:39.760] the less laws you have to follow. [09:39.760 --> 09:48.840] Now we can rant and rave about that if you want to but it has been this way since we [09:48.840 --> 09:58.160] have had civilization and since we have had human beings acting as judges. [09:58.160 --> 10:04.000] It's been this way for at least 6,000 years that we know of, don't expect it to change [10:04.000 --> 10:06.200] tomorrow. [10:06.200 --> 10:13.280] So no reason to expect that the sky is going to completely fall in on us tomorrow because [10:13.280 --> 10:15.360] it hasn't. [10:15.360 --> 10:21.640] Those in positions of power it's not in their best interest to destroy the little people. [10:21.640 --> 10:26.880] It will keep them working, keep them somewhat prosperous so that the people can buy their [10:26.880 --> 10:29.320] products and move the economy. [10:29.320 --> 10:36.560] So the economy moves in approximately 50 year cycles, it advances, it recedes, it's done [10:36.560 --> 10:44.160] that for the last 200 years that we've kept record, 200 or 300 years. [10:44.160 --> 10:45.760] Calamity hasn't happened. [10:45.760 --> 10:50.000] Good times are followed by bad times are followed by good times and we've gone through these [10:50.000 --> 10:52.760] cycles and keep doing that. [10:52.760 --> 10:59.200] If you are to be able to function in this cyclic society you've got to understand the [10:59.200 --> 11:07.920] cycles and you have to understand what pressures move the court and it's not the statutory [11:07.920 --> 11:10.040] law. [11:10.040 --> 11:13.880] You will never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side [11:13.880 --> 11:17.200] to think so is naive. [11:17.200 --> 11:24.440] You win your case if you have the politics on your side and all politics is local. [11:24.440 --> 11:32.680] It is important that you understand that in the book we talk about that and why that works [11:32.680 --> 11:44.760] and how you as the pro se ordinary individual wield the greatest power in the whole system [11:44.760 --> 11:51.640] and the whole system does everything they can to keep you from figuring that out. [11:51.640 --> 12:04.040] To show Eddie Craig, Dr. Graves, this is what we're here for, to help you to figure out [12:04.040 --> 12:08.600] how powerful you really are. [12:08.600 --> 12:13.320] One of the examples I like to use is being on a military base. [12:13.320 --> 12:18.920] On a military base whenever a general is going to show up we've got to get out there and [12:18.920 --> 12:24.920] mow everything and trim it and touch up every little speck of paint and make sure the place [12:24.920 --> 12:29.840] looks perfect because everybody is afraid of those generals. [12:29.840 --> 12:37.600] There's only one person on the base that everybody is more afraid of than the generals. [12:37.600 --> 12:44.400] That's the civilians because only the civilian can march into that general's office and [12:44.400 --> 12:50.520] crawl down his throat like he was a parent stepchild and all that general can say is [12:50.520 --> 12:59.000] yes sir, yes ma'am, whatever you say and when you're done with him he is not going to be [12:59.000 --> 13:04.480] a happy camper and somebody's in trouble. [13:04.480 --> 13:11.000] Whoever influenced you to go there, it doesn't make any difference if they were right wrong [13:11.000 --> 13:15.280] or what have you, kind of like these guys that drug this doctor off that United Airlines [13:15.280 --> 13:16.280] flight. [13:16.280 --> 13:22.480] To the point they banged his head so hard they knocked him out and they drug him out bloody [13:22.480 --> 13:26.920] in front of everybody with their cell phones out. [13:26.920 --> 13:31.520] Now all those guys have been relieved to duty. [13:31.520 --> 13:36.480] Well they were following instructions, they were doing what they were supposed to. [13:36.480 --> 13:39.440] It don't make any difference. [13:39.440 --> 13:43.000] And the guy at the top has to answer for what they did. [13:43.000 --> 13:46.840] He'll care if they did it right or not. [13:46.840 --> 13:52.640] He had the answer, he was put on the dime, your dog meat, this is how it works in the [13:52.640 --> 13:55.560] world we live in. [13:55.560 --> 14:02.960] Politics is everything and you as the private citizen, the ordinary individual, there is [14:02.960 --> 14:11.120] nobody in that courtroom more powerful than you and nobody more dangerous to those in [14:11.120 --> 14:18.080] official capacities that are not following the rules and that's what these three products [14:18.080 --> 14:24.480] will help you to come to grips with and if you purchase one of them, every $25 you put [14:24.480 --> 14:34.120] out for one of them, we will put a chance in our drawing for, we've got two weapons [14:34.120 --> 14:38.200] this year, one's the AR-15 and the other one is a pistol. [14:38.200 --> 14:44.880] So go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and have a look at what we've got going. [14:44.880 --> 14:48.440] All of that will help us to keep this radio station on the air. [14:48.440 --> 14:53.760] We're only trying to raise 10 grand this year and in the overall scheme of things that's [14:53.760 --> 15:00.400] chump change but we need some just to keep the pieces working, we have some equipment [15:00.400 --> 15:07.480] we have to replace and change out just to keep us up to speed and we run this every [15:07.480 --> 15:08.480] year. [15:08.480 --> 15:13.120] It's kind of a struggle to get that much but if we get that much we keep this thing going [15:13.120 --> 15:14.120] another year. [15:14.120 --> 15:19.080] Okay, enough of that, we've got a couple of callers on the line, I'm going to start [15:19.080 --> 15:24.200] with Scott, Scott you've got a minute 40 seconds. [15:24.200 --> 15:28.560] Well I was just talking about, go ahead. [15:28.560 --> 15:29.560] You're not talking fast enough. [15:29.560 --> 15:36.360] Oh well dude, you know I was just going to tell you, I got a nice little letter from [15:36.360 --> 15:42.560] the town of Addison, remember I was talking about how I sent those, I noticed the default [15:42.560 --> 15:49.560] judgment out of Bishio and from far upon the court, well it took about three months but [15:49.560 --> 15:52.560] they did answer. [15:52.560 --> 15:53.560] Interesting. [15:53.560 --> 15:58.640] Yeah, since you were talking of it, you have it in your email already, I sent it to you [15:58.640 --> 16:04.880] this morning when I got it, yeah so I'm writing up now, I'm going to review because they're [16:04.880 --> 16:10.080] just wanting to set a hearing just for me to come there and discuss how to pay for their [16:10.080 --> 16:17.920] little fine of like $260 for failure to identify and I'm counter claiming that whole thing [16:17.920 --> 16:24.240] and writing up all the stuff that the judge did wrong and everything and going to challenge [16:24.240 --> 16:31.440] you on a huge sign of warrant and you're going to get a personal lawsuit against you so I've [16:31.440 --> 16:36.520] been working on that most of the day to day so there's a music. [16:36.520 --> 16:41.920] Okay, when we come back from break, I want to talk about that because that breaks one [16:41.920 --> 16:51.160] of my rules, never give fair warning, Bushwack is so much better, hang on Randy Kelton, do [16:51.160 --> 16:57.960] the radio, I'll call it number 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [16:57.960 --> 17:06.800] Sayin' cookie, cookie, me love cookies, oh hi Cookie Muncher, no these are yucky cookies, [17:06.800 --> 17:12.760] cookie, yucky, no, no bad cookies, you can't even eat these cookies, these are cyber cookies, [17:12.760 --> 17:17.560] no can't eat it, no, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer, these are [17:17.560 --> 17:25.400] apples, really, oh that's an actual apple, yummy apple, I'm going to throw away these [17:25.400 --> 17:32.000] yucky cookies in the trash, I clicked control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies [17:32.000 --> 17:38.200] and clear them, bye bye yucky cookies, now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click [17:38.200 --> 17:43.800] on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon [17:43.800 --> 17:49.600] through this link and order you some yummy new cookie, no cookies for me, consider it [17:49.600 --> 17:54.600] an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon I go through this link and [17:54.600 --> 18:00.760] I give a little present to this radio network too, she is for cookie, she is for classified. [18:00.760 --> 18:06.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? 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[19:26.520 --> 19:41.000] Okay, we are back, we're in the county rule of law radio and we're talking to Scott in [19:41.000 --> 19:44.520] Texas, okay. [19:44.520 --> 19:51.400] The only thing we want to give them is notice a tort, in order to sue them in the county [19:51.400 --> 19:58.640] or anything you have to give them notice a tort first, but when it comes to suing a judge, [19:58.640 --> 20:04.120] the only way you can sue a judge is in his personal capacity for acting outside jurisdiction [20:04.120 --> 20:13.800] and as far as I know you don't have to give them a notice and opportunity, but I want [20:13.800 --> 20:21.920] to give them as little warning as possible, pushback is so much better. [20:21.920 --> 20:28.280] Oh I know, so this is a real arrogant judge over here in Addison, remember he's the one [20:28.280 --> 20:33.480] I even took a complaint before the grand jury over at Fort Worth and they just stomped that [20:33.480 --> 20:42.760] right out, but this guy is so arrogant, he went, he dismissed the counterclaimed subject [20:42.760 --> 20:47.000] marriage jurisdiction, I mean everything is just like, yeah, whatever, we ain't hearing [20:47.000 --> 20:48.560] none of that stuff. [20:48.560 --> 20:56.680] So even if I go ahead and submit this and have it kind of with a discussion and list [20:56.680 --> 21:04.280] all the stuff and basically the outline of how he's acting out of his scope of office, [21:04.280 --> 21:09.880] violating his office and then attach all the criminal complaints that I was attempting [21:09.880 --> 21:15.880] to get submitted in other places, which would never, go ahead and put all that on the record, [21:15.880 --> 21:22.600] that way when he goes, if he goes ahead and violates it, then there is, this is building [21:22.600 --> 21:31.600] the case towards the federal case too, because here's the thought that he wants me to try [21:31.600 --> 21:37.360] to come down there and agree to paying the fine, which would effectively give consent [21:37.360 --> 21:42.920] that everything that they had done was okay, even in my federal lawsuit, so he'd wash [21:42.920 --> 21:47.120] out the federal lawsuits and say, oh, well, you agreed all this and you know, all that [21:47.120 --> 21:48.600] doesn't count. [21:48.600 --> 21:56.840] So that's the reason I just want to counterclaim it, make the claim that he has caused me harm, [21:56.840 --> 22:03.120] stay on the offense completely, always as the plaintiff in the matter, never defending [22:03.120 --> 22:04.120] it. [22:04.120 --> 22:09.760] And that way, when he still violates it, then you have so much evidence on the record, it's [22:09.760 --> 22:17.760] just, hey, you're getting sued now, and so then will you just take him to county court? [22:17.760 --> 22:22.600] Because then he's out of jurisdiction for sure, because I've laid it all out where [22:22.600 --> 22:24.720] he was, he lacked jurisdiction. [22:24.720 --> 22:32.000] Well, you can sue him in the JP court and only cost 60 bucks to file a suit. [22:32.000 --> 22:36.640] And he's suing for like 10 grand. [22:36.640 --> 22:42.440] And then use that to get discovery, get him to do all his song and dance self-sustaining [22:42.440 --> 22:53.320] pants, and then you can always file an amended and bring it out to a higher court. [22:53.320 --> 22:59.040] That's another way, because we're, everybody's just going to have to start getting geared [22:59.040 --> 23:04.800] up and start learning this stuff, take these judges to court, and make it to where they [23:04.800 --> 23:09.440] are absolutely in fear of people, because they don't fear nobody right now, and they [23:09.440 --> 23:16.120] run roughshod over everyone, unless you stand up, and then you still get run over. [23:16.120 --> 23:25.920] But, yeah, but, when we start grieving them on a regular basis, and that's what my electronic [23:25.920 --> 23:33.520] lawyers intended to do, and I had a week that kind of, this week kind of got slowed down [23:33.520 --> 23:41.400] for addressing other issues, but we're real close to having a alpha prototype that we [23:41.400 --> 23:52.080] can put on line, where right now, to develop the alpha prototype, I've taken traffic and [23:52.080 --> 23:57.080] taken subject matter jurisdiction as it goes to traffic. [23:57.080 --> 24:03.520] And, Mr. Nair, when you were pulled over by the officer, did the officer personally [24:03.520 --> 24:12.520] observe you driving slash operating a motor vehicle slash conveyance, and I put both those [24:12.520 --> 24:19.440] together that way, so that the reader keeps seeing them, and as I move along, the questions [24:19.440 --> 24:25.120] explain why I use the two different terms. [24:25.120 --> 24:30.240] It's real hard for people to stop saying driving and stop saying motor vehicle, so I put them [24:30.240 --> 24:37.960] together so that I attach the two differences, but anyway, I ask them to personally see you [24:37.960 --> 24:47.360] operating, and if they say yes, were you in a parking lot, or other place that was not [24:47.360 --> 24:56.280] a public thoroughfare, and say they say yes, if they say yes, I will eventually get to [24:56.280 --> 25:02.640] did the officer write a citation, and if they say yes, they're not going to say, since [25:02.640 --> 25:08.520] you were on a, not on a public thoroughfare, but in a parking lot or on a, in a field in [25:08.520 --> 25:13.560] your driveway, then you charge the officer with tampering with the government document [25:13.560 --> 25:20.480] to aggravated curgery, official oppression, you file a T-close complaint against him, [25:20.480 --> 25:27.600] and the system will just dump these out, they will, because you'll put in all the relevant [25:27.600 --> 25:33.000] information from the ticket, it already has all the information indeed, it just merges [25:33.000 --> 25:38.720] it into the document, spits it out, or you do a silent send. [25:38.720 --> 25:43.560] People who don't know anything about this, if all they've got to do is sign and send, [25:43.560 --> 25:49.320] we can get that done, and one of the things that they'll sign and send is a request that [25:49.320 --> 25:58.320] the court rule on the pleadings without oral argument, so we don't want people to go on [25:58.320 --> 26:04.000] court, just do it on the pleadings, does that sound like a pun, Scott? [26:04.000 --> 26:12.040] Well, that's a good twist, so, I mean, everything that we do now is just keep hammering on them [26:12.040 --> 26:15.560] and just don't let up, it's a war of attrition, you know? [26:15.560 --> 26:16.560] Yeah. [26:16.560 --> 26:20.400] It was funny, I was watching a, I had to go to Fry's to get some heat from my printer [26:20.400 --> 26:28.320] so I could make up more complaints and stuff, whatever, but I was, on the screen there was [26:28.320 --> 26:32.600] like some of that schoolhouse rock, you know, those real old schools, conjunction, junction, [26:32.600 --> 26:37.200] you know what you're talking about, but anyway, it was showing this one about the Revolutionary [26:37.200 --> 26:41.960] War and how we were fighting the blue coats, I was thinking, dang, the cops used to wear [26:41.960 --> 26:46.600] blue coats, now they're all wearing black because they look like ISIS, but, shoot, we're [26:46.600 --> 26:48.600] still in war. [26:48.600 --> 26:56.800] It sure seems that way, but we have to be the boss. [26:56.800 --> 27:01.720] They don't realize that we've got bigger guns than they have. [27:01.720 --> 27:06.240] We just have to learn how to use them and I'm working on that now. [27:06.240 --> 27:07.240] Yeah. [27:07.240 --> 27:16.680] So, that's the tool that I've been working on for seven years and it is, it's a big job [27:16.680 --> 27:24.240] and it is complex, but what I'm doing simple is just a lot of parts to it, a lot in what [27:24.240 --> 27:32.000] the Pastor Massive calls a lot of moving parts, but we've been working real hard at it and [27:32.000 --> 27:37.800] we're getting down to the final details so we can put something up online. [27:37.800 --> 27:44.000] I'm hoping within the next week or so to have one that I could start referring people to. [27:44.000 --> 27:51.360] It will only deal with the generic issues going to traffic. [27:51.360 --> 27:58.400] Then we'll start adding speeding, driving while license suspended, all these different [27:58.400 --> 28:03.520] issues as I can get to them and load them up. [28:03.520 --> 28:09.280] Takes a lot of work to build up on these questionnaires, but once I've got it done and it's set [28:09.280 --> 28:14.640] in place and I don't have to do it anymore, then all we have to do is make my own adjustments [28:14.640 --> 28:17.000] when new issues come up. [28:17.000 --> 28:19.960] So we're almost ready. [28:19.960 --> 28:24.800] Then we can start going to the courts and getting all of their tickets that they've [28:24.800 --> 28:30.520] just written and send everybody references to rule of law radio where they can go in [28:30.520 --> 28:33.200] and start downloading documents and sending them. [28:33.200 --> 28:38.440] It's going to make these guys crazy. [28:38.440 --> 28:41.280] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [28:41.280 --> 28:48.960] Okay, Addison, what are you, okay, are you preparing a federal suit against Addison? [28:48.960 --> 28:53.320] I already have one against the cops. [28:53.320 --> 28:55.320] What about the judge? [28:55.320 --> 29:02.040] No, see now I can go ahead and start working on the judge. [29:02.040 --> 29:11.400] The only thing is if he's out of jurisdiction, I just need a federal case with a dollar amount [29:11.400 --> 29:17.520] that no would to have assessed damages. [29:17.520 --> 29:24.080] The one thing that your lawyer in that trial at Rockwall threw you under the bus because [29:24.080 --> 29:29.160] he didn't address the primary issue. [29:29.160 --> 29:33.800] With the officer, I thought he was going there, but then he backed off. [29:33.800 --> 29:39.200] He asked the officer about his training, but he didn't pursue and ask him about his training [29:39.200 --> 29:44.760] under 4.13 Texas administrative code. [29:44.760 --> 29:53.200] Under the code, the sheriff can appoint one municipal officer in the county to enforce [29:53.200 --> 30:02.360] the traffic laws or you, that officer, and do you have evidence that you're the officer? [30:02.360 --> 30:04.560] Coffee might not be so bad after all. [30:04.560 --> 30:09.240] In fact, researchers say drinking a cup of Joe every day can help keep the doctor away. [30:09.240 --> 30:13.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment to talk about the health benefits [30:13.120 --> 30:14.520] of coffee. [30:14.520 --> 30:16.600] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.600 --> 30:20.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.200 --> 30:24.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.960 --> 30:30.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.000 --> 30:32.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.720 --> 30:37.040] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:37.040 --> 30:40.560] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.560 --> 30:43.960] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.960 --> 30:46.200] For years, coffee has gotten a bad rap. [30:46.200 --> 30:51.040] True, it can be addictive and even spike blood pressure, but researchers now say coffee could [30:51.040 --> 30:52.560] actually be good for you. [30:52.560 --> 30:57.000] Did you know that regular coffee drinkers have a lower risk of type 2 diabetes? [30:57.000 --> 31:02.000] Coffee may also prevent colon cancer, gallstones, liver damage, and Parkinson's disease. [31:02.000 --> 31:06.120] And anyone who's had to pull an all-nighter can tell you that coffee improves alertness [31:06.120 --> 31:07.280] and increases endurance. [31:07.280 --> 31:10.520] Coffee has many perks, but doctors caution against over-consumption. [31:10.520 --> 31:15.760] Two cups a day is generally okay, but more can cause jitters, insomnia, and other health [31:15.760 --> 31:16.760] risks. [31:16.760 --> 31:19.680] As with most things in life, moderation is the key. [31:19.680 --> 31:20.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:20.680 --> 31:50.640] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:50.680 --> 31:56.960] The American Nutrients at B. Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can [31:56.960 --> 31:57.960] do for you. [31:57.960 --> 31:58.960] Only at censususa.org. [31:58.960 --> 32:05.360] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.360 --> 32:07.840] In today's America, we live in a nus against them society. [32:07.840 --> 32:11.000] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [32:11.000 --> 32:12.680] stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.680 --> 32:16.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [32:16.120 --> 32:20.320] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.320 --> 32:24.200] Public courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.200 --> 32:26.080] our rights through due process. [32:26.080 --> 32:29.560] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.560 --> 32:33.320] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.320 --> 32:35.720] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:35.720 --> 32:39.720] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.720 --> 32:41.040] ordering your copy today. [32:41.040 --> 32:44.360] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.360 --> 32:45.360] The Law Versus the Lie. [32:45.360 --> 32:48.000] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:48.000 --> 32:50.920] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.920 --> 32:54.920] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.920 --> 33:03.920] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.920 --> 33:14.920] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:14.920 --> 33:26.920] Okay, we are back. [33:26.920 --> 33:37.640] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 14th day of April 2017 and we're talking [33:37.640 --> 33:39.440] to Scott in Texas. [33:39.440 --> 33:44.360] So, Sue the Judges. [33:44.360 --> 33:50.840] This is one thing we haven't been doing and with this subject matter jurisdiction challenge [33:50.840 --> 34:01.440] we're developing, the one thing that it really gives you is a direct shot at the judge himself. [34:01.440 --> 34:06.400] Those judges start getting personal lawsuits one after the other. [34:06.400 --> 34:13.200] That's going to make it not quite so much fun to be a municipal judge in Texas and maybe [34:13.200 --> 34:18.200] we'll begin to get their attention. [34:18.200 --> 34:24.640] Okay, do you have anything else for us, Scott? [34:24.640 --> 34:25.640] I agree. [34:25.640 --> 34:30.840] That's what everybody's going to have to do so I was just kind of letting me kind of [34:30.840 --> 34:37.480] go off for a second but yep, no, as soon as everybody will get on board that's when we'll [34:37.480 --> 34:41.280] start making some changes so I guess that's all I've got for you right now. [34:41.280 --> 34:48.760] Okay, I'll try to catch up on those by the weekend. [34:48.760 --> 34:54.960] I had a pretty tough week but I'm kind of beginning to recover and getting my sense [34:54.960 --> 34:57.880] back about me so maybe I can get caught up. [34:57.880 --> 34:59.880] Okay, thank you. [34:59.880 --> 35:01.880] Thank you, Scott. [35:01.880 --> 35:06.000] Okay, now we're going to go to Barrett in Arizona. [35:06.000 --> 35:07.000] Hello, Barrett. [35:07.000 --> 35:08.000] Yeah, hi. [35:08.000 --> 35:10.000] Let me turn my speaker off. [35:10.000 --> 35:20.600] Yeah, I'm going to sue a DES security guard and I have to go, I was told I have to go [35:20.600 --> 35:29.440] down to the state office here in Tucson because I can't make it to the capital of the state [35:29.440 --> 35:32.120] which would be Phoenix. [35:32.120 --> 35:42.600] So I was told by the city hall to go to the state office here in Tucson and file a notice [35:42.600 --> 35:51.120] of, I'm not sure if I could call it a tort but he, this security guard, he falsely arrested [35:51.120 --> 35:52.120] me. [35:52.120 --> 35:56.640] He assaulted me after I had just gotten out of the hospital six days prior with three [35:56.640 --> 36:01.480] broken ribs and he didn't know that. [36:01.480 --> 36:08.240] I told the cops that but anyways, so Monday I'm going to go down to the state office and [36:08.240 --> 36:13.400] I'm also worried about, if they're going to say, okay, it's $49 for you for filing [36:13.400 --> 36:19.000] fee because I don't have it and I'm worried about the statute of limitations running out [36:19.000 --> 36:22.120] because it's already been about 90 plus days. [36:22.120 --> 36:26.600] Okay, this is a civil suit against the state. [36:26.600 --> 36:32.760] Security guard, you're going to have two years, that's relatively standard. [36:32.760 --> 36:41.720] The shortest statute of limitation tends to be false imprisonment and that tends to only [36:41.720 --> 36:47.800] apply to public officials but not necessarily since this guy arrested you improperly. [36:47.800 --> 36:51.400] That would be false imprisonment but you're still going to, you still have a full year. [36:51.400 --> 36:58.000] How much can I ask for damages like $100,000 for false arrest and he had his hand on his [36:58.000 --> 37:02.240] gun just about the whole time when he was assaulting me? [37:02.240 --> 37:11.080] Okay, Travis Zant, the Travis Zant case out of Florida, he was held for I think 20 minutes [37:11.080 --> 37:14.160] and got $60,000 or $70,000. [37:14.160 --> 37:24.040] So a lot of guys use that as a benchmark and they calculate how much he got paid per minute [37:24.040 --> 37:30.680] and then run the calculation for how much time you were detained. [37:30.680 --> 37:34.600] So there are a number of cases where guys have won on false imprisonment. [37:34.600 --> 37:40.880] You can look at what juries have awarded and that'll tell you what to claim. [37:40.880 --> 37:45.640] They'll claim $10 trillion because they'll just throw that out. [37:45.640 --> 37:55.280] I had some guys call me when I was in North Carolina doing seminars and they had the U.S. [37:55.280 --> 38:00.000] Attorney coming after him because he filed liens against the public official. [38:00.000 --> 38:04.920] I said, well, how much were the liens, $10 trillion? [38:04.920 --> 38:12.320] Okay, what was the issue, traffic? [38:12.320 --> 38:16.360] I said, what were you thinking? [38:16.360 --> 38:24.360] You need what you asked for to have some basis in law. [38:24.360 --> 38:29.840] So find a case that false imprisonment, just do a search for false imprisonment. [38:29.840 --> 38:33.680] You'll find some cases on it and see what the juries award. [38:33.680 --> 38:39.600] You can say, Ty, false imprisonment, jury award, it won't take much to get some hits [38:39.600 --> 38:40.600] on that. [38:40.600 --> 38:43.680] But you were talking about a tort letter. [38:43.680 --> 38:49.920] Yeah, here's the other thing I'm worried about, what if they say, oh, you need $49 [38:49.920 --> 38:50.920] filing fee? [38:50.920 --> 38:54.760] Isn't there some time for the indigent people to come out? [38:54.760 --> 38:59.880] You can file an affidavit of inability to pay. [38:59.880 --> 39:02.520] And that's pretty common. [39:02.520 --> 39:08.960] One thing about an affidavit for inability to pay, the states may be different, but in [39:08.960 --> 39:17.760] the Fed, if you file an affidavit for inability to pay, that allows the judge to determine [39:17.760 --> 39:25.840] whether or not he or cases insufficient, unsupportable, or frivolous, and dismiss it [39:25.840 --> 39:27.840] to his ponte. [39:27.840 --> 39:35.000] Now, I haven't studied the authority myself, but I just had someone talking about how that [39:35.000 --> 39:39.720] could only be done if you were in prison. [39:39.720 --> 39:40.720] But I'm not sure. [39:40.720 --> 39:41.720] I'd have to check. [39:41.720 --> 39:49.000] But you definitely can file for an affidavit of inability to pay. [39:49.000 --> 39:55.480] And would I be out of line asking for about $50,000 as of what you start? [39:55.480 --> 39:59.440] Oh, that's jump change. [39:59.440 --> 40:03.760] You want to ask for a lot more net, but you want something to be able to say when they [40:03.760 --> 40:07.440] say where'd you come up with this number, you can say, here's precedent. [40:07.440 --> 40:11.200] Come up with the highest number you can support. [40:11.200 --> 40:14.000] Travis, how long were you held? [40:14.000 --> 40:21.800] Uh-oh, about 35 minutes in hand from the ground and cuffs. [40:21.800 --> 40:29.880] So $50,000 is probably a pretty good amount, and it'll be supported by Travis Atten, probably [40:29.880 --> 40:32.480] a number of other cases. [40:32.480 --> 40:35.040] So just do a search for... [40:35.040 --> 40:41.200] I've only been out of the hospital for six days, because I had to go to the ER because [40:41.200 --> 40:47.800] of a bicycle wreck, and I had broken three ribs, and this guy had assaulted me just only [40:47.800 --> 40:52.880] six days after and totally re-injured, and I'm having to do therapy. [40:52.880 --> 40:55.080] So I don't know, $100,000 or... [40:55.080 --> 40:57.320] Yeah, that may go more. [40:57.320 --> 41:00.400] Look at what it's going to cost for therapy, pain and suffering. [41:00.400 --> 41:03.040] I can't tell you off the cuff. [41:03.040 --> 41:04.040] You need to... [41:04.040 --> 41:05.520] In Arizona law... [41:05.520 --> 41:13.160] You say I can't ask for too much, $100,000 would be a relief or remedy, I would say. [41:13.160 --> 41:14.680] I'm trying to get two... [41:14.680 --> 41:16.000] I don't know. [41:16.000 --> 41:19.880] I don't know, what have juries awarded in Arizona? [41:19.880 --> 41:22.520] Gosh, I have no idea. [41:22.520 --> 41:26.520] I'm from Oregon, I'm not from here, this place. [41:26.520 --> 41:29.560] Well, just do an internet search. [41:29.560 --> 41:33.440] It probably takes five minutes. [41:33.440 --> 41:38.160] Do an inter-search, internet search, jury award, false imprisonment. [41:38.160 --> 41:41.720] You'll probably get 50 hits. [41:41.720 --> 41:48.600] Do an internet search, Tucson or Phoenix, jury award, false imprisonment. [41:48.600 --> 41:54.720] And you will get a good idea of what you can charge and be able to show standing. [41:54.720 --> 41:57.760] You just pull a number out of the air, maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. [41:57.760 --> 42:02.560] I don't know, but I can't say what would be a good number, I would go look and see what [42:02.560 --> 42:04.560] has been awarded. [42:04.560 --> 42:07.600] Okay, I'll do that. [42:07.600 --> 42:16.240] So when I go down Monday, if they tell me, oh, there is no waiver of this fee, if you're [42:16.240 --> 42:20.640] indigent, that's just too bad, so should I take that person's name down and say, you [42:20.640 --> 42:24.960] know, if I find out different, then I'm going to come back after you or... [42:24.960 --> 42:26.360] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute. [42:26.360 --> 42:35.120] The kinds of questions you're asking indicate that you don't know the really, really minor [42:35.120 --> 42:40.520] basics of how to file a lawsuit. [42:40.520 --> 42:43.640] Before you file a lawsuit, you need to do some research. [42:43.640 --> 42:45.640] Yeah, I want to get this... [42:45.640 --> 42:46.640] Go on. [42:46.640 --> 42:57.720] You know, that said, I'd like to know a little bit more about it, I mean, will it tell me [42:57.720 --> 43:10.120] how to sue a cop or a judge or will it teach me how to drive without a license, without [43:10.120 --> 43:12.560] a registration, without all that stuff? [43:12.560 --> 43:13.560] Will it teach me that? [43:13.560 --> 43:18.320] Well, nothing is magic. [43:18.320 --> 43:24.760] You have to dig it out, all that information's there, but this is what Eddie does on the [43:24.760 --> 43:31.560] Monday Night Show, it's he teaches you how to drive without a license, I have one, that's [43:31.560 --> 43:37.360] not a fight I want to have, driving without a license goes to a class B misdemeanor. [43:37.360 --> 43:44.000] So if you do that or nothing, you know, okay, then you have a reason to fight that, listen [43:44.000 --> 43:48.000] to Eddie's show, he'll tell you how to do that, but he's going to tell you something [43:48.000 --> 43:52.120] I'm going to tell you, and I'll get to that when I get back on the other side, Randy [43:52.120 --> 43:59.120] Kelton, we'll be right back. [43:59.120 --> 44:07.840] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, and I would like to invite you to come [44:07.840 --> 44:13.360] by our store at 1904 Waterloo Street Sweet D here in Austin, Texas, find brave new books [44:13.360 --> 44:16.800] and chase things to see all that fantastic health and wellness products with your very [44:16.800 --> 44:17.800] own eyes. [44:17.800 --> 44:22.640] To have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine, [44:22.640 --> 44:26.680] take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Emu Oil, [44:26.680 --> 44:34.800] Lotion Candles, Olive Oil Soaps, and Colloidal Silver and Gold, call 512-264-4043, or find [44:34.800 --> 44:40.800] us online at naturespureorganics.com, that's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:40.800 --> 44:47.520] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.520 --> 44:54.520] See you next time on naturespureorganics.com. [45:17.520 --> 45:18.520] Your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.520 --> 45:19.520] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:19.520 --> 45:20.520] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:20.520 --> 45:21.520] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:21.520 --> 45:22.520] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [45:22.520 --> 45:23.520] and practices that control our American courts. [45:23.520 --> 45:24.520] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, and more. [45:24.520 --> 45:25.520] Thanks for watching. [45:25.520 --> 45:51.520] We'll see you next time on Naturespureorganics.com. [45:55.520 --> 46:21.520] We'll see you next time on Naturespureorganics.com. [46:25.520 --> 46:51.520] Thank you. [46:51.520 --> 46:58.520] Thank you. [47:22.520 --> 47:23.520] Go ahead. [47:23.520 --> 47:27.520] Oh, what's the rules of court going to tell me? [47:27.520 --> 47:29.520] It's going to tell you the rules of court. [47:29.520 --> 47:31.520] You're asking the wrong questions. [47:31.520 --> 47:34.520] You're asking odd questions. [47:34.520 --> 47:39.520] The rules of court are going to tell you the rules of court. [47:39.520 --> 47:44.520] They're going to tell you how to file motions, when to file motions, how to eject emotions, [47:44.520 --> 47:50.520] rules of evidence to tell you how to present evidence, how to set foundation for evidence. [47:50.520 --> 47:53.520] These things you need to know, if you're going to take on... [47:53.520 --> 47:59.520] Well, Eddie Craig's program teach me all of this, because I really want to know. [47:59.520 --> 48:00.520] I want to be... [48:00.520 --> 48:01.520] Yes. [48:01.520 --> 48:03.520] This will make it hurt, really bad. [48:03.520 --> 48:11.520] If you really want to know, read the codes, then listen to these shows. [48:11.520 --> 48:15.520] We don't really teach the basic codes. [48:15.520 --> 48:17.520] Take us too long. [48:17.520 --> 48:22.520] We need you to do a little bit of the basics. [48:22.520 --> 48:26.520] And since you don't have the money, it'd be best if you got jurisdictionary. [48:26.520 --> 48:29.520] That's the best value for the buck. [48:29.520 --> 48:34.520] But if you don't have $250, then read the rules of court. [48:34.520 --> 48:36.520] That's the best thing you can do. [48:36.520 --> 48:38.520] The rules of court? [48:38.520 --> 48:39.520] Read that? [48:39.520 --> 48:40.520] Is that an online thing? [48:40.520 --> 48:41.520] I can read? [48:41.520 --> 48:48.520] Yeah, you just look up the Arizona rules of civil procedure. [48:48.520 --> 48:53.520] You're going to file a civil suit, so look up the rules of civil procedure. [48:53.520 --> 48:55.520] And go through them. [48:55.520 --> 48:58.520] What you'll find going through them is... [48:58.520 --> 49:01.520] There's a lot of them there, but most of them you don't care about. [49:01.520 --> 49:07.520] They're really arcane stuff that won't be something oddball you'll never get to. [49:07.520 --> 49:12.520] So you can actually go through them relatively quickly. [49:12.520 --> 49:16.520] And I always suggest you read through the rules. [49:16.520 --> 49:17.520] Just read through them. [49:17.520 --> 49:18.520] Don't try to understand them. [49:18.520 --> 49:19.520] Just read them. [49:19.520 --> 49:23.520] And then go back and read through them again. [49:23.520 --> 49:26.520] You'll find it's... [49:26.520 --> 49:32.520] Yes, you'll find it's interesting because when you read through it the second time, [49:32.520 --> 49:35.520] then you start stitching the codes together. [49:35.520 --> 49:41.520] You're reading a code in the front and the second reading you realize what it means [49:41.520 --> 49:46.520] because it refers to something deeper down in the code that now you've already read it. [49:46.520 --> 49:48.520] Now you know what it refers to. [49:48.520 --> 49:50.520] You start stitching these pieces together. [49:50.520 --> 49:54.520] It starts making sense to you. [49:54.520 --> 49:58.520] You need that as a basis. [49:58.520 --> 50:03.520] Then we can talk about how to take these guys on. [50:03.520 --> 50:08.520] Right now you're asking questions that... [50:08.520 --> 50:09.520] What would you recommend? [50:09.520 --> 50:16.520] Should I get Eddie Craig's $250 program? [50:16.520 --> 50:17.520] Okay. [50:17.520 --> 50:18.520] Eddie's going to... [50:18.520 --> 50:20.520] It depends on what you want to do. [50:20.520 --> 50:27.520] If you want the program for the purpose of filing a civil lawsuit, no. [50:27.520 --> 50:37.520] If you want the program to work out how to drive without a driver's license, yes. [50:37.520 --> 50:39.520] It depends on what your purpose is. [50:39.520 --> 50:40.520] Pretty good. [50:40.520 --> 50:41.520] What did we call that again? [50:41.520 --> 50:42.520] We'll drive without a license. [50:42.520 --> 50:44.520] That's what I want to learn, especially. [50:44.520 --> 50:45.520] Okay. [50:45.520 --> 50:48.520] Get Eddie's course. [50:48.520 --> 50:50.520] And what is it called again? [50:50.520 --> 50:51.520] Eddie's... [50:51.520 --> 50:52.520] Which course? [50:52.520 --> 50:56.520] Eddie's traffic seminar. [50:56.520 --> 50:57.520] What is it called? [50:57.520 --> 51:01.520] His book is the law and the lie. [51:01.520 --> 51:02.520] What is it? [51:02.520 --> 51:03.520] The law and the lie? [51:03.520 --> 51:04.520] Whatever. [51:04.520 --> 51:05.520] Look on there. [51:05.520 --> 51:06.520] You'll see a link to his... [51:06.520 --> 51:09.520] It's a long one that costs $250. [51:09.520 --> 51:11.520] Yeah, I think so. [51:11.520 --> 51:15.520] I think jurisdictionary costs $275. [51:15.520 --> 51:21.520] Overall, jurisdictionary would be the primer. [51:21.520 --> 51:25.520] Then you'll understand how the legal system works. [51:25.520 --> 51:32.520] And then when you talk to Eddie about something as specific as traffic, you'll better understand [51:32.520 --> 51:39.520] how to implement the remedies that he talks about. [51:39.520 --> 51:40.520] Okay. [51:40.520 --> 51:49.520] Eddie's not quite as patient with me, so you need to have some background when you go talk to him. [51:49.520 --> 51:50.520] Okay. [51:50.520 --> 51:52.520] All right. [51:52.520 --> 51:54.520] Thank you all. [51:54.520 --> 51:57.520] Yeah, if you can tell us more about these programs. [51:57.520 --> 51:58.520] I mean, just advertise. [51:58.520 --> 52:00.520] You're trying to get donations. [52:00.520 --> 52:04.520] I mean, you can sell these things. [52:04.520 --> 52:06.520] Get more people interested. [52:06.520 --> 52:11.520] Tell more people what different things they can do or if you study. [52:11.520 --> 52:12.520] I don't know. [52:12.520 --> 52:14.520] It's just a recommendation. [52:14.520 --> 52:16.520] But anyway, thanks, guys. [52:16.520 --> 52:17.520] Okay. [52:17.520 --> 52:18.520] Thank you, Barrett. [52:18.520 --> 52:19.520] Okay. [52:19.520 --> 52:24.520] Now we're going to go to Mauricio in Texas. [52:24.520 --> 52:26.520] Hello, Martin. [52:26.520 --> 52:27.520] Hear me? [52:27.520 --> 52:30.520] Should I call you Mauricio or Maurice? [52:30.520 --> 52:34.520] Either one's more comfortable before you're ending. [52:34.520 --> 52:35.520] Okay. [52:35.520 --> 52:38.520] What do you have for us today? [52:38.520 --> 52:45.520] I have a quick question, but I know how you like the story that leads up to the question. [52:45.520 --> 52:53.520] So let's see here on January 6th, I was pulled over Monard County. [52:53.520 --> 52:57.520] I wound up staying 20 hours in jail when I came out. [52:57.520 --> 53:02.520] I noticed that I had received four different moving violations. [53:02.520 --> 53:04.520] Mentioned that I was going to fight them. [53:04.520 --> 53:10.520] The uniformed officer that was there told me to just pay the effing ticket. [53:10.520 --> 53:13.520] I looked at the clerk, asked him what he said again. [53:13.520 --> 53:15.520] He said it again. [53:15.520 --> 53:17.520] I went ahead and took off. [53:17.520 --> 53:22.520] That way I could later stop being at her. [53:22.520 --> 53:23.520] I went over there. [53:23.520 --> 53:27.520] I turned in Eddie's constitutional challenge. [53:27.520 --> 53:32.520] Took off maybe a month later. [53:32.520 --> 53:38.520] I received notice that I have been signed up for bench trial. [53:38.520 --> 53:40.520] No motions hearing, nothing like that. [53:40.520 --> 53:42.520] Just bench trial by judge. [53:42.520 --> 53:46.520] So I went ahead and I sent them a letter back. [53:46.520 --> 53:53.520] And since it's been a copy to the county attorney, I put him in the letter too. [53:53.520 --> 53:56.520] I wrote to the judge and county attorney of death court. [53:56.520 --> 53:58.520] I'm Mauricio. [53:58.520 --> 54:08.520] The responded in this matter did not request nor do I consent to a bench trial set by judge hearing on the 19th of April. [54:08.520 --> 54:13.520] I sent it signed. That way I could know that they got it first hand. [54:13.520 --> 54:16.520] I appreciate my paper that they signed for it. [54:16.520 --> 54:19.520] The judge signed for it himself actually. [54:19.520 --> 54:23.520] And I have yet to hear anything from them. [54:23.520 --> 54:29.520] So I guess my question is for safety things, should I still show up on the 19th? [54:29.520 --> 54:31.520] Absolutely. [54:31.520 --> 54:32.520] Okay. [54:32.520 --> 54:35.520] Always show up. [54:35.520 --> 54:41.520] They're just waiting for you not to show up so they can issue a failure to appear. [54:41.520 --> 54:44.520] Show up with criminal complaints. [54:44.520 --> 54:55.520] Show up with a criminal complaint against that police officer for obstruction. [54:55.520 --> 55:04.520] Because when you gave notice to the clerk that you intended to fight the tickets, [55:04.520 --> 55:08.520] he ordered you not to fight the tickets. [55:08.520 --> 55:13.520] When he did that, he was prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [55:13.520 --> 55:16.520] Is this the officer that arrested you? [55:16.520 --> 55:19.520] No, sir. It was the next day. [55:19.520 --> 55:24.520] And he seemed like he was more of a deputy that hung out at the office. [55:24.520 --> 55:25.520] He was an older man. [55:25.520 --> 55:28.520] He had his best wearing a polo shirt. [55:28.520 --> 55:33.520] But he did have his handgun on his knife. [55:33.520 --> 55:37.520] Then file against him. [55:37.520 --> 55:42.520] Send me an email. I'll send you a copy of a T-close complaint. [55:42.520 --> 55:43.520] Okay. [55:43.520 --> 55:52.520] And file against him for using profanity and for threatening you in order to deny you access to the courts. [55:52.520 --> 55:57.520] While he was prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [55:57.520 --> 56:00.520] That'll jerk a knot in his shorts. [56:00.520 --> 56:02.520] That was great. [56:02.520 --> 56:04.520] Now I did ask him for his name. [56:04.520 --> 56:07.520] And he told me it was none of my dot darn business. [56:07.520 --> 56:10.520] But of course, he used the other terminology. [56:10.520 --> 56:11.520] Okay. Well, that'll work. [56:11.520 --> 56:13.520] I didn't know his name. [56:13.520 --> 56:16.520] You don't need to know his name. [56:16.520 --> 56:21.520] I was in Belden, Texas, just south of Temple. [56:21.520 --> 56:25.520] And I went to the district attorney to file some complaints. [56:25.520 --> 56:30.520] And this investigator threw me out of the courthouse. [56:30.520 --> 56:34.520] He physically drugged me down the stairs and showed me out the door. [56:34.520 --> 56:37.520] So I called 911. [56:37.520 --> 56:42.520] And the dispatcher asked me who was this. [56:42.520 --> 56:43.520] I don't know who it was. [56:43.520 --> 56:48.520] It was some investigator for the district attorney. [56:48.520 --> 56:49.520] What did he look like? [56:49.520 --> 56:51.520] Big fat guy. [56:51.520 --> 56:54.520] White shirt, brown pants. [56:54.520 --> 56:57.520] So they said two officers out there. [56:57.520 --> 57:02.520] And this investigator standing right by the door when these cops get there. [57:02.520 --> 57:05.520] And they asked him, well, who was it that threw you out of the courtroom? [57:05.520 --> 57:09.520] And I pointed, I'm three feet from him and I pointed right at him. [57:09.520 --> 57:11.520] That one right there and a fat one. [57:11.520 --> 57:12.520] What's his name? [57:12.520 --> 57:13.520] I don't know. [57:13.520 --> 57:14.520] He wouldn't tell me. [57:14.520 --> 57:15.520] You can tell. [57:15.520 --> 57:16.520] See how fat he is? [57:16.520 --> 57:18.520] That's the guy. [57:18.520 --> 57:26.520] The guy looked like he was contemplating on whether or not he could shoot me and get away with it. [57:26.520 --> 57:29.520] They don't want to tell you who they are. [57:29.520 --> 57:30.520] Wonderful. [57:30.520 --> 57:31.520] That'll work. [57:31.520 --> 57:36.520] You filed a complaint against an unknown officer. [57:36.520 --> 57:46.520] And then when the DA doesn't locate this officer and make a, convert your complaint into an [57:46.520 --> 57:53.520] information and then give it to the grand jury, if I'll criminal charges against the DA and [57:53.520 --> 57:57.520] really get them hopping up and down. [57:57.520 --> 58:06.520] You take the criminal complaints against the DA to the judge who's hearing the tickets. [58:06.520 --> 58:10.520] And certainly when you go for this hearing, you take criminal complaints. [58:10.520 --> 58:13.520] Maybe this guy will be there. [58:13.520 --> 58:14.520] Yeah. [58:14.520 --> 58:17.520] Oh, wait a minute. [58:17.520 --> 58:21.520] Did he say none of your GD business? [58:21.520 --> 58:23.520] Yeah. [58:23.520 --> 58:26.520] Oh, let me tell you what I did once. [58:26.520 --> 58:30.520] I sued Denton County for $11 million. [58:30.520 --> 58:34.520] I sued 24 litigants. [58:34.520 --> 58:39.520] The 13th litigant was my worst nightmare. [58:39.520 --> 58:43.520] I'll address this when we get back on the other side. [58:43.520 --> 58:45.520] This was so much fun. [58:45.520 --> 58:50.520] Randy Calhoun rule of law radio, we'll be right back. [58:50.520 --> 58:55.520] If you'd like to make more definite progress in your walk with God, Bibles for America [58:55.520 --> 59:00.520] is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.520 --> 59:05.520] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.520 --> 59:06.520] today. [59:06.520 --> 59:10.520] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.520 --> 59:13.520] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.520 --> 59:18.520] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.520 --> 59:23.520] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:23.520 --> 59:27.520] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.520 --> 59:33.520] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:33.520 --> 59:40.520] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.520 --> 59:44.520] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.520 --> 59:49.520] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:14.520 --> 01:00:29.520] Today in history, the year 1945, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt passes away in office. [01:00:29.520 --> 01:00:33.520] Vice President Harry Truman became president in Roosevelt's stead. [01:00:33.520 --> 01:00:36.520] Today in history. [01:00:36.520 --> 01:00:41.520] In recent news, Chinese President Xi Jinping placed a call by request of and to President [01:00:41.520 --> 01:00:45.520] Donald Trump earlier Tuesday to discuss the heated buildup and militarization of the Korean [01:00:45.520 --> 01:00:46.520] Peninsula. [01:00:46.520 --> 01:00:50.520] Over the weekend, the US redirected a naval strike group to the western Pacific Ocean [01:00:50.520 --> 01:00:54.520] instead of making a port visit to Australia with the word of Japanese ships meeting up [01:00:54.520 --> 01:00:55.520] with the strike group. [01:00:55.520 --> 01:00:59.520] And though the reason for doing so hasn't been revealed by President Trump or the DoD, [01:00:59.520 --> 01:01:04.520] it seems clear that the US is responding to nearly half a dozen nuclear tests and multiple [01:01:04.520 --> 01:01:08.520] missile launches that have been illegally conducted by North Korea over the years. [01:01:08.520 --> 01:01:11.520] North Korea is claiming self-defense. [01:01:11.520 --> 01:01:15.520] Their foreign minister was quoted as saying early Sunday that what happened in Syria once [01:01:15.520 --> 01:01:20.520] again taught a bitter lesson that one can defend oneself from the imperialistic aggression [01:01:20.520 --> 01:01:22.520] only when one has one strength. [01:01:22.520 --> 01:01:26.520] Any aggression should be countered with force only and we are entirely just when we have [01:01:26.520 --> 01:01:28.520] bolstered our nuclear force remarkably. [01:01:28.520 --> 01:01:32.520] Just last week, President Xi Jinping and President Trump held face-to-face talks in [01:01:32.520 --> 01:01:36.520] Florida where the issue of North Korea, according to Trump, was discussed. [01:01:36.520 --> 01:01:41.520] The People's Daily, the official Communist Party mouthpiece, said Xi Jinping stressed that [01:01:41.520 --> 01:01:46.520] China insists on realizing the goal of denuclearization of the peninsula, insist on maintaining peace [01:01:46.520 --> 01:01:51.520] and stability on the peninsula, advocates resolving the problem through peaceful means, [01:01:51.520 --> 01:01:55.520] and is willing to maintain communication and coordination with the US. [01:01:55.520 --> 01:01:58.520] The call between leaders was also made a day after Trump tweeted, [01:01:58.520 --> 01:02:00.520] North Korea is looking for trouble. [01:02:00.520 --> 01:02:02.520] If China decides to help, that would be great. [01:02:02.520 --> 01:02:05.520] If not, we will solve the problem without them. [01:02:05.520 --> 01:02:09.520] North Korean state media did warn yesterday that the revolutionary strong army is keenly [01:02:09.520 --> 01:02:15.520] watching every move by US elements with their nuclear sites focused on the US invasionary bases, [01:02:15.520 --> 01:02:20.520] not only in South Korea and in the Pacific Operation Theater, but also in the US mainland. [01:02:20.520 --> 01:02:24.520] To up the ante, this Saturday, North Korea is expected to hold a huge military parade [01:02:24.520 --> 01:02:28.520] to celebrate the 105th birthday of its founding president, Kim Sung. [01:02:28.520 --> 01:02:32.520] And with the 85th anniversary of the creation of the Korean People's Army on April 25th, [01:02:32.520 --> 01:02:36.520] the expected customary military parade in the capital city is predictable. [01:02:36.520 --> 01:02:41.520] Let's just hope and pray that people consider the wise words of Chinese Foreign Minister, [01:02:41.520 --> 01:02:46.520] spokesman Liu Kang, all relevant parties should exercise restraint and keep calm, [01:02:46.520 --> 01:02:51.520] ease tension instead of provoking each other and adding fuel to the fire. [01:02:51.520 --> 01:03:03.520] This was Brooke Rody with your vote-out for April 12th, 2017. [01:03:21.520 --> 01:03:31.520] Okay, we are Randy Kelton with Law Radio. [01:03:31.520 --> 01:03:38.520] And one of my rules is never interfere with somebody when they're screwing up. [01:03:38.520 --> 01:03:46.520] So you ask this guy what his name was, and he said his name was none of your G.D. business. [01:03:46.520 --> 01:03:52.520] Oh, I would have so much fun with that. [01:03:52.520 --> 01:03:58.520] So you file official oppression against none of your G.D. business. [01:03:58.520 --> 01:04:04.520] When I filed suit in Denton County, I was at the sheriff's department, [01:04:04.520 --> 01:04:10.520] tried to get some information and wound up with about a dozen officers all around me. [01:04:10.520 --> 01:04:17.520] And they're getting pretty aggressive, and I'm sitting down. [01:04:17.520 --> 01:04:19.520] I don't want to get up and look aggressive. [01:04:19.520 --> 01:04:23.520] And this one guy stepped up over me and said something to me. [01:04:23.520 --> 01:04:25.520] And I said, who the heck are you? [01:04:25.520 --> 01:04:31.520] He leaned over and said, I'm your worst nightmare. [01:04:31.520 --> 01:04:38.520] And I sat back and chuckled and said, you are my worst nightmare. [01:04:38.520 --> 01:04:40.520] And you know what my nightmares are. [01:04:40.520 --> 01:04:43.520] Say, look, bubba, that didn't come out too good. [01:04:43.520 --> 01:04:46.520] What you need to do is get you a rag and tie it around your head [01:04:46.520 --> 01:04:52.520] and kind of drop your lip down and say, oh, what a nightmare. [01:04:52.520 --> 01:04:55.520] Well, these other guys kind of shuffled him off. [01:04:55.520 --> 01:04:59.520] I spent two months trying to find out who he was. [01:04:59.520 --> 01:05:04.520] The major who was standing there, two lieutenants and a captain, [01:05:04.520 --> 01:05:09.520] refused to tell me, the sheriff refused to tell me. [01:05:09.520 --> 01:05:13.520] So I sued my worst nightmare. [01:05:13.520 --> 01:05:20.520] And then I got the transcripts where the county commissioners court [01:05:20.520 --> 01:05:26.520] appointed the district attorney to represent my case. [01:05:26.520 --> 01:05:34.520] And the county judge said, Dick Army, his father was a congressman, [01:05:34.520 --> 01:05:39.520] he said, who is this my worst nightmare? [01:05:39.520 --> 01:05:41.520] Right out of the transcripts. [01:05:41.520 --> 01:05:45.520] And the lawyer said, well, apparently someone introduced himself [01:05:45.520 --> 01:05:49.520] to Mr. Kelton as his worst nightmare. [01:05:49.520 --> 01:05:51.520] And the judge said, yes. [01:05:51.520 --> 01:05:57.520] And I have a bone to pick with him. [01:05:57.520 --> 01:06:04.520] So I suggest that when you go to this hearing that you tell the judge [01:06:04.520 --> 01:06:08.520] you have a document you'd like to present to the court, [01:06:08.520 --> 01:06:14.520] you present a verified criminal affidavit accusing none of your [01:06:14.520 --> 01:06:22.520] GED business of official oppression, you might do two or three, obstruction of justice. [01:06:22.520 --> 01:06:25.520] That's 3,606 penal code. [01:06:25.520 --> 01:06:30.520] And maybe even witness tampering, 3,605. [01:06:30.520 --> 01:06:32.520] Just make them all up. [01:06:32.520 --> 01:06:34.520] Send me an email. [01:06:34.520 --> 01:06:37.520] I have blank forms. [01:06:37.520 --> 01:06:42.520] I've got filed a bunch of those so I can pull out one of mine where I've already filed them. [01:06:42.520 --> 01:06:45.520] I'll just change the details a little. [01:06:45.520 --> 01:06:48.520] Take them to a notary, sign them in front of a notary. [01:06:48.520 --> 01:06:52.520] And then give them to the judge. [01:06:52.520 --> 01:06:56.520] You invoke the judge's duty as a magistrate. [01:06:56.520 --> 01:07:02.520] If he don't perform his duty, 3903 official oppressions across a misdemeanor, [01:07:02.520 --> 01:07:05.520] failure to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:07:05.520 --> 01:07:07.520] Sound like fun? [01:07:07.520 --> 01:07:09.520] I was like a plan. [01:07:09.520 --> 01:07:12.520] Now I'm worried a little bit about my safety. [01:07:12.520 --> 01:07:16.520] There's only 2,000 people in the whole county and he's the only JP out there. [01:07:16.520 --> 01:07:18.520] Hold on. [01:07:18.520 --> 01:07:24.520] What happens is when you start going after the higher levels, [01:07:24.520 --> 01:07:28.520] now if you're concerned about your safety, [01:07:28.520 --> 01:07:34.520] then go ahead and send the complaint either to the district attorney [01:07:34.520 --> 01:07:39.520] or they're going to have a district judge send it to the district judge. [01:07:39.520 --> 01:07:47.520] You send the complaint to the district judge against none of your GD business. [01:07:47.520 --> 01:07:55.520] That district judge is going to want to know what in the heck is going on here. [01:07:55.520 --> 01:07:59.520] Somebody's going to be up on a carpet. [01:07:59.520 --> 01:08:06.520] These JP's and municipal court judges, they don't have to be lawyers [01:08:06.520 --> 01:08:10.520] and their only purpose is to collect money. [01:08:10.520 --> 01:08:15.520] So they tend to be somewhat careless and a bit more outrageous. [01:08:15.520 --> 01:08:20.520] But the district judge, he lives in a whole other house. [01:08:20.520 --> 01:08:26.520] Just about every lawyer in the county would like to be sitting in his place. [01:08:26.520 --> 01:08:33.520] He knows that and he does higher level work. [01:08:33.520 --> 01:08:37.520] He's going to have little patience for this kind of nonsense [01:08:37.520 --> 01:08:41.520] and the district attorney is going to have little patience for this, [01:08:41.520 --> 01:08:46.520] especially when that judge fails to hold an examining trial [01:08:46.520 --> 01:08:54.520] and then you file criminal charges against the district judge with the prosecuting attorney. [01:08:54.520 --> 01:09:00.520] Once you've done that, then if an officer says anything to you, [01:09:00.520 --> 01:09:03.520] you file a criminal complaint against the district judge, [01:09:03.520 --> 01:09:09.520] accuse the district judge of sending that officer out to harass you [01:09:09.520 --> 01:09:14.520] in retaliation for you filing complaints against him. [01:09:14.520 --> 01:09:18.520] You want to see these guys start tippy-toeing? [01:09:18.520 --> 01:09:24.520] I am next to my house, I live in a small town right next to City Hall. [01:09:24.520 --> 01:09:30.520] I'm doing some plastic welding on a big tank and we had a fire ban on [01:09:30.520 --> 01:09:33.520] and this new cop didn't know who I was, came up and said, [01:09:33.520 --> 01:09:37.520] sir, sir, and I turned around, yes, you can't have that open plane. [01:09:37.520 --> 01:09:41.520] And I held up this little propane torch and said, sure can, look, nothing to it. [01:09:41.520 --> 01:09:44.520] Oh, no, no, you don't understand, we have a fire ban. [01:09:44.520 --> 01:09:46.520] Do you see this equipment here? [01:09:46.520 --> 01:09:48.520] I could not run the fire department. [01:09:48.520 --> 01:09:51.520] I know this, sir, but you can't have that open plane. [01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:54.520] Wait a minute, you're joshing me, right? [01:09:54.520 --> 01:09:55.520] You're just joking. [01:09:55.520 --> 01:09:57.520] No, sir, I'm not joking. [01:09:57.520 --> 01:09:59.520] Wait a minute. [01:09:59.520 --> 01:10:04.520] That John Faustel, that district judge, that no good rotten scoundrel, [01:10:04.520 --> 01:10:07.520] he sent you down here to harass me, didn't he? [01:10:07.520 --> 01:10:12.520] Just because I filed one crummy little criminal complaint against him with the attorney general, [01:10:12.520 --> 01:10:14.520] he sent you down here, didn't he? [01:10:14.520 --> 01:10:17.520] This cop holds up both hands with his palms out, [01:10:17.520 --> 01:10:22.520] takes a step backward and said, one moment, sir, [01:10:22.520 --> 01:10:24.520] takes out his cell phone, dials it. [01:10:24.520 --> 01:10:28.520] About 30 seconds, the chief of police stepped out of city hall, [01:10:28.520 --> 01:10:33.520] looked across and said, Randy, what are you doing to my new officer? [01:10:33.520 --> 01:10:37.520] I said, oh, Tom, I was just jerking his chain. [01:10:37.520 --> 01:10:45.520] And this cop said, oh, God, I saw my whole career pass before my eyes. [01:10:45.520 --> 01:10:50.520] Listen, that should teach us something really important. [01:10:50.520 --> 01:10:57.520] These cops are terrified of those judges, especially the district judge. [01:10:57.520 --> 01:11:02.520] And what would happen if you accused the district judge of doing something [01:11:02.520 --> 01:11:06.520] that he had nothing to do with? [01:11:06.520 --> 01:11:12.520] He is going to be righteously indignant, [01:11:12.520 --> 01:11:18.520] and he's going to land on this cop like a ton of bricks [01:11:18.520 --> 01:11:24.520] that I cannot get pulled over in the county I live in. [01:11:24.520 --> 01:11:27.520] The cops see me, they go the other way. [01:11:27.520 --> 01:11:33.520] So if you're concerned about them giving you any harassment, [01:11:33.520 --> 01:11:39.520] then get a complaint to the district judge. [01:11:39.520 --> 01:11:43.520] Long as you've got it to him, they say one word to you, [01:11:43.520 --> 01:11:46.520] any policeman say a word to you, you accuse the district judge [01:11:46.520 --> 01:11:50.520] of sending that person down to threaten and intimidate you [01:11:50.520 --> 01:11:55.520] in order to prevent you from pursuing criminal complaints against this officer. [01:11:55.520 --> 01:12:00.520] The district judge will go ballistic. [01:12:00.520 --> 01:12:03.520] And then all of a sudden when you pull in the county, [01:12:03.520 --> 01:12:05.520] all these cops are going to be falling all over themselves [01:12:05.520 --> 01:12:10.520] trying to be somewhere that you're not. [01:12:10.520 --> 01:12:12.520] Yeah. [01:12:12.520 --> 01:12:13.520] Thank you. [01:12:13.520 --> 01:12:22.520] When I do show up on Wednesday, [01:12:22.520 --> 01:12:25.520] and I go through the procedures, more than likely I'm going to be found guilty, [01:12:25.520 --> 01:12:28.520] especially if it's just the judge by himself. [01:12:28.520 --> 01:12:31.520] Of course, I'll put in for my notice of appeal. [01:12:31.520 --> 01:12:35.520] But should I be getting this guy with bar grievances? [01:12:35.520 --> 01:12:37.520] I mean, I chose. [01:12:37.520 --> 01:12:40.520] Okay, don't tell them. [01:12:40.520 --> 01:12:41.520] Okay. [01:12:41.520 --> 01:12:42.520] Absolutely. [01:12:42.520 --> 01:12:45.520] If you'll send me an email, I'll send you. [01:12:45.520 --> 01:12:52.520] I've got some fill-in-the-blank PDFs of bar grievance and judicic conduct complaints. [01:12:52.520 --> 01:12:56.520] I think the Judicic Conduct Commission actually wants you to use the one on their site, [01:12:56.520 --> 01:12:59.520] but I don't really care what they want. [01:12:59.520 --> 01:13:00.520] I'll send those to you. [01:13:00.520 --> 01:13:06.520] I've got a T-close complaint to file against the police officer. [01:13:06.520 --> 01:13:08.520] And I can send you some criminal complaints. [01:13:08.520 --> 01:13:13.520] I'll send you some samples of some complaints that I've written. [01:13:13.520 --> 01:13:16.520] So you'll see how to write them. [01:13:16.520 --> 01:13:18.520] It's great fun. [01:13:18.520 --> 01:13:20.520] Yes, sir. [01:13:20.520 --> 01:13:26.520] Have you ever seen a public official do a chicken dance? [01:13:26.520 --> 01:13:28.520] Believe it or not, yes, I have, actually. [01:13:28.520 --> 01:13:31.520] I once bought an ordinance one time. [01:13:31.520 --> 01:13:36.520] They called me the day before I was supposed to show up to jury trial to notify me. [01:13:36.520 --> 01:13:41.520] This is after I had the city attorney dismissed and another one came in. [01:13:41.520 --> 01:13:46.520] Mr. Garza, there's absolutely no reason for you to show up to court today. [01:13:46.520 --> 01:13:48.520] The case has been dismissed. [01:13:48.520 --> 01:13:53.520] According to our paperwork, we went ahead and said that you were under complete compliance. [01:13:53.520 --> 01:13:59.520] So I've got them on the ordinance. [01:13:59.520 --> 01:14:04.520] This will be the first real hard fight that I have with the traffic. [01:14:04.520 --> 01:14:11.520] I've won a couple of them with traffic, but this one's the first one where I'm out of my comfort element [01:14:11.520 --> 01:14:16.520] because of the size of the town and the amount of corruption I've obviously been dealing with. [01:14:16.520 --> 01:14:25.520] Oh, when you start going after the district judge, everybody's going to start shaking in their boots. [01:14:25.520 --> 01:14:27.520] That's awesome. [01:14:27.520 --> 01:14:32.520] Yes, this is the way that works, especially in a small town. [01:14:32.520 --> 01:14:41.520] If you file against the accused officer, the accused district judge is sending this officer out there, [01:14:41.520 --> 01:14:48.520] he's probably going to know the judge personally and the judge will know him personally. [01:14:48.520 --> 01:14:52.520] That'll make it even worse for him. [01:14:52.520 --> 01:14:57.520] I guarantee you these guys, they will really get nervous. [01:14:57.520 --> 01:15:00.520] That's what makes you so powerful. [01:15:00.520 --> 01:15:05.520] That's why on a military base, we're so afraid of civilians. [01:15:05.520 --> 01:15:11.520] So you don't care who you are, you can chew out anybody he wants to. [01:15:11.520 --> 01:15:18.520] The last thing this officer wants is for that district judge to be accused of doing something he didn't do, [01:15:18.520 --> 01:15:22.520] and the officer's the reason for it. [01:15:22.520 --> 01:15:27.520] So that I do, I like to do that kind of thing early. [01:15:27.520 --> 01:15:30.520] That backs all these guys off. [01:15:30.520 --> 01:15:39.520] But especially if you file a criminal complaint against none of your GD business. [01:15:39.520 --> 01:15:43.520] Oh, that would be so much fun. [01:15:43.520 --> 01:15:49.520] I do intend to, trust me, I will be emailing you either later tonight or in the morning, [01:15:49.520 --> 01:15:54.520] but we will continue this conversation without a chat over that. [01:15:54.520 --> 01:16:01.520] Okay, just imagine if you're the district judge and you read this complaint. [01:16:01.520 --> 01:16:06.520] Say what? [01:16:06.520 --> 01:16:10.520] Oh, that would be, that's just too much fun. [01:16:10.520 --> 01:16:15.520] I'll be honest, I wish I was a fly on the wall when the JP opened up that letter [01:16:15.520 --> 01:16:21.520] and read my response with a copy of the letter they sent me. [01:16:21.520 --> 01:16:27.520] Oh, what were you, were you, were you charged under transportation code? [01:16:27.520 --> 01:16:29.520] Yes, sir. [01:16:29.520 --> 01:16:31.520] Oh, good. [01:16:31.520 --> 01:16:39.520] Uh, send me an email, I will send you my challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [01:16:39.520 --> 01:16:43.520] I, I, I put one in, the constitutional challenge. [01:16:43.520 --> 01:16:47.520] Oh, this one's not a constitutional challenge. [01:16:47.520 --> 01:16:49.520] Oh, okay, okay. [01:16:49.520 --> 01:16:52.520] This one's a statutory challenge. [01:16:52.520 --> 01:16:54.520] Oh. [01:16:54.520 --> 01:17:20.520] See, we will walk right down their codes. [01:17:20.520 --> 01:17:46.520] How can I help logos? [01:17:46.520 --> 01:17:48.520] No. [01:17:48.520 --> 01:17:50.520] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.520 --> 01:17:55.520] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:17:55.520 --> 01:17:56.520] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.520 --> 01:17:58.520] We are logos. [01:17:58.520 --> 01:18:00.520] Happy holidays, logos. [01:18:00.520 --> 01:18:05.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.520 --> 01:18:09.520] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Merris Proven Method. [01:18:09.520 --> 01:18:14.520] Michael Merris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:18:14.520 --> 01:18:20.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:18:20.520 --> 01:18:24.520] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:18:24.520 --> 01:18:26.520] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:18:26.520 --> 01:18:29.520] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:18:29.520 --> 01:18:33.520] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:18:33.520 --> 01:18:38.520] The Michael Merris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.520 --> 01:18:41.520] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.520 --> 01:18:49.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.520 --> 01:19:00.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.520 --> 01:19:11.520] This is the Logos Radio with Net Radio with Net Radio. [01:19:11.520 --> 01:19:33.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Mauricio in Texas. [01:19:33.520 --> 01:19:37.520] Okay, do you have anything else for us, Mauricio? [01:19:37.520 --> 01:19:43.520] No, sir. I appreciate all the advice. I'll email you and to all the listeners, please. [01:19:43.520 --> 01:19:46.520] They're having their fundraisers donate to these guys. [01:19:46.520 --> 01:19:49.520] I know Randy could be with a little bit for his beer fund. [01:19:49.520 --> 01:19:51.520] Oh, yeah. [01:19:51.520 --> 01:19:57.520] My beer fund is so pitiful. [01:19:57.520 --> 01:20:04.520] But then I'm getting old and I'm down to half a beer, so I guess that kind of makes up for it. [01:20:04.520 --> 01:20:08.520] I drink half a beer and fall asleep. [01:20:08.520 --> 01:20:12.520] Life is tough when you get old. [01:20:12.520 --> 01:20:15.520] Amen. [01:20:15.520 --> 01:20:22.520] Okay, keep us up to date on how this goes. [01:20:22.520 --> 01:20:28.520] And be careful. Try not to have too much fun. [01:20:28.520 --> 01:20:30.520] Yes, sir. [01:20:30.520 --> 01:20:37.520] Thank you, Mauricio. Okay, now we're going to Darren in Pennsylvania. [01:20:37.520 --> 01:20:41.520] Hello, Darren. What do you have for us today? [01:20:41.520 --> 01:20:44.520] Well, I just have a couple of questions for you. [01:20:44.520 --> 01:20:48.520] I recently started listening to your shows and I'm not fully up to speed, [01:20:48.520 --> 01:20:54.520] but you mentioned bar grievances a lot, and I wanted to know if you could give me just out of your own opinion [01:20:54.520 --> 01:20:56.520] what the topic of bar grievances is. [01:20:56.520 --> 01:21:00.520] Oh, one of my favorite subjects. [01:21:00.520 --> 01:21:08.520] One of the things we try to do here is teach people how to be the pro-save from hell. [01:21:08.520 --> 01:21:14.520] And bar grievances is about the most powerful tool you have. [01:21:14.520 --> 01:21:19.520] Yeah, I'm not beginning to wicked women attorneys in two different matters, [01:21:19.520 --> 01:21:25.520] and they're doing all kinds of stuff, and so I just want to be on the attack. [01:21:25.520 --> 01:21:28.520] Okay, there's a strategy to this. [01:21:28.520 --> 01:21:36.520] When you write a bar grievance, only complain about one thing per grievance, [01:21:36.520 --> 01:21:39.520] send them at least a week apart. [01:21:39.520 --> 01:21:46.520] Okay, if you file a bar grievance against an attorney in Pennsylvania, [01:21:46.520 --> 01:21:52.520] the Pennsylvania bar will get that grievance and throw it in the trash, [01:21:52.520 --> 01:21:56.520] and they will send you a letter back saying we examined into your accusation, [01:21:56.520 --> 01:21:59.520] find it does not rise to the level of misconduct. [01:21:59.520 --> 01:22:03.520] And that's a good thing. [01:22:03.520 --> 01:22:11.520] The reason it's a good thing is that their insurance carrier knows the bar will throw it in the trash. [01:22:11.520 --> 01:22:14.520] So how do they gauge their level of risk? [01:22:14.520 --> 01:22:16.520] By valid bar grievances? [01:22:16.520 --> 01:22:18.520] Next to a wall in the trash. [01:22:18.520 --> 01:22:20.520] By the numbers. [01:22:20.520 --> 01:22:26.520] One bar grievance, I'm sorry, there are approximately nine underwriters [01:22:26.520 --> 01:22:30.520] for errors in emission policies for lawyers in the United States. [01:22:30.520 --> 01:22:34.520] All of these companies that write policies are underwritten by these nine. [01:22:34.520 --> 01:22:38.520] All nine of these are underwritten by Lois of London. [01:22:38.520 --> 01:22:42.520] They all have the same criteria. [01:22:42.520 --> 01:22:46.520] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. [01:22:46.520 --> 01:22:50.520] Two bar grievances, anyone practice, they cancel. [01:22:50.520 --> 01:22:54.520] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [01:22:54.520 --> 01:22:58.520] And it starts at like 25 grand a year. [01:22:58.520 --> 01:23:03.520] I had a lawyer tell me, that is wholly unfair. [01:23:03.520 --> 01:23:06.520] And I'm standing there grinning from ear to ear. [01:23:06.520 --> 01:23:08.520] Yeah, it is. [01:23:08.520 --> 01:23:10.520] He shook his head. [01:23:10.520 --> 01:23:12.520] Oh, I shouldn't have told you that. [01:23:12.520 --> 01:23:15.520] No, you shouldn't have. [01:23:15.520 --> 01:23:17.520] So. [01:23:17.520 --> 01:23:24.520] So what would you say the top ten in your list would be to watch board to attack on? [01:23:24.520 --> 01:23:28.520] Failure to speak with candor to the court. [01:23:28.520 --> 01:23:35.520] Failure to give the court notice when the court is acting improperly. [01:23:35.520 --> 01:23:42.520] They have a requirement to bring good case law. [01:23:42.520 --> 01:23:46.520] To only bring valid issues. [01:23:46.520 --> 01:23:50.520] To always tell the truth. [01:23:50.520 --> 01:23:53.520] To a lawyer can't testify. [01:23:53.520 --> 01:23:55.520] They can't bring evidence. [01:23:55.520 --> 01:24:00.520] But the main one is failure to speak with candor to the court. [01:24:00.520 --> 01:24:03.520] And then the other one that's kinds of sneaks up on them. [01:24:03.520 --> 01:24:08.520] They kind of probably know it's there, but act like they don't. [01:24:08.520 --> 01:24:15.520] If the judge doesn't rule the way he's supposed to, this lawyer has a duty. [01:24:15.520 --> 01:24:17.520] Okay, let's take a step back. [01:24:17.520 --> 01:24:20.520] The duties of the judge. [01:24:20.520 --> 01:24:25.520] It is the duty of the judge to determine the. [01:24:25.520 --> 01:24:32.520] In accordance with the rules of evidence, then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:24:32.520 --> 01:24:40.520] If the judge acts improperly and fails to take notice of valid evidence. [01:24:40.520 --> 01:24:48.520] Even if it's from opposing side, the lawyer is required to give him notice. [01:24:48.520 --> 01:24:53.520] And the lawyer is always required to speak with candor to the court. [01:24:53.520 --> 01:24:56.520] That means truth and integrity. [01:24:56.520 --> 01:25:04.520] So if he misstates law to the court, if he misstates the fact of the court, you grieve him. [01:25:04.520 --> 01:25:11.520] You know, you can file a grievance against the lawyer, accusing him of parting his hair on the wrong side. [01:25:11.520 --> 01:25:14.520] And if it's first year in practice, they'll cancel. [01:25:14.520 --> 01:25:21.520] But I don't suggest you ever file a frivolous bar grievance. [01:25:21.520 --> 01:25:24.520] Because you don't have to. [01:25:24.520 --> 01:25:28.520] You get more than you can keep up with. [01:25:28.520 --> 01:25:37.520] Go to the American Bar Association site and look up the American Bar Association model standards. [01:25:37.520 --> 01:25:40.520] All but three states have adopted those. [01:25:40.520 --> 01:25:42.520] Pennsylvania is one of them. [01:25:42.520 --> 01:25:46.520] And the three that didn't, their standards are almost the same. [01:25:46.520 --> 01:25:50.520] What's wrong for a lawyer in one state is wrong for a lawyer in every state. [01:25:50.520 --> 01:25:55.520] And the bar does not want you citing statute of code. [01:25:55.520 --> 01:26:03.520] So I always construct my complaint in the verbiage of a standard. [01:26:03.520 --> 01:26:11.520] If it says the lawyer must do this certain thing, I will write the lawyer failed to do this certain thing as follows. [01:26:11.520 --> 01:26:14.520] And then I write what the lawyer did. [01:26:14.520 --> 01:26:21.520] I don't cite anything, I just write the complaint in the verbiage of the code. [01:26:21.520 --> 01:26:25.520] Well, then send them at least a week apart. [01:26:25.520 --> 01:26:36.520] If you send a bunch of them together, or you make more than one accusation in a complaint, they will treat it as one complaint. [01:26:36.520 --> 01:26:44.520] Also, do a search on the internet somewhere in all my stuff. I've got this in my records, but you can find it real easy. [01:26:44.520 --> 01:26:52.520] When must a lawyer notify his insurance carrier? [01:26:52.520 --> 01:26:55.520] Write up the first or second item. [01:26:55.520 --> 01:26:59.520] You'll get a hit on a treatment of this issue. [01:26:59.520 --> 01:27:02.520] You read that. [01:27:02.520 --> 01:27:12.520] One of the good things about a bar grievance is when you file the grievance, the lawyer must give notice to his insurance carrier. [01:27:12.520 --> 01:27:23.520] Because if he doesn't, and you sue him based on the accusations in the grievance, he's not covered. [01:27:23.520 --> 01:27:33.520] The insurance carrier, it's their job to write the insurance, collect the money, and then get out of having to pay a premium. [01:27:33.520 --> 01:27:38.520] So they're going to do everything they can to keep them paying that premium. [01:27:38.520 --> 01:27:52.520] So what this article says is if the lawyer knows of anything that could possibly result in litigation, he has to give notice. [01:27:52.520 --> 01:27:57.520] If he gives notice, they're going to up his rates. [01:27:57.520 --> 01:28:02.520] He's kind of stuck in a quandary. [01:28:02.520 --> 01:28:06.520] Life is tough, isn't it, Bubba? Deal with it. [01:28:06.520 --> 01:28:21.520] So you look at what this says specifically has to be noticed, and you try to write your complaints so they land on one of these issues. [01:28:21.520 --> 01:28:29.520] So if he's stinging good, he has to give notice of each one, or he's paid, it starts at like $25,000 a year. [01:28:29.520 --> 01:28:39.520] And if he didn't give notice, then he's paid $25,000 for nothing because they want to cover him. [01:28:39.520 --> 01:28:49.520] And when you file a bar grievance, the lawyer is forbidden to address the grievance with you. [01:28:49.520 --> 01:28:57.520] One word of him out of him about that grievance, you file a grievance against him for that. [01:28:57.520 --> 01:29:07.520] What will happen is about the second grievance you file, you're all of a sudden going to have a new lawyer on the case. [01:29:07.520 --> 01:29:10.520] Funny how that happens. [01:29:10.520 --> 01:29:16.520] Now nobody's going to have any indication that your grievance had any effect. [01:29:16.520 --> 01:29:23.520] I guarantee you, it has major, it's like dropping an atomic bomb in the courtroom. [01:29:23.520 --> 01:29:27.520] It has major effect on these lawyers. [01:29:27.520 --> 01:29:38.520] When we come back, I'll tell you about how I got the court to dismiss my last case in order to protect my lawyer from me. [01:29:38.520 --> 01:29:41.520] It's all about politics. [01:29:41.520 --> 01:29:44.520] Bar grievances is a good way to get politics. [01:29:44.520 --> 01:29:50.520] This is Randy Kelton with the Law Radio or call it number 512-646-1984. [01:29:50.520 --> 01:30:14.520] We'll be right back. [01:30:14.520 --> 01:30:21.520] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database of your personal information. [01:30:21.520 --> 01:30:22.520] That's creepy. [01:30:22.520 --> 01:30:24.520] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:24.520 --> 01:30:27.520] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:27.520 --> 01:30:34.520] StartPage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies and their third party certified. [01:30:34.520 --> 01:30:38.520] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with StartPage. [01:30:38.520 --> 01:30:41.520] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:41.520 --> 01:30:44.520] StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:44.520 --> 01:30:47.520] Filming the police could land you in the slammer. [01:30:47.520 --> 01:30:49.520] Case in point, Anthony Gruber. [01:30:49.520 --> 01:30:57.520] Arrested after posting footage of his speeding citation on YouTube, he faced a 16-year prison term for wiretapping. [01:30:57.520 --> 01:31:05.520] His footage featured a plainclothes state trooper jumping out of an unmarked car, screaming at Gruber and brandishing a gun before identifying himself. [01:31:05.520 --> 01:31:09.520] Gruber spent 26 hours in jail and had his computer seized. [01:31:09.520 --> 01:31:11.520] His case was later thrown out of Maryland court. [01:31:11.520 --> 01:31:14.520] Videographers in other states could be convicted. [01:31:14.520 --> 01:31:18.520] Documenting police practices empowers the people and should be legal. [01:31:18.520 --> 01:31:22.520] I say let the cameras roll. It might just put the civil back in civil servant. [01:31:22.520 --> 01:31:27.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.520 --> 01:31:36.520] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.520 --> 01:31:38.520] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.520 --> 01:31:43.520] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.520 --> 01:31:46.520] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.520 --> 01:31:49.520] And thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:49.520 --> 01:31:50.520] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.520 --> 01:31:51.520] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.520 --> 01:31:53.520] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.520 --> 01:31:54.520] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.520 --> 01:31:55.520] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:55.520 --> 01:31:56.520] We're Americans. [01:31:56.520 --> 01:31:58.520] And we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.520 --> 01:32:08.520] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:29.520 --> 01:32:32.520] To handle your claim and your roof right the first time, [01:32:32.520 --> 01:32:38.520] just call 512-992-8745 or go to Hill Country Home Improvements.com. [01:32:38.520 --> 01:32:41.520] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:41.520 --> 01:32:45.520] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos radio network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.520 --> 01:32:50.520] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.520 --> 01:32:57.520] That's 512-992-8745 or Hill Country Home Improvements.com. [01:32:57.520 --> 01:32:59.140] based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.140 --> 01:33:01.420] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.420 --> 01:33:05.040] Looking for some truth? [01:33:05.040 --> 01:33:06.280] You found it. [01:33:06.280 --> 01:33:08.540] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:20.040 --> 01:33:21.960] Okay, we are back. [01:33:21.960 --> 01:33:24.200] Randy Kelton, the root of our radio, [01:33:24.200 --> 01:33:28.600] and we're talking to Darren in Pennsylvania. [01:33:28.600 --> 01:33:35.800] I had a Capitol Police Sergeant knock out one of my teeth [01:33:35.800 --> 01:33:37.880] at the Secretary of State's building [01:33:37.880 --> 01:33:41.520] after I called 911 on them. [01:33:41.520 --> 01:33:44.840] And they threw me in jail overnight. [01:33:44.840 --> 01:33:46.480] Many let me out without charge. [01:33:46.480 --> 01:33:49.760] And I filed a whole bunch of information requests. [01:33:49.760 --> 01:33:53.360] Then they refiled the charge and had me arrested. [01:33:53.360 --> 01:33:56.760] When I go to court, they ordered me to court. [01:33:56.760 --> 01:33:59.080] So I come to court, and I told the judge [01:33:59.080 --> 01:34:01.720] that I got this order to be at court, [01:34:01.720 --> 01:34:03.480] but doesn't tell me why I'm supposed to be here. [01:34:03.480 --> 01:34:04.760] You always tell me why I'm here? [01:34:04.760 --> 01:34:10.080] And she said, well, we wanted to see if you had an attorney. [01:34:10.080 --> 01:34:12.680] And I said, well, I've got 28.01 Texas [01:34:12.680 --> 01:34:14.560] Code of Criminal Procedure, and it lists all those things [01:34:14.560 --> 01:34:16.880] you can order me to come to court for to see [01:34:16.880 --> 01:34:17.680] if I have a lawyer. [01:34:17.680 --> 01:34:20.240] It's not one of them. [01:34:20.240 --> 01:34:24.320] All right, well, a court watcher said [01:34:24.320 --> 01:34:27.600] he could see her jaw muscles working. [01:34:27.600 --> 01:34:33.160] But she was the daughter of the outgoing district attorney. [01:34:33.160 --> 01:34:35.280] So I figured she was pretty political, [01:34:35.280 --> 01:34:36.800] so I kind of backed off on it. [01:34:36.800 --> 01:34:39.080] And she said, well, Mr. Kelton, we [01:34:39.080 --> 01:34:41.000] needed to know if you had an attorney. [01:34:41.000 --> 01:34:43.040] I said, no, I don't. [01:34:43.040 --> 01:34:44.280] Are you going to hire an attorney? [01:34:44.280 --> 01:34:46.160] No, I'm not. [01:34:46.160 --> 01:34:48.400] Would you like me to appoint counsel? [01:34:48.400 --> 01:34:49.960] I don't care what you do. [01:34:49.960 --> 01:34:52.640] Well, Mr. Kelton, I'm going to appoint you an attorney. [01:34:52.640 --> 01:34:55.760] I said, well, if you do, make sure you appoint one [01:34:55.760 --> 01:34:58.520] that you really don't like. [01:34:58.520 --> 01:35:00.160] And she kind of laughed and said, well, we [01:35:00.160 --> 01:35:01.480] have an attorney for you. [01:35:01.480 --> 01:35:02.800] You get the next one. [01:35:02.800 --> 01:35:04.400] So they appointed a lawyer. [01:35:04.400 --> 01:35:07.360] He comes out, and we go in this room, and he says, OK, [01:35:07.360 --> 01:35:09.280] this is how things are going to go. [01:35:09.280 --> 01:35:10.840] And I let him ride along a while. [01:35:10.840 --> 01:35:13.400] And I said, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:35:13.400 --> 01:35:15.280] That's not how it's going to go. [01:35:15.280 --> 01:35:18.520] And he's still kind of cocky as a real young kid. [01:35:18.520 --> 01:35:20.600] Well, then, Mr. Kelton, just how are they going to go? [01:35:20.600 --> 01:35:22.880] I said, this is how they're going to go. [01:35:22.880 --> 01:35:25.880] You're going to go to the judge and ask the judge to remove [01:35:25.880 --> 01:35:27.800] you from this case. [01:35:27.800 --> 01:35:29.480] And I'm going to go to the judge and tell him, [01:35:29.480 --> 01:35:31.800] don't you dare remove him from this case. [01:35:31.800 --> 01:35:35.560] He's my attorney of choice, and he's under contract. [01:35:35.560 --> 01:35:37.960] And the lawyer said, well, Mr. Kelton, I'm under contract [01:35:37.960 --> 01:35:39.960] with the state, not with you. [01:35:39.960 --> 01:35:43.040] Yes, you are, but I'm the intended third party beneficiary, [01:35:43.040 --> 01:35:46.320] and I have standing under the contract. [01:35:46.320 --> 01:35:49.800] And I told him, and the judge is going to remove you [01:35:49.800 --> 01:35:52.720] from the case, or is going to allow you to withdraw. [01:35:52.720 --> 01:35:54.640] He said, yes, he will. [01:35:54.640 --> 01:35:56.680] Then I get to sue the judge for interfering [01:35:56.680 --> 01:35:59.960] with the private contract. [01:35:59.960 --> 01:36:03.360] The look on his face was priceless. [01:36:03.360 --> 01:36:08.240] The look said, he's going to kick me this board. [01:36:08.240 --> 01:36:11.960] He told me that 20 times if he told me that once [01:36:11.960 --> 01:36:16.480] through the course of the hearing of the prosecution, [01:36:16.480 --> 01:36:18.680] we're in court. [01:36:18.680 --> 01:36:22.800] Him and the prosecutor are up at the bench talking to the judge. [01:36:22.800 --> 01:36:25.760] I'm outside the bar. [01:36:25.760 --> 01:36:28.640] My lawyer comes over to me and said, [01:36:28.640 --> 01:36:30.520] the prosecutor said she knows who you are. [01:36:30.520 --> 01:36:32.120] And if you start filing criminal charges, [01:36:32.120 --> 01:36:33.520] she's going to charge you with tampering [01:36:33.520 --> 01:36:34.960] the government document. [01:36:34.960 --> 01:36:38.080] I look over at her and she said, she said, yes, she did. [01:36:38.080 --> 01:36:42.240] And I reached in my case and pulled out 30 of them. [01:36:42.240 --> 01:36:44.280] I said, I got 30 of them here. [01:36:44.280 --> 01:36:47.560] I need her to verify these affidavits in accordance [01:36:47.560 --> 01:36:51.040] with her duty under Article 2.06 Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:36:51.040 --> 01:36:52.000] And I pointed at her. [01:36:52.000 --> 01:36:54.040] You, come here. [01:36:54.040 --> 01:36:56.760] And she kind of scooched up against the bench. [01:36:56.760 --> 01:36:59.400] I guess she thought the judge would protect her. [01:36:59.400 --> 01:37:00.800] And I handed him to my lawyer. [01:37:00.800 --> 01:37:03.400] And he holds up both hands with his palms out. [01:37:03.400 --> 01:37:04.240] I'm not going to touch him. [01:37:04.240 --> 01:37:05.520] I'm not going to touch him. [01:37:05.520 --> 01:37:10.040] Take him, your chicken, right in front of the judge. [01:37:10.040 --> 01:37:14.000] The judge calls a recess for lunch. [01:37:14.000 --> 01:37:18.400] I barely got my burrito and my lawyer called me and said, [01:37:18.400 --> 01:37:21.360] the judge dismissed the case. [01:37:21.360 --> 01:37:23.720] He did what? [01:37:23.720 --> 01:37:26.320] Did he dismiss it without prejudice? [01:37:26.320 --> 01:37:27.760] He said, well, with prejudice. [01:37:27.760 --> 01:37:29.520] He said, well, no. [01:37:29.520 --> 01:37:30.640] Will you get back in there? [01:37:30.640 --> 01:37:33.560] You make him reinstate this case. [01:37:33.560 --> 01:37:35.800] I want to fight this thing. [01:37:35.800 --> 01:37:39.240] Oh, Mr. Kildon, you can't reinstate the case. [01:37:39.240 --> 01:37:40.800] It's already dismissed. [01:37:40.800 --> 01:37:42.800] I was just jerking his chain. [01:37:42.800 --> 01:37:45.840] But he was absolutely ecstatic. [01:37:45.840 --> 01:37:49.800] First case he ever won. [01:37:49.800 --> 01:37:52.880] The reason he won that case? [01:37:52.880 --> 01:37:58.800] They threw the case out in order to protect my lawyer from me. [01:37:58.800 --> 01:38:02.520] That was a valuable lesson. [01:38:02.520 --> 01:38:07.720] You can think of your case like a four-sided chessboard. [01:38:10.720 --> 01:38:12.440] If you've got more than two players, [01:38:12.440 --> 01:38:16.520] it's all about relationships. [01:38:16.520 --> 01:38:19.480] With four-sided, you'll have two sets of people get together [01:38:19.480 --> 01:38:21.640] and gang up on the other two, get rid of them, [01:38:21.640 --> 01:38:24.800] and then they play against each other. [01:38:24.800 --> 01:38:29.200] Well, you go into court and sit down at the table. [01:38:29.200 --> 01:38:31.720] You've got your lawyer to your right. [01:38:31.720 --> 01:38:35.440] Opposing counsel to your left, the judge across from you. [01:38:35.440 --> 01:38:38.800] You have a relationship with your lawyer. [01:38:38.800 --> 01:38:42.920] Your lawyer has a relationship with you, opposing counsel, [01:38:42.920 --> 01:38:45.320] and the judge. [01:38:45.320 --> 01:38:47.160] Opposing counsel has a relationship [01:38:47.160 --> 01:38:48.280] with your lawyer and the judge. [01:38:48.280 --> 01:38:51.320] You're the odd man out. [01:38:51.320 --> 01:38:55.480] So the way to beat your case is to take [01:38:55.480 --> 01:38:59.400] advantage of these relationships. [01:38:59.400 --> 01:39:04.000] The best way to do that is sting your lawyer good. [01:39:04.000 --> 01:39:06.640] Because if you have court-appointed counsel, [01:39:06.640 --> 01:39:08.800] or even if you don't, but especially [01:39:08.800 --> 01:39:10.320] if you have court-appointed counsel, [01:39:10.320 --> 01:39:13.400] his only purpose is to ensure that you do not [01:39:13.400 --> 01:39:15.880] have grounds for appeal. [01:39:15.880 --> 01:39:20.080] We had a lawyer actually tell one of our listeners that once [01:39:20.080 --> 01:39:22.440] when he's trying to get the lawyer to do some things. [01:39:22.440 --> 01:39:24.200] He said, you don't understand. [01:39:24.200 --> 01:39:27.320] Let's just tell them, well, my only job [01:39:27.320 --> 01:39:30.880] is to ensure you don't have grounds for appeal. [01:39:30.880 --> 01:39:32.720] Oops. [01:39:32.720 --> 01:39:34.800] Well, that's the fact. [01:39:34.800 --> 01:39:38.480] Your lawyer is not going to do anything [01:39:38.480 --> 01:39:41.360] that might annoy that judge. [01:39:41.360 --> 01:39:44.800] Because the judge likely would take it out on his next client [01:39:44.800 --> 01:39:48.000] or take it out on him with sanctions. [01:39:48.000 --> 01:39:53.680] So if you're going to get effective adjudication, [01:39:53.680 --> 01:39:58.920] you need to get your lawyer's attention and give your lawyer [01:39:58.920 --> 01:40:02.480] plausible deniability. [01:40:02.480 --> 01:40:04.680] Judge, you've got to do something. [01:40:04.680 --> 01:40:07.560] I've got an out-of-control client. [01:40:07.560 --> 01:40:10.560] He's going to ruin my career. [01:40:10.560 --> 01:40:13.600] You've got to help me out here. [01:40:13.600 --> 01:40:19.520] And one way to get that started, well, is bar grids. [01:40:19.520 --> 01:40:21.040] The bar grids are one on the other side, [01:40:21.040 --> 01:40:23.000] and they will really have a fit because they [01:40:23.000 --> 01:40:25.520] claim you can't do that. [01:40:25.520 --> 01:40:27.400] Of course you can. [01:40:27.400 --> 01:40:32.120] I can watch a lawyer in court bar grieving. [01:40:32.120 --> 01:40:35.720] I don't have to have standing. [01:40:35.720 --> 01:40:38.800] Now, the bar is not going to act on my grievance, [01:40:38.800 --> 01:40:40.880] but I don't care. [01:40:40.880 --> 01:40:42.000] The insurance company is. [01:40:42.000 --> 01:40:45.120] They're just looking for an excuse [01:40:45.120 --> 01:40:51.840] to cancel this guy's or double his premium. [01:40:51.840 --> 01:40:52.320] Right. [01:40:52.320 --> 01:41:00.360] So that's kind of the deal about bar grievances. [01:41:00.360 --> 01:41:04.320] Now, when you get to judicial conduct complaints, [01:41:04.320 --> 01:41:08.440] the judge doesn't carry his insurance policy. [01:41:08.440 --> 01:41:14.520] The county does, or the state does, in the form of a bond. [01:41:14.520 --> 01:41:16.760] Every time you file against the judge, [01:41:16.760 --> 01:41:20.000] his bond rating goes up. [01:41:20.000 --> 01:41:25.400] Oh, federal judges really hate it because a grievance [01:41:25.400 --> 01:41:29.160] against them, it goes to the court of appeals. [01:41:29.160 --> 01:41:32.800] And it stays on their record forever. [01:41:32.800 --> 01:41:34.640] So you've got a federal judge here [01:41:34.640 --> 01:41:38.680] that would like to be appointed to the court of appeals. [01:41:38.680 --> 01:41:40.280] And they've got 50 judges out here [01:41:40.280 --> 01:41:43.160] that want to position in the court of appeals. [01:41:43.160 --> 01:41:45.080] So how do they select one? [01:41:45.080 --> 01:41:48.400] Oh, there's got six judicial conduct complaints [01:41:48.400 --> 01:41:51.280] against him. He's a political liability. [01:41:51.280 --> 01:41:54.960] Gives them a reason to toss him out. [01:41:54.960 --> 01:41:56.160] And they know that. [01:41:56.160 --> 01:41:58.800] That's nice to know. [01:41:58.800 --> 01:42:01.560] It's all about politics. [01:42:01.560 --> 01:42:03.120] You'll never win your case simply [01:42:03.120 --> 01:42:06.000] because you have the law and the facts on your side [01:42:06.000 --> 01:42:08.640] to think so naive. [01:42:08.640 --> 01:42:12.920] You win the case if you have the politics on your side. [01:42:12.920 --> 01:42:19.200] Consider Jesus Christ. He ran around the Middle East [01:42:19.200 --> 01:42:22.600] spreading this new gospel. [01:42:22.600 --> 01:42:28.200] And Paul, from Tars, Saul before he became Paul, [01:42:28.200 --> 01:42:33.760] went to the Sadducees and asked them to crucify. [01:42:33.760 --> 01:42:37.160] And they said, heck, we don't care what he does. [01:42:37.160 --> 01:42:40.640] He's not bothering us. [01:42:40.640 --> 01:42:45.960] They didn't care until he went into the temple [01:42:45.960 --> 01:42:51.000] and kicked over the tables of the money changers. [01:42:51.000 --> 01:42:53.920] That was an whoops. [01:42:53.920 --> 01:42:54.920] Politics. [01:42:54.920 --> 01:42:58.520] The money changers had the political clout. [01:42:58.520 --> 01:43:02.040] And they didn't have the restraint that the, [01:43:02.040 --> 01:43:05.280] I said the Sadducees, the Pharisees. [01:43:05.280 --> 01:43:07.520] They didn't have the restraint the Pharisees had. [01:43:07.520 --> 01:43:12.880] The Pharisees are now the rabbis, the learned people. [01:43:12.880 --> 01:43:15.320] So anyway, it's all political. [01:43:15.320 --> 01:43:17.480] If you're going to win your case, you get into politics. [01:43:17.480 --> 01:43:20.200] And you start grieving that judge, [01:43:20.200 --> 01:43:23.080] or filing judicial conduct complaints against him. [01:43:23.080 --> 01:43:26.480] He cannot say one word to you, but he [01:43:26.480 --> 01:43:30.360] can crawl down that lawyer or the other side's throat [01:43:30.360 --> 01:43:33.600] and tell him you get this person off my back [01:43:33.600 --> 01:43:38.120] or I will screw you royal. [01:43:38.120 --> 01:43:41.320] That's how it works as a real, it may not be right. [01:43:41.320 --> 01:43:42.960] But that's how it works in the real world, [01:43:42.960 --> 01:43:45.240] you and I live here. [01:43:45.240 --> 01:43:47.160] OK, we're about to go to break. [01:43:47.160 --> 01:43:48.560] We'll pick this up on the other side, [01:43:48.560 --> 01:43:50.400] random count them, root of our radio, [01:43:50.400 --> 01:43:54.480] or call in number at 512-646-1984. [01:43:54.480 --> 01:43:55.440] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.400 --> 01:44:02.960] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:44:02.960 --> 01:44:06.120] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:44:06.120 --> 01:44:09.120] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:44:09.120 --> 01:44:11.280] Did you know the US government banned the hemp [01:44:11.280 --> 01:44:13.160] plant from growing in the United States? 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[01:44:39.240 --> 01:44:43.120] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, [01:44:43.120 --> 01:44:46.600] is gluten free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, [01:44:46.600 --> 01:44:48.200] and is loaded with nutrients. [01:44:48.200 --> 01:44:53.920] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, [01:44:53.920 --> 01:44:58.320] and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only. [01:44:58.320 --> 01:45:01.840] HempUSA.org. [01:45:01.840 --> 01:45:04.920] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.920 --> 01:45:08.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:08.240 --> 01:45:11.880] the affordable, easy to understand, four CD course [01:45:11.880 --> 01:45:16.280] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:16.280 --> 01:45:19.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.960 --> 01:45:23.800] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.800 --> 01:45:26.800] Thousands have won with our step by step course. [01:45:26.800 --> 01:45:28.720] And now you can, too. [01:45:28.720 --> 01:45:31.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:31.840 --> 01:45:35.280] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.280 --> 01:45:37.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [01:45:37.240 --> 01:45:39.760] you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.760 --> 01:45:41.960] about the principles and practices that [01:45:41.960 --> 01:45:44.160] control our American courts. [01:45:44.160 --> 01:45:47.440] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [01:45:47.440 --> 01:45:53.000] tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.000 --> 01:45:57.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:57.200 --> 01:46:01.680] or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.680 --> 01:46:30.680] Let me know, comment, like, and around the corner. [01:46:30.680 --> 01:46:50.120] Thank you. [01:46:50.120 --> 01:47:09.320] It's up to you as to how long these days. [01:47:09.320 --> 01:47:13.420] Now that being said, if you want to call in and get in line to ask questions, if you [01:47:13.420 --> 01:47:17.940] can't get in right away, we've got limited spots on the caller line, so please keep [01:47:17.940 --> 01:47:19.100] trying. [01:47:19.100 --> 01:47:23.280] The number is 512-646-1984. [01:47:23.280 --> 01:47:26.600] All right, let's get JD back up here. [01:47:26.600 --> 01:47:29.800] All right, JD, anything else you got to ask? [01:47:29.800 --> 01:47:34.880] Yeah, I've got one more thing, Dave. [01:47:34.880 --> 01:47:42.280] As my understanding is, let's just say as a person who goes in to get a job, you start [01:47:42.280 --> 01:47:48.880] your job application, they give you your, I always get the forms mixed up, is a W9 [01:47:48.880 --> 01:47:49.880] W4, whichever. [01:47:49.880 --> 01:47:50.880] W4. [01:47:50.880 --> 01:47:51.880] Your tax form. [01:47:51.880 --> 01:47:52.880] W4? [01:47:52.880 --> 01:47:53.880] W4. [01:47:53.880 --> 01:47:54.880] Okay, W4. [01:47:54.880 --> 01:47:57.880] You can get to W4 or whatever. [01:47:57.880 --> 01:48:05.360] All right, as my understanding is, that at any time after filling out the W4, you can [01:48:05.360 --> 01:48:07.360] rescind or basically... [01:48:07.360 --> 01:48:08.360] Okay, I'm back. [01:48:08.360 --> 01:48:09.360] Sorry for the delay there. [01:48:09.360 --> 01:48:10.360] We got hung up a little bit. [01:48:10.360 --> 01:48:11.360] I'm a little injured. [01:48:11.360 --> 01:48:12.360] I'm hopping around on one foot. [01:48:12.360 --> 01:48:19.840] So it slows me down a bit. [01:48:19.840 --> 01:48:30.040] Okay, we are back and we're going to go to Ted in Washington. [01:48:30.040 --> 01:48:36.920] I guess we lost our caller from Pennsylvania. [01:48:36.920 --> 01:48:41.000] I could have took a while on that because it's kind of my favorite subject. [01:48:41.000 --> 01:48:44.840] If you're listening and you dropped off, call back in. [01:48:44.840 --> 01:48:46.840] We'll pick you back up. [01:48:46.840 --> 01:48:52.400] Bargree, this is the conduct complaints, are two of the most powerful tools we as pro [01:48:52.400 --> 01:48:55.160] says have. [01:48:55.160 --> 01:49:01.200] And we can wield them with relative impunity. [01:49:01.200 --> 01:49:08.080] Not only can they not do anything about it, they can't even say a word about it. [01:49:08.080 --> 01:49:12.400] And they go out of their way not to say a word about it because they don't want us to [01:49:12.400 --> 01:49:14.960] know how powerful they are. [01:49:14.960 --> 01:49:16.960] Okay, we're going to... [01:49:16.960 --> 01:49:19.560] We're going to Ted in Washington. [01:49:19.560 --> 01:49:20.560] Hello, Ted. [01:49:20.560 --> 01:49:22.560] What do you have for us today? [01:49:22.560 --> 01:49:24.680] Good evening, Randy. [01:49:24.680 --> 01:49:27.000] Thank you for taking my call. [01:49:27.000 --> 01:49:28.000] You are welcome. [01:49:28.000 --> 01:49:29.000] Can you hear me okay? [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:30.000] All right. [01:49:30.000 --> 01:49:31.000] I can hear you fine. [01:49:31.000 --> 01:49:32.000] That's perfect. [01:49:32.000 --> 01:49:33.000] Thank you. [01:49:33.000 --> 01:49:39.520] So I received a summons for jury duty and it makes me feel very uncomfortable. [01:49:39.520 --> 01:49:46.080] The questionnaire is too invasive. [01:49:46.080 --> 01:49:51.640] And I don't mind participating in jury duty, but they're asking a lot of detailed information [01:49:51.640 --> 01:49:52.640] to be disclosed. [01:49:52.640 --> 01:49:56.320] And then finally, they want me to sign under penalty of perjury. [01:49:56.320 --> 01:50:05.800] Then just the information you don't want to reveal just to put in none of your business. [01:50:05.800 --> 01:50:09.160] You are not required to answer any of that stuff. [01:50:09.160 --> 01:50:13.560] I'm so glad to hear that because they're asking about children, employment, mobile [01:50:13.560 --> 01:50:15.560] phone, education, citizenship. [01:50:15.560 --> 01:50:20.600] They're asking all kinds of details that I don't want to disclose. [01:50:20.600 --> 01:50:24.200] Just tell them none of your business. [01:50:24.200 --> 01:50:27.360] And that's going to go to whether or not you're selected or not. [01:50:27.360 --> 01:50:31.280] You are not required to fill out any of that stuff. [01:50:31.280 --> 01:50:38.360] So what about signing under official form, the form letter right below the questionnaire? [01:50:38.360 --> 01:50:43.120] Can I send a separate letter of my own and tell them I don't want to disclose that? [01:50:43.120 --> 01:50:44.120] Sign under penalty of perjury. [01:50:44.120 --> 01:50:46.120] None of your business. [01:50:46.120 --> 01:50:47.120] Nice. [01:50:47.120 --> 01:50:54.480] Or you prefer not to respond. [01:50:54.480 --> 01:50:55.480] Excellent. [01:50:55.480 --> 01:51:03.880] You're asking you to come for jury duty and they're asking that information, they don't [01:51:03.880 --> 01:51:06.240] mess with juries. [01:51:06.240 --> 01:51:09.240] It's too hard to seek juries anyway. [01:51:09.240 --> 01:51:12.640] So they don't mess with you. [01:51:12.640 --> 01:51:15.480] And they won't use this information to mess with you. [01:51:15.480 --> 01:51:23.200] So all they need to do is let some of this information get out and someone nefarious [01:51:23.200 --> 01:51:30.520] use it to a negative person, it become almost impossible to see the jury. [01:51:30.520 --> 01:51:36.800] So then there could be information that you don't want them to know anyway. [01:51:36.800 --> 01:51:37.800] Exactly. [01:51:37.800 --> 01:51:38.800] I do not. [01:51:38.800 --> 01:51:46.080] And where could I research more information where I can learn how to opt out? [01:51:46.080 --> 01:51:51.800] Okay, you can't opt out of a jury, you can just refuse to answer. [01:51:51.800 --> 01:51:54.320] Well, I'm sorry, that's what I meant. [01:51:54.320 --> 01:52:00.360] I mean, I don't mind participating, but I do refuse to answer certain questions. [01:52:00.360 --> 01:52:05.440] If you have an issue with a question, just don't answer it. [01:52:05.440 --> 01:52:12.360] And then when they get in court and they say, well, Mr. Ted, you didn't answer this question. [01:52:12.360 --> 01:52:15.320] You say, I know I didn't, and I don't intend to. [01:52:15.320 --> 01:52:19.600] And they say, why not? [01:52:19.600 --> 01:52:22.400] I always tell them, I don't trust you guys. [01:52:22.400 --> 01:52:26.720] And that'll probably get you tossed. [01:52:26.720 --> 01:52:27.720] Very right. [01:52:27.720 --> 01:52:28.720] Yeah. [01:52:28.720 --> 01:52:29.720] Randy, thank you. [01:52:29.720 --> 01:52:33.560] Any objections like that? [01:52:33.560 --> 01:52:37.160] My wife got called for jury duty. [01:52:37.160 --> 01:52:41.200] All my family's been called for jury duty, but never me. [01:52:41.200 --> 01:52:42.200] That's annoying. [01:52:42.200 --> 01:52:43.200] I would like to be on a jury. [01:52:43.200 --> 01:52:52.720] I go, I went in with my wife, she got called for jury duty, you know, sitting in the courtroom [01:52:52.720 --> 01:52:57.320] with her in the district attorney walks in the courtroom and he just kind of glances out [01:52:57.320 --> 01:53:03.040] over the courtroom and sees me while he's beginning to turn his head back and he freezes [01:53:03.040 --> 01:53:09.240] and jerks back and does this double take, then he goes over and gets the jury list and [01:53:09.240 --> 01:53:13.880] goes down and they call up my wife. [01:53:13.880 --> 01:53:17.880] She said, do you know Randy, the district attorney said, do you know Randall Telfen? [01:53:17.880 --> 01:53:19.880] Yeah, he's my husband. [01:53:19.880 --> 01:53:23.040] Has he ever told you anything about me? [01:53:23.040 --> 01:53:27.200] Oh, yeah, he talked about you, but I don't pay any attention to that. [01:53:27.200 --> 01:53:30.760] And he said, well, that's a good sign that you can go. [01:53:30.760 --> 01:53:34.640] And oh, she was just jumping up and down and clapping her hands. [01:53:34.640 --> 01:53:38.240] So she had to take me to court. [01:53:38.240 --> 01:53:41.640] Well, but yeah, yeah, don't worry about that. [01:53:41.640 --> 01:53:44.080] Just don't answer them. [01:53:44.080 --> 01:53:46.880] You're not compelled to answer. [01:53:46.880 --> 01:53:47.880] Not compelled. [01:53:47.880 --> 01:53:52.240] Should I cross it off on their line that that says, no, just ignore it. [01:53:52.240 --> 01:53:53.240] Ignore it. [01:53:53.240 --> 01:53:54.240] Okay. [01:53:54.240 --> 01:54:04.560] So the least confrontational way is the judge or most likely a judge or one of the lawyers [01:54:04.560 --> 01:54:07.360] will say, well, you didn't answer these questions. [01:54:07.360 --> 01:54:14.120] You say, I know I didn't and I don't intend to, unless the judge orders me to. [01:54:14.120 --> 01:54:19.160] And if the judge orders you to, you better write an answer or they will hold you in contempt. [01:54:19.160 --> 01:54:24.600] But then you can come back and file judicial conduct complaints against the judges in that. [01:54:24.600 --> 01:54:25.600] Don't get thrown in jail. [01:54:25.600 --> 01:54:28.920] Just tell them you prefer not to answer. [01:54:28.920 --> 01:54:31.920] And neither side, they will strike you for cause. [01:54:31.920 --> 01:54:32.920] Okay. [01:54:32.920 --> 01:54:33.920] I think it makes sense. [01:54:33.920 --> 01:54:41.800] So don't offend the judge, but just be diplomatic on the way I avoid certain questions. [01:54:41.800 --> 01:54:42.800] Yeah. [01:54:42.800 --> 01:54:47.400] Don't pick a fight unless you really want to start a fight. [01:54:47.400 --> 01:54:49.280] I do not. [01:54:49.280 --> 01:54:50.280] Okay. [01:54:50.280 --> 01:54:55.400] If you're, if you're going to have a fight, then you want to pick it. [01:54:55.400 --> 01:54:57.200] Those are the best ones to have. [01:54:57.200 --> 01:55:00.640] But if you don't want to have a fight, then just, just be diplomatic and tell them you're [01:55:00.640 --> 01:55:03.760] very uncomfortable about releasing this information. [01:55:03.760 --> 01:55:10.480] You do not trust this court or this county or this district able to keep your private [01:55:10.480 --> 01:55:13.240] information private. [01:55:13.240 --> 01:55:17.960] They're not going to be able to get around that. [01:55:17.960 --> 01:55:18.960] Excellent. [01:55:18.960 --> 01:55:19.960] Thank you so much. [01:55:19.960 --> 01:55:20.960] I'm so glad I called. [01:55:20.960 --> 01:55:24.240] And thank you for being still on the air after all these years. [01:55:24.240 --> 01:55:25.240] Okay. [01:55:25.240 --> 01:55:27.800] Well, this is my job. [01:55:27.800 --> 01:55:28.800] Okay. [01:55:28.800 --> 01:55:30.600] Thank you, Ted. [01:55:30.600 --> 01:55:34.200] Now we're going to go to Darren and Pennsylvania. [01:55:34.200 --> 01:55:35.200] All of these years. [01:55:35.200 --> 01:55:39.200] Oh, well, I guess it has been all of these years. [01:55:39.200 --> 01:55:40.200] Sorry, Darren. [01:55:40.200 --> 01:55:41.200] We dropped you there. [01:55:41.200 --> 01:55:42.200] Okay. [01:55:42.200 --> 01:55:43.200] Yeah. [01:55:43.200 --> 01:55:45.720] No, I think it was on my end. [01:55:45.720 --> 01:55:49.000] Back to one, back to my favorite subject. [01:55:49.000 --> 01:56:00.480] There are just a few things that once we understand them, then we become bad news. [01:56:00.480 --> 01:56:07.800] And it's, it's kind of subtle sometimes the most powerful things that I've discovered [01:56:07.800 --> 01:56:13.920] in messing with these people for a long time is one, like I just talked to Ted, is don't [01:56:13.920 --> 01:56:19.320] start a fight unless you want to have one and be polite. [01:56:19.320 --> 01:56:23.840] When I go in, I am always polite, a joke with them. [01:56:23.840 --> 01:56:25.480] I am never difficult. [01:56:25.480 --> 01:56:28.680] I never raise my voice. [01:56:28.680 --> 01:56:31.520] I never give legal advice. [01:56:31.520 --> 01:56:36.320] Oh, I've got these rights and you're supposed to do this. [01:56:36.320 --> 01:56:39.680] No, I don't do any of that stuff. [01:56:39.680 --> 01:56:41.560] I have a rule. [01:56:41.560 --> 01:56:49.560] Never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want him to do because you [01:56:49.560 --> 01:56:50.560] never ask that. [01:56:50.560 --> 01:56:51.560] You never. [01:56:51.560 --> 01:56:52.560] Go ahead. [01:56:52.560 --> 01:56:55.960] I said I've heard that on your show before. [01:56:55.960 --> 01:57:00.040] Yeah, yeah, you never ask him to do anything the law doesn't require him to do. [01:57:00.040 --> 01:57:07.280] So when they don't, you tend to be sitting there grinning when I was talking to Mauricio [01:57:07.280 --> 01:57:08.280] earlier. [01:57:08.280 --> 01:57:15.080] He said the cop told him his name was none of your GD business. [01:57:15.080 --> 01:57:23.480] If I was standing there, I would have a hard time not just busted out laughing. [01:57:23.480 --> 01:57:28.920] Because oh my goodness, this is so good. [01:57:28.920 --> 01:57:39.760] And that has been the most powerful thing I've ever done is not give them feedback. [01:57:39.760 --> 01:57:47.080] You go in there and you have in your mind that you're trying to set them up. [01:57:47.080 --> 01:57:54.880] They know that 99% of the people who come into that court have a dog in this hunt. [01:57:54.880 --> 01:57:56.000] This is important to them. [01:57:56.000 --> 01:57:58.840] They have an investment in what's going on here. [01:57:58.840 --> 01:58:03.200] And that makes them real easy to manipulate. [01:58:03.200 --> 01:58:12.040] So even if you have an issue in the court, pick a different fight. [01:58:12.040 --> 01:58:19.800] I just went to court last Wednesday with Scott Richardson and I was sitting in the courtroom [01:58:19.800 --> 01:58:22.480] and I called the bailiff over because of own crutches. [01:58:22.480 --> 01:58:29.920] They come over and he said, I told him, tell the judge that I want to make a video recording [01:58:29.920 --> 01:58:33.040] of these proceedings. [01:58:33.040 --> 01:58:38.920] And he said, okay, he goes up and I saw the judge say, no, because back and said, no, [01:58:38.920 --> 01:58:43.040] the judge said you can't videotape these proceedings. [01:58:43.040 --> 01:58:46.680] I said, well, in that case, I'm going to want you to take a criminal complaint against the [01:58:46.680 --> 01:58:49.360] judge for official oppression. [01:58:49.360 --> 01:58:59.320] The bailiff said, okay, but then Scott had beat them all up big time. [01:58:59.320 --> 01:59:02.560] So this bailiff could not have been more polite. [01:59:02.560 --> 01:59:03.960] I make up a criminal complaint. [01:59:03.960 --> 01:59:04.960] I call him over. [01:59:04.960 --> 01:59:08.040] I signed it in front of him and gave it to him. [01:59:08.040 --> 01:59:13.280] He took it, made a copy, brought it back with a copy of the rules of court. [01:59:13.280 --> 01:59:14.280] Oh, good. [01:59:14.280 --> 01:59:17.480] I don't even have to ask for those. [01:59:17.480 --> 01:59:21.200] There's a brand, and I told you, there's a new ruling out that just came down in February. [01:59:21.200 --> 01:59:28.400] It says I have a right to videotape these, but I didn't like the way the court of appeals [01:59:28.400 --> 01:59:29.800] rendered the ruling. [01:59:29.800 --> 01:59:36.200] So now I get to go in and force them to rule on this issue the way I want them to. [01:59:36.200 --> 01:59:37.600] So I'm not after the judge. [01:59:37.600 --> 01:59:41.080] He said, well, why are you filing against him? [01:59:41.080 --> 01:59:42.080] He was convenient. [01:59:42.080 --> 01:59:51.720] So he's going to tell this judge that I filed criminal charges against the judge because [01:59:51.720 --> 01:59:55.480] the judge was convenient. [01:59:55.480 --> 01:59:57.160] How did they deal with you? [01:59:57.160 --> 01:59:58.160] Right. [01:59:58.160 --> 02:00:14.240] They don't even know what your agenda is.