[00:00.000 --> 00:05.440] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:05.440 --> 00:14.040] Markets for Friday 2 June 2017 closed off with gold at $1,278.45 an ounce, silver $17.51 [00:14.040 --> 00:20.000] an ounce, Texas Crude $48.36 a barrel and Bitcoin is still going up sitting at about [00:20.000 --> 00:24.000] $2,472 US currency. [00:24.000 --> 00:32.000] Today in history, the year 1953, the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, crowned Queen of the [00:32.000 --> 00:36.600] United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and her other realms and territories and head [00:36.600 --> 00:42.000] of the Commonwealth, marks one of the first major international events to be televised. [00:42.000 --> 00:47.000] Today in history. [00:47.000 --> 00:52.000] In recent news, President Donald Trump announced the US would withdraw from the UN Paris Accord [00:52.000 --> 00:57.000] on climate change this last Thursday yesterday stating that quote, the US will withdraw from [00:57.000 --> 01:03.000] the Paris Climate Accord but begin negotiations to re-enter either the Paris Accord or a really [01:03.000 --> 01:08.000] entirely new transaction on terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its [01:08.000 --> 01:11.000] workers, its people, its taxpayers. [01:11.000 --> 01:17.000] This could be predictably expected and G7 formerly G8 leaders in a frenzy, notably Chinese [01:17.000 --> 01:21.960] dictatorship admiring Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who in a statement said that [01:21.960 --> 01:25.960] quote, we are deeply disappointed that the United States federal government has decided [01:25.960 --> 01:30.680] to withdraw from the Paris Agreement or French Socialist President Emmanuel Macron saying [01:30.680 --> 01:35.360] that it's quote, a mistake for our planet, wherever we live, whoever we are, we all share [01:35.360 --> 01:38.880] the same responsibility to make our planet great again. [01:38.880 --> 01:43.640] Along with UK Prime Minister Theresa May, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime [01:43.640 --> 01:47.360] Minister Paolo Gentiloni all stating disapproval as well. [01:47.360 --> 01:51.080] Even Russia, eighth in the former G8, stated the great significance it saw in the Paris [01:51.080 --> 01:56.280] Agreement hours before Trump made his announcement, not to mention a Vatican spokesman from the [01:56.280 --> 02:00.600] Holy See expressed the pontiffs dismay at President Trump's decision. [02:00.600 --> 02:04.280] Unfortunately, world leaders and media pundits failed to ask the opinions of another more [02:04.280 --> 02:09.120] important base, the American taxpayer, because they are never consulted via referendum or [02:09.120 --> 02:14.040] congressional vote when President Obama decided to unilaterally sign up the US to an agreement [02:14.040 --> 02:18.240] that would have major effects on industry in the United States or maybe they should [02:18.240 --> 02:22.560] have asked major climate change proponent, American adjunct professor in the Department [02:22.560 --> 02:27.080] of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University, James Hansen. [02:27.080 --> 02:31.440] What he thought of the agreement, which he actually called a fraud, really a fake, it's [02:31.440 --> 02:36.480] just worthless words, mostly because there was no solution to CO2 emissions other than [02:36.480 --> 02:42.800] charging more for energy, which would only disproportionately hurt the most vulnerable. [02:42.800 --> 02:48.400] The low star lowdown is currently looking for sponsors to apply for a service to advertise [02:48.400 --> 02:49.400] with us. [02:49.400 --> 02:50.400] Feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. [02:50.400 --> 03:16.800] This was Rick Roddy with your lowdown for June 2, 2017. [03:16.800 --> 03:28.160] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton through VLA radio and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [03:28.160 --> 03:39.400] Okay, Olivier, still I don't understand what is actually going on with your friend in jail. [03:39.400 --> 03:44.000] Sounds like you're just reacting to the things that have occurred. [03:44.000 --> 03:57.760] Right, because the attorney refused to file appeal or file paperwork for Troy after he [03:57.760 --> 03:58.760] was convicted. [03:58.760 --> 04:02.800] So that's what got us into this position. [04:02.800 --> 04:06.840] Oh, did you file a bar grievance against the attorney? [04:06.840 --> 04:07.840] Not yet. [04:07.840 --> 04:11.840] Oh, we need to do that quickly. [04:11.840 --> 04:12.840] Okay. [04:12.840 --> 04:19.440] The attorney has no reason to do anything that would annoy the judge. [04:19.440 --> 04:23.160] Okay, let's take a step back. [04:23.160 --> 04:30.160] You're getting pretty good with understanding the law and the code, statute and case law [04:30.160 --> 04:32.600] that affect your case. [04:32.600 --> 04:37.600] Now let's go back and talk about the politics. [04:37.600 --> 04:45.440] At the end of the day, you cannot expect to win your case simply because you have the [04:45.440 --> 04:48.720] law and the facts on your side. [04:48.720 --> 04:52.360] You think so as naive. [04:52.360 --> 04:54.720] Everything is political. [04:54.720 --> 04:59.320] When you walk into the courtroom, especially if you have counsel, it's like a foresighted [04:59.320 --> 05:01.840] chess board. [05:01.840 --> 05:06.080] You've got your counsel to your right, you have opposing counsel to your left and judge [05:06.080 --> 05:08.400] across from you. [05:08.400 --> 05:15.240] You have a relationship with your counsel may not be a good one, but you got one. [05:15.240 --> 05:23.080] Your counsel has a relationship with opposing counsel and with the judge. [05:23.080 --> 05:25.000] Everything here is about these relationships. [05:25.000 --> 05:33.320] So in order for you to take advantage of your position, being the odd man out, you need [05:33.320 --> 05:44.160] to be able to invoke the politics of the group to the benefit of your attorney to your benefit. [05:44.160 --> 05:51.440] The way you do that, you're bar-grieving at the first opportunity and you instruct him [05:51.440 --> 05:56.280] as to what he is to do. [05:56.280 --> 06:02.040] He is likely not to want to do that because he doesn't want to do anything that's going [06:02.040 --> 06:04.960] to annoy the judge. [06:04.960 --> 06:08.720] So he's going to throw your buddy under the bus. [06:08.720 --> 06:14.840] Well, the first thing you want to do is let him know that you are more dangerous to him [06:14.840 --> 06:16.600] than the judge is. [06:16.600 --> 06:21.400] Bar-grieving is far more dangerous than the judge. [06:21.400 --> 06:24.120] So you ask him to do something when he doesn't, you bar-grieve him. [06:24.120 --> 06:28.560] Now he's going to be jumping up and down, waving his arms and railing in righteousness [06:28.560 --> 06:34.800] and indignation because he's dumb and good and you let him know that if you try to get [06:34.800 --> 06:39.240] to a move from this case, I'll bar-grieve you for that. [06:39.240 --> 06:41.080] Now he's in a spot. [06:41.080 --> 06:45.520] He's got a client here that's going to screw him royal. [06:45.520 --> 06:52.000] So what does he do when he goes to the judge and says, judge, you've got to help me, the [06:52.000 --> 06:57.840] prosecutor said, you've got to bail me out here, you gave me this client and now he's [06:57.840 --> 06:59.280] about to bust my chops. [06:59.280 --> 07:07.400] He's going to put me out of business, use the lawyer's politics to get you what you [07:07.400 --> 07:08.400] need. [07:08.400 --> 07:09.400] Go ahead. [07:09.400 --> 07:21.800] He said that he was going to file a motion for a new trial and a motion to be withdrawn. [07:21.800 --> 07:27.080] You say he would file a motion for a new trial or he would not? [07:27.080 --> 07:28.080] No. [07:28.080 --> 07:37.320] After they offered Troy the deal and Troy rejected the deal, they offered to release [07:37.320 --> 07:41.920] him that day if he dropped the appeals. [07:41.920 --> 07:45.960] Troy told him to go take it to the trash. [07:45.960 --> 07:51.720] What did the lawyer say? [07:51.720 --> 08:02.600] The lawyer said, well, then he's going to set bond today and I'm going to file a motion [08:02.600 --> 08:06.720] for a new trial and a motion to be withdrawn. [08:06.720 --> 08:07.720] Okay. [08:07.720 --> 08:12.120] So the lawyer is going to file the motion for a new trial. [08:12.120 --> 08:14.160] That's good. [08:14.160 --> 08:20.560] Even if he doesn't, you're acting in good faith reliance. [08:20.560 --> 08:27.600] So your problem is a motion for a new trial two weeks after the notice of appeal going [08:27.600 --> 08:30.080] to make a difference? [08:30.080 --> 08:32.440] No. [08:32.440 --> 08:40.480] If you make a notice of appeal untimely, then the notice of appeal is moot and it sits in [08:40.480 --> 08:44.720] the record and waits until it is timely. [08:44.720 --> 08:49.200] You are probably going to get a notice from the court of appeals saying they don't have [08:49.200 --> 08:59.440] subject matter jurisdiction and this gets confusing because the clerk sent the appeal [08:59.440 --> 09:06.920] in too soon and I had problems with one of those here in Texas where I sent in a notice [09:06.920 --> 09:14.400] to the court of appeals that they didn't have subject matter jurisdiction because the notice [09:14.400 --> 09:22.440] was early but you shouldn't have to do that because it should sit in the record. [09:22.440 --> 09:31.520] So make sure that, read the rules on motion for reconsideration because in Texas, you [09:31.520 --> 09:33.680] file a motion for reconsideration. [09:33.680 --> 09:44.960] If the judge doesn't answer it for 75 days, it is ruled denied as a matter of law. [09:44.960 --> 09:51.280] So I had to wait 75 days because the judge refused to answer the motion. [09:51.280 --> 09:53.320] Good chance the judge would do the same thing here. [09:53.320 --> 10:01.400] You need to read the code on motion for new trial to see if he must require, doesn't answer [10:01.400 --> 10:07.800] it timely, you need to get the lawyer to file a petition for read a mandamus because you [10:07.800 --> 10:15.960] need the findings of fact and conclusions at law in order to know what the judge ruled [10:15.960 --> 10:23.080] so that you are able to file an effective appeal. [10:23.080 --> 10:28.880] So if he doesn't give it to you, you petition the court of appeals to order him to give [10:28.880 --> 10:32.280] you one. [10:32.280 --> 10:34.480] After the time limit is up. [10:34.480 --> 10:44.320] Right, after his, whatever statutory time limit they give him to respond in. [10:44.320 --> 10:46.320] Okay. [10:46.320 --> 10:56.080] All right, so, all right. [10:56.080 --> 11:05.720] So how are your other cases moving along, any, any movement on any of those? [11:05.720 --> 11:11.800] They gave me a new attorney, so they had to do the whole process of coming to court and [11:11.800 --> 11:21.040] wait, wait, what case, what case on the driver license case on the driver's case, my all [11:21.040 --> 11:28.000] my civil cases as far as where I'm still in the government or the city are my briefs [11:28.000 --> 11:34.440] have been turned in, their briefs have been turned in, and the court has gave them 30 [11:34.440 --> 11:37.040] more days to turn in one brief. [11:37.040 --> 11:44.080] And I did what you said today, filing the oral argument, removing the oral argument. [11:44.080 --> 11:50.960] So she told me once, because I did the, because I removed the oral argument now instead of [11:50.960 --> 11:56.840] the next court date being a date for our argument, the next court date will be a date that they [11:56.840 --> 11:59.880] sit down and rule over the case. [11:59.880 --> 12:00.880] Good. [12:00.880 --> 12:03.280] That's the best way to do it. [12:03.280 --> 12:05.840] We'll go on the document. [12:05.840 --> 12:11.680] You might come into court and the judge look at you and decide he doesn't like you. [12:11.680 --> 12:15.800] You know, that's a risk you take. [12:15.800 --> 12:22.440] He obviously knows the lawyer on the other side and you could come into court and miss [12:22.440 --> 12:26.360] enough fine point and just screw yourself for oil. [12:26.360 --> 12:34.000] I suggest to anyone per se that you insist that the court make all determinations on [12:34.000 --> 12:37.560] the filings, no oral argument. [12:37.560 --> 12:38.560] So that's good news. [12:38.560 --> 12:39.560] That's good. [12:39.560 --> 12:42.280] So now it's just sitting waiting for them to rule. [12:42.280 --> 12:46.160] That could take six or eight months. [12:46.160 --> 12:47.160] Yeah. [12:47.160 --> 12:52.560] That's not what she told me. [12:52.560 --> 12:57.920] They generally have a busy docket. [12:57.920 --> 13:04.000] So don't be surprised if it takes six to eight months. [13:04.000 --> 13:11.080] You had one here, one in California, take about nine months for them to rule. [13:11.080 --> 13:16.760] Wait, was it like a big, serious case? [13:16.760 --> 13:17.760] No. [13:17.760 --> 13:23.640] Actually, it was my who the heck are you case? [13:23.640 --> 13:25.600] It was three pages. [13:25.600 --> 13:27.120] I don't know who you are. [13:27.120 --> 13:32.520] I don't know who your alleged principal is and never entered into a contract with you [13:32.520 --> 13:37.880] and never entered into a contract with your principal, prove up your agency's standing [13:37.880 --> 13:45.720] and capacity to initiate a proceeding against this property and that's it. [13:45.720 --> 13:50.280] It wasn't that it took them long to render the ruling. [13:50.280 --> 13:56.760] It's that it took them a long time to get to it. [13:56.760 --> 14:03.320] What the appeals court will do is they will put your appeal in the hands of a law clerk, [14:03.320 --> 14:09.760] maybe two, and they'll go through all your law and they will write an analysis for the [14:09.760 --> 14:14.840] court and then the court will look at the analysis and if they like it, they accept [14:14.840 --> 14:15.840] it. [14:15.840 --> 14:20.120] If not, they give it back to the law clerk, tell them what they need to fix and then they [14:20.120 --> 14:21.120] get another one. [14:21.120 --> 14:25.440] The judges don't write all these things. [14:25.440 --> 14:31.040] So they use that to help move the dockets along. [14:31.040 --> 14:39.080] But generally appeals courts are so busy that if it doesn't take them a long time to get [14:39.080 --> 14:46.600] to your case, then they don't and then they have too many judges. [14:46.600 --> 14:52.080] So don't expect that part to go quickly. [14:52.080 --> 14:56.600] Or does. [14:56.600 --> 15:02.000] I'm intrigued about the response by the FBI. [15:02.000 --> 15:06.800] I use these agencies for politics. [15:06.800 --> 15:15.200] I look at who is this guy I'm after most afraid of? [15:15.200 --> 15:22.760] If it's a municipal judge or a city, a municipal judge or a justice of the peace, they're afraid [15:22.760 --> 15:29.600] of the state both state to commission on judicial conduct because they believe that the commission [15:29.600 --> 15:34.720] on judicial conduct never sanctions high level judges. [15:34.720 --> 15:41.320] They only throw JP's and municipal court judges under the bus. [15:41.320 --> 15:44.560] And for the most part, they're right about that. [15:44.560 --> 15:49.480] Local police, local police are terrified of the judges. [15:49.480 --> 15:54.680] They're afraid of prosecutors, but they have a relationship with prosecutors usually, but [15:54.680 --> 15:57.880] they don't have one with the judges. [15:57.880 --> 16:03.360] And these police go into court and they get on the stand and if they got a good lawyer [16:03.360 --> 16:11.240] on the other side and he rips the cop to shreds, the judge just reams him good because he's [16:11.240 --> 16:13.760] supposed to be a professional. [16:13.760 --> 16:18.240] And judges that the police are terrified of these high level judges. [16:18.240 --> 16:21.440] So that's the ones I want to stick on the police. [16:21.440 --> 16:26.720] Judges, who are they afraid of? [16:26.720 --> 16:33.200] Judges they're afraid of people who would be their political opponents in their next [16:33.200 --> 16:34.200] election. [16:34.200 --> 16:41.480] Other lawyers, prosecutors, other judges and the feds. [16:41.480 --> 16:45.640] Staying on, about to go to break, Brandy Kelton wheeled out radio. [16:45.640 --> 16:49.800] I call it number 512-646-1984. [16:49.800 --> 16:56.800] We'll be right back. [16:56.800 --> 17:01.160] Dang cookies. [17:01.160 --> 17:02.160] Cookie? [17:02.160 --> 17:03.160] Me love cookies. [17:03.160 --> 17:04.640] Oh, hi Cookie Munchers. [17:04.640 --> 17:06.640] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:06.640 --> 17:07.640] Cookie? [17:07.640 --> 17:08.640] Yucky? [17:08.640 --> 17:09.640] No, no bad cookies. [17:09.640 --> 17:12.640] And even eat these cookies, these are cyber cookies. [17:12.640 --> 17:13.640] No candy? [17:13.640 --> 17:16.880] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.880 --> 17:17.880] These have apples. [17:17.880 --> 17:18.880] Really? [17:18.880 --> 17:21.400] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:21.400 --> 17:22.400] Yummy apple. [17:22.400 --> 17:26.760] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.760 --> 17:32.880] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.880 --> 17:34.480] Bye bye yucky cookies. [17:34.480 --> 17:39.920] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right [17:39.920 --> 17:45.640] hand side, bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you [17:45.640 --> 17:47.240] some yummy new cookie. [17:47.240 --> 17:48.240] New cookies? [17:48.240 --> 17:49.240] Or me? [17:49.240 --> 17:53.520] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, I go through [17:53.520 --> 17:57.480] this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.480 --> 17:58.480] These are cookies. [17:58.480 --> 18:00.480] These look like a pie. [18:00.480 --> 18:05.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:05.800 --> 18:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris proven method. [18:09.240 --> 18:13.600] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.600 --> 18:14.600] can win two. [18:14.600 --> 18:19.400] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.400 --> 18:20.400] civil rights statute. [18:20.400 --> 18:24.720] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons? [18:24.720 --> 18:26.720] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.720 --> 18:29.360] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [18:29.360 --> 18:34.040] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:34.040 --> 18:39.160] The Michael Mearris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.160 --> 18:41.280] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.280 --> 18:46.840] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner [18:46.840 --> 18:49.760] or email Michael Mearris at yahoo.com. [18:49.760 --> 18:57.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.520 --> 19:04.520] And to learn how to stop debt collectors next, you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:04.520 --> 19:07.520] at the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:07.520 --> 19:18.520] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the father can deliver you, and don't let [19:18.520 --> 19:20.520] bad-mine people hurt you. [19:20.520 --> 19:26.520] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton on the rule of law radio and we're talking to Olivier [19:26.520 --> 19:32.520] and Olivier, we need more politics, we need more strategy. [19:32.520 --> 19:38.520] Before we do anything, we need to know where we're trying to get to. [19:38.520 --> 19:45.520] That's why I ask you what you are trying to accomplish with your friend that's in jail now. [19:45.520 --> 19:55.520] How can you use his being in jail under these conditions to your ultimate down the road advantage? [19:55.520 --> 20:05.520] Well, I've got a friend of mine who gave me somebody's name who's in office and he's a [20:05.520 --> 20:14.520] Spanish entity and he helps, I guess, the Spanish community and he told me to contact [20:14.520 --> 20:20.520] him and let him know what's going on because he's an elected official. [20:20.520 --> 20:23.520] And that is great. [20:23.520 --> 20:31.520] If you go to what elected officials want, they want you to come to them with something [20:31.520 --> 20:35.520] that's completely wrapped up. [20:35.520 --> 20:41.520] Generally, if you want an elected official to do something, you need to bring him a white paper. [20:41.520 --> 20:46.520] Now, white paper will list out what you want him to do. [20:46.520 --> 20:52.520] It'll list all of the laws surrounding what you want him to do. [20:52.520 --> 20:59.520] What is likely to take in terms of resources to get it done? [20:59.520 --> 21:06.520] How much it will cost and how it will, if you're asking him to get new law, how the law will [21:06.520 --> 21:12.520] affect other laws and other individuals. [21:12.520 --> 21:16.520] He wants you to research out the whole thing and then bring it to him. [21:16.520 --> 21:22.520] And that's reasonable because he's the lawmaker. [21:22.520 --> 21:25.520] He spends his time trying to get laws passed. [21:25.520 --> 21:30.520] If he spent his time researching out all the laws, he wouldn't have any time to get his work done. [21:30.520 --> 21:40.520] So, with that in mind, what have you got to sell this Spanish lawmaker? [21:40.520 --> 21:53.520] What are the courts consistently doing to his constituents that this case exemplifies? [21:53.520 --> 22:03.520] That since he has a couple of smart operators, that he can use this case to bring issues [22:03.520 --> 22:09.520] against these judges who are doing the same things to his constituents. [22:09.520 --> 22:15.520] And he come out the good guy. [22:15.520 --> 22:21.520] The best thing for you can do is stay in the background and never show your face [22:21.520 --> 22:25.520] and let him take all the credit and you get the outcome you want. [22:25.520 --> 22:29.520] Is that making sense, Olivier? [22:29.520 --> 22:33.520] Yes, sir. [22:33.520 --> 22:40.520] So, think about it, you've been really good at responding and reacting to what they do. [22:40.520 --> 22:42.520] You do your research. [22:42.520 --> 22:43.520] They do something. [22:43.520 --> 22:48.520] You find the laws you need and you go back after them. [22:48.520 --> 22:51.520] Now you're ready to take the next step. [22:51.520 --> 22:58.520] I always talk about what's your ultimate intended outcome. [22:58.520 --> 23:03.520] Because if you don't know where you're going, very likely you're going to wind up somewhere else. [23:03.520 --> 23:13.520] So, at the end of the day, after all of these cases are completed, what would be a win for you? [23:13.520 --> 23:19.520] What would you like to accomplish? [23:19.520 --> 23:24.520] Well, our main thing was making case law. [23:24.520 --> 23:28.520] And we wanted to make case law and appeal in the Supreme Court. [23:28.520 --> 23:34.520] So, basically, when we hit that road, I mean, that's the main overall issue that we really... [23:34.520 --> 23:35.520] Okay, hold on. [23:35.520 --> 23:37.520] Make case law for what? [23:37.520 --> 23:44.520] What are you trying to achieve with the case law? [23:44.520 --> 23:47.520] What are we trying to achieve with the case law? [23:47.520 --> 23:56.520] We're going to have case law that's to assist us later in other legal issues. [23:56.520 --> 23:59.520] You're being too general. [23:59.520 --> 24:02.520] So far, you don't have an outcome in mind. [24:02.520 --> 24:08.520] You're just kind of shooting in the dark. [24:08.520 --> 24:11.520] Let me give you an example. [24:11.520 --> 24:23.520] Everything that I do is focused around one very clearly defined ultimate outcome. [24:23.520 --> 24:33.520] It is my purpose to place every judge in the country in a position such that when they step up behind the bench, [24:33.520 --> 24:38.520] look out across the bar at the gallery, I want them wondering which one. [24:38.520 --> 24:48.520] Which one of those scoundrels sitting out there are waiting for me to render a ruling so they can run down to the grand jury and try to get me indicted. [24:48.520 --> 24:55.520] Everything I do is focused toward that objective. [24:55.520 --> 24:57.520] And it's always been focused that way. [24:57.520 --> 25:09.520] When I was a number of years ago, I was shoved out of the courthouse by the bailiff to prevent me from giving criminal complaints to the grand jury against the district attorney. [25:09.520 --> 25:14.520] Shoved me out the door, knocked me down and broke my elbow. [25:14.520 --> 25:18.520] Now that really hurt. [25:18.520 --> 25:30.520] I landed on my elbow so hard I smashed it through my shirt and my suit coat, made a hole in one of my favorite suits. [25:30.520 --> 25:37.520] So I was really upset at the bailiff and I really wanted to get back at him. [25:37.520 --> 25:50.520] So I sat down and said to myself, okay, how can I use this to move me toward my ultimate intended outcome? [25:50.520 --> 25:59.520] And I could find no way to craft that such that it would move me toward my outcome. [25:59.520 --> 26:02.520] So I didn't go after the bailiff. [26:02.520 --> 26:09.520] Everybody was sure that I was going to get the bailiff fired, even especially the bailiff. [26:09.520 --> 26:20.520] And then after I got out of the hospital, I came back to the courthouse a week or two later in a cast and a sling and a prosecuting attorney. [26:20.520 --> 26:24.520] He was a county attorney then. He's now the district attorney. [26:24.520 --> 26:33.520] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, are you going to go after the bailiff? After Dick Wood? I said, no. You're not? [26:33.520 --> 26:37.520] You know you could. I said, yeah, I know I could. [26:37.520 --> 26:41.520] But my purpose here is not to get people fired. [26:41.520 --> 26:51.520] Well, he knocked you down. Well, yeah, he did, but I pushed him over the edge and I certainly didn't want to ruin his professional career. [26:51.520 --> 27:01.520] And ruining this guy's professional career while it might make me feel better, it wouldn't lead me toward my outcome. [27:01.520 --> 27:07.520] And that was the day that everybody found out that I was for real. [27:07.520 --> 27:17.520] That's when the sheriff and the district attorney at the time got really afraid of me. [27:17.520 --> 27:26.520] Because it became very clear this guy has got a purpose in mind and you are not going to move him from that purpose. [27:26.520 --> 27:35.520] Until you have a very well-defined purpose in mind, you're going to be distracted. [27:35.520 --> 27:40.520] You're not going to be near as effective. And just getting case law is not enough. [27:40.520 --> 27:51.520] Case law concerning what specific issue? What is going on here, Olivier, that needs to be fixed? [27:51.520 --> 27:56.520] The due process, the procedures. [27:56.520 --> 28:12.520] Me, I don't know if I'm hearing you right, but our purpose is to assume for every opportunity we get, just to assume and get paid. [28:12.520 --> 28:27.520] So when they see us, they know that we're different. If the purpose is only to make money, very good chance you're going to be disappointed. [28:27.520 --> 28:35.520] You need an overriding purpose and you almost said it. [28:35.520 --> 28:42.520] And I know what I want to say, but this is something you have to determine. [28:42.520 --> 28:53.520] In order to get to a noble, ultimate outcome, it's perfectly all right to sue them into the stone age. [28:53.520 --> 29:06.520] And take every dime from them you can, but you need a purpose that a jury of your peers can look at it and say, that's a credible purpose. [29:06.520 --> 29:12.520] Making money at the expense of the state is not going to be construed as a credible purpose. [29:12.520 --> 29:22.520] You need a purpose that your jury will say, this guy deserves the money so he can take us to this purpose. [29:22.520 --> 29:23.520] Back to go to break. [29:23.520 --> 29:24.520] Hang on. [29:24.520 --> 29:33.520] But think about that when we come back and see if you can find a goal that you can set and keep moving toward that goal. [29:33.520 --> 29:37.520] That will dramatically increase your effectiveness. [29:37.520 --> 29:43.520] Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [29:43.520 --> 29:45.520] We have another caller on the board. [29:45.520 --> 29:47.520] Kevin, I see you there. [29:47.520 --> 29:54.520] We've just got two people on the board, so we've probably got room for at least one more while the show's going, so give us a call. [29:54.520 --> 29:56.520] We'll be right back. [30:00.520 --> 30:03.520] Are you too clean for your own good? [30:03.520 --> 30:08.520] According to new research, being too conscientious about dirt and germs could actually make you sick. [30:08.520 --> 30:14.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back with some antibacterial products you might want to avoid. [30:14.520 --> 30:16.520] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.520 --> 30:20.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.520 --> 30:24.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.520 --> 30:26.520] So protect your rights. [30:26.520 --> 30:30.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.520 --> 30:32.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.520 --> 30:40.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.520 --> 30:43.520] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.520 --> 30:50.520] A University of Michigan study suggests that antibacterial soaps and hand sanitizers could make your family sick. [30:50.520 --> 30:54.520] Many contain the chemical triclosan and antimicrobial. [30:54.520 --> 31:00.520] Young people with higher levels of triclosan in their systems are more likely to be diagnosed with allergies and hay fever. [31:00.520 --> 31:06.520] Scientists believe the chemical may interfere with the body's immune system by mimicking or affecting human hormones. [31:06.520 --> 31:12.520] Triclosan may also prevent kids from dealing with everyday germs, so they don't develop a natural immunity to them. [31:12.520 --> 31:18.520] So if you want a healthy queen, skip the antibacterial products and wash up with good old fashioned soap and water. [31:18.520 --> 31:44.520] I'm Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:48.520 --> 32:00.520] If you have any questions or other problems, please feel free to post them in the comments section below. [32:00.520 --> 32:19.520] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:19.520 --> 32:34.520] Traffic Courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law. [32:34.520 --> 32:50.520] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.520 --> 33:01.520] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.520 --> 33:11.520] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:11.520 --> 33:40.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. Olivier, think about it. If you could change something for the better, that would benefit everyone. [33:40.520 --> 33:50.520] What would that be? [33:50.520 --> 34:02.520] Don't answer now. It's too soon. But think about it. And the next time we talk, see if you need something to focus on, see if you can come up with a place to focus on. [34:02.520 --> 34:22.520] Then when you file your suits against them, you're not trying to get money for you. You're trying to force them to have to give up money in order to get them to do something they should be doing. [34:22.520 --> 34:37.520] Then you can take that to a jury and say, this is why you should give me all this money, not for my benefit, but for the benefit of everybody. Does that make sense? [34:37.520 --> 34:40.520] Yes, it does. [34:40.520 --> 34:55.520] And you'll be surprised at how much that will help you. I go into these hearings and courts and stuff, and they do stuff that makes me want to grab them by the throat and choke them. [34:55.520 --> 35:11.520] But I look at it and say, if I grab them by the throat and choke them, will that lead me toward my ultimate outcome? And it helps me to temper my reactions so that I'm always steady. [35:11.520 --> 35:22.520] I'm always focused. They can never distract me. And it makes me appear to them to be far more powerful than I am. [35:22.520 --> 35:27.520] And at the end of the day, perception is everything. [35:27.520 --> 35:38.520] And it's that perspective that got them to look at me as if I'm always trying to set them up. [35:38.520 --> 35:44.520] Because they can't predict how I'm going to react or respond. [35:44.520 --> 35:57.520] They don't know that I have a focus that keeps me from being pulled one way or another. And they try to drag me off on a rabbit trail, but I've got this focus that doesn't let me go there. [35:57.520 --> 36:02.520] And that makes them nervous because for the most part, they don't. [36:02.520 --> 36:15.520] I had a prosecutor in Waco, Texas recognize that when I gave him a criminal complaint against the judge for not taking a motion into the court. [36:15.520 --> 36:23.520] And I gave it to an assistant prosecutor. He went in the back. This older man come out real tall, stately looking gentlemen. [36:23.520 --> 36:30.520] And he's holding my complaint. And I said, I take it you're the elected prosecutor. He said, yes, I am. [36:30.520 --> 36:35.520] So what are you going to do with that complaint? [36:35.520 --> 36:44.520] He looked at it. He looked down at me and he said, Mr. Kelton, I get the impression that you're a man on a mission. [36:44.520 --> 36:48.520] I said, sir, you are very astute. [36:48.520 --> 36:54.520] He said, Mr. Kelton, I make it a point never to interfere with a man on a mission. [36:54.520 --> 37:00.520] I will do as you wish and I will give this to the grand jury and they can do what they want with it. [37:00.520 --> 37:05.520] I said, wonderful, we're done here. [37:05.520 --> 37:20.520] If you can get these judges to see you in that light, when they see you as a man on the mission, they're not going to want to mess with you either. [37:20.520 --> 37:28.520] They're not going to think that they can get you to react to them and do something dumb or careless. [37:28.520 --> 37:37.520] They're going to see you as very dangerous to them and dangerous in a way that they can't deal with. [37:37.520 --> 37:39.520] Does that make sense? [37:39.520 --> 37:50.520] Yeah, not something to make sense. So I got to have a purpose and that purpose has to include the jurors to be sensitive to their emotions. [37:50.520 --> 38:02.520] So especially if I could show where a common everyday thing that they thought was this way but by law is written down and it's actually this way. [38:02.520 --> 38:11.520] And the officers or whoever is routinely violating it. [38:11.520 --> 38:17.520] And they're harming the people around us in the process. [38:17.520 --> 38:25.520] So don't force them officers to pay me all this money because they were mean to me. [38:25.520 --> 38:31.520] Force them to pay all this money so they won't be mean to everybody else. [38:31.520 --> 38:41.520] Because we have laws that protect us in our right which keeps us from having to use weapons against the officers. [38:41.520 --> 38:46.520] And if these rights are not adhered to, what other protections do we have? [38:46.520 --> 38:53.520] Right. And you could remind them of the reason for the Second Amendment. [38:53.520 --> 39:00.520] Do you know the stated reason of our founders for including the right to bear arms? [39:00.520 --> 39:03.520] To be able to take over the government. [39:03.520 --> 39:09.520] Exactly. We weren't allowed to bear arms for self-protection. [39:09.520 --> 39:17.520] We were allowed to bear arms to throw out this gun if it got corrupt. [39:17.520 --> 39:20.520] That was the reason. [39:20.520 --> 39:28.520] So it's not practical to do that with arms right now but we have other tools we can do that with. [39:28.520 --> 39:31.520] Okay, think about that. [39:31.520 --> 39:39.520] When we talk next time, give me a well-defined ultimate outcome. [39:39.520 --> 39:41.520] All right. [39:41.520 --> 39:43.520] Okay, thank you Olivier. [39:43.520 --> 39:46.520] Okay, now we're going to Kevin in Texas. [39:46.520 --> 39:50.520] Hello Kevin, what do you have for us today? [39:50.520 --> 39:53.520] Hey Randy, how are you doing? [39:53.520 --> 39:56.520] Doing well. [39:56.520 --> 40:03.520] I have a question on access in public documents in the district clerk's office. [40:03.520 --> 40:06.520] This would be like in Johnson County. [40:06.520 --> 40:10.520] Oh, Johnson County. I just called him today. [40:10.520 --> 40:12.520] Did you? [40:12.520 --> 40:17.520] I love to talk about Johnson County. [40:17.520 --> 40:24.520] Hannah didn't call me back. [40:24.520 --> 40:29.520] I'm sorry but Hannah is the district attorney down there. [40:29.520 --> 40:34.520] He's the guy I personally presented to a grand jury a few years ago. [40:34.520 --> 40:37.520] Yeah, I remember that. [40:37.520 --> 40:44.520] He does not send me Christmas cards. [40:44.520 --> 40:49.520] Okay, so you're requesting public information. [40:49.520 --> 40:54.520] Yes, sir. I've been trying to pull the files off of some tax suits [40:54.520 --> 40:57.520] and it used to not be a problem. [40:57.520 --> 41:02.520] I'm just going in, I was given the tax suit number and they would, a long time ago, [41:02.520 --> 41:05.520] they would just charge me 10 cents a copy, you know, and give me the copy of the tax suit. [41:05.520 --> 41:11.520] Here lately, they've been not wanting to give me, first they wanted to charge me a dollar a copy [41:11.520 --> 41:15.520] and they decided I could look them up on their computers [41:15.520 --> 41:20.520] but their computers were out of date and being updated so I couldn't get them on that [41:20.520 --> 41:23.520] so they decided they'd go ahead and give them to get 10 cents a copy. [41:23.520 --> 41:27.520] That was about two months ago and then this month when I went in, [41:27.520 --> 41:33.520] they told me, you know, they put back to a dollar copy and I asked just see the document [41:33.520 --> 41:36.520] and they said, if we can't show you the document, you're not a lawyer. [41:36.520 --> 41:39.520] I said, I'm not a lawyer. Correct. [41:39.520 --> 41:44.520] Okay, here's the deal. [41:44.520 --> 41:51.520] We had Larry Wiest go into the clerk's office in Johnson County to file some documents [41:51.520 --> 41:56.520] a couple years ago and they wouldn't accept him. [41:56.520 --> 42:00.520] So he called me and said, okay, what do I do? [42:00.520 --> 42:07.520] I said, go to the sheriff's department, filed a complaint against the clerk and he did. [42:07.520 --> 42:13.520] Now, I presented the district attorney in Johnson County to the grand jury. [42:13.520 --> 42:21.520] The reason I did that is I went down to the sheriff's department [42:21.520 --> 42:29.520] and told the sheriff's department that I wanted to observe the morning registration hearings. [42:29.520 --> 42:37.520] Oh, you can't watch those. We hold them deep in the jail and you would be a security risk. [42:37.520 --> 42:43.520] Oh, well, no problem. Hold them somewhere else. I want to watch. [42:43.520 --> 42:46.520] They said, well, we don't have any place else. [42:46.520 --> 42:53.520] Right here, right in your building, you've got a JP's office and a court. Hold them there. I want to watch. [42:53.520 --> 43:02.520] So they went back to talk to the JP who was doing the hearings and this lieutenant came out [43:02.520 --> 43:08.520] and he was the guy, well, I asked the clerk for the highest ranking officer in the building [43:08.520 --> 43:13.520] and they brought this lieutenant and he went to the back and came out and he said, [43:13.520 --> 43:17.520] the judge said, this is her courtroom and you're not going in it. [43:17.520 --> 43:23.520] I told him, you need to go back and explain to the judge that she is mistaken. [43:23.520 --> 43:31.520] It is not her courtroom. It is my courtroom and I very generously allow her to administer it according to my law. [43:31.520 --> 43:35.520] So in this case, I want you to go back there and arrest the judge. [43:35.520 --> 43:39.520] Well, we can arrest the judge as you can. Just go back and throw the cuffs on her. [43:39.520 --> 43:42.520] You don't have far to go. You're already in the jail. [43:42.520 --> 43:46.520] I even asked him to take his chicken suit off and he wouldn't do it. [43:46.520 --> 43:49.520] Now, explain the rest of it. We'll get back on the other side, ran to kill them. [43:49.520 --> 44:01.520] Welcome, we'll be right back. [44:20.520 --> 44:25.520] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. [44:25.520 --> 44:29.520] From Defense Distributed, third place, the AR-308 80% Lower. [44:29.520 --> 44:32.520] Fourth place, the AR-15 80% Lower. [44:32.520 --> 44:37.520] From Fat Sal's Deli, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fat Sal's Deli. [44:37.520 --> 44:42.520] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. That's logosradionetwork.com. [44:42.520 --> 44:47.520] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [44:47.520 --> 44:51.520] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get ten chances to win. [44:51.520 --> 44:54.520] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:54.520 --> 45:22.520] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:22.520 --> 45:27.520] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.520 --> 45:33.520] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.520 --> 45:42.520] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.520 --> 45:52.520] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.520 --> 46:21.520] Please visit www.lulavlalradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:21.520 --> 46:27.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking about Johnson County. [46:27.520 --> 46:32.520] Well, the lieutenant wouldn't go back there and arrest the judge. [46:32.520 --> 46:48.520] So I told the lieutenant not to get upset if he heard that I was making some rather unsavory allegations against him because I'm not after you. [46:48.520 --> 46:53.520] He said, you're not after me and you're going to file charges against me. [46:53.520 --> 46:55.520] I said, yes, as a matter of fact, I am. [46:55.520 --> 46:58.520] He said, well, why me? [46:58.520 --> 47:02.520] I said, you're convenient. [47:02.520 --> 47:13.520] And this really devastated him because I'm telling him I'm going to file criminal charges against him, but I'm only doing it because he's convenient. [47:13.520 --> 47:15.520] He can't deal with me. [47:15.520 --> 47:19.520] He can't negotiate with me. How do you do anything with me? [47:19.520 --> 47:22.520] As far as I'm concerned, he's cannon fodder. [47:22.520 --> 47:25.520] He was real kind of shaken by that. [47:25.520 --> 47:36.520] So I took a set of complaints against the lieutenant to the county judge and the county judge refused to act on him. [47:36.520 --> 47:43.520] So I took a set of complaints against the county judge to the district judge and the district judge refused to act on him. [47:43.520 --> 47:49.520] Then I took complaints against the district judge to the district attorney and the district attorney refused to act on him. [47:49.520 --> 47:53.520] Now I've walked everybody through the system. [47:53.520 --> 48:02.520] And then one day the grand jury came in to present their findings to the court and I was sitting in the courtroom. [48:02.520 --> 48:06.520] And I'm the only non-member who's in there. [48:06.520 --> 48:13.520] So they're all kind of looking at me wondering what I'm doing there, but they're not saying anything to me because it is an open court. [48:13.520 --> 48:18.520] And the grand jury came in and the foreman got up and he read the indictments. [48:18.520 --> 48:28.520] He read all of the presentments to the court, the names of them, what they were charged with, and whether they true-build or no-build. [48:28.520 --> 48:37.520] And when they were finished, the judge said, does the grand jury have any further business? And the foreman said, no, Your Honor, we do not. [48:37.520 --> 48:41.520] And I stood up in the courtroom and said, yes, you do. [48:41.520 --> 48:45.520] And the judge said, well, who are you? So I'm Randall Kelton. [48:45.520 --> 48:49.520] And what business do you have with this grand jury? [48:49.520 --> 48:55.520] And at that point I could have told him I have business with this grand jury and it's none of yours. [48:55.520 --> 49:00.520] But I had plans for him because he was the judge I filed criminal charges against. [49:00.520 --> 49:03.520] So he said, what business do you have with this grand jury? [49:03.520 --> 49:07.520] I said, well, Your Honor, I have some criminal complaints against the public officials. [49:07.520 --> 49:16.520] And what officials are those? Well, this district attorney sitting here and this assistant district attorney and you judge. [49:16.520 --> 49:23.520] And when I pointed at him and told him you, he froze in his tracks. [49:23.520 --> 49:27.520] He just stopped. He never did say anything else. [49:27.520 --> 49:34.520] I finally turned to the jury and apologized to them for approaching them this way. [49:34.520 --> 49:38.520] My issue started out with a very minor complaint. [49:38.520 --> 49:47.520] But because of the improprieties of the sheriff's department and the prosecutor's office and every judge in the county has grown to this. [49:47.520 --> 49:51.520] And I picked up a file three inches thick. [49:51.520 --> 49:55.520] And they agreed to hear my case. [49:55.520 --> 50:03.520] And then this judge gave me a date to be there and it was the wrong date. [50:03.520 --> 50:10.520] So I came back and I called the prosecutor to ask when the grand jury was next going to meet. [50:10.520 --> 50:14.520] And I got Lisa Wyatt. She was the assistant DA. [50:14.520 --> 50:22.520] She said, well, Mr. Kelton, you're too late. They just met today. They won't meet again for another month. [50:22.520 --> 50:30.520] Liar liar pants on fire. Never ask a grand, never ask a prosecuting attorney a question. [50:30.520 --> 50:34.520] You don't already know the answer to it because they'll lie to you. [50:34.520 --> 50:39.520] They were meeting the next day and I already got that from the district clerk. [50:39.520 --> 50:48.520] So the next day I come in, go down to the grand jury, told the bailiff that my name's Randall Kelton struck the grand jury. [50:48.520 --> 50:54.520] I have business with the grand jury and we struck the form and I have business with the grand jury. [50:54.520 --> 51:03.520] May I tell him the nature of the business? Yes, you may give him these and I gave him a stack of folders, 12 folders. [51:03.520 --> 51:05.520] And then I went upstairs. [51:05.520 --> 51:08.520] I'm sitting in the courtroom waiting to see what happens. [51:08.520 --> 51:15.520] And Lisa Wyatt's in there having hearings and she walked up to the judge as I was walking in. [51:15.520 --> 51:23.520] I sat down and she talked to the judge and turned around and saw me sitting there and she just froze in her tracks. [51:23.520 --> 51:30.520] And then she ran over to an assistant DA and whisper, whisper, whisper and assistant DA split. [51:30.520 --> 51:32.520] I knew what they were doing. [51:32.520 --> 51:40.520] They went and got the complaints I had given to the district attorney under the condition that he give it to the grand jury, [51:40.520 --> 51:45.520] which included criminal complaints against the district attorney. [51:45.520 --> 51:49.520] Went and got those and ran them down to the grand jury. [51:49.520 --> 51:54.520] Sorry, too late, already got them there. [51:54.520 --> 52:04.520] So while I'm sitting waiting, I walked out in the hall for a minute and a sergeant on the bailiff's there, real friendly guy, we had talked several times. [52:04.520 --> 52:08.520] And he said, Mr. Kelton, you seem like a personable individual. [52:08.520 --> 52:10.520] I said, well, I try to be. [52:10.520 --> 52:12.520] He said, do you mind if I give you some advice? [52:12.520 --> 52:13.520] Sure. [52:13.520 --> 52:20.520] He said, when you come down to poking the bear the way you do, you really need to be careful. [52:20.520 --> 52:24.520] I said, oh, I'm always careful. [52:24.520 --> 52:27.520] Besides, Sergeant, you don't understand. [52:27.520 --> 52:30.520] I am the bear. [52:30.520 --> 52:38.520] He stepped back and laughed and he said, yes, Mr. Kelton, today you are the bear. [52:38.520 --> 52:46.520] And about 20 minutes later, the grand jury called me down and I presented Dale Hannah to the grand jury myself. [52:46.520 --> 52:49.520] Now they didn't indict him. [52:49.520 --> 53:11.520] But when about five years later, when Larry Weest went to the sheriff's department with a complaint against the clerk, they got him a lieutenant who got on the phone, called the clerk, had a conversation, said, I'll be down there in 30 minutes. [53:11.520 --> 53:20.520] And he told Mr. Weest, he said, Mr. Weest, I'm going to go talk to the clerk and somebody will be getting back to you. [53:20.520 --> 53:22.520] And he did exactly what I told him. [53:22.520 --> 53:24.520] Don't tell me that garbage. [53:24.520 --> 53:25.520] Nobody ever calls back. [53:25.520 --> 53:31.520] Oh, Mr. Weest, I assure you, someone will get back to you. [53:31.520 --> 53:42.520] 8.30 the next morning, he got a call from the clerk's office asking him to please come down there and file those documents. One of her clerks had made a mistake. [53:42.520 --> 53:47.520] Now, I didn't get Dale Hannah indicted. [53:47.520 --> 53:56.520] But I darn sure got his attention and he told everybody else, this garbage is not going to happen to me again. [53:56.520 --> 54:04.520] If somebody else comes to me with complaints against the public official, I'm not going to shield them from the grand jury. [54:04.520 --> 54:11.520] So he, while I didn't get him indicted, and I didn't want to get him indicted, it did change everything. [54:11.520 --> 54:22.520] So, Kevin, if you take a complaint against the clerk, oops, hold on here, I'm trying to get you unmuted. [54:22.520 --> 54:39.520] Against the clerk to the shared department, you may not get a criminal complaint filed against the clerk, but I guarantee you, you will get that clerk's attention. [54:39.520 --> 54:57.520] Well, I have a question about a process that they're doing to see if there's a remedy for, and that is they have given me access to the computer system where I can pull the documents up, but they will no longer let me take a photo of them with my phone as I pull them up. [54:57.520 --> 54:59.520] Call 911. [54:59.520 --> 55:08.520] I mean, is that, they're saying it's internal rules that they are allowed to write for the preservation of their system and documents and all that. [55:08.520 --> 55:11.520] Okay, this is what I tell them. [55:11.520 --> 55:13.520] You have your rules. [55:13.520 --> 55:20.520] I have my constitution. I have my statute. You wipe your behind with your rules. [55:20.520 --> 55:25.520] So print you off a copy of Turner v. Driver. [55:25.520 --> 55:27.520] Take it with you. [55:27.520 --> 55:32.520] And when they tell you you can't photograph down 911. [55:32.520 --> 55:39.520] Okay, or ask them, is there a bailiff in the building? [55:39.520 --> 55:42.520] This the county clerk's office? [55:42.520 --> 55:44.520] The district clerk. [55:44.520 --> 55:50.520] District clerk. Oh, you're just down the hall from the, from the bailiff. You step out the door. [55:50.520 --> 55:55.520] Tell Lloyd I said hi. [55:55.520 --> 56:00.520] I'll tell you what I did to Lloyd in a minute. Oh, he was a hoot. [56:00.520 --> 56:05.520] You call the bailiff down and say, I need you to arrest this clerk. [56:05.520 --> 56:14.520] And he's going to say, why? Well, she won't let me videotape or photograph this monitor here. [56:14.520 --> 56:20.520] And he's going to say, what's wrong with that? Your hand in Turner driver. This is what's wrong with that. [56:20.520 --> 56:24.520] Now you need to arrest her for official oppression criminal violation. [56:24.520 --> 56:29.520] 39.03 Texas penal code. I'll square out the complaint. [56:29.520 --> 56:34.520] And you might write out the complaint before you even go and just hand it. [56:34.520 --> 56:42.520] But what you do is you take out the complaint, you lay it down on the counter and sign it and hand it to it. [56:42.520 --> 56:47.520] Signed in front of him, he can verify it. [56:47.520 --> 56:52.520] Now you got their attention. [56:52.520 --> 56:57.520] Very likely they'll change their rules. [56:57.520 --> 57:03.520] I'll tell you about Lloyd. I went down to file a habeas corpus. [57:03.520 --> 57:09.520] And the clerk said, that'll be $245 filing fee. [57:09.520 --> 57:14.520] I told her, don't tell me that. She said, well, I have to tell you that. No, no, no, no, no. [57:14.520 --> 57:19.520] Don't tell me that. Go get Lloyd to tell me that. [57:19.520 --> 57:23.520] So she went in the back, come out, Lloyd came out. [57:23.520 --> 57:29.520] I said, hello, Lloyd. He said, what can I do for you? So I'm here to file this habeas corpus. [57:29.520 --> 57:34.520] I didn't want her to tell me what the filing fee is. Will you tell me what the filing fee is? [57:34.520 --> 57:38.520] He said, that'll be $245 filing fee. [57:38.520 --> 57:43.520] I said, wait right there. Don't go anywhere. [57:43.520 --> 57:49.520] Somebody's going to want to talk to you. Took out my cell phone down 911. [57:49.520 --> 57:53.520] Asked for a deputy to arrest the district clerk. [57:53.520 --> 57:57.520] And the dispatcher gave me a bit of difficulty. [57:57.520 --> 58:01.520] And I finally asked her, are you a lawyer? And she said, well, no, I'm not. [58:01.520 --> 58:06.520] I'm a dispatcher, then dispatch. And she did. [58:06.520 --> 58:09.520] And to Lloyd's credit, he did not untrack a foot. [58:09.520 --> 58:16.520] And then this big old fat sergeant come in the door in the back and said, what seemed to be the problem here? [58:16.520 --> 58:19.520] I said, the problem is you don't have pencil and paper. [58:19.520 --> 58:25.520] Well, why do I need pencil and paper to take my criminal complaint against the district judge here? [58:25.520 --> 58:30.520] Well, why would I take a criminal complaint against the district judge? [58:30.520 --> 58:37.520] Because he's a criminal. That's why it went downhill from there. [58:37.520 --> 58:44.520] They didn't arrest him and I didn't want him to, but he checked the code and charged me nothing for the habeas. [58:44.520 --> 58:49.520] Hang on, I'm about to go to break. Radio, we'll be right back. [59:14.520 --> 59:18.520] A three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.520 --> 59:27.520] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.520 --> 59:40.520] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.520 --> 59:49.520] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.520 --> 59:59.520] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.520 --> 01:00:04.520] The following news flash is brought to you by the Low Star Lowdowns. [01:00:04.520 --> 01:00:24.520] Markets for Friday 2 June 2017, closed off with gold at $1,278.45 an ounce, silver $17.51 an ounce, Texas crude $48.36 a barrel, and Bitcoin is still going up, sitting at about $2,472 U.S. currency. [01:00:24.520 --> 01:00:41.520] Today in History, the year 1953, the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, crowned Queen of the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and her other realms and territories, and headed the Commonwealth, marks one of the first major international events to be televised. [01:00:41.520 --> 01:00:46.520] Today in History. [01:00:46.520 --> 01:01:10.520] In recent news, President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw from the U.N. Paris Accord on climate change this last Thursday, yesterday, stating that, quote, the U.S. will withdraw from the Paris Climate Accord, but begin negotiations to reenter under the Paris Accord, or a really entirely new transaction on terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people, its taxpayers. [01:01:10.520 --> 01:01:38.520] This, as could be predictably expected, had G7, formerly G8 leaders, and a frenzy, notably Chinese dictatorship admiring Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who in a statement said that, quote, we are deeply disappointed that the United States federal government has decided to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, or French Socialist President Emmanuel Macron, saying that it's, quote, a mistake for our planet, wherever we live, whoever we are, we all share the same responsibility to make our planet great again. [01:01:38.520 --> 01:01:47.520] Along with U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, all stating disapproval as well. [01:01:47.520 --> 01:02:00.520] Even Russia, eighth in the former G8, stated the great significance it saw in the Paris Agreement, hours before Trump made his announcement, not to mention a Vatican spokesman from the Holy See expressed the pot tips dismay at President Trump's decision. [01:02:00.520 --> 01:02:17.520] Unfortunately, world leaders and media pundits failed to ask the opinions of another more important base, the American taxpayer, because they were never consulted via referendum or congressional vote when President Obama decided to unilaterally sign up the U.S. to an agreement that would have major effects on industry in the United States. [01:02:17.520 --> 01:02:31.520] Or maybe they should have asked major climate change proponent, American adjunct professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia University, James Hansen, what he thought of the agreement, which he actually called a fraud, really a fake. [01:02:31.520 --> 01:02:42.520] It's just worthless words, mostly because there was no solution to CO2 emissions other than charging more for energy, which would only disproportionately hurt the most vulnerable. [01:02:42.520 --> 01:03:00.520] The Lone Star lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. She applied for a service to advertise with us. Feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. This was Rick Roddy with your lowdown for June 2, 2017. [01:03:00.520 --> 01:03:26.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, the root of low radio, and we're talking to Kevin in Johnson County. And I saw Lloyd in the hall the next day. [01:03:26.520 --> 01:03:38.520] And I said, hello, Lloyd. How's it going? He said, it's going fine. You're going to try to get me arrested again today? Oh, that heck. I was just joshing. Wasn't that a hoot? [01:03:38.520 --> 01:03:44.520] I didn't think it was so funny. But I like Lloyd. [01:03:44.520 --> 01:04:03.520] Anyway, point is, in Johnson County of all places, if you take them to task, they pay attention. And I suggest they try to keep you from photographing the screen. They're trying to make money. [01:04:03.520 --> 01:04:23.520] And the problem is, are you familiar with 39.03 Texas Penal Code? No, sir. You should have that memorized. It won't take much because if you deal with public officials much, you use it all the time. It is a catch-all. [01:04:23.520 --> 01:04:52.520] And it says, in effect, that if a public official, while acting under the collar or pretense of an official capacity, exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not expressly have or fails to perform a duty he's required to perform it in the process denies a citizen in the pool of pre-access to or enjoyment of a right, that's a class A misdemeanor in the state of Texas. [01:04:52.520 --> 01:05:11.520] Fail to perform any duty, exert any authority they do not expressly have, authority does not come from internal rules. Authority comes from Constitution and statute. [01:05:11.520 --> 01:05:32.520] So you want to see the statute that grabs them the authority to prevent you from doing a thing. I have never had a clerk stop me from photographing something. I've heard of it being done, but they've never done that to me. [01:05:32.520 --> 01:05:50.520] I'm looking forward to one of them trying it. And a good chance, if you make enough of a nuisance itself, that they will make it very easy for you to get what you want. [01:05:50.520 --> 01:05:58.520] Kevin, I take it this is something that you expect to go there often for? [01:05:58.520 --> 01:06:02.520] Yes, I do. [01:06:02.520 --> 01:06:09.520] So you're probably concerned about getting on the wrong side of the clerk? [01:06:09.520 --> 01:06:22.520] That wasn't my main concern. My main concern was I didn't think they had the right to do it. And the fact that they've upped the price on all of the copies and stuff, people without lawyers can't afford that. [01:06:22.520 --> 01:06:41.520] You were right. What they were doing, they didn't have the authority to do. And as to getting on the wrong side of the clerk, not a problem. That should not be a concern in the least. [01:06:41.520 --> 01:06:52.520] The clerk is your employee. They're public servants. You are the master. And you should never let them forget it. [01:06:52.520 --> 01:07:03.520] You need them to think that you're trying to get them to take one step across the legal line so you can land on them like a ton of bricks. [01:07:03.520 --> 01:07:13.520] If I go to Johnson County, that's certainly what they think about me. And they could not be nicer or more accommodating to me. [01:07:13.520 --> 01:07:23.520] Yes, sir, Mr. Kelton, what can I do for you, Mr. Kelton? Because they don't want to be presented to a grand jury the way Dale Hannah was. [01:07:23.520 --> 01:07:30.520] And I'm sure Dale Hannah is giving them strict instructions. Don't you sick him on me again? [01:07:30.520 --> 01:07:41.520] So you're right. They don't have any authority to do that. And even if they do, make them prove it. [01:07:41.520 --> 01:07:50.520] Call 911 or step out of the hall, get a bailiff in there. I need you to arrest it. And the bailiff is going to say, well, I'm not going to arrest the clerk. [01:07:50.520 --> 01:08:03.520] Right? Well, life is filled with little decisions. We all get to make some. You return. You're going to do your job and keep the peace. [01:08:03.520 --> 01:08:13.520] Are you going to shield this person from prosecution and violation of 38.05 penal code? And that happens to be a felon in the state of Texas. [01:08:13.520 --> 01:08:27.520] So make your decision. I don't care which. You take out your cell phone and say, be there a raster by Dal 9-1-1. It's your call. [01:08:27.520 --> 01:08:39.520] Generally only takes one of those. They're used to interrupting people and have people do what they say. They're not just somebody setting them up. [01:08:39.520 --> 01:08:46.520] They're not used to somebody asking them to do something when they really don't want them to do it. [01:08:46.520 --> 01:08:52.520] The reason they don't want them to do it is because now you get to hammer them when they don't. [01:08:52.520 --> 01:09:00.520] And the first time you do that to the clerk, you are going to get her attention. I guarantee it. [01:09:00.520 --> 01:09:13.520] Did that to a district clerk in Randall County when she wouldn't, said I had to look at these documents on the computer and I wanted to see the hard copy because I'm looking for something missing. [01:09:13.520 --> 01:09:21.520] And when I found it missing, I told the clerk, I need to see the actual document. So when it's not in here, I'll give you an information request for it. [01:09:21.520 --> 01:09:25.520] Well, if it's not in there, I can't give it to you. I said, that's right. [01:09:25.520 --> 01:09:36.520] But then you'll have to give me a letter saying that you have nowhere because you're responsive to my request and I can prove that it wasn't in the file at this time on this day. [01:09:36.520 --> 01:09:41.520] Well, I don't have the time of the personnel. You'll just have to look in the computer. [01:09:41.520 --> 01:09:47.520] Wait right there. Don't go anywhere. Somebody's going to want to talk to you. [01:09:47.520 --> 01:09:57.520] And I opened the door, called the bailiff over and asked him to arrest her. He called his boss a lieutenant and said, what seems to be the problem here? [01:09:57.520 --> 01:10:01.520] I need you to arrest the clerk. Well, I won't be arresting any clerk. [01:10:01.520 --> 01:10:05.520] Okay. Then I need you to take a criminal complaint against the clerk. [01:10:05.520 --> 01:10:14.520] We won't be taking any criminal complaints here today. And I said to the sergeant, what do you bring him for? He's worthless. I need a real cop. [01:10:14.520 --> 01:10:20.520] Yeah, I am a real cop. I'm a sheriff's deputy or a lieutenant on the sheriff's department. [01:10:20.520 --> 01:10:25.520] I said, well, then what I need is the non-emergency number to the sheriff's department. [01:10:25.520 --> 01:10:39.520] Well, I'll do you one better. The lieutenant takes out a card and holds it out. I jerk it out of his hand, dial the number, ask arrest lieutenant to whatever his name was, and the district clerk. [01:10:39.520 --> 01:10:45.520] And I swear out the complaint, I'll wait. I go sit down. [01:10:45.520 --> 01:10:53.520] While I'm waiting, I'm writing out criminal complaints. This young bailiff came over and said, Mr. Calton, you're going to have to leave the building. [01:10:53.520 --> 01:11:01.520] I looked up and said, beat it. Went back to writing. Mr. Calton, you're creating a disturbance. You're going to have to leave the building. [01:11:01.520 --> 01:11:05.520] I looked up, get lost. Go back to writing. [01:11:05.520 --> 01:11:13.520] The sergeant came over and said, leave him alone, leave him alone. He's just trying to get you to do something so he can file charges against you. [01:11:13.520 --> 01:11:20.520] I looked up at the guy and I said, he's smart. You should listen to him. [01:11:20.520 --> 01:11:31.520] And they go away. About that time, the lieutenant and the clerk came out of the office. She's got a handful of Manila folders. [01:11:31.520 --> 01:11:38.520] The lieutenant started to say something. I said, stop, stop, stop. I can't talk to you two. [01:11:38.520 --> 01:11:48.520] I have someone coming. I'll give them a full report. But since I'm filing criminal charges against you two, it would be inappropriate for us to have any further communication. [01:11:48.520 --> 01:12:01.520] The sergeant said, well, she has the documents you asked for. I looked up at the sergeant and said, sorry, Bubba, that bell's already been rung. [01:12:01.520 --> 01:12:11.520] The look on the clerk's face was priceless. That's what you need them to think. [01:12:11.520 --> 01:12:21.520] Do you imagine if I go back to Randall County and ask the clerk for some records that I'm going to have a problem? [01:12:21.520 --> 01:12:26.520] Those clerks have fall all over themselves getting me what I need. [01:12:26.520 --> 01:12:38.520] Now, I don't care if they hate me. Them liking me is not a criteria. But I don't want to be messed with. I didn't pursue the complaint against the clerk. [01:12:38.520 --> 01:12:43.520] They sent the Canyon City Municipal Police, the officer. [01:12:43.520 --> 01:12:54.520] And I said, what did they send you for? Well, they told me to come here. Well, you're worthless. This is a county building. You don't have any jurisdiction in here. Well, they told me to come here. [01:12:54.520 --> 01:13:08.520] Oh, man, get lost. So I didn't pursue. But I won't have that problem again. I suggest you be as intolerant. [01:13:08.520 --> 01:13:16.520] They're your public officials. They're your servants. You don't owe them tolerance. [01:13:16.520 --> 01:13:30.520] You always be polite. I don't get serious with them. They're sometimes not sure when I'm joking and when I'm not, especially when I tell them to take the chicken suit off. [01:13:30.520 --> 01:13:35.520] Never give legal advice. [01:13:35.520 --> 01:13:45.520] If you try to give legal advice, they'll always construe it as a threat and claim that you are agitated. [01:13:45.520 --> 01:13:54.520] So when it became clear that I couldn't talk to these people, I couldn't negotiate or deal with them, I cut that out. [01:13:54.520 --> 01:14:03.520] Now, set them up. Never ask them to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:14:03.520 --> 01:14:13.520] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not specifically command them to do. [01:14:13.520 --> 01:14:19.520] So that when they fail to do it, you tell 911. [01:14:19.520 --> 01:14:28.520] So they think that everything you do, everything you say is a setup. And they're right. It is. [01:14:28.520 --> 01:14:32.520] So go ahead. Screw with me. See how that works for you. [01:14:32.520 --> 01:14:39.520] And then when you ask the bailiff to arrest the clerk, the bailiff's going to get real excited. He's going to get agitated. [01:14:39.520 --> 01:14:45.520] And he's going to want to pick a fight with you so he can discredit you. [01:14:45.520 --> 01:14:54.520] So my primary tactic is I tell the bailiff, I need you to take your chicken suit off. [01:14:54.520 --> 01:15:01.520] And that always stops them in their tracks and do a linguistic programming. They call that a pattern interruption. [01:15:01.520 --> 01:15:12.520] They never see that one coming. I just stood there, looked him right in the eye and called him a chicken coward. [01:15:12.520 --> 01:15:20.520] And it did it in a way that he can't show to take offense. [01:15:20.520 --> 01:15:30.520] But what I'm really doing is I'm always thinking what will play well before a grand jury of my peers. [01:15:30.520 --> 01:15:36.520] He's going to say I was agitated. I'm going to say I wasn't. [01:15:36.520 --> 01:15:40.520] Ken Magnuson called me. What were you doing in Mansfield yesterday? [01:15:40.520 --> 01:15:44.520] I did my business, Ken. His brother was a city attorney there. [01:15:44.520 --> 01:15:50.520] And I had tried to get a municipal police officer to arrest a judge. [01:15:50.520 --> 01:15:56.520] And Ken said, Craig said that officer said you were agitated. [01:15:56.520 --> 01:16:06.520] I said, Ken asked Craig to ask that officer if I got agitated before I asked him to take his chicken suit off or after. [01:16:06.520 --> 01:16:13.520] Ken said, did you really say that to him? Can I always say that to them? [01:16:13.520 --> 01:16:17.520] For this very reason. [01:16:17.520 --> 01:16:23.520] He said, well, I know I told Craig you got a way of putting them over the edge. [01:16:23.520 --> 01:16:27.520] And all I do is not take their crapola. [01:16:27.520 --> 01:16:31.520] I never raise my voice. I never threaten them. [01:16:31.520 --> 01:16:35.520] I just tell them what I want when they don't do it. [01:16:35.520 --> 01:16:40.520] Now 9-1-1. Get the next guy, tell him what I want. [01:16:40.520 --> 01:16:42.520] He can either do it or not. [01:16:42.520 --> 01:16:45.520] Does that sound like fun, Ken? [01:16:45.520 --> 01:16:47.520] Yeah. [01:16:47.520 --> 01:16:53.520] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break. Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [01:17:18.520 --> 01:17:28.520] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:28.520 --> 01:17:34.520] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:17:34.520 --> 01:17:37.520] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.520 --> 01:17:43.520] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.520 --> 01:17:44.520] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.520 --> 01:17:45.520] No. [01:17:45.520 --> 01:17:47.520] Anything different when I order? [01:17:47.520 --> 01:17:48.520] No. [01:17:48.520 --> 01:17:49.520] Can I use my Amazon Prime? 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[01:19:03.860 --> 01:19:09.520] The Logos Radio Net Radio, Net Radio, Net Radio [01:19:12.520 --> 01:19:16.520] Ohh come of [01:19:19.520 --> 01:19:24.020] Ok, we are back. [01:19:24.020 --> 01:19:27.520] We're in the Kelkin Boulevard radio and we're talking to Kevin in Texas. [01:19:27.520 --> 01:19:36.040] Texas and Kevin I kind of took some time on that but I was doing some kind of [01:19:36.040 --> 01:19:43.960] specific. I have this set of stories that I go through and that's the kind of [01:19:43.960 --> 01:19:50.680] handle those things that you will tend to run into when you start taking these [01:19:50.680 --> 01:19:59.480] guys on this way. When you get there and deal with them these stories have come [01:19:59.480 --> 01:20:04.080] back to you because you'll probably they'll probably do everything that I've [01:20:04.080 --> 01:20:11.480] spoken to. You try to reason with them they'll just treat you as if you're [01:20:11.480 --> 01:20:17.560] trying to start an altercation and you're agitated. You tell them what the law is [01:20:17.560 --> 01:20:22.840] they'll accuse you of threatening them. You tell them what you want and when they [01:20:22.840 --> 01:20:26.840] don't you call somebody else and ask them to arrest them now you've got their [01:20:26.840 --> 01:20:39.040] attention. And their problem is when you down 911 now you're the victim and as [01:20:39.040 --> 01:20:44.880] the victim you have the same kind of perfection protections that a judge has. [01:20:44.880 --> 01:20:53.760] They can't sue you, period. And you're calling the police to get someone down [01:20:53.760 --> 01:21:01.840] there not to protect you but to enforce law. So what does he do? He arrests [01:21:01.840 --> 01:21:10.640] somebody he has to work with? Or did he risk you calling somebody to arrest him? [01:21:10.640 --> 01:21:18.880] Have fun guys. And what will most likely happen is they'll leave you be in [01:21:18.880 --> 01:21:26.640] Arlington. I asked for some records and the clerk said is this your case? I said [01:21:26.640 --> 01:21:32.320] no. Are you an attorney? I said no. He said well this is not your case and you're [01:21:32.320 --> 01:21:37.120] not an attorney. You can't look at these records. Oh my goodness you shouldn't have [01:21:37.120 --> 01:21:41.960] said that. Now Bailiff across the room I said hey Bailiff come over here I need [01:21:41.960 --> 01:21:49.240] you. He come over he's one of these really hard guy type of characters. What [01:21:49.240 --> 01:21:55.080] can I do for you? I need you to arrest her. Well why can't arrest her? Of course [01:21:55.080 --> 01:21:58.520] you can't just throw the cuss on her and drag her off to jail. It's only a few [01:21:58.520 --> 01:22:04.960] blocks over. And mom don't want to arrest the clerk. Oh okay and I took out my [01:22:04.960 --> 01:22:13.000] cell phone and he said you can't use that phone in this office. Watch me 9-1-1. [01:22:13.000 --> 01:22:20.200] I pointed it at him you're gonna interfere with a 9-1-1 call and the [01:22:20.200 --> 01:22:27.760] clerk said leave him alone leave him alone. And I called 9-1-1 to ask him to [01:22:27.760 --> 01:22:34.920] send an officer out to arrest both of them. Oh that was a hoot. The next time [01:22:34.920 --> 01:22:39.920] I go in there I can use my cell phone I can do anything I want to. They'll get [01:22:39.920 --> 01:22:54.560] me anything I want. No garbage. So do you have a scanner app on your phone? Yes. [01:22:54.560 --> 01:23:01.800] Good. And taking pictures of the video screen if you can get the camera in the [01:23:01.800 --> 01:23:10.160] right place it works pretty good. Do you have a one of these little selfie [01:23:10.160 --> 01:23:18.280] handles? No. It's a little yes extendable handle and that's not the part you [01:23:18.280 --> 01:23:24.000] want. You want the part that has the button that you hold in your hand and [01:23:24.000 --> 01:23:30.480] it cooks to the phone and you can take a picture from this button. So what I did [01:23:30.480 --> 01:23:35.520] when I was doing that is I got me a little tripod that I could mount my [01:23:35.520 --> 01:23:40.960] phone on. You can buy those on eBay. You mount the phone on it with this selfie [01:23:40.960 --> 01:23:45.840] plug in it and you point it and get it set right at the screen and you don't [01:23:45.840 --> 01:23:49.800] touch it. And you just change the screen you reach over push the button boom it [01:23:49.800 --> 01:23:56.920] takes the photo. If you use a scanner app it stands it and you get a real good [01:23:56.920 --> 01:24:10.320] image. Yes sir. And the clerk can go scratch. I did do one thing after they [01:24:10.320 --> 01:24:13.920] all denied me those things and they finally gave me access on the computer [01:24:13.920 --> 01:24:19.040] screen to read the documents. They sent out a deputy I guess it is a deputy [01:24:19.040 --> 01:24:23.440] district clerk and he was the one that did the final denying and I told him [01:24:23.440 --> 01:24:27.560] before I left I wanted a letter from him typed up and written with his signature [01:24:27.560 --> 01:24:31.160] on it naming all the people that I spoke to here today and all that was [01:24:31.160 --> 01:24:39.000] denigrating and he did. Oh wonderful. He gave me that letter with everybody's [01:24:39.000 --> 01:24:46.520] name on it. So now write up a statement and charge each one of them with [01:24:46.520 --> 01:24:54.760] official oppression. Make up a set of complaints and take it to a notary and [01:24:54.760 --> 01:25:00.560] have it notarized and take it to the sheriff's department. Now you don't [01:25:00.560 --> 01:25:07.480] really want them prosecuted but you want to get their attention and this will [01:25:07.480 --> 01:25:15.120] get their attention. Well I don't know this is Johnson County. [01:25:15.120 --> 01:25:26.800] Dale Hannah is a real unscrupulous character. So if he has some political [01:25:26.800 --> 01:25:36.800] agendas he might prosecute them. Would I would I have to file charges against [01:25:36.800 --> 01:25:44.520] all of them or could I just file them against the district clerk? You could [01:25:44.520 --> 01:25:49.040] file just against the district clerk and that's the last that's the one that [01:25:49.040 --> 01:25:56.680] probably won't get presented to a grand jury or indicted but that will get their [01:25:56.680 --> 01:26:04.480] attention or you could take Lloyd a copy of Turner v. Driver if you don't want to [01:26:04.480 --> 01:26:12.440] have a fight with them. Say look Lloyd here's the deal here's the law here are [01:26:12.440 --> 01:26:21.840] my complaints what do you want me to do and give him an opportunity to end this [01:26:21.840 --> 01:26:28.800] issue depending on what you want to achieve. If you just want to get access [01:26:28.800 --> 01:26:34.440] to this information without any interference you might go to Lloyd and [01:26:34.440 --> 01:26:40.000] say you know here's the deal either you get these people to get out of my way [01:26:40.000 --> 01:26:47.360] or we all go down to the grand jury. I don't want them just out of my way I [01:26:47.360 --> 01:26:50.360] want them out of everybody's way because I've said there's a lot of people that [01:26:50.360 --> 01:26:56.680] can't afford to pay for now. Well then tell him you know this is the law and you [01:26:56.680 --> 01:27:02.640] have to stop this. If you stop this then I'm not going to take these complaints to [01:27:02.640 --> 01:27:10.400] the grand jury but make up the complaints take them to your bank your bank [01:27:10.400 --> 01:27:15.360] are notarizing for nothing. Get them all notarized and say here I have a set of [01:27:15.360 --> 01:27:19.080] verified criminal complaints against every one of these people for class A [01:27:19.080 --> 01:27:27.040] misdemeanor official oppression. Do I take this to the grand jury or do you tell [01:27:27.040 --> 01:27:38.280] them to stop violating Turner driver? Most likely that'll get it fixed and if [01:27:38.280 --> 01:27:45.040] it doesn't they fire do it on a day when the grand jury is meeting I think they [01:27:45.040 --> 01:27:56.440] meet the third Thursday of every month. That's next Thursday. Yeah. So go in next [01:27:56.440 --> 01:28:01.680] Thursday and say the grand jury is downstairs. Do I take this to the grand [01:28:01.680 --> 01:28:06.160] jury or do you change these policies? [01:28:06.160 --> 01:28:20.160] What do you think? Is that a federal case? Wait, say that again? Turner v. Driver, where do I find that? [01:28:20.160 --> 01:28:27.160] Yeah that's a Fifth Circuit case. Federal Fifth Circuit. It addresses Texas. [01:28:27.160 --> 01:28:33.520] Turner is across the street from the Fort Worth Police Department videotaping [01:28:33.520 --> 01:28:41.600] the police department. For this purpose he set them up. They come out and harass [01:28:41.600 --> 01:28:47.560] him, cuff him, put him in the car for an hour with the windows rolled up and then [01:28:47.560 --> 01:28:54.920] decide to let him go. He sues them. He gets to the appeals to the Fifth. He [01:28:54.920 --> 01:29:00.160] sues them in the Fed, appeals to the Fifth. The Fifth grants them qualified [01:29:00.160 --> 01:29:05.720] immunity claiming that the right to videotape your public officials had not [01:29:05.720 --> 01:29:13.400] been clearly defined. I have an argument with that in that my rights do not need [01:29:13.400 --> 01:29:18.320] to be clearly defined. Their authority to infringe on one of them needs to be [01:29:18.320 --> 01:29:25.120] clearly defined. But without taking that issue to task they went on to say that [01:29:25.120 --> 01:29:33.600] from this point on the right is clearly defined. That it is axiomatic, it is clear, [01:29:33.600 --> 01:29:38.200] I forgot exactly the wording, that a public official, that a private citizen [01:29:38.200 --> 01:29:43.480] has a right to videotape his police in the performance of the duty and that's [01:29:43.480 --> 01:29:48.200] taken to mean public official in general. So all the other circuits say [01:29:48.200 --> 01:29:56.560] public official in general. So we have the right defined. It was February, end of [01:29:56.560 --> 01:30:00.880] February this year so it's brand new. [01:30:00.880 --> 01:30:05.720] So did you catch that yawn? Researchers have found that when someone yawns [01:30:05.720 --> 01:30:10.040] about half the people nearby will yawn too. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. I'll be [01:30:10.040 --> 01:30:13.820] back in just a moment with the latest scientific explanation for contagious [01:30:13.820 --> 01:30:19.160] yawning. Your search engine is watching you recording all your searches and [01:30:19.160 --> 01:30:23.720] creating a massive database of your personal information. That's creepy. But [01:30:23.720 --> 01:30:27.920] it doesn't have to be that way. StartPage.com is the world's most private [01:30:27.920 --> 01:30:31.800] search engine. StartPage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your [01:30:31.800 --> 01:30:35.720] searches or use tracking cookies and their third party certified. If you don't [01:30:35.720 --> 01:30:40.640] like big brother spying on you start over with StartPage. Great search results [01:30:40.640 --> 01:30:45.760] and total privacy. StartPage.com. The world's most private search engine. There [01:30:45.760 --> 01:30:49.960] are lots of theories about why we yawn. Some say it's caused by boredom or lack [01:30:49.960 --> 01:30:54.040] of sleep. Others blame it on the need for more oxygen. Whatever the cause it's [01:30:54.040 --> 01:30:58.360] clear that most people react to yawns by yawning themselves. Researchers say the [01:30:58.360 --> 01:31:01.920] so-called contagious yawning is a way to synchronize with those around us [01:31:01.920 --> 01:31:06.080] biologically and socially. Scientists have found that contagious yawning is [01:31:06.080 --> 01:31:09.760] learned to behavior. It starts around age four in children with normal [01:31:09.760 --> 01:31:13.840] development. Interestingly, children who have difficulty picking up social cues [01:31:13.840 --> 01:31:17.600] like those with autism aren't susceptible to catching yawns. The yawn [01:31:17.600 --> 01:31:21.840] contagiously only happens often and those who are severely autistic don't [01:31:21.840 --> 01:31:26.440] respond to yawns at all. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at [01:31:26.440 --> 01:31:34.760] CatherineAlbrecht.com. This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the [01:31:34.760 --> 01:31:37.880] afternoon of September 11. The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.880 --> 01:31:42.520] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled [01:31:42.520 --> 01:31:45.800] demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.800 --> 01:31:50.120] And thousands of my fellow force respond visit line. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.120 --> 01:31:53.240] I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force [01:31:53.240 --> 01:31:57.680] pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.680 --> 01:32:02.640] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home [01:32:02.640 --> 01:32:05.960] Improvements. Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.960 --> 01:32:09.600] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails. But good [01:32:09.600 --> 01:32:12.880] luck getting them to pay for it. Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:12.880 --> 01:32:16.560] But I'm serious about your roof. That's why you have insurance. And Hill Country [01:32:16.560 --> 01:32:20.360] Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket [01:32:20.360 --> 01:32:24.480] expense. 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LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:17.120 --> 01:33:24.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with our radio. And we're talking to Kevin in [01:33:24.800 --> 01:33:30.720] Texas. Kevin, if you'll do a quick internet search for Turner v Driver, you [01:33:30.720 --> 01:33:37.240] get number of hits on Turner Driver. And I'm reading it now. It's trying to find [01:33:37.240 --> 01:33:43.640] the exact place where they set it. The right is clearly established. They [01:33:43.640 --> 01:33:54.040] argue about whether a white is clearly established. And I'm annoyed by that. The [01:33:54.040 --> 01:34:00.160] issue is not whether a white is clearly established, but rather a prohibition [01:34:00.160 --> 01:34:07.640] exists. The question is not, do I have a white to do something? The question is, [01:34:07.640 --> 01:34:14.560] do you have the authority to prevent me from doing something? But anyway, what [01:34:14.560 --> 01:34:19.920] Turner Driver says is that you can record your public officials while in the [01:34:19.920 --> 01:34:29.160] performance of their duty. This started out in New Jersey, where a lawyer was [01:34:29.160 --> 01:34:33.280] filming the police beating the guy up. And they arrested the lawyer for [01:34:33.280 --> 01:34:38.640] filming the police without their permission. And he got the first ruling on [01:34:38.640 --> 01:34:45.120] it. And since then, I think the fifth circuit is either seven or eight. So we'll [01:34:45.120 --> 01:34:49.760] have almost all of them have ruled on it. We will soon have all of them ruled [01:34:49.760 --> 01:34:56.960] on it. Anyway, you can videotape. So it depends on what you want to do. Do you [01:34:56.960 --> 01:35:02.320] want to beat them up? No, I just want them to change it. I want everything to have [01:35:02.320 --> 01:35:08.960] active. Then probably the best way to get it changed is to go to Lloyd and say, [01:35:08.960 --> 01:35:13.800] you know, here's the law. And here's the deal. Here are the complaints I'll file if [01:35:13.800 --> 01:35:25.280] you don't. Give me reason not to. Okay. Have you talked to Lloyd at all? No, he's been [01:35:25.280 --> 01:35:29.960] conveniently missing every time. They always send up this the deputy district [01:35:29.960 --> 01:35:38.080] clerk. Well, if you tell them, you know, either you get Lloyd out here and we get [01:35:38.080 --> 01:35:43.040] this handle or grand juries downstairs. I go down to the grand jury and you can [01:35:43.040 --> 01:35:49.360] explain it to them. I'll give them these complaints and turn her driver and see [01:35:49.360 --> 01:35:59.000] what they think about it. Yeah. Lloyd is, as public officials go, he's pretty [01:35:59.000 --> 01:36:07.160] reasonable guy. And you bring a real issue to them. And if you tell their [01:36:07.160 --> 01:36:13.560] assistant tries to run interference, you say, you know, it's up to you. Either you [01:36:13.560 --> 01:36:18.040] take it or go to the grand jury, make your call. And if you do go to the grand [01:36:18.040 --> 01:36:26.440] jury, you go down. You know where the grand jury meets. No, sir. It's on the [01:36:26.440 --> 01:36:31.960] north side of the building in the basement. So you take the elevator down [01:36:31.960 --> 01:36:35.240] and you're almost across from where the grand jury meets. There's a hallway [01:36:35.240 --> 01:36:40.760] going back. And just ask one of the bailiffs where the grand jury meets. And [01:36:40.760 --> 01:36:46.600] there'll be a bailiff. You open one door and there's two little rooms. And then the [01:36:46.600 --> 01:36:50.200] grand jury meets in a room behind. And there'll be a bailiff standing in front [01:36:50.200 --> 01:36:57.640] of the door. And you go up to the bailiff. You want 12 packages. One for each [01:36:57.640 --> 01:37:04.400] grand jury member and one, sorry, 13 and one for the prosecutor. So you tell the [01:37:04.400 --> 01:37:09.080] bailiff to instruct the foreman that you have business with the grand jury. [01:37:09.080 --> 01:37:14.760] And the bailiff is supposed to ask you, may I tell him the nature of the [01:37:14.760 --> 01:37:20.880] business? Yes, anything else? You tell him, no, no, no, no, no. You're supposed to [01:37:20.880 --> 01:37:27.560] ask me the nature of the business. And I'm going to tell you that my business is [01:37:27.560 --> 01:37:33.320] with the grand jury. It's none of yours. And give the foreman these. And you don't [01:37:33.320 --> 01:37:37.520] care if he gives this to the grand jury or not. Because if he doesn't, you'll file [01:37:37.520 --> 01:37:43.800] against him for witness tampering. What he'll want to do is give him to the [01:37:43.800 --> 01:37:50.800] prosecuting attorney. And you tell him, no, these complaints are against public [01:37:50.800 --> 01:37:56.960] officials. The district attorney can have nothing to say about this. He's [01:37:56.960 --> 01:38:04.800] excluded. So and then don't go into many much discussion with him. Say you do do [01:38:04.800 --> 01:38:10.280] it or we go to the next step at your call. You might step back if he doesn't [01:38:10.280 --> 01:38:19.280] and don't the information and ask for a number for the Texas Rangers or ask him [01:38:19.280 --> 01:38:25.440] where do I find the local Texas Ranger? And you go to the Ranger with it. You [01:38:25.440 --> 01:38:30.640] start this thing going. And that will force them all to take a close look [01:38:30.640 --> 01:38:37.680] around and check the law on their subject and get this thing fixed. [01:38:38.520 --> 01:38:43.960] Does it sound? Do you have any questions on what you think you might run into that [01:38:43.960 --> 01:38:51.160] you might not know how to handle? Most of it. This is all pretty new to me. Well, [01:38:51.160 --> 01:38:56.040] you know, when you're filing criminal complaints and you're going into a public [01:38:56.040 --> 01:39:04.920] building and when you do, you're in a building full of public servants and you [01:39:04.920 --> 01:39:10.920] are the master of those servants. You are the baddest motor scooter in the [01:39:10.920 --> 01:39:16.200] building. And for the most part, they know it. They just don't want you to know [01:39:16.200 --> 01:39:22.400] it. You know, when I go into the courthouses, I don't have much problem. [01:39:22.400 --> 01:39:30.240] Everybody wants to back away from me because they know that I know that I'm [01:39:30.240 --> 01:39:38.360] the one everybody answers to. And I get two words I don't like. I dial 911. I just [01:39:38.360 --> 01:39:46.560] had a sheriff's deputy pull me over because my registration was expired. I [01:39:46.560 --> 01:39:54.040] said, what's the problem? It's only been out for two years. He goes back to write [01:39:54.040 --> 01:39:59.040] me a ticket. I called 911. I want somebody here resting for first degree [01:39:59.040 --> 01:40:07.720] felony aggravated assault. And whenever there's a traffic stop, every cop in the [01:40:07.720 --> 01:40:13.760] neighborhood for some reason converges on the location. Well, this other deputy [01:40:13.760 --> 01:40:20.520] showed up and he come up and was talking to me through the passengers window and [01:40:20.520 --> 01:40:28.320] said that I made an improper 911 call. It was only for emergencies. Well, I'm [01:40:28.320 --> 01:40:32.600] charging him with first degree felony aggravated assault. You don't consider [01:40:32.600 --> 01:40:40.520] that an emergency? Oh, well, it wasn't really assault. I said, you obviously have [01:40:40.520 --> 01:40:48.000] not read the code, have you? Anyway, I'm getting off topic. I want to make sure [01:40:48.000 --> 01:40:54.280] that I've answered all the questions you may have. Well, you've answered everything [01:40:54.280 --> 01:40:58.160] that I mainly had, whether or not they actually had any kind of authority by [01:40:58.160 --> 01:41:04.920] statute or by the administrative code to do that, to disallow photocopy the [01:41:04.920 --> 01:41:13.200] screen. And apparently there's not. Yeah, I have found nothing to that effect. With [01:41:13.200 --> 01:41:19.120] public information, you know, if you have documents, you can photograph documents. [01:41:19.120 --> 01:41:25.120] In Denton, I had them complain about it. I had a clerk come by and say, you can't [01:41:25.120 --> 01:41:31.920] photograph those. Of course I can. Watch. Click. And she ran in the back and they [01:41:31.920 --> 01:41:37.160] huddled back there a while, but nobody ever come out and mess with me. I don't [01:41:37.160 --> 01:41:41.600] know if they knew who I was or they just didn't want to have the fight. But I have [01:41:41.600 --> 01:41:48.360] found absolutely zero. I'm certain there is nothing in law that allows them to do [01:41:48.360 --> 01:41:56.240] that. They don't care. If there is, when you charge them, they'll have to go bring [01:41:56.240 --> 01:42:00.880] up the law. That's their affirmative defense. And then you don't even have to [01:42:00.880 --> 01:42:07.760] look it up. But if they bring out their rules, they can use the rules for toilet [01:42:07.760 --> 01:42:18.920] paper. And I've told Baylitz that sometimes they get real excited a couple [01:42:18.920 --> 01:42:25.240] times. I got tossed out on my ear. It started a fight. I didn't want to have. [01:42:26.240 --> 01:42:34.040] But that's the case. Rules don't count. Rules only apply to people who work for [01:42:34.040 --> 01:42:40.280] the department. They have no force in law. That's my story and I'm sticking to [01:42:40.280 --> 01:42:46.920] it. Well, I appreciate it. Next time you're in Johnson County, I'd like to hear [01:42:46.920 --> 01:42:52.960] some of your stories. Okay. Just send me an email. I may be coming down there [01:42:52.960 --> 01:42:59.400] because of these complaints that I filed against two deputies in Somerville [01:42:59.400 --> 01:43:10.640] County. They arrested a friend of mine for failure to ID. If you read the code [01:43:10.640 --> 01:43:15.720] and you hear you were arrested for failure to ID, you want to say, what is [01:43:15.720 --> 01:43:23.520] wrong with that picture? You can't be arrested for failure to ID. You can be [01:43:23.520 --> 01:43:29.720] charged with failure to ID, but you cannot be arrested for failure to ID. [01:43:29.720 --> 01:43:35.760] Because in order to charge you with failure to ID, you have to already be [01:43:35.760 --> 01:43:46.640] arrested. He wasn't already arrested when he failed to ID. So they arrested him [01:43:46.640 --> 01:43:51.160] for failing to ID and it was strictly against the code. Randy Kelton will [01:43:51.160 --> 01:43:55.000] our radio. We'll be right back. [01:44:22.160 --> 01:44:27.520] So now you know hemp is not marijuana and marijuana is not hemp. They are [01:44:27.520 --> 01:44:32.400] different varieties of the same species. HempUSA.org wants the world to know these [01:44:32.400 --> 01:44:36.600] basic facts and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best [01:44:36.600 --> 01:44:40.720] kept health secret you need to know about. Remember, hemp protein powder [01:44:40.720 --> 01:44:47.080] contains 53% protein. It's gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO and is loaded [01:44:47.080 --> 01:44:55.160] with nutrients. Call 888-910-4367. 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds [01:44:55.160 --> 01:45:01.400] and oil can do for you. Only at hempUSA.org. [01:45:02.400 --> 01:45:08.200] It's the 2017 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser sponsored by Central Texas [01:45:08.200 --> 01:45:13.680] Gunworks. Defense distributed in Fatsal, Delhi. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and [01:45:13.680 --> 01:45:18.120] enter to win. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. From Central Texas [01:45:18.120 --> 01:45:23.400] Gunworks, first place up for grabs of Spike's Tactical AR-15. Second place, [01:45:23.400 --> 01:45:29.240] Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. From Defense distributed, third place, the [01:45:29.240 --> 01:45:35.680] AR-308 80% lower. Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. From Fatsal, Delhi, fifth [01:45:35.680 --> 01:45:40.960] place, $100 gift card for Fatsal, Delhi. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:40.960 --> 01:45:45.560] That's LogosRadioNetwork.com. Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, [01:45:45.560 --> 01:45:50.400] Legal101, you get four chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, [01:45:50.400 --> 01:45:55.560] get ten chances to win. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go [01:45:55.560 --> 01:46:12.080] to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:46:25.560 --> 01:46:38.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, the viewer of our radio, and we're talking to Kevin [01:46:38.000 --> 01:46:48.080] in Texas. And this is not as hard as it seems. I know it's new and you haven't [01:46:48.080 --> 01:46:54.040] done it before, but a good time to do it is when you're on the high moral ground [01:46:54.040 --> 01:47:03.200] this way. They're clearly using this rule as a way to create revenue for the [01:47:03.200 --> 01:47:10.480] county clerk's office. One thing you need to ask them is where the funds go that [01:47:10.480 --> 01:47:18.720] they collect for these services. I was wondering that myself. Yeah, do they [01:47:18.720 --> 01:47:26.700] send to the general fund or do they keep it? So you might make that request of the [01:47:26.700 --> 01:47:36.040] clerk. The clerk's office cannot be a revenue source. The government's not there [01:47:36.040 --> 01:47:42.240] to make money. They're there to spend money. So it appears as though they're [01:47:42.240 --> 01:47:51.000] trying to augment their income. And that is probably strictly against state [01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:58.240] guidelines. You might put in a request for their finances, for all records of [01:47:58.240 --> 01:48:11.360] all monies collected by the department under this rule, for documents that [01:48:11.360 --> 01:48:18.400] could have been photographed, but well, all of the documents that they have sold [01:48:18.400 --> 01:48:23.520] to people, you can maintain all, could have easily been photographed by [01:48:23.520 --> 01:48:30.200] anybody with a cell phone, but they were prevented from doing so. And depending [01:48:30.200 --> 01:48:33.760] on how you want to pursue it, you might go down there and just start [01:48:33.760 --> 01:48:36.800] photographing, and they're going to tell you, you can. You say, sure, I can. Watch, [01:48:36.800 --> 01:48:42.480] click, and then let them call the bailiff and then give the bailiff the [01:48:42.480 --> 01:48:50.440] criminal charges against them. Yeah. That would get interesting. Yeah, it would. [01:48:50.440 --> 01:48:58.320] Might be more interesting than I'm not as cool as you are. Well, this is our job. [01:48:58.320 --> 01:49:05.440] If we're going to fix this system, then we have to do it. The system is out of [01:49:05.440 --> 01:49:10.240] whack, but the clerk didn't put it out of whack, and the bailiff didn't put it [01:49:10.240 --> 01:49:19.600] out of whack. We did. We asked our police to police us to protect us from our own [01:49:19.600 --> 01:49:27.600] distraction and excesses. We didn't return the favor. We owe it to our public [01:49:27.600 --> 01:49:33.960] officials to keep them in line. Otherwise, things get horribly out of hand and [01:49:33.960 --> 01:49:40.240] will wind up living in a police state. Kevin, you have any idea what the [01:49:40.240 --> 01:49:45.600] average conviction rate for all crimes across the board in Texas is? Probably [01:49:45.600 --> 01:49:57.480] about, I guess, over 90 percent. 99.6. That's way over 90 percent. This is the [01:49:57.480 --> 01:50:04.200] worst police state the world has ever seen, and for the most part, nobody even [01:50:04.200 --> 01:50:11.760] realizes it. Yeah. We need to fix that, and this is how we fix it. There's only [01:50:11.760 --> 01:50:24.480] 254 counties. If you fix Johnson County, again, I fix Wise County. 254 of us could [01:50:24.480 --> 01:50:33.360] fix this thing. That's one of the exciting parts about this ticket app that I'm [01:50:33.360 --> 01:50:38.840] putting together, and I'm going to set it up as a multi-level, a real simple [01:50:38.840 --> 01:50:43.320] multi-level, so that I can get people another place who's doing this, because [01:50:43.320 --> 01:50:49.920] there's 6.1 million tickets in Texas. I can't get all of them. So if I set this [01:50:49.920 --> 01:50:54.760] up where other people can make money doing it, then we start doing this [01:50:54.760 --> 01:51:00.920] around Texas, and we'll shut down traffic enforcement. But more important, we will [01:51:00.920 --> 01:51:08.080] wake up a lot of people that never had reason to consider that there was a [01:51:08.080 --> 01:51:18.920] problem. When people get tickets, they are upset. At least 27 percent are upset. [01:51:18.920 --> 01:51:26.760] The other 73 paid the ticket, and just go out about the business. But 27 percent [01:51:26.760 --> 01:51:37.720] plead not guilty. We had access to those. If we could get 1 percent, 1 percent of [01:51:37.720 --> 01:51:43.000] the state of Texas, that's 250,000 people. [01:51:43.000 --> 01:51:53.320] Yeah, that's right. 250,000 people. It's 25 million people in Texas. 1 percent, 250,000 [01:51:53.320 --> 01:52:02.560] people kicking behind on the municipal courts will shut them down completely. [01:52:02.560 --> 01:52:09.440] And then we take those people when they're upset, but given this ticket that [01:52:09.440 --> 01:52:15.480] they feel is bogus, and we say, okay, you think that's bad, let me show you how it [01:52:15.480 --> 01:52:21.800] gets worse. They make you go in and see the judge, just all the crimes they [01:52:21.800 --> 01:52:27.400] commit. And that's a good time to let people know that it's not like they [01:52:27.400 --> 01:52:33.760] told you in high school. All that garbage they told you about how you live in a [01:52:33.760 --> 01:52:38.920] land of law and how you have all these rights, it's not like that. Not out here [01:52:38.920 --> 01:52:46.360] in the real world. You only have those rights if you take them. And we're only [01:52:46.360 --> 01:52:53.600] going to maintain this system if we maintain it. Now we can, you know, you're [01:52:53.600 --> 01:53:00.440] obviously already awake. You and me listen to this show. One of the gauges of [01:53:00.440 --> 01:53:04.840] whether or not we're doing this right is if the show picks up dramatically in [01:53:04.840 --> 01:53:11.920] this listenership, we catch somebody when they're angry, we demonstrate the problem [01:53:11.920 --> 01:53:23.760] to them, and we wake them up. I think we can, this may be the crack in the cosmic [01:53:23.760 --> 01:53:31.200] egg. If we do this right, this can wind up changing everything because as soon as [01:53:31.200 --> 01:53:38.040] we get traffic worked out, fairly well working, then the next step is going to [01:53:38.040 --> 01:53:47.200] be to process and quiet criminal. I have a whole plan for that. And soon as we get [01:53:47.200 --> 01:53:55.440] criminal, then we go to family law. And this electronical be growing the whole [01:53:55.440 --> 01:54:02.400] time. We'll breach a point to where we can make all of the law available to [01:54:02.400 --> 01:54:10.080] everybody. You don't have to be a lawyer to have all of the law available. That's [01:54:10.080 --> 01:54:20.920] what God made computers for. This is what lawyers do is especially a turn to what [01:54:20.920 --> 01:54:27.640] a computer does. They can do what lawyers do, but they can do it much, much [01:54:27.640 --> 01:54:36.680] better. But that's a computer never forgets to make the link from one set of [01:54:36.680 --> 01:54:43.120] law to another. When a judge has an ex parte communication with one party and [01:54:43.120 --> 01:54:48.080] doesn't tell the other, that implicates the, if the other party's a lawyer, the [01:54:48.080 --> 01:54:53.600] state bar association, the state bar standards, the judicial ethics standards, [01:54:53.600 --> 01:55:00.200] the criminal code, the code of criminal procedure, all these [01:55:00.200 --> 01:55:04.560] different codes are implicated. Well, the system never forgets to make those [01:55:04.560 --> 01:55:10.840] connections as we build the implications and connections in. It never [01:55:10.840 --> 01:55:16.880] forgets to make them. It'll literally make an electronic neural net where all of [01:55:16.880 --> 01:55:24.400] the laws are integrated together so you never miss any. The more deal with it, [01:55:24.400 --> 01:55:32.520] the more I look at it and work with it, the more the potential demonstrates [01:55:32.520 --> 01:55:39.640] itself that within 10 years we could eliminate lawyers all together. We just [01:55:39.640 --> 01:55:44.840] wouldn't need them because we have an electronic lawyer who can serve as [01:55:44.840 --> 01:55:55.480] everybody. And I get to side up million people can use the site. It has been my [01:55:55.480 --> 01:56:03.240] goal for a very long time to eliminate the profession of lawyer and get lawyers [01:56:03.240 --> 01:56:10.600] to pay me to do it. And I think we are on the cusp if you've been hearing me for [01:56:10.600 --> 01:56:16.960] a long time. You've heard me say this for years and probably thought that that was [01:56:16.960 --> 01:56:30.160] a pretty high goal. Right now I see that goal in reach. So Kevin, try this out if [01:56:30.160 --> 01:56:37.160] you like it. Let me know as this tool gets together. I'm going to need some [01:56:37.160 --> 01:56:47.160] people around the state to help me implement it. We can change everything. [01:56:48.040 --> 01:57:00.880] That's what I said. Go ahead. But we'll go back and look again. Just go through the [01:57:00.880 --> 01:57:07.880] fill in the ticket. Just put in any junk in there. Hit the submit button. And it [01:57:07.880 --> 01:57:15.040] will now I've got it redirected to some back pages. And let me know how reading [01:57:15.040 --> 01:57:22.000] that works. I know how it looks to me but I'm not, you know, I'm the one [01:57:22.000 --> 01:57:27.520] writing it. So it always looks right to me. But anybody out there listening go to [01:57:27.520 --> 01:57:34.080] trafficticket.website. You can just go to the bottom of the first page and hit [01:57:34.080 --> 01:57:38.720] submit without putting anything in if you want to. And it'll jump you to the back [01:57:38.720 --> 01:57:47.280] pages where I talk about what's really going on. I'm trying to get this [01:57:47.280 --> 01:57:51.560] structure in a way that it makes sense to people who don't know anything about [01:57:51.560 --> 01:57:58.000] the subject. So I would greatly appreciate any input I can get from you [01:57:58.000 --> 01:58:02.520] folks out there so that when we get people that don't know anything about [01:58:02.520 --> 01:58:08.280] this, this gives them the opportunity to find out and understand what's really [01:58:08.280 --> 01:58:14.600] going on. And I don't want to blow it because I didn't do my job right. Okay. [01:58:14.600 --> 01:58:20.000] Thank you all for listening. We are out of time. This is Randy Kelton. We live on [01:58:20.000 --> 01:58:27.160] radio. We will be back next week with Eddie Craig's Monday Night Traffic [01:58:27.160 --> 01:58:33.080] Show. And then again on Thursday and Friday with this show which apparently [01:58:33.080 --> 01:58:37.480] is going to move more to traffic. Maybe I can get Eddie to come on this show and [01:58:37.480 --> 01:58:42.280] we can talk about some of the issues that we're bringing up that nobody's ever [01:58:42.280 --> 01:58:50.280] seen. Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:50.280 --> 01:58:55.960] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New [01:58:55.960 --> 01:59:00.840] Testament Recovery Version. The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 [01:59:00.840 --> 01:59:05.600] footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse helping you to know [01:59:05.600 --> 01:59:10.520] God and to know the meaning of life. Order your free copy today from Bibles for [01:59:10.520 --> 01:59:20.120] America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at BFA.org. [01:59:20.120 --> 01:59:25.120] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross [01:59:25.120 --> 01:59:30.240] references plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. This [01:59:30.240 --> 01:59:34.880] is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament [01:59:34.880 --> 01:59:45.680] Recovery Version call us toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102 or visit [01:59:45.680 --> 01:59:51.080] us online at BFA.org. [01:59:51.080 --> 02:00:07.120] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com.