[00:00.000 --> 00:10.000] Today in history, the year 1938, an unprecedented swarm of grasshoppers, descends on the ground. [00:10.000 --> 00:20.000] Today in history, the year 1938, an unprecedented swarm of grasshoppers, descends on the ground. [00:20.000 --> 00:33.000] Today in history, the year 1938, an unprecedented swarm of grasshoppers, descends on crops throughout the American heartland, devastating millions of acres. [00:33.000 --> 00:41.000] Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota, already in the midst of a bad drought, suffered the most from this grasshopper disaster. [00:41.000 --> 00:46.000] Today in history. [00:46.000 --> 01:01.000] In recent news, yesterday Tuesday, police chiefs from three of the five biggest cities in the state spoke out at the Texas Capitol against the transgender bathroom bill being considered by the Republican legislator as discriminatory and in divergence of resources that won't keep people safe. [01:01.000 --> 01:12.000] The police chiefs were joined by public school officials, advocates for sexual assault survivors, representatives from the Harris County and El Paso Sheriff's offices, the Corpus Christi ISD chief of police and others. [01:12.000 --> 01:24.000] The main issue, as Austin police chief Brian Manley put it, is that if, quote, a bill like this were to be passed, that would pull police officers time away from combating violent crime into enforcing a bathroom bill. [01:24.000 --> 01:29.000] It makes communities less safe, since it is time not spent ensuring community safety. [01:29.000 --> 01:44.000] The legislation would restrict bathroom use in schools and local government buildings by superseding and nullifying parts of local non-discrimination ordinances meant to allow transgender residents, which make up less than 1% of the population, that claim to use the public bathroom of their choice. [01:44.000 --> 01:47.000] The bill did pass just after midnight last night. [01:47.000 --> 01:56.000] The Senate voted 21 to 10, and it now goes to the House for consideration. [01:56.000 --> 02:13.000] An information technology staffer for former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Democrat from Florida, Imran Awan, a 37-year-old, was arrested on Monday by FBI agents in U.S. Capitol Police at Dulies International Airport while attempting to flee to Lahore, Pakistan. [02:13.000 --> 02:18.000] He was charged with bank fraud in the U.S. District Court on Tuesday, where he pleaded not guilty. [02:18.000 --> 02:33.000] According to federal court documents, officials are accusing Awan and his wife, Hina Alvi, of defrauding the Congressional Federal Credit Union of $165,000 by lying on a home equity loan application and not listing the home that they were getting the loan for as a rental property. [02:33.000 --> 02:39.000] Awan was released and is under a high-intensity supervision program with his hearing scheduled for the 21st of August. [02:39.000 --> 02:51.000] Awan's lawyer Christopher Gohan said that the charges are politically motivated and, quote, began as part of a frenzy of anti-Muslim bigotry in the literal heart of our democracy, the House of Representatives. [03:09.000 --> 03:28.000] What you want, what you're going, what you're going to do, when every son and brother comes for you. Tell me, what you're going to do, what you're going to do. [03:28.000 --> 03:43.000] Okay, howdy, howdy. This is Randy Kelton, root of law radio on this Friday, the 11th day of October, 11th day of August, 2017. [03:43.000 --> 03:53.000] Thank you all for listening and we're going to start out tonight, I generally start out Fridays going over what I did Thursday. [03:53.000 --> 04:08.000] And on Thursday, we talked about my Tuesday night ticket hearing in Highland Park, Texas. It was interesting. [04:08.000 --> 04:23.000] And we put together this trafficticket.website, a site for producing documents to file with the courts. And the courts are having problems dealing with them. [04:23.000 --> 04:44.000] We have a few people who filed them and the courts are looking at them. And they're not accustomed to any filings at all. And that was apparent in this case, as when I got to court, I had filed almost 100 pages of documentation. [04:44.000 --> 04:59.000] And neither the prosecutor nor the judge had a clue that I had filed anything. I went in and waited till the last, that was about the last person in the room and they called me up. [04:59.000 --> 05:08.000] And they sent me the prosecutor first and I told him all I wanted from him was his name and his bar card number. [05:08.000 --> 05:19.000] That it won't be talking to you, I'll be talking to the judge. So he said, okay, I think this prosecutor was brand new, if he had no clues to what was going on. [05:19.000 --> 05:28.000] So when I went and talked to the judge, they called me up and told him, well, I'm here for my examining trial. [05:28.000 --> 05:42.000] The judge right away was taken aback. He said, well, Mr. Kelton, we need to have you talk to the prosecutor. No, no, no, I won't be talking to the prosecutor. [05:42.000 --> 05:50.000] I'm here for my examining trial. Well, Mr. Kelton, we can't give you the examining trial. Of course you can. So you're required to. [05:50.000 --> 06:00.000] And we had this back and forth for a while. And I had to admit the judge handled himself really well. He never lost his cool. [06:00.000 --> 06:07.000] After it was over, I mentioned that to him and he said, well, it got close to our time or two. [06:07.000 --> 06:26.000] But I made the argument with him that under 543.006, I signed an agreement to be here in this court on this day at this time to appear before a magistrate. [06:26.000 --> 06:32.000] Not a judge, not a prosecutor, not a court clerk, but a magistrate. [06:32.000 --> 06:46.000] And I'm here to appear before the magistrate. And I want you to hold an examining trial. And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, you don't have a right to an examining trial unless it's a felony. [06:46.000 --> 06:52.000] And I said, well, so what? What's that have to do with anything? [06:52.000 --> 07:05.000] You have a statutory duty under 14.06 code of criminal procedure to hold an examining trial. Doesn't matter if I have a right to one or not. [07:05.000 --> 07:15.000] But the fact that you are statutorily required to hold one, that goes to due process and that creates the right. [07:15.000 --> 07:25.000] And he sat back in his chair and you could see his eyes dilate and he went inside and processed what I was saying. [07:25.000 --> 07:34.000] And he got it turned out he was a he's a lawyer and he represents. [07:34.000 --> 07:49.000] He's a criminal defense lawyer, so he represents clients and he later he said that he had been trying to get examining trials for his clients, but the courts refused to hold one. [07:49.000 --> 07:54.000] He held him because of this Clark decision. [07:54.000 --> 08:00.000] And he said, I could use these arguments in my cases. [08:00.000 --> 08:06.000] Well, it turned out to be interesting. They had not looked at the pleadings at all. [08:06.000 --> 08:17.000] The court made the judge made a comment at one point that a little knowledge can be dangerous. [08:17.000 --> 08:26.000] But as we talk, he kind of got the idea that he was dealing with more than a little knowledge. [08:26.000 --> 08:35.000] And once I referenced my documentation, he said, well, Mr. Kelton, I really need you to enter a plea. [08:35.000 --> 08:37.000] Oh, I've already done that. [08:37.000 --> 08:48.000] I have a plea before the court in the form of a special appearance and a plea to the jurisdiction. [08:48.000 --> 08:56.000] He just didn't know what to say when I told him that he looked at me. [08:56.000 --> 09:08.000] I don't know what he was thinking, but he had no comeback because he's a lawyer and he knows what a special pleading and a plea to the jurisdiction is. [09:08.000 --> 09:14.000] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I don't have your motions. [09:14.000 --> 09:21.000] I told him your problem, not my problem. [09:21.000 --> 09:27.000] My problem is I filed them and I filed them timely. [09:27.000 --> 09:34.000] If you don't have them, then we need to talk to the clerk and find out what she did with them. [09:34.000 --> 09:42.000] And then he kind of snapped out of his trance and, oh, yeah, we need to get the clerk in here and he got the clerk in. [09:42.000 --> 09:47.000] The clerk went and got the motions and gave them to him. [09:47.000 --> 09:51.000] And he, I don't know what was on the top. [09:51.000 --> 09:58.000] I'm assuming it was the plea to the jurisdiction, the special pleading. [09:58.000 --> 10:05.000] Once he read through, he read through about a half a page of that and his demeanor completely changed. [10:05.000 --> 10:11.000] All of a sudden he wasn't considering a little knowledge. [10:11.000 --> 10:15.000] We do have Scott on the line and Scott was there. [10:15.000 --> 10:16.000] Hello, Scott. [10:16.000 --> 10:19.000] The clerk went and got the motions and gave them to him. [10:19.000 --> 10:23.000] Whoa, that sounded like you had your head in the toilet. [10:23.000 --> 10:32.000] I was listening to it on the radio and I turned the volume down. [10:32.000 --> 10:36.000] I didn't realize you initiated me into the call. [10:36.000 --> 10:45.000] Oh, okay. Yeah. Oh, I'm live. Oh, good. All right. Here we go. [10:45.000 --> 10:48.000] So what was the question? [10:48.000 --> 10:56.000] Oh, no, I was just telling, I was going over the hearing we had in Highland Park. [10:56.000 --> 10:57.000] Yep. [10:57.000 --> 10:58.000] With the judge. [10:58.000 --> 11:00.000] I was... [11:00.000 --> 11:02.000] Give them your... [11:02.000 --> 11:04.000] Yeah, the judge. [11:04.000 --> 11:13.000] He wanted to drop everything as soon as he actually had a nice little conversation with you at first. [11:13.000 --> 11:18.000] Because when he started out with the knowledge, a little bit of knowledge could be dangerous. [11:18.000 --> 11:22.000] That was before they went and got the motions and all the pleadings. [11:22.000 --> 11:27.000] And then once they brought it back up there, then his attitude kind of changed and he decided, [11:27.000 --> 11:34.000] oh, I can use some of this stuff. So that was pretty good. [11:34.000 --> 11:39.000] And as I can say, the bailiffs, they were hopping around. They didn't know what to do. [11:39.000 --> 11:46.000] They never seen the judge kind of come apart. The whole wheels just come off, you know. [11:46.000 --> 11:55.000] And so this is not normal. This does not happen. What's going on here? Why is this happening? [11:55.000 --> 12:06.000] And the judge, he never lost his cool. He really was trying to make things work. [12:06.000 --> 12:14.000] I was real pleased with that judge. And I told him toward the end there that after the hearing was kind of finished. [12:14.000 --> 12:20.000] I said, I did want to tell you that, you know, I came in here and I stepped right square in the middle of you. [12:20.000 --> 12:27.000] And you never once lost your composure. And he said, well, it got close there a time or two. [12:27.000 --> 12:39.000] And I knew it got close and I kind of backed up. I didn't push him over the edge because he was clearly trying to deal with the law that I was putting in front of him. [12:39.000 --> 12:43.000] But he had no idea, no knowledge of what the law was. [12:43.000 --> 12:51.000] But he was struggling to, from my perspective, he was struggling to do the right thing. He just didn't know what it was. [12:51.000 --> 12:57.000] And there's not a whole lot more I can ask from a public official than that. [12:57.000 --> 13:06.000] And I did appreciate it. And this poor little lawyer, I asked when he called, the lawyer called me up. [13:06.000 --> 13:11.000] I asked him for a card and he didn't have one. [13:11.000 --> 13:20.000] Well, then I need your bar card number, your name and bar card number. His name was Butler and he just spit out his bar card number. [13:20.000 --> 13:25.000] So generally lawyers, they forget what that is after a while. [13:25.000 --> 13:32.000] But I took it that he just got his and this is what happens guys get out of law school. [13:32.000 --> 13:39.000] If they don't get picked up by a law firm, they need a way to make some money. [13:39.000 --> 13:44.000] So one way is to go to work for a municipality as a prosecutor. [13:44.000 --> 13:52.000] And then you have the judge. The judge is always a practicing attorney, especially in these bigger municipalities. [13:52.000 --> 14:01.000] And they will show the lawyer the ropes. They'll kind of get them introduced to the whole system and how things work. [14:01.000 --> 14:10.000] But this guy was absolutely brand new. He didn't have any kind of attitude yet. [14:10.000 --> 14:16.000] When I asked him for his bar card, he just spit it out. No objection. [14:16.000 --> 14:31.000] So he hadn't been around enough to start to get jaded by one person after another trying to get out of their tickets and after a while the prosecutors, they don't want to hear it anymore. [14:31.000 --> 14:36.000] But he hadn't done that yet and I kind of got that from him. [14:36.000 --> 14:47.000] The judge, they decided that if I wanted to, I could have the trial right now. I said, no, no, no. [14:47.000 --> 14:56.000] I'm not ready for trial right now and what I didn't go into that I may at the next hearing is discovery. [14:56.000 --> 14:59.000] He wanted to hold the trial on the merits. [14:59.000 --> 15:07.000] You said, oh, no, no, we still haven't established subject matter jurisdiction yet and he has to answer my claim. [15:07.000 --> 15:13.000] So you're going to have to reset this and he has to write me an excellent brief. [15:13.000 --> 15:18.000] Yeah, I told that little lawyer, I'm going to expect a really good brief from you. [15:18.000 --> 15:22.000] And the lawyer is looking at me like, oh my gosh, oh my gosh. [15:22.000 --> 15:30.000] And I went over to him and I said, you know, I kind of cheated here. I've been researching this for the last 30 years. [15:30.000 --> 15:33.000] So you got some catching up to do. [15:33.000 --> 15:38.000] And he was looking like he would rather be somewhere else. [15:38.000 --> 15:46.000] But the judge said that he wasn't the regular judge that there was another guy. [15:46.000 --> 15:51.000] His name was Morris and he said that Morris will find this interesting. [15:51.000 --> 15:54.000] So we'll see if that's what happens. [15:54.000 --> 15:57.000] But here's the problem. [15:57.000 --> 16:08.000] I put the motions in at least 10 days before the hearing and they include discovery. [16:08.000 --> 16:22.000] That gives them a problem because 39.14, Texas Cochrane Recedure, that's the discovery statutes, the Brady, the Michael Morden Act. [16:22.000 --> 16:30.000] It requires that the prosecutor produce discovery 30 days before trial on the merits. [16:30.000 --> 16:44.000] Well, that stipulates a duty on the part of the prosecutor. If he don't have it 30 days before, and that was three days ago, [16:44.000 --> 16:48.000] then I charge him with official pressure. [16:48.000 --> 16:50.000] They're not going to be happy. [16:50.000 --> 17:00.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Ruella Radio, they're calling number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [17:20.000 --> 17:23.000] Hmm, yummy apple. [17:51.000 --> 17:57.000] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.000 --> 17:58.000] B is for cookie. [17:58.000 --> 18:21.000] C is for classified. [18:29.000 --> 18:34.000] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.000 --> 18:39.000] The Michael Mirris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.000 --> 18:41.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.000 --> 18:50.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michael Mirris at yahoo.com. [18:50.000 --> 18:57.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.000 --> 19:01.000] To learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:01.000 --> 19:28.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. Logos Radio Network.com. [19:28.000 --> 19:38.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton of ruleoflawradio on this Friday, the 11th day of October, 2017. [19:38.000 --> 19:47.000] And we're talking to Scott in Texas about our little Tata in Highland Park, Texas. [19:47.000 --> 19:58.000] Highland Park is one of the most expensive suburbs of Dallas, right on the north edge of Dallas. [19:58.000 --> 20:02.000] Real expensive area, always getting lost in that area. [20:02.000 --> 20:08.000] And I was surprised at how well they handled themselves. Nobody got an attitude. [20:08.000 --> 20:14.000] And they didn't have a clue as to what they were doing. He was clear. [20:14.000 --> 20:20.000] They set the hearing. He set another hearing for the 5th. [20:20.000 --> 20:26.000] But the problem is that has to be an examining trial. [20:26.000 --> 20:36.000] We still haven't had one. And I'm not going to be amenable to anything other than an examining trial. [20:36.000 --> 20:44.000] So I'm going to send a motion for a continuance because I want a brief. [20:44.000 --> 20:50.000] I'm going to request that the prosecutor file a brief. If not, I just move them to dismiss. [20:50.000 --> 20:58.000] I'm kind of concerned they may just dismiss it without trying to respond to it. [20:58.000 --> 21:10.000] We'll get better. This is a court that was at least trying to give the semblance of doing things right. [21:10.000 --> 21:16.000] But they were doing things the way they had been trained to do things and the way everybody else had done things. [21:16.000 --> 21:24.000] And when I come in there and through a big cog in the works, they didn't just freak out and go postal on me [21:24.000 --> 21:31.000] and drag the bailiff over with his hair on his knuckles to threaten me and intimidate me. [21:31.000 --> 21:36.000] They didn't do any of that kind of stuff. So I was replaced. [21:36.000 --> 21:38.000] So what do you think, Scott? [21:38.000 --> 21:49.000] Well, I think they had a total different outcome than they always have normally had. [21:49.000 --> 21:56.000] And even though it was kind of a real bump for them, they handled it pretty well. [21:56.000 --> 22:04.000] It almost gives you the impression that they've had some people come in there because since it is an SMU park, [22:04.000 --> 22:12.000] that they've had some SMU law students come through there and kind of might have ringed their bell just a little bit. [22:12.000 --> 22:22.000] So they might have known there is a chance that every once in a while somebody might actually know a little bit about the law. [22:22.000 --> 22:28.000] And when they come in there, they might ought to respect them a little bit more. [22:28.000 --> 22:31.000] But you have a really good demeanor too. [22:31.000 --> 22:40.000] And so they're going to have to respect you even though the bailiff, he was kind of getting a little agitated. [22:40.000 --> 22:49.000] You could tell it was funny because even the bailiff, it was like the judge actually was asking the bailiff about certain procedures in there. [22:49.000 --> 22:51.000] And the bailiff was kind of guiding him a little bit. [22:51.000 --> 23:01.000] So that judge, he wanted out from underneath that so fast he could always hand that little football off. [23:01.000 --> 23:04.000] Yeah, he did not want to deal with it. [23:04.000 --> 23:16.000] The documents, once you get these documents, you read through them two or three times, it'll make sense what I'm doing. [23:16.000 --> 23:18.000] I'm not doing anything radical. [23:18.000 --> 23:21.000] I'm not doing anything unusual. [23:21.000 --> 23:24.000] I'm walking right down the code. [23:24.000 --> 23:31.000] And when you take on a case, you start, my philosophy started at the beginning, not in the middle. [23:31.000 --> 23:40.000] When someone comes and makes an accusation against you, the first thing to do is not defend yourself. [23:40.000 --> 23:43.000] That's something you do later. [23:43.000 --> 23:50.000] First thing is ask the question, who the heck are you? [23:50.000 --> 23:54.000] And what authority do you have to make the accusation? [23:54.000 --> 23:58.000] What authority do you have to even talk to me? [23:58.000 --> 24:03.000] So they're taking a proactive approach. [24:03.000 --> 24:07.000] You exerted this authority, now prove it up. [24:07.000 --> 24:25.000] But see, if you can't prove it up, if you actually turned those lights on me and forced me to pull over at the thread of being shot or drug out of my car and beaten into unconsciousness, [24:25.000 --> 24:29.000] you better be sure you had authority to do that. [24:29.000 --> 24:32.000] And I'm going to test it. [24:32.000 --> 24:38.000] And I'm not going to accept you moving past it until you've proved it up. [24:38.000 --> 24:49.000] So this would maybe a good opportunity for me to get the arguments the other side will try to bring. [24:49.000 --> 24:56.000] Because this judge didn't lose his cool, I didn't. [24:56.000 --> 25:06.000] It was amiable, and the judge looked at my arguments and saw how they were, saw clearly that they were valid. [25:06.000 --> 25:16.000] He had been listening to what everybody else had been telling him, that under the Clark decision, it referenced 16.01 Texas Codercrone procedure. [25:16.000 --> 25:27.000] 16.01 says that you have a right to an examining trial before indictment in a felony case. [25:27.000 --> 25:35.000] So they took that to mean you don't have a right to an indictment in any other case. [25:35.000 --> 25:39.000] I'm saying, wait a minute. [25:39.000 --> 25:45.000] It does make any difference if I have a right to an indictment to an examining trial or not. [25:45.000 --> 25:53.000] The statute specifically commands the court to hold one. [25:53.000 --> 25:56.000] And that's what clicked with him. [25:56.000 --> 26:02.000] And because they're required to hold one, that becomes a part of due process. [26:02.000 --> 26:06.000] And I do have a right to due process. [26:06.000 --> 26:07.000] And the judge got it. [26:07.000 --> 26:15.000] And that's when he stopped thinking that a little bit of knowledge will get you into trouble. [26:15.000 --> 26:19.000] Anyway, great, great appearance, great hearing. [26:19.000 --> 26:21.000] I was real pleased with it. [26:21.000 --> 26:27.000] I'll keep you apprised of what occurs because it's going to get interesting. [26:27.000 --> 26:31.000] The next judge is going to be ready for me. [26:31.000 --> 26:39.000] I wish to act this one, but he's going to give the next judge a heads up. [26:39.000 --> 26:44.000] So I really want him to have a heads up. [26:44.000 --> 26:52.000] I want them to be ready for me because I want them to pull out all of their best arguments. [26:52.000 --> 27:02.000] So when I come back from the next hearing, then I'll adjust all of my documents to handle whatever arguments they produce. [27:02.000 --> 27:07.000] This is how we build an electronic lawyer. [27:07.000 --> 27:13.000] It doesn't matter what our first set of documents are. [27:13.000 --> 27:16.000] We just put some out there. [27:16.000 --> 27:26.000] And the thing that the tool that we've developed is the way of memorializing everything that occurs. [27:26.000 --> 27:32.000] So we come back from the hearing and somebody's going to say, OK, what happened? [27:32.000 --> 27:33.000] Did they do this? [27:33.000 --> 27:34.000] Did they do this? [27:34.000 --> 27:35.000] Did they do this? [27:35.000 --> 27:37.000] We just list the questions. [27:37.000 --> 27:39.000] And we say, no, no, they didn't do any of those things. [27:39.000 --> 27:40.000] They did this over here. [27:40.000 --> 27:42.000] So we stop, stop, stop, hold on. [27:42.000 --> 27:46.000] We need to back up and add that question to the list. [27:46.000 --> 27:53.000] So the next guy that comes back, that question's in the list every single time. [27:53.000 --> 28:04.000] And then as we move through the process, I have laid out the process as the code requires it to be. [28:04.000 --> 28:06.000] So then we ask, did they do this? [28:06.000 --> 28:07.000] Did they do this? [28:07.000 --> 28:10.000] And this is walking right down the statutory requirements. [28:10.000 --> 28:17.000] And when this person says no, then we ask questions to develop what actually occurred. [28:17.000 --> 28:22.000] And we write that down into a set of questions and memorialize it. [28:22.000 --> 28:28.000] So the next time we come through and they say, no, then we know what question to ask. [28:28.000 --> 28:30.000] And then we get something different we haven't seen before. [28:30.000 --> 28:31.000] We just stick that in there. [28:31.000 --> 28:33.000] It won't be long. [28:33.000 --> 28:35.000] Then we got everything. [28:35.000 --> 28:39.000] And this is not as complex as it seems. [28:39.000 --> 28:44.000] Because this is not free form. [28:44.000 --> 28:52.000] Yeah, there's a million different circumstances that can get you pulled over by the police. [28:52.000 --> 29:00.000] But when the police pull you over, there is a very finite set of conditions he has to meet. [29:00.000 --> 29:03.000] That's not random and it's not infinite. [29:03.000 --> 29:06.000] It is very finite. [29:06.000 --> 29:13.000] There are elements that must be addressed in every case and we walk down the elements. [29:13.000 --> 29:19.000] All the other stuff that gets you there, we really don't care much about at this point. [29:19.000 --> 29:21.000] We'll get to that later. [29:21.000 --> 29:23.000] Right now we care about the elements. [29:23.000 --> 29:24.000] They're finite. [29:24.000 --> 29:25.000] They're not hard. [29:25.000 --> 29:27.000] It's not hard to capture all of those. [29:27.000 --> 29:31.000] So this is actually easier than these lawyers like to think it is. [29:31.000 --> 29:37.000] And it won't take us long until we'll just have them outgunned big time. [29:37.000 --> 29:39.000] Okay, we'll come back. [29:39.000 --> 29:46.000] Scott, you're going to tell us about your hearing that you had today, which was somewhat interesting. [29:46.000 --> 29:49.000] A little more exciting than mine. [29:49.000 --> 29:55.000] Randy Calton, rule of law radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [29:55.000 --> 29:56.000] Johnny, hang on. [29:56.000 --> 29:57.000] We'll get to you. [29:57.000 --> 30:02.000] We'll be right back. [30:27.000 --> 30:49.000] They say that waking up is hard to do. [30:49.000 --> 30:56.000] It's tough rolling out of bed in the morning, but now even young people are turning to caffeinated energy drinks to kickstart their days. [30:56.000 --> 31:02.000] According to the Journal of Pediatrics, up to 50% of American youth are consuming them, despite the risks. [31:02.000 --> 31:05.000] Many of these drinks contain large amounts of caffeine. [31:05.000 --> 31:10.000] Eight ounces of Red Bull, for example, contains about the same caffeine as a cup of coffee. [31:10.000 --> 31:14.000] Pediatricians caution that youngsters can have a difficult time handling the caffeine rush. [31:14.000 --> 31:23.000] While many kids just get wired or irritable, other potential effects include seizures, heart palpitations, strokes, or even sudden death. [31:23.000 --> 31:28.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.000 --> 32:06.000] Rural law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:06.000 --> 32:13.000] 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. [32:13.000 --> 32:20.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.000 --> 32:26.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:26.000 --> 32:35.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy, A. Craig, in conjunction with Rural 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. [32:35.000 --> 32:41.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuralLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.000 --> 32:48.000] 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. [32:48.000 --> 32:51.000] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:51.000 --> 32:55.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuralLawRadio.com. [32:55.000 --> 32:59.000] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [33:04.000 --> 33:10.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:10.000 --> 33:15.000] Logos Radio Network [33:15.000 --> 33:18.000] Yeah, I got that one right. [33:18.000 --> 33:25.000] And I'm gonna send them to the head of government to prosecute them. [33:25.000 --> 33:29.000] Okay. [33:29.000 --> 33:31.000] What was that? [33:31.000 --> 33:41.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, RuralLawRadio on this Friday, the 11th day of August 2017. [33:41.000 --> 33:44.000] And we're talking to Scott in Texas. [33:44.000 --> 33:52.000] Okay, Scott, you went to a hearing today and it got rather exciting. [33:52.000 --> 34:02.000] Yeah, I had Mesquite who had issued a warrant out of a warrant capious proton last Friday. [34:02.000 --> 34:05.000] And they hold a warrant hearing on every Friday. [34:05.000 --> 34:08.000] And so this was the first Friday where I could go. [34:08.000 --> 34:12.000] So I went there to go see what I was getting taken care of. [34:12.000 --> 34:21.000] And as soon as I got there that morning, because it starts at nine o'clock and as soon as I got there I submitted a motion to recall the warrant. [34:21.000 --> 34:27.000] A motion to save prosecution and a petition for judicial disclosure. [34:27.000 --> 34:31.000] Before I appeared in court, men went up there and signed in. [34:31.000 --> 34:34.000] And I wrote a great timeline down. [34:34.000 --> 34:36.000] This is just read by the book. [34:36.000 --> 34:42.000] And so I went up there and I was number 22 in the hearing. [34:42.000 --> 34:53.000] During that time, Jody, who was with me, he submitted a handwritten note to the judge via the bailiff for permission to record the hearing. [34:53.000 --> 34:59.000] Well, the bailiff gave it to the court clerk who just kind of sat on it. [34:59.000 --> 35:01.000] She didn't give it to the judge immediately. [35:01.000 --> 35:04.000] And so it was like, okay, whatever. [35:04.000 --> 35:17.000] Well, then finally they called me to the podium and then I called the bailiff over to give him a copy of an indigency report. [35:17.000 --> 35:21.000] So it was a hardship to pay court costs. [35:21.000 --> 35:35.000] The judge, Judge Crane, proceeded into a hearing when the administrator interjected and informed that Jody had submitted this request for permission to record the hearing. [35:35.000 --> 35:42.000] Well, that triggered Judge Crane via YouTube video. [35:42.000 --> 35:52.000] And all of a sudden he became agitated and started going, is this the person that made the YouTube video called the Judge Quisling? [35:52.000 --> 35:57.000] And he actually took it away. [35:57.000 --> 36:01.000] Quisling. [36:01.000 --> 36:11.000] He picks up the phone and calls downstairs, you know, and he goes, I need you to look up this person's case, you know. [36:11.000 --> 36:21.000] And so he starts looking up the case and then he asks the person, is this the guy that made the YouTube video called the Judge Quisling? [36:21.000 --> 36:30.000] And all of a sudden he was on the phone for about two minutes and then he hangs up the phone and he says, there will be no recording in this courtroom. [36:30.000 --> 36:34.000] And then he threatens me with contempt of court immediately. [36:34.000 --> 36:44.000] Okay, so are you going to file criminally against him for that? [36:44.000 --> 36:48.000] Oh, wait, I'm just giving you the whole timeline here. [36:48.000 --> 36:51.000] And then I'll move on to the other side because this is beautiful. [36:51.000 --> 36:53.000] Wait till I get to the end. [36:53.000 --> 37:14.000] Oh, so he threatens me with contempt and then he ordered me to sit down and where Jody was and told the bailiff that Jody and I were talking, he was to hold either one of us in contempt. [37:14.000 --> 37:25.000] Well, he judge clears out the courtroom, makes sure there is nobody left in there and then he gets ready to start jangling with me again. [37:25.000 --> 37:37.000] And so he calls me up, then he calls Jody up out of the gallery and orders this because he thought Jody was sitting there looking at his phone or something. [37:37.000 --> 37:47.000] And I said, I need you to stand up and the bailiff, I told the bailiff to go over and search him for his phone and the bailiff goes over there and pass him down. [37:47.000 --> 37:49.000] And he says, where's your phone? [37:49.000 --> 37:51.000] He goes, I don't have a phone. [37:51.000 --> 37:55.000] I left it in the car. [37:55.000 --> 37:57.000] How would you go to record? [37:57.000 --> 38:00.000] He goes, I just wanted to get permission and I'd go get it. [38:00.000 --> 38:06.000] You know, if I could, you know, we walked out there and got it because I don't have a phone on me. [38:06.000 --> 38:08.000] And then he asked me if I was recording. [38:08.000 --> 38:10.000] I was like, no funny recording. [38:10.000 --> 38:11.000] That's it. [38:11.000 --> 38:19.000] So then we, we caused both of us up to the bench now. [38:19.000 --> 38:24.000] And so then he was talking about the video. [38:24.000 --> 38:35.000] He goes, is this the video that was posted on September 27, 2016 that has right now 73 views and only 30 minutes long. [38:35.000 --> 38:38.000] And I'm thinking right now, it's only got 73 views. [38:38.000 --> 38:39.000] Hey, man. [38:39.000 --> 38:42.000] And I was like, that's funny. [38:42.000 --> 38:43.000] And I said, yes. [38:43.000 --> 38:50.000] And so anyhow, the judge said if he was making this video just, and so he's like, I don't do YouTube. [38:50.000 --> 38:52.000] He asked, did I make this video? [38:52.000 --> 38:54.000] I said, I didn't record that video. [38:54.000 --> 38:56.000] You know, I didn't record that one. [38:56.000 --> 38:58.000] That's not mine. [38:58.000 --> 39:05.000] And so he told Johnny to go sit back down. [39:05.000 --> 39:09.000] And so he starts reading the motions that I found. [39:09.000 --> 39:12.000] And because I told him earlier, I said, I got motion. [39:12.000 --> 39:17.000] And he said, well, you know, they had to go, they had to go find us again. [39:17.000 --> 39:20.000] You know, so they found them. [39:20.000 --> 39:23.000] And then now he's just reading the title. [39:23.000 --> 39:27.000] And then as soon as he reads the title, because I'm going to deny all these for not being commonly called. [39:27.000 --> 39:29.000] I was like, yeah, go ahead and whatever. [39:29.000 --> 39:31.000] I knew he was. [39:31.000 --> 39:33.000] So then he lifts the warrant. [39:33.000 --> 39:39.000] You know, he says, he said, do you have 100 bucks to lift the warrant? [39:39.000 --> 39:40.000] I was like, yeah. [39:40.000 --> 39:41.000] And he's okay. [39:41.000 --> 39:45.000] The wards are lifted once you sign the agreement, pay the 105. [39:45.000 --> 39:54.000] And then now, and he says, I'm going to hold you for $50 a month payment plan until the rest of the fund is paid out, you know. [39:54.000 --> 39:56.000] And I was like, whatever, you know. [39:56.000 --> 40:01.000] And now he wants to hold the contempt hearing because he was threatened contempt all the way down. [40:01.000 --> 40:04.000] Now he's getting ready to hold the contempt hearing. [40:04.000 --> 40:08.000] He starts off, yes, three days, Joe with a hundred dollar five, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. [40:08.000 --> 40:13.000] And, and so he, this was weird. [40:13.000 --> 40:24.000] And so Joe Craig said that he knows that somebody was in his court during plaintiff's bench trial in a black trench coat sitting in the front row on plaintiff's right hand side. [40:24.000 --> 40:27.000] He knew that somebody was there at that bench trial. [40:27.000 --> 40:30.000] And he actually said, and he goes, I don't think it was Joe. [40:30.000 --> 40:32.000] He figured making a reporting. [40:32.000 --> 40:35.000] But where did this black trench coat guy come from? [40:35.000 --> 40:39.000] And I mean, that was me from a dark past or something. [40:39.000 --> 40:40.000] I don't know. [40:40.000 --> 40:41.000] I don't remember. [40:41.000 --> 40:43.000] Nobody in the whole courtroom wearing a black trench coat that day. [40:43.000 --> 40:45.000] But, you know, I don't know. [40:45.000 --> 41:03.000] So anyhow, then he asked if I could, if I had access to the channel, I said, yeah, I have access to the channel along with 50 other people who have access to the channel to make uploads or edits, you know. [41:03.000 --> 41:17.000] And so then he starts to badger me about stuff, you know, asking if, if I was calling the judge at Quizley and I said, you know, you were calling the judge at Quizley. [41:17.000 --> 41:18.000] And that is Jim. [41:18.000 --> 41:20.000] I said, I never called you at Quizley. [41:20.000 --> 41:23.000] You know, he goes, I heard you say the word Quizley. [41:23.000 --> 41:24.000] Do you know what that means? [41:24.000 --> 41:28.000] And I said, yeah, there's a judge goes, he said it means traitor. [41:28.000 --> 41:30.000] And I was like, it's like nodding my head. [41:30.000 --> 41:31.000] Yeah. [41:31.000 --> 41:32.000] Okay. [41:32.000 --> 41:37.000] And he goes, if I was calling him at Quizley again, I said, look, you read the complaint. [41:37.000 --> 41:40.000] You said the word Quizley, not me. [41:40.000 --> 41:42.000] You got bad about it, basically. [41:42.000 --> 41:46.000] And he was just as stated, you know, did you call me? [41:46.000 --> 41:49.000] I said, no, I'm not calling you or this court of Quizley. [41:49.000 --> 41:57.000] I'm calling the chief of police at Quizley. [41:57.000 --> 42:02.000] Now he orders me to delete the video. [42:02.000 --> 42:03.000] Well, here's the best part. [42:03.000 --> 42:08.000] They don't have access out of the courtroom building to internet. [42:08.000 --> 42:14.000] So there's no way that the court clerk says he can't get access outside of the building to internet. [42:14.000 --> 42:16.000] So he can't, he wanted me to delete it right then. [42:16.000 --> 42:17.000] I said, you want me to delete it now? [42:17.000 --> 42:19.000] He goes, yeah, I want to see it removed. [42:19.000 --> 42:26.000] And I was like, okay, yeah, well, you know, and so they said he doesn't have access. [42:26.000 --> 42:29.000] I'm going to delete it outside the building to do it here from here. [42:29.000 --> 42:30.000] I was like, hey, you know what? [42:30.000 --> 42:32.000] You let me out of here. [42:32.000 --> 42:37.000] I'll take it off on noon, you know, because you're going to hold me in contempt. [42:37.000 --> 42:39.000] I'm just going to keep an eye out of here. [42:39.000 --> 42:44.000] And so anyhow, he sets it for a contempt hearing for August 21st. [42:44.000 --> 42:49.000] And this is kind of where it gets really interesting though. [42:49.000 --> 42:55.000] So he sets it up for August 21st hearing at 2 p.m. [42:55.000 --> 42:59.000] And he goes, I just want to make sure you remove this video. [42:59.000 --> 43:03.000] You know, if that occurs, I will not do, I won't do anything on the contempt charges. [43:03.000 --> 43:06.000] I just want to know who recorded this video. [43:06.000 --> 43:08.000] And there you go. [43:08.000 --> 43:10.000] I just got one question. [43:10.000 --> 43:12.000] This is just kind of curiosity. [43:12.000 --> 43:15.000] I have to know, I've been doing this since the 70s. [43:15.000 --> 43:19.000] You see how it's treating people with respect and very nice. [43:19.000 --> 43:26.000] I have to know, why are you targeting me? [43:26.000 --> 43:27.000] Oh man. [43:27.000 --> 43:32.000] I told him, I said, I felt like an officer targeted me. [43:32.000 --> 43:37.000] Oh, I need to get out of here, you know. [43:37.000 --> 43:39.000] And oh man. [43:39.000 --> 43:44.000] So I need to call him and tell him that I've got this video. [43:44.000 --> 43:47.000] I'm going to put it on my radio station website. [43:47.000 --> 43:51.000] Before I do, I need you to have an opportunity to rebut. [43:51.000 --> 43:53.000] I want to get you on the show. [43:53.000 --> 43:55.000] And then you're going to have a contempt hearing. [43:55.000 --> 43:58.000] Hang on, we'll talk about that when we get back. [43:58.000 --> 44:26.000] We're ready to help. [44:26.000 --> 44:30.000] From Defense Distributed, third place, the AR308, 80% lower. [44:30.000 --> 44:33.000] Fourth place, the AR15, 8% lower. [44:33.000 --> 44:38.000] From Fat Sal's Deli, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fat Sal's Deli. [44:38.000 --> 44:40.000] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:40.000 --> 44:42.000] That's the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [44:42.000 --> 44:47.000] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, legal 101, you get four chances to win. [44:47.000 --> 44:51.000] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get 10 chances to win. [44:51.000 --> 44:54.000] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:54.000 --> 45:01.000] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:01.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:07.000 --> 45:12.000] the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how [45:12.000 --> 45:15.000] in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.000 --> 45:43.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:48.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:48.000 --> 45:53.000] forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [45:53.000 --> 45:57.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:57.000 --> 46:21.000] It's called toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:21.000 --> 46:23.000] Okay, we are back. [46:23.000 --> 46:28.000] Welcome to ruleoflawradio.com, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [46:28.000 --> 46:34.000] I call down there and tell him that I want to videotape this contempt hearing. [46:34.000 --> 46:37.000] And he's going to say, oh, you can't do that. We have a court rule. [46:37.000 --> 46:39.000] Unless I want to care about your court rule. [46:39.000 --> 46:42.000] I got Turner Driver. [46:42.000 --> 46:45.000] Turner Driver says I can record it. [46:45.000 --> 46:51.000] And if you stop me, then you're going against the Fifth Circuit, [46:51.000 --> 46:55.000] stand in case law, and that'll be criminal on your part. [46:55.000 --> 47:03.000] And then we'll have a examining trial. [47:03.000 --> 47:09.000] I've done this before, and it is so much fun. [47:09.000 --> 47:13.000] We did it in Minnesota, and we did it in Michigan. [47:13.000 --> 47:17.000] A kind of long story won't go into all of it, but it had great results. [47:17.000 --> 47:24.000] And I'm pleased to see that the judge is real unhappy. [47:24.000 --> 47:26.000] That's what we want. [47:26.000 --> 47:35.000] We want the judge to be real unhappy with a pro say nobody comes into his court and wipes the floor with it. [47:35.000 --> 47:41.000] Because the whole purpose of this show is to put every judge in the country in a position such that [47:41.000 --> 47:46.000] when they step up behind the bar and look out across the bar at the gout and across the bench at the gallery. [47:46.000 --> 47:51.000] And they step up behind the bench, look out across the bar at the gallery, [47:51.000 --> 47:56.000] and what I'm wondering which one, which one of those goundals out there waiting for me to render a ruling. [47:56.000 --> 48:01.000] So they can run down and try to get me thrown out of office. [48:01.000 --> 48:07.000] When that happens, then we'll start having liberty in our courts. [48:07.000 --> 48:13.000] Has the judge even looked at your demand for disclosure? [48:13.000 --> 48:17.000] Take it he didn't while he was in the courtroom. [48:17.000 --> 48:20.000] He ruled everything out of hand. [48:20.000 --> 48:25.000] It was just like, yeah, he was so infuriated about that. [48:25.000 --> 48:29.000] He was so triggered by the YouTube video. [48:29.000 --> 48:32.000] I was like only 73 views and he found out about it. [48:32.000 --> 48:37.000] I was like, oh, he was triggered. [48:37.000 --> 48:44.000] Seriously, he got on the phone and he was calling down. [48:44.000 --> 48:49.000] He held up the rest of the poor people that were up to sit there to go like, what in the heck is going on? [48:49.000 --> 48:53.000] They called up the cops that come to you with a fatty wagon. [48:53.000 --> 48:58.000] They called him the principal. [48:58.000 --> 49:05.000] I was just standing up there and he was like, I want to hold him in contempt of court. [49:05.000 --> 49:07.000] I was like, okay, great. [49:07.000 --> 49:09.000] Joey goes, we're going to jail. [49:09.000 --> 49:14.000] I said, yeah. [49:14.000 --> 49:22.000] So now I'm sure you're going to file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge. [49:22.000 --> 49:25.000] Oh, yeah. [49:25.000 --> 49:30.000] Run all this past the state commission on judicial conduct. [49:30.000 --> 49:34.000] That'll make the judge real happy. [49:34.000 --> 49:41.000] Can you introduce the state commission to Turner driver? [49:41.000 --> 49:43.000] Oh, yeah. [49:43.000 --> 49:44.000] Oh, yeah. [49:44.000 --> 49:46.000] And then follow another lawsuit on him. [49:46.000 --> 49:47.000] But here's the funny part. [49:47.000 --> 49:49.000] I was going to turn in. [49:49.000 --> 49:56.000] I brought all three suits that I just filed yesterday in Dallas County. [49:56.000 --> 50:00.000] And I was going to bring a copy and give him a courtesy copy. [50:00.000 --> 50:06.000] But since he got all across right off the bat about, he got some triggered on the YouTube video. [50:06.000 --> 50:12.000] It starts mumbling contempt of court before I even got two words out real good. [50:12.000 --> 50:18.000] And cause one said court clerk told me about video and he snapped. [50:18.000 --> 50:20.000] And he was like video. [50:20.000 --> 50:21.000] Oh, YouTube. [50:21.000 --> 50:25.000] Is this the guy? [50:25.000 --> 50:26.000] Yeah. [50:26.000 --> 50:29.000] He knew immediately. [50:29.000 --> 50:31.000] He just didn't know which one. [50:31.000 --> 50:33.000] It just had to have a reference. [50:33.000 --> 50:39.000] And Jody, I was like, man, I was like, Jody, I was like, how the heck did he tie us together? [50:39.000 --> 50:40.000] Like, you know, range. [50:40.000 --> 50:43.000] We were at range when he goes and asked the judge to video. [50:43.000 --> 50:45.000] He said he wrote my name down. [50:45.000 --> 50:51.000] Scott, you know, and it's so the judge like, well, you all know each other. [50:51.000 --> 50:53.000] I was like, I'm not here for that. [50:53.000 --> 50:54.000] Well, you know each other. [50:54.000 --> 50:55.000] It was like, do you know him? [50:55.000 --> 50:57.000] I was like, yeah, I do. [50:57.000 --> 51:01.000] He said, you know, I was like, Jody, how did he know this? [51:01.000 --> 51:03.000] How did this guy know? [51:03.000 --> 51:04.000] You can write my name. [51:04.000 --> 51:06.000] He goes, no, I wrote you cause numbers down. [51:06.000 --> 51:07.000] I was like, jerk. [51:07.000 --> 51:08.000] He told me to do it. [51:08.000 --> 51:10.000] Well, can you just be anonymous? [51:10.000 --> 51:12.000] What's up with you, man? [51:12.000 --> 51:13.000] Yeah. [51:13.000 --> 51:14.000] What a rush. [51:14.000 --> 51:19.000] We almost both went down. [51:19.000 --> 51:21.000] Did he learn anything? [51:21.000 --> 51:24.000] Oh, heck no, man. [51:24.000 --> 51:29.000] That boy is like, man, I was like, dude, seriously? [51:29.000 --> 51:31.000] I was like, just be anonymous, man. [51:31.000 --> 51:32.000] What's wrong with you? [51:32.000 --> 51:33.000] I don't know, man. [51:33.000 --> 51:37.000] It was like, oh man, they're going to know it's my tag team now. [51:37.000 --> 51:40.000] I was like, he's saying, go right, boy. [51:40.000 --> 51:45.000] When they asked me what I'm doing in the court, I'm there for entertainment. [51:45.000 --> 51:50.000] Oh, my God. [51:50.000 --> 51:51.000] Okay. [51:51.000 --> 51:52.000] Okay. [51:52.000 --> 51:54.000] Thanks. [51:54.000 --> 51:55.000] This was good. [51:55.000 --> 51:56.000] Keep it up. [51:56.000 --> 51:58.000] And we'll do so. [51:58.000 --> 51:59.000] We'll work him over. [51:59.000 --> 52:00.000] I'll call down there. [52:00.000 --> 52:09.000] I want to send a video crew down to record this contempt of court hearing so we can put [52:09.000 --> 52:11.000] it on our radio station. [52:11.000 --> 52:17.000] And then when they try to object, I'll remind them of Turner driver that says I have a right [52:17.000 --> 52:19.000] to according to the courts. [52:19.000 --> 52:22.000] If you try to prevent me now, that's official oppression. [52:22.000 --> 52:24.000] We'll have to have a hearing on that. [52:24.000 --> 52:26.000] See how this works for them. [52:26.000 --> 52:27.000] All right. [52:27.000 --> 52:31.000] This, this will really get the judge excited. [52:31.000 --> 52:34.000] They throw you under the jail. [52:34.000 --> 52:35.000] Oh, yeah. [52:35.000 --> 52:39.000] He was trying to get anything he could do. [52:39.000 --> 52:41.000] Jody didn't even have a phone on him. [52:41.000 --> 52:43.000] So he's like, well, you're not recording. [52:43.000 --> 52:44.000] He can't read. [52:44.000 --> 52:48.000] I was like, duh, you know, so I'm not recording anything. [52:48.000 --> 52:50.000] I thought about bringing something. [52:50.000 --> 52:54.000] I was like, no, I think this will probably get a little bit weird for some reason. [52:54.000 --> 52:56.000] It always seems to go a little south. [52:56.000 --> 53:01.000] They get a little antsy with you. [53:01.000 --> 53:03.000] You start kicking around. [53:03.000 --> 53:08.000] I mean, shoot, you start handing them the motions and all of a sudden that kind of makes him flash [53:08.000 --> 53:09.000] a little bit. [53:09.000 --> 53:14.000] He goes, oh, I don't see these two often, you know, not by anybody else except other some [53:14.000 --> 53:19.000] smarty and but yeah, that lit them up. [53:19.000 --> 53:21.000] That was a good one. [53:21.000 --> 53:26.000] And now when the 20 years, the beautiful part Monday, he's going to get the mail and it's [53:26.000 --> 53:31.000] going to get that fresh lawsuit on him, a prosecutor and the cops. [53:31.000 --> 53:37.000] So if he was hopping mad today and had to go have a drink come Monday or Tuesday, he's [53:37.000 --> 53:40.000] going to be asking for the whole bottle. [53:40.000 --> 53:41.000] Good. [53:41.000 --> 53:48.000] And then then we'll call about videotaping the contempt hearing. [53:48.000 --> 53:51.000] Yeah, that'll shake us. [53:51.000 --> 53:55.000] You already have that lawsuit in his hands by Wednesday for sure. [53:55.000 --> 54:00.000] He'll be like, oh my gosh, I got this and they didn't call by Wednesday because that's [54:00.000 --> 54:05.000] when he would tell everybody all your warrants will be officially off the thing off the record, [54:05.000 --> 54:06.000] you know, by Wednesday. [54:06.000 --> 54:09.000] You know, so after Wednesday you can do all your stuff. [54:09.000 --> 54:12.000] Call him after Wednesday and say, yeah, you're on the record. [54:12.000 --> 54:21.000] You know, you want to take him up so hard. [54:21.000 --> 54:26.000] He's already you should have seen it when he was asking why you targeting me. [54:26.000 --> 54:33.000] I was like, he was trying to be all super nice and stuff. [54:33.000 --> 54:36.000] You know, I'm just trying to be nice. [54:36.000 --> 54:42.000] I was like, yeah, whatever. [54:42.000 --> 54:47.000] You should have told him like I told the sheriff's deputy in Johnson County. [54:47.000 --> 54:51.000] He said, why are you charging, filing charges against me? [54:51.000 --> 54:58.000] I said, well, I'm not really after you, but you're just convenient. [54:58.000 --> 55:01.000] That's the beautiful one. [55:01.000 --> 55:05.000] I wish I'd have thought of that if I just said you're convenient. [55:05.000 --> 55:07.000] He would have lost his mind. [55:07.000 --> 55:13.000] He was already seeming like he was getting a little unstable. [55:13.000 --> 55:15.000] That was terrible. [55:15.000 --> 55:17.000] I can file a lawsuit on him. [55:17.000 --> 55:19.000] So many things on this. [55:19.000 --> 55:24.000] I mean, talk about freedom because he ordered me to take my video down, you know, so I came [55:24.000 --> 55:28.000] back when I got back off and I took the video down. [55:28.000 --> 55:30.000] That's official oppression. [55:30.000 --> 55:33.000] He has no power to do that. [55:33.000 --> 55:38.000] Yeah, well, you know, and all this censorship coming out with Google and now all these people [55:38.000 --> 55:43.000] are actually talking about doing lawsuits against YouTube for shutting down their videos and content [55:43.000 --> 55:47.000] and demonetizing and doing all this other stuff. [55:47.000 --> 55:53.000] I mean, the net is just buzzing hard with Sue and Google. [55:53.000 --> 55:57.000] They're talking about protesting Google and everything because it's turned into a monopoly. [55:57.000 --> 56:01.000] I mean, this is turning into another censorship monopoly. [56:01.000 --> 56:04.000] You know, when a judge oversteps his bounds, I mean, where does it stop? [56:04.000 --> 56:06.000] You know, Google does it now. [56:06.000 --> 56:07.000] Judges do it. [56:07.000 --> 56:11.000] I mean, you know, next, you can't have, you know, whatever, you know, you can't be posting [56:11.000 --> 56:14.000] nothing or no, we're going to hold you like a champ. [56:14.000 --> 56:15.000] You know, like, we don't like it. [56:15.000 --> 56:19.000] I was like, yeah, because it's about you. [56:19.000 --> 56:21.000] So this would be a good one to go after important. [56:21.000 --> 56:27.000] Maybe a good one to get our, the rulings out, get the word out to the judges that they can't [56:27.000 --> 56:30.000] continue to do this. [56:30.000 --> 56:31.000] Okay. [56:31.000 --> 56:32.000] We need to move on. [56:32.000 --> 56:33.000] We've got some more callers. [56:33.000 --> 56:34.000] Okay. [56:34.000 --> 56:37.000] You're having way too much fun, Scott. [56:37.000 --> 56:38.000] All right. [56:38.000 --> 56:39.000] I'll talk to you all later. [56:39.000 --> 56:40.000] Bye. [56:40.000 --> 56:41.000] Okay. [56:41.000 --> 56:44.000] Now we're going to go to Brett in Texas. [56:44.000 --> 56:46.000] Hello, Brett. [56:46.000 --> 56:48.000] Hello there, Randy. [56:48.000 --> 56:49.000] Howdy. [56:49.000 --> 56:52.000] What do you have for us today? [56:52.000 --> 56:56.000] Well, I have a question for you. [56:56.000 --> 57:04.000] Is it true that a presiding judge of an administrative judicial region is not a magistrate? [57:04.000 --> 57:07.000] I've got a criminal complaint. [57:07.000 --> 57:08.000] Okay, okay. [57:08.000 --> 57:10.000] I'm going to put this around a criminal complaint. [57:10.000 --> 57:11.000] Okay. [57:11.000 --> 57:17.000] The correct term is head administrative judge. [57:17.000 --> 57:23.000] And no, an administrative judge is not, as far as I know, is not a magistrate. [57:23.000 --> 57:24.000] Okay. [57:24.000 --> 57:31.000] The 2.09 lists all of the judges that are magistrates and administrative judges are [57:31.000 --> 57:33.000] not in there. [57:33.000 --> 57:34.000] Okay. [57:34.000 --> 57:39.000] Well, I'm sending a criminal complaint around and everybody's ignoring it. [57:39.000 --> 57:45.000] I did get one response from somebody that is presiding judge of the first administrative [57:45.000 --> 57:46.000] judicial region. [57:46.000 --> 57:51.000] And I figured when I was looking at that 2.09, I was kind of getting busy looking at all [57:51.000 --> 57:52.000] those things. [57:52.000 --> 57:58.000] And I figured, well, shoot, if everybody, even municipal mayors and court recorders are magistrates, [57:58.000 --> 58:01.000] then certainly this person is too. [58:01.000 --> 58:05.000] He might also be a district judge. [58:05.000 --> 58:09.000] You should check that. [58:09.000 --> 58:11.000] Because sometimes they are. [58:11.000 --> 58:16.000] The head administrative judge of the district is a separate position. [58:16.000 --> 58:19.000] They could still be a district judge. [58:19.000 --> 58:20.000] Hang on. [58:20.000 --> 58:21.000] About to go to break. [58:21.000 --> 58:28.000] This is Randy Kelton with our radio on this Friday, the 11th day of August, 2017. [58:28.000 --> 58:32.000] I call it number 512-646-1984. [58:32.000 --> 58:34.000] It's the top of the hour break. [58:34.000 --> 58:35.000] So it's a little longer. [58:35.000 --> 58:41.000] It's a good time to go check out our fundraiser on Logos Radio Network and help us support [58:41.000 --> 58:42.000] this network. [58:42.000 --> 58:50.000] We'll be right back. [58:50.000 --> 58:54.000] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.000 --> 59:00.000] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [59:00.000 --> 59:01.000] can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:06.000] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:06.000 --> 59:07.000] today. [59:07.000 --> 59:11.000] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:11.000 --> 59:14.000] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:14.000 --> 59:19.000] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:19.000 --> 59:24.000] This five chapter Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.000 --> 59:28.000] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:28.000 --> 59:33.000] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:33.000 --> 59:40.000] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.000 --> 59:50.000] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.000 --> 01:00:01.000] Live free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:01.000 --> 01:00:05.000] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.000 --> 01:00:11.000] Markets for Wednesday the 26th of July 2017 are currently trading with gold at $1,260.75 [01:00:11.000 --> 01:00:19.000] in ounce, silver $16.69 in ounce, Texas Crude $47.89 in barrel and Bitcoin is sitting a little [01:00:19.000 --> 01:00:23.000] over $2,474 US currency. [01:00:23.000 --> 01:00:30.600] Today in history, the year 1938, an unprecedented swarm of grasshoppers descends on crops throughout [01:00:30.600 --> 01:00:35.600] the American heartland, devastating millions of acres, Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota, [01:00:35.600 --> 01:00:41.600] already in the midst of a bad drought, suffered the most from this grasshopper disaster. [01:00:41.600 --> 01:00:46.600] Today in history. [01:00:46.600 --> 01:00:50.600] In recent news, yesterday Tuesday police chiefs from three of the five biggest cities in the [01:00:50.600 --> 01:00:54.600] state spoke out at the Texas Capitol against the transgender bathroom bill being considered [01:00:54.600 --> 01:00:59.600] by the Republican legislator as discriminatory and in divergence of resources that won't [01:00:59.600 --> 01:01:00.600] keep people safe. [01:01:00.600 --> 01:01:05.600] The police chiefs were joined by public school officials, advocates for sexual assault survivors, [01:01:05.600 --> 01:01:09.600] representatives from the Harris County and El Paso Sheriff's offices, the Corpus Christi [01:01:09.600 --> 01:01:11.600] ISD chief of police and others. [01:01:11.600 --> 01:01:16.600] The main issue as Austin police chief Brian Manley put it is that if quote, a bill like [01:01:16.600 --> 01:01:21.600] this were to be passed that would pull police officers time away from combating violent crime [01:01:21.600 --> 01:01:27.600] into enforcing a bathroom bill, it makes communities less safe since it is time not spent ensuring [01:01:27.600 --> 01:01:28.600] community safety. [01:01:28.600 --> 01:01:32.600] The legislation would restrict bathroom use in schools and local government buildings [01:01:32.600 --> 01:01:36.600] by superseding and nullifying parts of local non-discrimination ordinances meant to allow [01:01:36.600 --> 01:01:41.600] transgender residents which make up less than 1% of the population that claim to use the [01:01:41.600 --> 01:01:43.600] public bathroom of their choice. [01:01:43.600 --> 01:01:46.600] The bill did pass just after midnight last night. [01:01:46.600 --> 01:01:55.600] The Senate voted 21 to 10 and it now goes to the House for consideration. [01:01:55.600 --> 01:01:59.600] An information technology staffer for former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, [01:01:59.600 --> 01:02:04.600] Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Democrat from Florida, and Ron Awan, a 37-year-old, [01:02:04.600 --> 01:02:09.600] was arrested on Monday by FBI agents in U.S. Capitol Police at Dulley's International Airport [01:02:09.600 --> 01:02:12.600] while attempting to flee to Lahore, Pakistan. [01:02:12.600 --> 01:02:17.600] He was charged with big fraud in the U.S. District Court on Tuesday where he pleaded not guilty. [01:02:17.600 --> 01:02:21.600] According to federal court documents, officials were accusing Awan and his wife, Hina Ali, [01:02:21.600 --> 01:02:27.600] of defrauding the Congressional Federal Credit Union of $165,000 by lying on a home equity [01:02:27.600 --> 01:02:32.600] loan application and not listing the home that they were getting the loan for as a rental property. [01:02:32.600 --> 01:02:37.600] Awan was released and is under a high-intensity supervision program with his hearing scheduled [01:02:37.600 --> 01:02:39.600] for the 21st of August. [01:02:39.600 --> 01:02:43.600] Awan's lawyer Christopher Gowen said that the charges are politically motivated and, [01:02:43.600 --> 01:02:49.600] quote, began as part of a frenzy of anti-Muslim bigotry in the literal heart of our democracy, [01:02:49.600 --> 01:02:51.600] the House of Representatives. [01:02:51.600 --> 01:02:59.600] This is Rick Brody with your lowdown for July 26, 2017. [01:02:59.600 --> 01:03:21.600] Okay, we are back. [01:03:21.600 --> 01:03:25.600] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [01:03:25.600 --> 01:03:27.600] Hello, Brett. [01:03:27.600 --> 01:03:29.600] Hello, there. [01:03:29.600 --> 01:03:35.600] Yeah, you were telling me about the possibility that this providing admin judges might also [01:03:35.600 --> 01:03:37.600] be a district judge, so I appreciate that. [01:03:37.600 --> 01:03:40.600] I'll look into that. [01:03:40.600 --> 01:03:47.600] We got time for another question? [01:03:47.600 --> 01:03:48.600] Are you there? [01:03:48.600 --> 01:03:49.600] Yes, I'm here. [01:03:49.600 --> 01:03:52.600] Yeah, we have time for another question. [01:03:52.600 --> 01:03:53.600] Okay. [01:03:53.600 --> 01:04:01.600] So what would be an appropriate complaint, an appropriate thing to put into a bar grievance? [01:04:01.600 --> 01:04:02.600] I've kind of gotten a lack. [01:04:02.600 --> 01:04:07.600] There's this one DA that I've only given him one bar grievance, and I just think he deserves [01:04:07.600 --> 01:04:08.600] a bunch more. [01:04:08.600 --> 01:04:15.600] So there's a public information request that I've put in for him to give me some information [01:04:15.600 --> 01:04:22.600] about who in his area has the ability to enforce, and he sat on it for a really long time, and [01:04:22.600 --> 01:04:33.600] he eventually turned it over to the AG for an opinion about whether it was okay to disclose [01:04:33.600 --> 01:04:39.600] information regarding all these officers, families, and how many children they have and everything, [01:04:39.600 --> 01:04:45.600] and he's completely misconstruing my request, which is simply about their training and certification. [01:04:45.600 --> 01:04:52.600] So I'd kind of like to slap that attorney for misconstruing in that way and for sitting [01:04:52.600 --> 01:04:58.600] on this thing for four months, and what would be a good way to complain? [01:04:58.600 --> 01:05:04.600] The first way I would do it is with a Class A misdemeanor official misconduct complaint [01:05:04.600 --> 01:05:08.600] under 552.353. [01:05:08.600 --> 01:05:19.600] The open records, the Open Government Act in Texas, Chapter 552, is not a civil statute. [01:05:19.600 --> 01:05:22.600] It is a criminal statute. [01:05:22.600 --> 01:05:31.600] 552.353 says violation of this act is an act of official misconduct. [01:05:31.600 --> 01:05:35.600] It's a Class A misdemeanor. [01:05:35.600 --> 01:05:42.600] Hey, I didn't write the law, I just read it up to your engine. [01:05:42.600 --> 01:05:43.600] All right, great. [01:05:43.600 --> 01:05:45.600] It's a criminal complaint. [01:05:45.600 --> 01:05:49.600] And then who do you think is a criminal complaint to? [01:05:49.600 --> 01:06:00.600] Is there something that does pay attention or do they just all ignore it? [01:06:00.600 --> 01:06:09.600] Sir? [01:06:09.600 --> 01:06:20.600] I'm hearing some strange audio. [01:06:20.600 --> 01:06:24.600] I'm sorry, I'm just hearing some really fuzzy distant audio. [01:06:24.600 --> 01:06:25.600] It seems pretty garbled. [01:06:25.600 --> 01:06:31.600] I don't know if I should have written it all behind or not. [01:06:31.600 --> 01:06:34.600] Is that better? [01:06:34.600 --> 01:06:35.600] Hello, hello. [01:06:35.600 --> 01:06:36.600] I heard the word better. [01:06:36.600 --> 01:06:40.600] Okay, I think that was internet, because all of a sudden it just jumped up. [01:06:40.600 --> 01:06:44.600] I wasn't getting feedback in my headset, and all of a sudden it came back. [01:06:44.600 --> 01:06:47.600] So I may just have a weak internet connection. [01:06:47.600 --> 01:06:50.600] Okay, I would run them up the flagpole. [01:06:50.600 --> 01:06:57.600] You send a criminal complaint, fill it out, take it to the bank, [01:06:57.600 --> 01:07:03.600] and get them to notarize it for you, and send it to a local magistrate. [01:07:03.600 --> 01:07:09.600] Give the magistrate two weeks and contact the magistrate's office [01:07:09.600 --> 01:07:23.600] and ask for a copy of the 16.17 order issued subsequent to your complaint against the district attorney. [01:07:23.600 --> 01:07:30.600] And they're going to tell you they have no records responsive to your request. [01:07:30.600 --> 01:07:38.600] And that gives you reasonable probable cause to believe that the magistrate did not hold an examining trial. [01:07:38.600 --> 01:07:45.600] Then you file a criminal complaint against the magistrate with the county court, [01:07:45.600 --> 01:07:53.600] with the J.P. with the county court, and accuse the magistrate of official oppression [01:07:53.600 --> 01:07:56.600] for failing to perform the duty he is required to perform, [01:07:56.600 --> 01:08:00.600] and in process denied uniformed free access to and joined if you're right [01:08:00.600 --> 01:08:03.600] to petition the court for redress grievance. [01:08:03.600 --> 01:08:08.600] You file that with county judge, verified format. [01:08:08.600 --> 01:08:17.600] And when the county judge doesn't act on it, then you give him a week and you put in a request for a 16.17 order. [01:08:17.600 --> 01:08:24.600] And then you do the district judge, and then you send it to the grand jury [01:08:24.600 --> 01:08:32.600] at the district attorney's address, registered restricted. [01:08:32.600 --> 01:08:36.600] And the prosecutors are going to open it. [01:08:36.600 --> 01:08:40.600] And the top complaint would be a complaint against him, [01:08:40.600 --> 01:08:44.600] and then a complaint against each of the others for shielding from prosecution, [01:08:44.600 --> 01:08:51.600] violation 3805, Texas penal code, state jail felony. [01:08:51.600 --> 01:08:54.600] Just give me the whole stack as it grows. [01:08:54.600 --> 01:09:01.600] Yeah, he's going to be addressed to the grand jury, and the prosecutors are going to open it. [01:09:01.600 --> 01:09:04.600] And that's when he's going to know you set him up. [01:09:04.600 --> 01:09:16.600] And then you send a give that if you're in a small county, sometimes they only meet once a month. [01:09:16.600 --> 01:09:21.600] So you find out if it's a small county, you find out when the grand jury meets, [01:09:21.600 --> 01:09:28.600] and then you contact the court clerk the day after they meet and request the minutes of the court [01:09:28.600 --> 01:09:34.600] as referenced by 2122, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:09:34.600 --> 01:09:41.600] 2122 says that the grand jury shall appear before the court or the clerk [01:09:41.600 --> 01:09:47.600] with the quorum and the grand jury present and read the fact of the indictment into the record, [01:09:47.600 --> 01:09:50.600] and the clerk shall make notes in the minutes of the court. [01:09:50.600 --> 01:09:55.600] Those are the notes you want to see. [01:09:55.600 --> 01:10:04.600] If they don't have them, or if you get them and there's no mention of your criminal complaints against these public officials, [01:10:04.600 --> 01:10:11.600] then you file criminal charges against the district attorney with the FBI, [01:10:11.600 --> 01:10:21.600] accusing him of shielding these complaints against himself from a grand jury [01:10:21.600 --> 01:10:25.600] behind you in procedural due process. [01:10:25.600 --> 01:10:30.600] You just keep walking it up the ladder. [01:10:30.600 --> 01:10:33.600] Oh, you got to file a, I'm sorry, I did that wrong. [01:10:33.600 --> 01:10:35.600] Don't get sent to the district attorney first. [01:10:35.600 --> 01:10:39.600] Send it to the Texas Ranger. [01:10:39.600 --> 01:10:44.600] There are the new players on the block. [01:10:44.600 --> 01:10:50.600] Send a complaint against all of these officials to the Texas Rangers. [01:10:50.600 --> 01:10:53.600] The Rangers come after which one? [01:10:53.600 --> 01:10:56.600] Before the grand jury. [01:10:56.600 --> 01:10:57.600] Okay. [01:10:57.600 --> 01:10:59.600] After the district judge. [01:10:59.600 --> 01:11:06.600] After the district judge, then you file against the prosecutor and all these others. [01:11:06.600 --> 01:11:08.600] Send it to the Ranger. [01:11:08.600 --> 01:11:12.600] Here's a problem the Ranger has. [01:11:12.600 --> 01:11:26.600] The Ranger has the Texas DPS set up protocols that the legislature required them to do when they gave the Rangers the responsibility of investigating public officials. [01:11:26.600 --> 01:11:34.600] And the protocol they set up was they required the Ranger to give their complaints to the district attorney. [01:11:34.600 --> 01:11:43.600] Well, district attorney when there's a complaint against a public official can't do anything with it has to give it directly to the grand jury. [01:11:43.600 --> 01:11:52.600] So if they give it to the district attorney, then I could screw that it's conspiring with the district attorney to obstruct justice. [01:11:52.600 --> 01:11:59.600] And so that's why you want to complain against the district attorney in the bunch. [01:11:59.600 --> 01:12:14.600] So then when you go ask for the minutes of the grand jury, after you've given these to the Texas Ranger, then you don't get it, then you file against the Ranger. [01:12:14.600 --> 01:12:17.600] That's going to make them really unhappy. [01:12:17.600 --> 01:12:30.600] I've done that before I filed first degree felony aggravated assault against my local district judge and filed against the Ranger and the director of public safety for shielding the judge from prosecution. [01:12:30.600 --> 01:12:34.600] But the judge kind of ruined everything he got out of it. [01:12:34.600 --> 01:12:37.600] He up and died on me. [01:12:37.600 --> 01:12:40.600] Kind of screwed everything up. [01:12:40.600 --> 01:12:52.600] But we need to start putting the Rangers on the dime and he'll just add another layer to the mix. Everybody's going to be calling each other and everybody's going to be upset because they're getting problems. [01:12:52.600 --> 01:13:00.600] What you do when you file against the Rangers, you also file a TECL's complaint against him and that's really going to make him unhappy. [01:13:00.600 --> 01:13:11.600] Because the Rangers think of themselves as the elite law enforcement officers in Texas. You start too close to them and that's really going to get him excited. [01:13:11.600 --> 01:13:16.600] They can't even do the basics. [01:13:16.600 --> 01:13:23.600] Yeah, just walk them through the system. Everything they do makes it worse for them. [01:13:23.600 --> 01:13:33.600] And here, you're pretty clean because you're the one that's going after them instead of them coming after you. [01:13:33.600 --> 01:13:36.600] Turns everything around on them. [01:13:36.600 --> 01:13:51.600] And if anybody says anything to you that you could in any way construe as a threat, that always gets, for me, it always gets a 911 call. [01:13:51.600 --> 01:13:57.600] If they give you unsolicited legal advice. [01:13:57.600 --> 01:14:07.600] Oh, you have to be careful. You can get in a lot of trouble doing this 911. [01:14:07.600 --> 01:14:12.600] Told a police officer wrote me a ticket that looks like you pulled the short straw today. [01:14:12.600 --> 01:14:15.600] Should I take that as a threat? 911. [01:14:15.600 --> 01:14:18.600] No, I just took that as a threat. [01:14:18.600 --> 01:14:27.600] So anything that they say to you, you know, I tell people, don't give public officials legal advice. [01:14:27.600 --> 01:14:33.600] They will always construe it as a threat. [01:14:33.600 --> 01:14:38.600] You say anything to them about what their duty is and what your right is. [01:14:38.600 --> 01:14:48.600] They will always consider that you are agitated and take what you say as a threat. [01:14:48.600 --> 01:14:54.600] So don't give them any fair warning. Bushwax better. [01:14:54.600 --> 01:15:00.600] Just smile and say, oh, oh, I bring you this complaint and you say I have to take it over here. [01:15:00.600 --> 01:15:07.600] Oh, okay. So I go over there and take a coin against this guy over there for him sending me there. [01:15:07.600 --> 01:15:15.600] If they wonder where this came from, what happened? [01:15:15.600 --> 01:15:19.600] No fair warning. [01:15:19.600 --> 01:15:28.600] They are public officials. They don't have a right to expect fair warning. [01:15:28.600 --> 01:15:33.600] Yeah, they want to have attitude and love attitude. [01:15:33.600 --> 01:15:39.600] What I had when I went to Highland Park is he didn't have any attitude. [01:15:39.600 --> 01:15:44.600] How do you hammer some guy when he doesn't have an attitude? [01:15:44.600 --> 01:15:50.600] When he treats you with dignity and respect? [01:15:50.600 --> 01:15:54.600] So be smart, mouth and nasty. [01:15:54.600 --> 01:15:58.600] Oh, I love it. [01:15:58.600 --> 01:16:03.600] Tell me that should I take that as a threat? [01:16:03.600 --> 01:16:13.600] I was thinking, oh, you are going to so wish you hadn't done that. [01:16:13.600 --> 01:16:19.600] So anytime I can get them to act ignorant, it always works in my favor. [01:16:19.600 --> 01:16:32.600] And when they don't, when you don't respond to them the way they expect you to, it gets them to really act ignorant. [01:16:32.600 --> 01:16:37.600] And the more you don't respond, the harder they try to get you to respond. [01:16:37.600 --> 01:16:45.600] And they do this really stupid stuff that when you bring it out to their boss, the boss says, what were you thinking? [01:16:45.600 --> 01:16:52.600] Well, he made me mad over 10, 50 times. [01:16:52.600 --> 01:17:21.600] Okay, hang on, Randy Kalkum, we'll be right back. [01:17:21.600 --> 01:17:23.600] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.600 --> 01:17:28.600] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:28.600 --> 01:17:30.600] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:30.600 --> 01:17:33.600] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:17:33.600 --> 01:17:36.600] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:36.600 --> 01:17:42.600] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:42.600 --> 01:17:43.600] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.600 --> 01:17:44.600] No. [01:17:44.600 --> 01:17:46.600] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.600 --> 01:17:47.600] No. [01:17:47.600 --> 01:17:48.600] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.600 --> 01:17:49.600] No. [01:17:49.600 --> 01:17:50.600] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.600 --> 01:17:55.600] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:17:55.600 --> 01:17:56.600] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.600 --> 01:17:57.600] We are Logos. [01:17:57.600 --> 01:17:59.600] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:59.600 --> 01:18:04.600] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:04.600 --> 01:18:08.600] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Merris Proven Method. [01:18:08.600 --> 01:18:14.600] Michael Merris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:18:14.600 --> 01:18:20.600] You'll get step-by-step instructions and claim English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:18:20.600 --> 01:18:24.600] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:18:24.600 --> 01:18:26.600] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:18:26.600 --> 01:18:28.600] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [01:18:28.600 --> 01:18:33.600] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:18:33.600 --> 01:18:38.600] The Michael Merris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.600 --> 01:18:40.600] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.600 --> 01:18:49.600] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner, or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.600 --> 01:19:00.600] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.600 --> 01:19:10.600] This is The Logos What Logos Radio Net Radio Net Radio Net Radio [01:19:10.600 --> 01:19:24.600] Music [01:19:24.600 --> 01:19:32.600] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [01:19:32.600 --> 01:19:40.600] So, if you have a prosecutor that has an attitude, well, he probably needs a little adjustment. [01:19:40.600 --> 01:19:55.600] And if you think of these guys in terms of giving them opportunity to screw up, it makes this process much easier. [01:19:55.600 --> 01:20:08.600] When I went into court Tuesday, the judge picked it up quickly that I'm giving him opportunity to screw up, and I don't care what he does. [01:20:08.600 --> 01:20:17.600] Because he's refusing to do what I want him to and what I'm asking him to, and I'm not getting the least bit upset. [01:20:17.600 --> 01:20:28.600] And he's looking at me wondering, this guy's not responding right. Something's going on here that I don't know about. [01:20:28.600 --> 01:20:37.600] He's supposed to get all upset and rail in righteous indignation and tell me what his rights are and what my duty is. [01:20:37.600 --> 01:20:42.600] He's not doing all that. He's just walking down the code. [01:20:42.600 --> 01:20:49.600] And when I say I don't want to, then he wants me to do something else. No, no, no, no. We don't want to do that. [01:20:49.600 --> 01:20:53.600] This is what we're going to do. We're not going to do something else. [01:20:53.600 --> 01:21:05.600] And they pick it up really quick. It helps to cheat me from getting any more broken collar bones or broken elbows or dislocated ribs. [01:21:05.600 --> 01:21:25.600] Been there, done that, that part sucks. Once you have the appearance of not caring what they do, it becomes clear to them that you've got something else planned and you're laying in a trap for them. [01:21:25.600 --> 01:21:35.600] I have a friend that got hired at the tax assessor's office here in the county I live in and they didn't know he knew me. [01:21:35.600 --> 01:21:42.600] And they're taking him to all the orientation and they take him to the front desk and they're showing him how to do everything. [01:21:42.600 --> 01:21:49.600] And they said, just you have to be careful. There's one guy that comes in here, this Randy Kelton watch that guy. [01:21:49.600 --> 01:21:55.600] So he's always laughing and joking and watch that guy. [01:21:55.600 --> 01:22:00.600] He's just trying to get you to do something so he can call the police and try to get you arrested. [01:22:00.600 --> 01:22:06.600] And John was thinking, yeah, that's right, he is. [01:22:06.600 --> 01:22:12.600] So just don't screw with me. We don't have any problems. [01:22:12.600 --> 01:22:21.600] Just follow the rules, follow the law. Even if I lose by law, that's okay. [01:22:21.600 --> 01:22:26.600] That's how it ought to be, but follow it. [01:22:26.600 --> 01:22:37.600] And once you know, every time I go in there, I always have something, something to do when they don't do what I ask them to. [01:22:37.600 --> 01:22:42.600] Do you take the paperwork in there with you? [01:22:42.600 --> 01:22:43.600] Do what? [01:22:43.600 --> 01:22:45.600] Do you take that paperwork in there with you? [01:22:45.600 --> 01:22:58.600] No. Sometimes when I go to court, I like to take copies of blank bar grievances and judiciconda complaints and I'll be adding a TECOS complaint form with it. [01:22:58.600 --> 01:23:13.600] So to prosecute, you know, like with Jody, Jody, I mean with Scott. [01:23:13.600 --> 01:23:20.600] If I was in court, if I was Scott in court, I would be taking, filling in these judic- [01:23:20.600 --> 01:23:32.600] Let me know what those documents are. [01:23:32.600 --> 01:23:42.600] They're work product, none of your business, but it goes to this adage. [01:23:42.600 --> 01:23:57.600] You never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do, because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not specifically command him to do. [01:23:57.600 --> 01:24:06.600] It's inappropriate to ask a public official to do something that they're not authorized to do, so I don't do that. [01:24:06.600 --> 01:24:15.600] But on the other hand, when I ask them to do something, I've already checked the code that says they have a requirement to do it. [01:24:15.600 --> 01:24:23.600] And when they don't, ding, that bell just got rung. [01:24:23.600 --> 01:24:34.600] We had Olivier in Tennessee going after them for procedural due process, and that is great, because when they're required to do a certain thing and they don't do it, [01:24:34.600 --> 01:24:38.600] then that's procedural due process violation, and it's done. [01:24:38.600 --> 01:24:39.600] It's a done deal. [01:24:39.600 --> 01:24:56.600] It's not something that's ongoing or something they can take back, like the clerk in Amarillo, a canyon city, a canyon city, and I forget the name of the county that Amarillo is in. [01:24:56.600 --> 01:25:10.600] But up there asking for some records, and she said I'd have to look at the computer, but I wanted to see the hard copy documents, and she didn't have time to mess with me, so I called 911. [01:25:10.600 --> 01:25:14.600] Actually, they gave me a non-emergency number, and I called it. [01:25:14.600 --> 01:25:24.600] First, I talked to a lieutenant, and he refused to take a complaint, so I called the Sheriff's Department and asked to send somebody out to arrest both of these people. [01:25:24.600 --> 01:25:37.600] And while I'm waiting for the officer to come and take my complaint, this lieutenant who wouldn't take my complaint, and the clerk came out, and the clerk had a handful of documents, and they started talking to me. [01:25:37.600 --> 01:25:42.600] The lieutenant started saying something, and I said, stop, stop, stop. [01:25:42.600 --> 01:25:44.600] I can't be talking to you. [01:25:44.600 --> 01:25:48.600] I will be filing criminal charges against both of you. [01:25:48.600 --> 01:25:57.600] So it would be inappropriate for us to have any further conversation. If I have an officer come as soon as he gets here, I'll give him a full complaint. [01:25:57.600 --> 01:26:01.600] The sergeant said, well, she has the records you asked for. [01:26:01.600 --> 01:26:03.600] Sorry, Bubba. [01:26:03.600 --> 01:26:06.600] That bill's already been wrong. [01:26:06.600 --> 01:26:13.600] And the look on the clerk's face was absolutely priceless. [01:26:13.600 --> 01:26:20.600] She's got this, I can't believe this is happening, look on her face. [01:26:20.600 --> 01:26:22.600] The cop gets earned. [01:26:22.600 --> 01:26:27.600] He's a local city cop, and I had so much fun at his expense. [01:26:27.600 --> 01:26:32.600] Well, before he got there, this bait had come over and said, Mr. Calton, you're going to have to leave the building. [01:26:32.600 --> 01:26:38.600] I'm down, I'm writing criminal accusations against his boss, and he tells me this. [01:26:38.600 --> 01:26:42.600] So I'm thinking, I was just going to play in front of a grand jury. [01:26:42.600 --> 01:26:46.600] So I look up at him and said, beat it. [01:26:46.600 --> 01:26:48.600] I go back to writing. [01:26:48.600 --> 01:26:51.600] Mr. Calton, you're creating a disturbance. You're going to have to leave the building. [01:26:51.600 --> 01:26:55.600] I looked up, get lost. [01:26:55.600 --> 01:26:57.600] I go back to writing. [01:26:57.600 --> 01:27:00.600] This sergeant came over and said, leave him alone, leave him alone. [01:27:00.600 --> 01:27:05.600] He's just trying to get you to do something so he can file charges against you. [01:27:05.600 --> 01:27:13.600] I looked up and I said, you should listen to him. He's really smart. [01:27:13.600 --> 01:27:21.600] I didn't laugh at them, but it was a struggle. [01:27:21.600 --> 01:27:28.600] So once you start back after them, everything changes. [01:27:28.600 --> 01:27:36.600] If anybody raises their voice to me, anybody acts the least bit out of line, it gets 911 call. [01:27:36.600 --> 01:27:43.600] Especially if they're prominently displaying a deadly weapon, [01:27:43.600 --> 01:27:50.600] because that makes their behavior extremely serious. [01:27:50.600 --> 01:27:59.600] I haven't seen this in other states, and I keep saying Texas has the best corpus jurus of any state I've ever looked at. [01:27:59.600 --> 01:28:10.600] In Texas, if a public official commits, if someone commits simple assaults, offensive speech, offensive touching, threats, [01:28:10.600 --> 01:28:16.600] or they put their hands on you, that simple assaults classy misdemeanor. [01:28:16.600 --> 01:28:42.600] However, if at the time they are prominently displaying a deadly weapon, it's the felony of the second group. [01:28:42.600 --> 01:28:53.600] If you put that pistol on your hip, that is a very, very big deal, and you should forget it. [01:28:53.600 --> 01:29:03.600] The policeman turns his lights on me, pulls me over, and he's a Highland Park municipal police officer. [01:29:03.600 --> 01:29:10.600] So Bubba, where'd you get authority to enforce the text transportation code? [01:29:10.600 --> 01:29:12.600] I can't find it. [01:29:12.600 --> 01:29:21.600] And when he turned those lights on me, it was clear that if I didn't pull over, there would be cops all over me with guns pointing at me. [01:29:21.600 --> 01:29:27.600] I considered my life at risk, and they intended that I should. [01:29:27.600 --> 01:29:40.600] So, when you put my life at risk, you better be absolutely certain you have the authority and the justification to do what you're doing, [01:29:40.600 --> 01:29:43.600] because I'm going to take you on a ride. [01:29:43.600 --> 01:29:49.600] I'll give you a walk through the legal system you are not going to believe. [01:29:49.600 --> 01:30:01.600] Hang on, Randy Kelton, we have our radio, or call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.600 --> 01:30:08.600] Yaza, getting burned is a painful experience, and the aftermath can include blistering in an ugly scar, [01:30:08.600 --> 01:30:11.600] but an unconventional home remedy could deliver welcome relief. [01:30:11.600 --> 01:30:16.600] I've got your Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you why some burn victims are turning to the pantry. [01:30:16.600 --> 01:30:22.600] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.600 --> 01:30:27.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.600 --> 01:30:32.600] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.600 --> 01:30:35.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.600 --> 01:30:42.600] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.600 --> 01:30:45.600] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.600 --> 01:30:50.600] My friend Liz burnt her arm in a cast iron pan the other day. Ouch. [01:30:50.600 --> 01:30:55.600] She ran cold water over the burn, but the pain remained. Plus, she was concerned about blisters. [01:30:55.600 --> 01:31:02.600] So she turned to the internet for advice. There she stumbled on a seemingly crazy home remedy suggested by the people's pharmacy, [01:31:02.600 --> 01:31:07.600] cold yellow mustard. She applied mustard to the burn, and the pain stopped right away. [01:31:07.600 --> 01:31:12.600] Then she bandaged the area, and the next day she was pain-free with no blisters. [01:31:12.600 --> 01:31:19.600] Serious burns require a trip to the doctor or the hospital, but for minor burns, you might want to give common yellow mustard a try. [01:31:19.600 --> 01:31:21.600] It seems to work. [01:31:21.600 --> 01:31:26.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.600 --> 01:31:35.600] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.600 --> 01:31:37.600] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.600 --> 01:31:42.600] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.600 --> 01:31:45.600] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.600 --> 01:31:48.600] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:48.600 --> 01:31:49.600] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.600 --> 01:31:50.600] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.600 --> 01:31:52.600] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.600 --> 01:31:53.600] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.600 --> 01:31:54.600] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.600 --> 01:31:57.600] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.600 --> 01:32:00.600] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.600 --> 01:32:02.600] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.600 --> 01:32:05.600] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.600 --> 01:32:08.600] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails. [01:32:08.600 --> 01:32:10.600] But good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.600 --> 01:32:12.600] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:12.600 --> 01:32:13.600] But I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:13.600 --> 01:32:15.600] That's why you have insurance. [01:32:15.600 --> 01:32:20.600] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.600 --> 01:32:26.600] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.600 --> 01:32:31.600] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.600 --> 01:32:37.600] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:37.600 --> 01:32:40.600] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:40.600 --> 01:32:44.600] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:44.600 --> 01:32:49.600] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:49.600 --> 01:32:55.600] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:55.600 --> 01:32:58.600] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.600 --> 01:33:02.600] Ben, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:02.600 --> 01:33:04.600] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.600 --> 01:33:33.600] Found at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:33.600 --> 01:33:36.600] Okay, we are back. [01:33:36.600 --> 01:33:42.600] Randy Kelton, root of our radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [01:33:42.600 --> 01:33:45.600] And Brett, you get me off on that subject. [01:33:45.600 --> 01:33:47.600] I could go all night. [01:33:47.600 --> 01:33:50.600] It's one of my favorite subjects. [01:33:50.600 --> 01:33:53.600] Well, it's good to get the direction from you. [01:33:53.600 --> 01:33:57.600] I really appreciate it. [01:33:57.600 --> 01:34:00.600] This particular judge, this admin judge, [01:34:00.600 --> 01:34:05.600] is a retired judge of the Fifth Court of Appeals. [01:34:05.600 --> 01:34:10.600] And she's also a former district judge. [01:34:10.600 --> 01:34:13.600] The one that's telling me that she's not a magistrate, [01:34:13.600 --> 01:34:17.600] so she can't do anything about criminal complaint. [01:34:17.600 --> 01:34:20.600] So I guess if she were still either one of those, [01:34:20.600 --> 01:34:29.600] then she would be on the dime, but not anymore. [01:34:29.600 --> 01:34:33.600] Hello? [01:34:33.600 --> 01:34:35.600] I'm not hearing you. [01:34:35.600 --> 01:34:37.600] Okay, can you hear me now? [01:34:37.600 --> 01:34:39.600] Oh, much better. [01:34:39.600 --> 01:34:42.600] Okay, I'm having a little trouble with the mic cord on this. [01:34:42.600 --> 01:34:45.600] It's a brand new mic cord, but I'm still having trouble with it. [01:34:45.600 --> 01:34:47.600] So I must have got a cheap one. [01:34:47.600 --> 01:34:52.600] Okay, that's good because she's an administrative judge. [01:34:52.600 --> 01:34:59.600] And you can be sure as soon as you got off the phone with her or you left her office [01:34:59.600 --> 01:35:05.600] that she was on the phone to these people you're trying to get her to take complaints about. [01:35:05.600 --> 01:35:14.600] And they're having to talk to this judge who was on the Court of Appeals [01:35:14.600 --> 01:35:17.600] and the head administrative judge of the district [01:35:17.600 --> 01:35:23.600] and having to hear that a citizen's out there trying to get them arrested, [01:35:23.600 --> 01:35:26.600] that is not going to make them happy. [01:35:26.600 --> 01:35:31.600] So I just hate to lose face. [01:35:31.600 --> 01:35:35.600] And I love to cause them to lose face. [01:35:35.600 --> 01:35:37.600] I was in Wetherford, Texas. [01:35:37.600 --> 01:35:39.600] I don't deserve it. [01:35:39.600 --> 01:35:41.600] Pardon me? [01:35:41.600 --> 01:35:43.600] Only when they deserve it. [01:35:43.600 --> 01:35:46.600] Yeah, well, and they always deserve it. [01:35:46.600 --> 01:35:49.600] I had a friend who was in jail in Wetherford. [01:35:49.600 --> 01:35:53.600] And he filed a habeas, but they didn't do anything on it. [01:35:53.600 --> 01:35:58.600] So I went down and looked in the record and I found the habeas, but I couldn't find a return. [01:35:58.600 --> 01:36:00.600] So I'm looking for the return. [01:36:00.600 --> 01:36:05.600] The clerks didn't know what I was talking about, so they sent me to the court's coordinator. [01:36:05.600 --> 01:36:10.600] So I go to the court and I'm talking to the coordinator and she doesn't know what I'm talking about. [01:36:10.600 --> 01:36:18.600] I told him that I went to the court clerk and I found the habeas in the record, but I didn't find a return on the habeas. [01:36:18.600 --> 01:36:20.600] She said, well, I don't know. [01:36:20.600 --> 01:36:21.600] I do. [01:36:21.600 --> 01:36:25.600] There has to be a return because the habeas is the great writ. [01:36:25.600 --> 01:36:28.600] Everything stands down before a writ. [01:36:28.600 --> 01:36:36.600] I did find that the judge held hearings after the habeas without a return on the habeas. [01:36:36.600 --> 01:36:45.600] Somebody has to have it and this little short guy come out, black shirt, black pants, snow white hair. [01:36:45.600 --> 01:36:49.600] And he was asking me questions and asked me what I was after. [01:36:49.600 --> 01:36:52.600] And I told him I was looking for the return on the habeas. [01:36:52.600 --> 01:36:55.600] And there was something in his posture. [01:36:55.600 --> 01:36:59.600] And I finally stopped and said, wait a minute, are you the judge? [01:36:59.600 --> 01:37:00.600] Yes, I am. [01:37:00.600 --> 01:37:02.600] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:37:02.600 --> 01:37:05.600] I can't be talking to you. [01:37:05.600 --> 01:37:08.600] I'll be filing criminal charges against you with the district attorney. [01:37:08.600 --> 01:37:13.600] So it would be inappropriate for me to be talking to you. [01:37:13.600 --> 01:37:17.600] Oh, there's a look on his face. [01:37:17.600 --> 01:37:32.600] What do you say when a guy stands and looks you in the eye and tells you that he's going to file criminal charges against you and you have no idea who this guy is? [01:37:32.600 --> 01:37:43.600] I left and they brought Mark in the next day for a hearing and he said, you know, generally they're pretty lackadaisical and pretty arrogant. [01:37:43.600 --> 01:37:53.600] He said this time they were running around like chickens with their heads cut off and they couldn't get him out of jail quick enough. [01:37:53.600 --> 01:37:55.600] Wow. [01:37:55.600 --> 01:38:04.600] So it's, it is a lot of fun when you get your ducks in a row and it is easier than you think. [01:38:04.600 --> 01:38:16.600] And it is the one, this is what I'm trying to help people understand is the one thing these guys do not want you to know. [01:38:16.600 --> 01:38:22.600] When a judge walks into a courthouse, he was wearing two hats. [01:38:22.600 --> 01:38:26.600] He's got a judge's hat and he's got a magistrate's hat. [01:38:26.600 --> 01:38:36.600] When you walk into a courthouse, you got two hats, a litigant's hat and the master's hat. [01:38:36.600 --> 01:38:42.600] All these people are public servants and you're the master of the servants. [01:38:42.600 --> 01:38:55.600] When I walk into a courthouse, I've got my litigant's hat on until they step out of line, take off my litigant's hat, I put on my master's hat and we have issues. [01:38:55.600 --> 01:38:57.600] We're going to get this straightened out. [01:38:57.600 --> 01:39:02.600] When we get this straightened out, then I take that master's hat off, put my litigant's hat back on. [01:39:02.600 --> 01:39:08.600] The nice thing about Highland Park, I've never had to put my master's hat on. [01:39:08.600 --> 01:39:27.600] I swear that I don't have to do that, but I am prepared that when you think of it in those terms, it makes it a lot easier for you to present a posture that keeps them off kilter. [01:39:27.600 --> 01:39:32.600] They don't know how to deal with you. [01:39:32.600 --> 01:39:42.600] Everybody just sitting guilty and valiant scraping that they don't understand somebody ready to wear that other hat. [01:39:42.600 --> 01:39:52.600] Exactly. They're so accustomed to people either being meek and mild or being angry. [01:39:52.600 --> 01:39:58.600] They don't have to deal with both of those. They deal with that every day, all day, every day. [01:39:58.600 --> 01:40:12.600] But when you come in and you have this master's attitude, Williamson County, Texas just north of Boston, Alex Jones won't even drive through the county. [01:40:12.600 --> 01:40:14.600] It's so corrupt. [01:40:14.600 --> 01:40:24.600] I'm sitting in the courtroom taking notes and a prosecutor came over and said, sir, sir, and I looked up at him and said, yes, do you have a case in this court today? [01:40:24.600 --> 01:40:28.600] Oh, no, no, nothing like that. I go back to writing. Ignore him. [01:40:28.600 --> 01:40:36.600] He stands there a minute. Sir, sir, I look up, yes. Do you have a civil case in this court? No, no, no, nothing like that. I go back to writing. [01:40:36.600 --> 01:40:44.600] He stands there a little bit. Sir, sir, and I look up at him and said, held up both hands with my palms out. No more questions. [01:40:44.600 --> 01:40:47.600] I go back to writing. [01:40:47.600 --> 01:40:59.600] He had no idea what to do. He had no behavior for that kind of interaction. He was stuck. [01:40:59.600 --> 01:41:11.600] He went away. A little while later, an older guy came and leaned over the bar and said, sir, yes, I asked for a docket sheet and he told me where I could get it. [01:41:11.600 --> 01:41:17.600] I said, yeah, I know the bailiff told me. Thank you. And I went back to writing. He said, sir, is there anything I can do for you? [01:41:17.600 --> 01:41:24.600] Clearly he was the elected. They went and got the elected county attorney. [01:41:24.600 --> 01:41:34.600] Is there anything I can do for you? And I looked up at him and said, if I need you, I will summon you. You're dismissed. [01:41:34.600 --> 01:41:37.600] I go back to writing. [01:41:37.600 --> 01:41:44.600] Oh, that was so much fun. [01:41:44.600 --> 01:41:53.600] And Doug Bell, he had two prescription pills in an Aspen bottle. They arrested him or prosecuted him. [01:41:53.600 --> 01:41:57.600] He brought in the prescriptions. They're still prosecuting him. [01:41:57.600 --> 01:42:02.600] He said, are you here with someone today? They said, well, no. [01:42:02.600 --> 01:42:08.600] They said, somebody's going to hear your records. Well, who is it? I don't know who it is. You won't tell us. [01:42:08.600 --> 01:42:15.600] They dismissed his case, gave him back his bond money just to get him out of there. [01:42:15.600 --> 01:42:25.600] The more corrupt they are, the more afraid of you they are and the more effect you can have on them. [01:42:25.600 --> 01:42:32.600] So Doug came to one of my seminars and he said, you walked in the room and turned the lights on and watched a cockroach scatter. [01:42:32.600 --> 01:42:34.600] He said, that's what it looked like. [01:42:34.600 --> 01:42:51.600] So when you go down there and you clearly have a separate agenda that you have a plan, you know exactly what you're doing and they don't have a clue. [01:42:51.600 --> 01:42:56.600] They make some crazy. And that's what they did. [01:42:56.600 --> 01:43:02.600] They don't really need to do most of these officials any harm. [01:43:02.600 --> 01:43:19.600] We just need to take them out of their element and remind them of how professionally dangerous an informed citizen can be to their professional career. [01:43:19.600 --> 01:43:21.600] This will do it. [01:43:21.600 --> 01:43:26.600] Okay, I studied neuro-linguistic programming years ago when it first came out. [01:43:26.600 --> 01:43:30.600] All this new stuff they've got is just gimmicks. [01:43:30.600 --> 01:43:38.600] But the original treatments by Gwendolyn Bandelier were excellent treatments of human condition. [01:43:38.600 --> 01:43:47.600] And one of the most powerful tools I've pulled out of neuro-linguistic programming is pattern interruption. [01:43:47.600 --> 01:43:50.600] Hang on, we'll pick that up when we come back. [01:43:50.600 --> 01:43:52.600] Jermaine, I see you there. [01:43:52.600 --> 01:43:56.600] And John from New York, if you'll call back in, we'll take you and drop it off. [01:43:56.600 --> 01:44:20.600] But we'll get to you. We'll be right back. [01:44:26.600 --> 01:44:29.600] It's not him. They are different varieties of the same species. [01:44:29.600 --> 01:44:38.600] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:44:38.600 --> 01:44:47.600] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:44:47.600 --> 01:44:56.600] Call 888-910-4367. 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you. [01:44:56.600 --> 01:45:22.600] Only at hempUSA.org. [01:45:22.600 --> 01:45:27.600] 2nd place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. From Defense Distributed. [01:45:27.600 --> 01:45:33.600] 3rd place, the AR-308 80% lower. 4th place, the AR-15 80% lower. [01:45:33.600 --> 01:45:38.600] From Fat Sal's Deli, 5th place, $100 gift card for Fat Sal's Deli. [01:45:38.600 --> 01:45:43.600] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. That's LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:45:43.600 --> 01:45:48.600] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal101, you get 4 chances to win. [01:45:48.600 --> 01:45:51.600] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar. Get 10 chances to win. [01:45:51.600 --> 01:45:54.600] Remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:54.600 --> 01:46:23.600] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:46:24.600 --> 01:46:32.600] Back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and this is a subject I don't talk about much on the... [01:46:54.600 --> 01:47:04.600] Access those different behaviors through Referential Index. [01:47:04.600 --> 01:47:10.600] The worst thing that can happen to us is a pattern interruption. [01:47:10.600 --> 01:47:19.600] We learn over time patterns of behaviors in our environment and how to deal with them. [01:47:19.600 --> 01:47:27.600] And then somebody comes along and does something for which you have no response. [01:47:27.600 --> 01:47:34.600] You have no way of reacting or responding to them in a predictable manner, causes pattern interruption. [01:47:34.600 --> 01:47:44.600] I'm at the Denton County Court, and I asked for a lawyer to verify some criminal affidavits to send out a young lawyer. [01:47:44.600 --> 01:47:49.600] And he read the complaints. There were complaints against his boss. [01:47:49.600 --> 01:47:56.600] Well, I can't sign these. I said, what's the matter? Chicken? Darn right I am. I like this guy. [01:47:56.600 --> 01:48:04.600] So he went and got his boss. His boss was named... What was his name? Roger? [01:48:04.600 --> 01:48:07.600] Oh, I'll think of the rest of his name in a minute. [01:48:07.600 --> 01:48:16.600] Anyway, he was the head of the criminal intake section for the Denton County District Attorney's Office. [01:48:16.600 --> 01:48:22.600] And he looked at my complaints, and I'm not going to sign these and threw them at me. Papers went everywhere. [01:48:22.600 --> 01:48:33.600] And that was an act that was clearly intended to elicit a predictable response. [01:48:33.600 --> 01:48:42.600] He knew full well what to expect from me in terms of response. He's been there. He's done that. [01:48:42.600 --> 01:48:51.600] So, but him too, I know that me. He was clearly trying to get me to respond to him. [01:48:51.600 --> 01:48:58.600] You know, there was a time when I did that, but then I come to realize, when you were five years old, [01:48:58.600 --> 01:49:04.600] you pretty well knew the full range of human response within your native culture. [01:49:04.600 --> 01:49:09.600] You knew what would make someone smile, frown, happy, sad. [01:49:09.600 --> 01:49:18.600] You pretty well understood how human beings reacted and responded to think that a person can do something [01:49:18.600 --> 01:49:26.600] that causes you to have this internal reaction and not know. [01:49:26.600 --> 01:49:30.600] Well, of course they know. It's naive to think otherwise. [01:49:30.600 --> 01:49:38.600] They know what to expect from you, and we spend all of our time interacting with other people [01:49:38.600 --> 01:49:43.600] in an attempt to elicit predictable responses from them. [01:49:43.600 --> 01:49:48.600] Some positive, some negative. Positive negative doesn't make any difference. [01:49:48.600 --> 01:49:57.600] Just as so long as we can predict them, take the child that's been abused all his life, [01:49:57.600 --> 01:50:07.600] all over you. You've got to expect it. [01:50:07.600 --> 01:50:12.600] You're treating him the way he's always wanted and wished for, but the problem is, [01:50:12.600 --> 01:50:22.600] is he doesn't have patterns for that. He doesn't have response tools to deal with that. [01:50:22.600 --> 01:50:30.600] So he's always waiting for the other foot to fall because he's constantly interrupted. [01:50:30.600 --> 01:50:34.600] He's not getting the reactions and responses that he expects. [01:50:34.600 --> 01:50:43.600] So he will do something to get you to treat him in a way that he's accustomed to and knows how to deal with. [01:50:43.600 --> 01:50:55.600] Now that may sound insane, but if you think about it, there's nothing worse than being caught totally without a way to respond. [01:50:55.600 --> 01:51:05.600] So Roger Jones, he threw the papers at me, and I felt like telling him what to do with those papers, [01:51:05.600 --> 01:51:10.600] but one thing I've learned is if somebody does something or says something, [01:51:10.600 --> 01:51:20.600] and your response is not pause and reflect, stop, objectively analyze, decide what to do, and then initiate. [01:51:20.600 --> 01:51:27.600] Human beings can do that, but for the most part, we don't. For the most part, we just do whatever we feel like doing. [01:51:27.600 --> 01:51:33.600] Somebody says something or does something, and our response just comes out. [01:51:33.600 --> 01:51:39.600] And then if it comes out badly, we use our rational minds to do what they do best. [01:51:39.600 --> 01:51:46.600] We rationalize. We rationalize our automatic behaviors. [01:51:46.600 --> 01:51:58.600] One of the most powerful things I own is this realization that the vast majority of my responses to other people are reactionary, [01:51:58.600 --> 01:52:07.600] not pause and reflect. They say something, and it's like they poke me and push my little button, and it just comes out. [01:52:07.600 --> 01:52:16.600] Somebody says something or does something, and you don't pause and reflect, stop, figure out what to say, what to do, and then speak. [01:52:16.600 --> 01:52:29.600] If it just comes out, it literally and physically comes from your center, your stomach, the central chakra that the eastern cultures talk about. [01:52:29.600 --> 01:52:37.600] It just comes out. Whenever that happens, that's not yours. That's theirs. [01:52:37.600 --> 01:52:47.600] You've just had that triggered from you by somebody else, and if you respond to it, you're like a little spider on a piece of web. [01:52:47.600 --> 01:52:55.600] Somebody's got a hold of the end of the web, and they do a little jerk on the web, and you do this little dance down there at the end of it. [01:52:55.600 --> 01:53:01.600] Now, you may feel like you're reading them to riot act and let them know how to cow ate the cabbage. [01:53:01.600 --> 01:53:04.600] Well, that's naive. [01:53:04.600 --> 01:53:08.600] I know exactly what to expect from you. [01:53:08.600 --> 01:53:17.600] I call it my rubber ball theory. I could give you three rubber balls, one hard, one medium, one spongy. [01:53:17.600 --> 01:53:25.600] Based on your experience and your environment, you could pretty well predict how hard to throw each one up against the wall, so you come back where you catch it. [01:53:25.600 --> 01:53:30.600] You know, the golf ball, you got to be careful. You bring yourself with it. [01:53:30.600 --> 01:53:34.600] The sponge, it's not likely to come back at all. You really got to toss it. [01:53:34.600 --> 01:53:37.600] So you can pretty well adjust it. [01:53:37.600 --> 01:53:47.600] So what if somebody does something or says something, and you feel this response? [01:53:47.600 --> 01:54:02.600] If you act on the response that you're feeling, it's like you're throwing this mental rubber ball up against their wall, or somebody tries to trigger a response from you. [01:54:02.600 --> 01:54:11.600] They're throwing their ball up against your wall, and they pretty well know how to predict your response to them. [01:54:11.600 --> 01:54:21.600] Oh, you may bat it back a little high, a little low off to one side of the other, but within a given range, they can pretty well predict it. [01:54:21.600 --> 01:54:35.600] But what happens if somebody throws their mental ball up against your wall, and instead of batting it back higher or low off to one side or the other, you just make it splash and slide to the floor? [01:54:35.600 --> 01:54:37.600] Pattern interruption. [01:54:37.600 --> 01:54:41.600] The other person is standing there looking at that. [01:54:41.600 --> 01:54:50.600] That thing was supposed to come back to me. They go over and they pick it up. They feel its weight, feel its density. They feel the wall. It's flat, hard, and smooth. [01:54:50.600 --> 01:54:56.600] Everything in their environment tells them that thing should have come back to me. [01:54:56.600 --> 01:55:07.600] Roger Jones threw those papers at me, and I said, wow, is there any special reason why you're not going to sign these? Are you just PO today? [01:55:07.600 --> 01:55:09.600] I'm just not going to sign them. [01:55:09.600 --> 01:55:15.600] That's okay. I picked them up, went over to their receptionist, and I said, ma'am, have you got an attorney who's literate? [01:55:15.600 --> 01:55:25.600] She said, huh? You got one who can write? I need one to verify these criminal affidavits in accordance with their duty under Article 2.06, Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:55:25.600 --> 01:55:33.600] And a lot of you listening have heard this story before, but you probably hadn't heard it this way. [01:55:33.600 --> 01:55:39.600] Roger Jones said, Mr. Kelton, you're creating a disturbance. You are not welcome here anymore. [01:55:39.600 --> 01:55:54.600] Okay, I felt it. He was poking a little harder, but been there done that. So I turned around and I said, well, Mr. Jones, I feel disparaged. [01:55:54.600 --> 01:56:02.600] You're going to hurt my feelings. And he's standing there looking at me like, what just happened? [01:56:02.600 --> 01:56:13.600] So then he said, Mr. Kelton, you're going to have to leave the building. And I knew I shouldn't have done it, but it just couldn't help myself. [01:56:13.600 --> 01:56:23.600] And I got this from a first sergeant who told it to a general. I said, Mr. Jones, I'll tell you what, if you'll just bend over, [01:56:23.600 --> 01:56:32.600] I'll pull that wild head of you behind for you so you and I can go back to treating one another like mature and responsible adults. [01:56:32.600 --> 01:56:45.600] He was frozen in his tracks. He had about 10 or 15 of his underlings behind him by this time, and they've all got their hands on their mouths trying to keep from laughing out loud. [01:56:45.600 --> 01:56:55.600] Pattern interruption. He had nothing he could do. And he knew I did that to him on purpose. [01:56:55.600 --> 01:57:03.600] I can guarantee you Roger Jones will remember that experience in his conscious awareness till the day he dies. [01:57:03.600 --> 01:57:14.600] We remember pattern interruptions. And once you learn to interrupt patterns, the trick is somebody says something or does something, [01:57:14.600 --> 01:57:23.600] and the reaction just comes out. The rule is whatever you feel like doing, don't do it. [01:57:23.600 --> 01:57:31.600] You're being had. You're being manipulated. And when you stop yourself, it takes a while. [01:57:31.600 --> 01:57:37.600] There's somebody you'll gig in, you'll do this little dance form, and you'll go away and you'll be mad at yourself. [01:57:37.600 --> 01:57:45.600] You come back and they gig you again, you do this little dance form, and you'll be frustrated and one time they'll gig you, and you'll say, [01:57:45.600 --> 01:57:58.600] Oops, gotcha. You catch them. This is a method for communicating with other people on a level that's totally outside the awareness of most people around you. [01:57:58.600 --> 01:58:07.600] You're reacting and responding to things that have no clue about. First time you catch one, it changes everything. [01:58:07.600 --> 01:58:15.600] Then whatever you do, don't do what you feel like doing and immediately something else will come to mind. Don't do that either. [01:58:15.600 --> 01:58:19.600] Bad it back high, bad it back low. No, no, no. Pull a third thing. [01:58:19.600 --> 01:58:27.600] Make it fit the circumstances, make it reasonable. Just not something they would expect. [01:58:27.600 --> 01:58:37.600] The most powerful mental tool for dealing with other people you will ever come across and we won't talk about that anymore when I come back on the inside. [01:58:37.600 --> 01:58:50.600] When you can't move low radio, we'll be right back. [01:58:50.600 --> 01:58:58.600] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.600 --> 01:59:06.600] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.600 --> 01:59:17.600] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:17.600 --> 01:59:27.600] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:27.600 --> 01:59:32.600] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:32.600 --> 01:59:47.600] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.600 --> 02:00:03.600] That's freestudybible.com. You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com.