[00:00.000 --> 00:07.680] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing the deli [00:07.680 --> 00:15.440] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.440 --> 00:23.280] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.280 --> 00:29.520] Markets for Wednesday, 13 September 2017, closed with gold at $1,323.24 an ounce. [00:29.520 --> 00:38.280] It's over $17.78 an ounce, Texas Crude $48.23 a barrel, Bitcoin is about $3,876, and Dashcoin [00:38.280 --> 00:46.360] sits about $300 US currency. [00:46.360 --> 00:51.880] Today in history, the year 1541, after three years in exile, John Calvin returns to Geneva [00:51.880 --> 00:56.200] to reform the church under a body of doctrine known as Calvinism. [00:56.200 --> 01:05.200] In recent news, Hillary Clinton's new already-on-discount book would happen officially hit store shelves [01:05.200 --> 01:06.200] Tuesday. [01:06.200 --> 01:09.880] Of the many things she blamed for her loss in the 2016 presidential race, she mentioned [01:09.880 --> 01:13.720] Russia in the election within the first few pages, quote, the press treated our warnings [01:13.720 --> 01:18.440] about Russia like it was spin we'd cooked up in order to distract from embarrassing revelations. [01:18.440 --> 01:21.920] She blamed President Trump, saying that listening to Trump, it almost felt like there was no [01:21.920 --> 01:26.520] such thing as truth anymore, that his strategy consisted of an appeal to the ugliest impulses [01:26.520 --> 01:28.040] of our national character. [01:28.040 --> 01:29.040] She blamed Wall Street. [01:29.040 --> 01:32.880] I didn't think many Americans would believe that I'd sell a lifetime of principle in advocacy [01:32.880 --> 01:33.880] for any price. [01:33.880 --> 01:36.800] I should have stayed away from anything having to do with Wall Street. [01:36.800 --> 01:37.800] I didn't. [01:37.800 --> 01:38.800] That's all me. [01:38.800 --> 01:40.040] Yeah, right, Hillary. [01:40.040 --> 01:44.280] Closed-door meetings with Wall Street corporate donors could have had no foreseeable problems. [01:44.280 --> 01:47.480] She blamed a scandal over State Department emails on her private server. [01:47.480 --> 01:51.000] It was a dumb mistake, she said, but even a dumber scandal. [01:51.000 --> 01:54.160] It was like quicksand, the more you struggle, the deeper you sink. [01:54.160 --> 01:57.920] She blamed former FBI Director James Comey, saying that, quote, Comey made the choice [01:57.920 --> 02:02.520] to extricate me in public in July and then dramatically reopened the investigation on [02:02.520 --> 02:06.600] October 28th, all while refusing to say a word about Trump and Russia. [02:06.600 --> 02:09.520] Not for those decisions, everything would have been different. [02:09.520 --> 02:14.080] And she even blamed patriarchy, stating that sexism and misogyny played a role in the 2016 [02:14.080 --> 02:16.120] presidential election. [02:16.120 --> 02:23.960] And A is the flagrantly sexist candidate, one. [02:23.960 --> 02:27.640] Days after Hurricane Harvey's onslaught across the Lone Star State, the coast was still very [02:27.640 --> 02:30.400] much littered with dead fish and other sea creatures. [02:30.400 --> 02:34.680] Pretied to say of the National Auburn Society, discovered a strange-looking sea animal, posting [02:34.680 --> 02:38.160] a photo of it on Twitter to see if anyone knew what it was. [02:38.160 --> 02:42.800] Experts responded with guesses that it was some sort of eel, possibly a fangtooth snake [02:42.800 --> 02:43.800] eel. [02:43.800 --> 02:48.040] It was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. [02:48.040 --> 02:52.040] It killed at least 70 people and dumped at least 51 inches of rain. [02:52.040 --> 03:02.040] This is Brook Lodi with your lowdown for September 13, 2017. [03:02.040 --> 03:23.920] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with our radio, and Laura, I'm going to shut up and let you [03:23.920 --> 03:24.920] finish. [03:24.920 --> 03:28.600] You seem a lot more articulate than me anyway. [03:28.600 --> 03:38.520] Okay, well, I gave my closing argument, provided by three cases, one of which was Arizona, [03:38.520 --> 03:41.640] and the judge still ruled against me. [03:41.640 --> 03:45.840] She didn't like the fact that the Arizona case was in 7-7 and didn't like the other [03:45.840 --> 03:50.680] two because they were from out of state, even though the other two cases were referenced [03:50.680 --> 03:59.600] within tied the Arizona case because it was the same identical argument that when it comes [03:59.600 --> 04:06.560] to primatastia, primatastia, all that does is that just gives them a reason to basically [04:06.560 --> 04:13.240] give you the ticket, but the primatastia says that if the defendant can introduce evidence [04:13.240 --> 04:21.440] to challenge any element, you know, whatever the officer says, the court, then the defendant [04:21.440 --> 04:29.360] has met their burden, and the burden shifts back to the officer, basically, to where you [04:29.360 --> 04:36.560] have to have, you know, either injured property, the threat of an injury, or, you know, a person [04:36.560 --> 04:37.560] being hurt. [04:37.560 --> 04:38.880] None of which happened. [04:38.880 --> 04:39.880] There was no traffic. [04:39.880 --> 04:45.520] It's a two-lane road in good shape out in the middle of, you know, on the one side of [04:45.520 --> 04:46.520] the road. [04:46.520 --> 04:53.600] It's nothing but cow pasture, and, you know, she was just, and the funny thing is when [04:53.600 --> 04:57.120] I had her on the stand, I said, well, how fast are you going? [04:57.120 --> 05:06.000] And she says, well, I usually do 5 to 10 over the speed limit, but if I do 10 over, it's [05:06.000 --> 05:07.000] not okay. [05:07.000 --> 05:14.080] Yeah, so she admitted that she was committing a crime when she charged you with committing [05:14.080 --> 05:15.080] a crime. [05:15.080 --> 05:16.080] Oh, yeah. [05:16.080 --> 05:17.080] Exactly. [05:17.080 --> 05:27.240] Is the judge a bar card-carrying attorney? [05:27.240 --> 05:29.920] I don't know. [05:29.920 --> 05:32.960] You might check and see in Bar Griever. [05:32.960 --> 05:40.960] Do you know if the court, do you have courts of record in Arizona? [05:40.960 --> 05:42.280] Yeah. [05:42.280 --> 05:46.720] Is your court a court of record? [05:46.720 --> 05:49.560] But, okay, no. [05:49.560 --> 05:57.040] Okay, let me, let me back up and kind of tell you why I'm asking that question that way. [05:57.040 --> 06:02.800] In Texas, we have municipal courts, and you, they can be inferior courts. [06:02.800 --> 06:12.280] You can have a non-lawyer as a judge unless you decide to make your court a court of record. [06:12.280 --> 06:20.160] If you make it a court of record, then one has to appeal based on error, and they don't [06:20.160 --> 06:25.360] have the option of a de novo appeal. [06:25.360 --> 06:34.000] However, when you designate your court a court of record, in Texas, you have to change the [06:34.000 --> 06:41.040] name of the court to whatever municipal court of record. [06:41.040 --> 06:48.600] We just nailed one here in the county I live in, the City of Newark Municipal Court, because [06:48.600 --> 06:54.720] it was a court of record and it wasn't named City of Newark Municipal Court of Record. [06:54.720 --> 06:57.960] And that was important. [06:57.960 --> 07:04.280] The reason they wrote that into the law is they were required to give you notice that [07:04.280 --> 07:05.720] this is a court of record. [07:05.720 --> 07:08.760] You don't get a de novo appeal out of here. [07:08.760 --> 07:11.760] You have to appeal based on rate of error. [07:11.760 --> 07:15.200] So you might want to check to see if it's a court of record. [07:15.200 --> 07:22.240] And if it is, the judge is absolutely going to be a lawyer, a bar griever. [07:22.240 --> 07:31.040] If it's a court of record, she can only be the judge because she has that bar card. [07:31.040 --> 07:35.800] And that makes it proper to grieve her under her bar card. [07:35.800 --> 07:43.880] And that'll double her malpractice insurance and we'll see how that works out for her. [07:43.880 --> 07:49.800] And then a judicial conduct complaint, Ken Magnuson, he's a friend of mine, his brother, [07:49.800 --> 07:58.120] Craig Magnuson, is a lawyer, and he was a municipal judge for a while. [07:58.120 --> 08:07.520] And it was his belief that the State Commission on Judicial Conduct only disciplined inferior [08:07.520 --> 08:14.680] court judges, municipal judges and justices of the peace. [08:14.680 --> 08:18.400] And they did that to make it look like they were actually doing something and they never [08:18.400 --> 08:20.240] disciplined elected judges. [08:20.240 --> 08:24.640] Well, that wasn't true, but he believed that. [08:24.640 --> 08:29.640] Well, actually, it kind of is true because when I look through the sanctions that are [08:29.640 --> 08:34.520] handed out, about one in 20 is an elected judge. [08:34.520 --> 08:40.080] And when they sanction an elected judge, it has to be really, really bad. [08:40.080 --> 08:44.720] But they hammer these municipal court judges. [08:44.720 --> 08:53.800] So the reason I'm saying that is he was really concerned about judicial conduct complaints. [08:53.800 --> 09:00.000] Just to speak about him, it would make him furious. [09:00.000 --> 09:10.280] And I listened to how concerned he was about them and I was thinking, wonderful. [09:10.280 --> 09:14.320] So you might want to look into those too. [09:14.320 --> 09:19.320] She needs reason to be more considerate. [09:19.320 --> 09:25.960] Well, Anna, and this is a town municipal court. [09:25.960 --> 09:27.120] She is not elected. [09:27.120 --> 09:31.280] She was hired by the town. [09:31.280 --> 09:34.320] She did not run for this position. [09:34.320 --> 09:42.680] And that generally means that she's there to generate revenue. [09:42.680 --> 09:50.600] So I put together this ticket site for the specific purpose, not so much of getting proper [09:50.600 --> 09:52.200] adjudications from the court. [09:52.200 --> 09:54.560] So we're not going to get that. [09:54.560 --> 09:56.720] They're there just to make money. [09:56.720 --> 10:00.560] So okay, you're there to make money. [10:00.560 --> 10:07.840] We'll see if we can't cost you a dollar or two when we're filing these documents specifically [10:07.840 --> 10:11.120] to increase the cost of prosecution. [10:11.120 --> 10:18.040] Now if we were lawyers, we could get sanctioned for that, but we're not lawyers so we can [10:18.040 --> 10:19.880] do that. [10:19.880 --> 10:26.680] They can gripe and grumble and complain about it all they want to and I'll tell them, yeah, [10:26.680 --> 10:30.880] life is tough. [10:30.880 --> 10:40.680] So if you might want to go to trafficticket.website, if you'll go there and fill out the ticket [10:40.680 --> 10:45.080] information, I'll send you all these documents, it's got a PayPal thing. [10:45.080 --> 10:46.080] Just ignore that. [10:46.080 --> 10:53.160] I'll send it and file that with them just to annoy them. [10:53.160 --> 11:02.280] Have you looked at the traffic, the application of the traffic code in Arizona? [11:02.280 --> 11:11.200] Who is authorized to enforce the traffic, the professional conduct transportation code [11:11.200 --> 11:12.200] in Arizona? [11:12.200 --> 11:19.640] Peace officer, anyone who is a peace officer can write these citations. [11:19.640 --> 11:27.720] Okay, so far now that's Georgia and Arizona that allows any peace officer to enforce [11:27.720 --> 11:30.720] the transportation code. [11:30.720 --> 11:34.760] Did you file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction? [11:34.760 --> 11:41.000] No, and that's one of the things, I wasn't sure how to do that, but I do know that it [11:41.000 --> 11:46.520] can be done even after the fact, but I'm not sure how to go about that. [11:46.520 --> 11:53.960] If you'll fill that document out, I have one written that's more generic and I will be [11:53.960 --> 12:02.480] constructing one for states that have authorized peace officers to enforce the code. [12:02.480 --> 12:11.480] My producer here is from Georgia and then Georgia peace officers are allowed to enforce. [12:11.480 --> 12:19.400] Other states, in most states, the state police was created for this specific purpose of enforcing [12:19.400 --> 12:21.920] the commercial transportation code. [12:21.920 --> 12:27.200] I was surprised to find that out when I started researching this, but that's what they were [12:27.200 --> 12:38.960] created for and Texas, Tennessee, Illinois, only the state police can enforce the transportation [12:38.960 --> 12:39.960] code. [12:39.960 --> 12:44.400] I haven't looked in other states yet, I've got a number to go through, but now so far [12:44.400 --> 12:48.600] Georgia and Arizona authorized peace officers. [12:48.600 --> 12:54.840] When the peace officer writes the citation, since the citation is a professional conduct [12:54.840 --> 13:04.480] code, then the way I craft a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is I state that [13:04.480 --> 13:16.120] since the transportation code is not a general penal code, penal law, that it is a special [13:16.120 --> 13:26.080] application that the citation itself in order to meet the elements of the crime must show [13:26.080 --> 13:31.320] that you fall within the statutory scheme. [13:31.320 --> 13:42.000] That would require exactly what you question that officer about, any evidence of commerce. [13:42.000 --> 13:49.640] By challenging the sufficiency of the charging instrument, that goes to a subject matter [13:49.640 --> 13:52.560] jurisdiction. [13:52.560 --> 13:58.880] When you file a subject matter jurisdiction at a municipal court, they will ignore it. [13:58.880 --> 14:03.680] That's wonderful because... [14:03.680 --> 14:13.000] Okay, I'll play there. [14:13.000 --> 14:14.000] Did I lose you? [14:14.000 --> 14:15.000] Yeah. [14:15.000 --> 14:16.000] Okay, am I back? [14:16.000 --> 14:17.000] I'm here. [14:17.000 --> 14:19.000] Okay, I'm having some mic issues. [14:19.000 --> 14:29.120] Okay, when a complaint is filed in the court, jurisdiction is presumed, but once jurisdiction [14:29.120 --> 14:36.160] is challenged, the presumption of jurisdiction is lost and the court must prove jurisdiction. [14:36.160 --> 14:43.960] If you file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction, they just ignore it, you can sue the judge. [14:43.960 --> 14:52.360] The only time you can sue a judge, it's when they act outside scope. [14:52.360 --> 15:00.240] When you've challenged subject matter jurisdiction, any adjudication toward the merits is outside [15:00.240 --> 15:09.000] scope until they've proven up jurisdiction, and it is the judge who must prove jurisdiction [15:09.000 --> 15:10.400] not to prosecution. [15:10.400 --> 15:17.040] Generally, the judge will get the prosecutor to do that, but if the judge is doing it, not [15:17.040 --> 15:23.560] the prosecutor's duty, so you can sue the judge personally, again, one of the things [15:23.560 --> 15:31.200] I'm trying to get to is a standard civil lawsuit against the judge. [15:31.200 --> 15:37.360] That'll get their attention, and wouldn't that be fun? [15:37.360 --> 15:39.560] Oh, yeah. [15:39.560 --> 15:46.360] Okay, so it sounds like you're in good shape for appeal. [15:46.360 --> 15:51.720] What do they require to appeal in Arizona? [15:51.720 --> 15:57.120] I just have to do a notice to appeal within 14 days of this past Tuesday, and then I've [15:57.120 --> 16:02.320] got 60 days to get my memorandum, I'm limited to 16 pages. [16:02.320 --> 16:06.960] I've done an appeal before on another matter, and I actually put it within another state [16:06.960 --> 16:07.960] for a different matter. [16:07.960 --> 16:15.040] So I've got the format down in terms of citing the law and the argument, and this one is going [16:15.040 --> 16:17.120] to go to Superior Court. [16:17.120 --> 16:24.480] I would suggest that you consider filing a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction [16:24.480 --> 16:30.280] of the appeals court. [16:30.280 --> 16:33.240] You can file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction at any time. [16:33.240 --> 16:38.120] Once you give notice of appeal, then the trial court no longer has jurisdiction. [16:38.120 --> 16:44.720] The court of appeals only has the jurisdiction that the trial court transferred to it, if [16:44.720 --> 16:49.040] they didn't have any, this one doesn't have any, and that's where you get subject matter [16:49.040 --> 16:50.040] jurisdiction. [16:50.040 --> 16:51.040] Hang on. [16:51.040 --> 16:52.040] About to go to break. [16:52.040 --> 17:00.240] Randy Kelton, Real Law Radio, we'll be right back. [17:00.240 --> 17:01.240] Dang, Cookie. [17:01.240 --> 17:02.240] Cookie? [17:02.240 --> 17:03.240] You may love cookies. [17:03.240 --> 17:04.640] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:04.640 --> 17:06.240] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:06.240 --> 17:07.240] Cookie? [17:07.240 --> 17:08.240] Yucky? [17:08.240 --> 17:09.240] No, no bad cookies. [17:09.240 --> 17:11.040] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:11.040 --> 17:12.240] These are cyber cookies. [17:12.240 --> 17:13.240] No candy. [17:13.240 --> 17:14.240] No. [17:14.240 --> 17:17.040] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:17.040 --> 17:18.040] We have apples. [17:18.040 --> 17:19.040] Really? [17:19.040 --> 17:21.240] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:21.240 --> 17:22.240] Yummy apple. [17:22.240 --> 17:26.720] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.720 --> 17:32.880] I click Control, Shift, Delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.880 --> 17:34.440] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.440 --> 17:40.120] Now I go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [17:40.120 --> 17:46.120] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.120 --> 17:47.120] new cookie. [17:47.120 --> 17:48.120] New cookies? [17:48.120 --> 17:49.120] For me? [17:49.120 --> 17:50.960] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:50.960 --> 17:55.720] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.720 --> 17:56.720] radio network, too. [17:56.720 --> 17:57.720] These are cookies. [17:57.720 --> 17:58.720] These are classified. [17:58.720 --> 18:05.760] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.760 --> 18:09.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meyers Proven Method. [18:09.440 --> 18:13.600] Michael Meyers has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.600 --> 18:14.600] can win, too. [18:14.600 --> 18:19.440] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.440 --> 18:24.880] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to [18:24.880 --> 18:29.320] answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, [18:29.320 --> 18:34.000] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.000 --> 18:39.120] The Michael Meyers Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.120 --> 18:41.280] Federal consultation is available as well. [18:41.280 --> 18:46.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meyers banner [18:46.800 --> 18:49.800] or email MichaelMeyers at yahoo.com. [18:49.800 --> 18:59.360] 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 [18:59.360 --> 19:00.360] next. [19:00.360 --> 19:11.360] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logo-logos-radio-network.com. [19:11.360 --> 19:17.360] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the Father can deliver you. [19:17.360 --> 19:24.360] Don't let bad-mine people hurt you, or just say something, get behind you. [19:24.360 --> 19:33.360] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with the radio, and, okay, Laura, I said I would shut up, [19:33.360 --> 19:36.360] but I didn't have a bad habit of that. [19:36.360 --> 19:38.360] Okay, where are we with you? [19:38.360 --> 19:41.360] What are you about to, what do you want to do now? [19:41.360 --> 19:46.360] Well, okay, so now I've got a question about this challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [19:46.360 --> 19:52.360] Is that separate from my appeal, or is that part of my appeal? [19:52.360 --> 19:56.360] That would be your appeal. [19:56.360 --> 20:03.360] You filed a subject matter jurisdiction challenge along with your brief. [20:03.360 --> 20:14.360] The way I would do it is I do a subject matter jurisdiction challenge, and then in the alternative, you include your brief. [20:14.360 --> 20:22.360] So that if they determine that they have jurisdiction, then they can go on to the issues. [20:22.360 --> 20:30.360] Okay, so the subject matter jurisdiction that would probably come in the very beginning? [20:30.360 --> 20:33.360] Yes. [20:33.360 --> 20:34.360] Okay. [20:34.360 --> 20:38.360] And, yeah, if you'll fill out that ticket thing, I'll send you my subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [20:38.360 --> 20:41.360] I've got all the case law in there. [20:41.360 --> 20:48.360] Okay, and I did that a couple of weeks ago, and I knew even though I don't live in Texas, so I skipped the paper, [20:48.360 --> 20:54.360] but I just figured you were collecting data because I didn't, I didn't do anything bad. [20:54.360 --> 20:59.360] Okay, what was the email address? [20:59.360 --> 21:02.360] I just got all of mine produced. [21:02.360 --> 21:06.360] I just moved to Tennessee, so I was getting caught up. [21:06.360 --> 21:12.360] And I spent all day today fixing those annoying spreadsheets. [21:12.360 --> 21:19.360] Microsoft's mail merge tools are not the best. [21:19.360 --> 21:22.360] I always have a lot of problems with them. [21:22.360 --> 21:27.360] What was your first part of your email? [21:27.360 --> 21:29.360] Under Western. [21:29.360 --> 21:35.360] Did you go to trafficticket.website and fill out a submission form? [21:35.360 --> 21:36.360] Yes. [21:36.360 --> 21:43.360] Okay, first name on the email. [21:43.360 --> 21:47.360] Under. [21:47.360 --> 21:49.360] Under. [21:49.360 --> 21:52.360] I don't see it. [21:52.360 --> 21:54.360] I can do it again. [21:54.360 --> 21:56.360] Pardon me? [21:56.360 --> 21:58.360] I can do it again. [21:58.360 --> 21:59.360] Yeah, yeah, do it again. [21:59.360 --> 22:03.360] I have one issue that I have trouble fixing on that thing. [22:03.360 --> 22:12.360] If you hit enter too soon, it looks like it submits, but it doesn't. [22:12.360 --> 22:19.360] And I hadn't figured out what's doing that yet, so I'll send it again and don't hit it. [22:19.360 --> 22:22.360] Did you hit the PayPal thing last time? [22:22.360 --> 22:24.360] No, I skipped it. [22:24.360 --> 22:25.360] Good, good, good, good, good. [22:25.360 --> 22:28.360] Okay, skip it this time too. [22:28.360 --> 22:39.360] But we send it, I'm going to the names, Willard Dean, MBK, G sharp, I don't see anything. [22:39.360 --> 22:46.360] I've got under Western star and I don't remember one from Arizona. [22:46.360 --> 22:50.360] So we send it and I will get that out tomorrow. [22:50.360 --> 22:54.360] I got all of my spreadsheets fixed so they're all working. [22:54.360 --> 22:55.360] Okay. [22:55.360 --> 23:03.360] I do have a question, should I, you know, if I wanted to, because the administrator says, [23:03.360 --> 23:08.360] you know, I think she's in the position of a revenue collector. [23:08.360 --> 23:13.360] How do I serve a request for financial disclosure? [23:13.360 --> 23:15.360] Oh, I got one of those. [23:15.360 --> 23:19.360] Who do you want to do the foreclosure to? [23:19.360 --> 23:21.360] The judge? [23:21.360 --> 23:23.360] Sure. [23:23.360 --> 23:28.360] Oh, okay, I got one I'll send you. [23:28.360 --> 23:33.360] The good thing about this is you don't care what the judge does. [23:33.360 --> 23:37.360] You're going to poison her well. [23:37.360 --> 23:43.360] You send it and if she's corrupt, it's going to terrify her. [23:43.360 --> 23:50.360] She's going to refuse to respond to it and then you go to the next higher court and ask for a mandamus. [23:50.360 --> 23:56.360] And just spread around all over that you're looking under her financial rug. [23:56.360 --> 24:06.360] If she's clean, it's going to stain her anyway with the suspicion because perception is everything. [24:06.360 --> 24:10.360] Okay, it's a dirty rotten shyster trick. [24:10.360 --> 24:13.360] That's why I like it so much. [24:13.360 --> 24:24.360] But you send me the go on traffic.ticket.website and fill it out and I will add this financial disclosure document to it. [24:24.360 --> 24:30.360] Matter of fact, now that you're mentioning it, I need to program that into the procedure anyway. [24:30.360 --> 24:39.360] So I'll go ahead and stick it in the spreadsheet and I'll wind up giving it to everybody. [24:39.360 --> 24:49.360] Okay, the last thing she had me do is she had me sign my name to a piece of paper promising that I'd pay 50 bucks a month. [24:49.360 --> 24:57.360] Oh, okay, none of that counts until the appeal is completed. [24:57.360 --> 24:59.360] Oh, okay. [24:59.360 --> 25:02.360] Yeah, so you don't have to do any of that yet. [25:02.360 --> 25:08.360] Once you appeal, there is no final adjudication in the case. [25:08.360 --> 25:11.360] Right. [25:11.360 --> 25:14.360] Okay, good luck and get that filled out. [25:14.360 --> 25:18.360] I'll get you some documents and keep us up to speed. [25:18.360 --> 25:19.360] Okay. [25:19.360 --> 25:20.360] Okay, thank you, Laura. [25:20.360 --> 25:21.360] I will. [25:21.360 --> 25:23.360] Okay, thanks. [25:23.360 --> 25:29.360] Okay, now we're going to Mark in Wisconsin. [25:29.360 --> 25:31.360] I'm having a little trouble. [25:31.360 --> 25:32.360] There we go. [25:32.360 --> 25:33.360] Okay, gotcha, Mark. [25:33.360 --> 25:36.360] What are you up to today? [25:36.360 --> 25:45.360] Well, I'm not 100% sure how I should respond to the trial memorandum. [25:45.360 --> 25:50.360] Got a trial memorandum here in a little small claims court case. [25:50.360 --> 25:58.360] Notably, we're going to have a evidentiary hearing according to one particular official, but the attorney's put forth his trial memorandum. [25:58.360 --> 26:13.360] In the trial memorandum, he says a bunch of male bovine solid excrement, and he explicitly goes ahead and makes statements that are untrue. [26:13.360 --> 26:19.360] I'm assuming my response would be my own version of a trial memorandum. [26:19.360 --> 26:39.360] And I'm not 100% sure if I should attack the things that are wrong in his trial memorandum, or if I have to write a brief about his trial memorandum, point out why it's wrong, and put my own trial memorandum where I state my case without attacking his deficiencies. [26:39.360 --> 26:45.360] You should definitely attack any misstatement that he's made. [26:45.360 --> 26:49.360] Oh, I got a gem here. [26:49.360 --> 26:57.360] He starts off shister attorney being duly sworn upon oath deposes and states to the court as follows. [26:57.360 --> 27:06.360] He then makes untrue statements in his oath, and at the end of it, he throws out a further your affidant say if not. [27:06.360 --> 27:17.360] What's interesting is I responded to his discovery. He had discovery requests, and I'm going with, I don't think you're really representing the bank. [27:17.360 --> 27:24.360] You claim you're representing. I think that you bought the debt, and you're just pretending to represent the bank. [27:24.360 --> 27:32.360] So to the discovery, I said no legal answers, legally called for, and therefore no answers given. [27:32.360 --> 27:36.360] That's what he quotes. He then leaves out the two paragraphs underneath it. [27:36.360 --> 27:41.360] The lawyer listed did not file a notice of appearance, which is the first document requested by the e-file system. [27:41.360 --> 27:47.360] There's no proof filed by the attorney. They are empowered to act on behalf of what appears to be an unregistered foreign corporation. [27:47.360 --> 27:59.360] The alleged plaintiff, unregistered foreign corporation, appears not to be an unregistered foreign corporation, and therefore cannot have the benefit of starting or maintaining a lawsuit in Wisconsin. [27:59.360 --> 28:05.360] They cannot start or maintain a legal fight there, not entitled to discovery. [28:05.360 --> 28:15.360] He goes ahead, and the only response to the plaintiff's discovery arrived at the plaintiff, which stated no answers, legally required, called for, and therefore no answers given. [28:15.360 --> 28:20.360] Which is a true quote, but, you know, taken out of context. [28:20.360 --> 28:40.360] Well, it's also, I'm lost the right word, it's untrue in that it's only, it's like fraud by non-disclosure. [28:40.360 --> 28:56.360] He took a partial quote and caused it to mean something different, like, I said I did not kill this person, and he says, this guy said I killed this person. [28:56.360 --> 29:03.360] Just take out a word or two, it sounds however you want it to. That's perjury. [29:03.360 --> 29:11.360] Ooh, wow, I'd love to make that stick. This could get fun then. [29:11.360 --> 29:22.360] As it is, he's making statements about the account numbers that are untrue, and he did it in a sworn affidavit, and he throws in this little gem. [29:22.360 --> 29:35.360] The affidant makes this affidavit after review an in-reliance of said physical and electronic notes, which are true, complete and accurate, and we have music coming up. [29:35.360 --> 29:41.360] Oh, wonderful. Are you going to play the music, or do I need to? [29:41.360 --> 29:52.360] Oh, it's better already. Okay. Okay, Randy Kelton, we'll go radio. I'll call it number 512-646-1984, and we'll be right back. [29:52.360 --> 30:12.360] There are only 24 hours in a day, and you try to spend them wisely, yet every hour you spend doing this activity increases your risk of a heart attack by up to 8%. 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[31:01.360 --> 31:05.360] They found the more TV they watch, the higher their risk of heart disease. [31:05.360 --> 31:14.360] In fact, for each additional hour of TV time, their risk of heart problems increase 6 to 8%, regardless of how much they exercised. [31:14.360 --> 31:20.360] Americans watch an average of 5 hours of TV a day. Maybe it's time for a change of heart. [31:20.360 --> 31:47.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:50.360 --> 32:00.360] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only at SQSA.org. [32:21.360 --> 32:25.360] To learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process, [32:25.360 --> 32:35.360] former sheriff's deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.360 --> 32:40.360] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.360 --> 32:47.360] 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. [32:47.360 --> 32:50.360] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.360 --> 32:54.360] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.360 --> 33:01.360] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.360 --> 33:18.360] Live free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:32.360 --> 33:37.360] Okay, we are back. [33:37.360 --> 33:41.360] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Mark in Wisconsin. [33:41.360 --> 33:46.360] And Mark is having too much fun with a shyster lawyer. [33:46.360 --> 33:48.360] Go ahead, Mark. [33:48.360 --> 33:56.360] Well, other things the shyster lawyer did is he refused service of a notice to motion hearing. [33:56.360 --> 34:00.360] And I have that on video and audio. [34:00.360 --> 34:06.360] The other little trick and I haven't heard you pull this one yet, so you can add this to your repertoire. [34:06.360 --> 34:12.360] In Wisconsin, we have 632-24 direct action against insurer. [34:12.360 --> 34:20.360] Any bond or policy of insurance covering liability to others for negligence makes the insurer liable. [34:20.360 --> 34:26.360] See the amount stated in the bond or policy to the person's entitled to recover against the insurer for the death of any person. [34:26.360 --> 34:28.360] That doesn't really help me much. [34:28.360 --> 34:41.360] Or for injury to the person's or person's property, irrespective of whether the liability is presently established or contingent and become fixed or certain by final judgment against the insured. [34:41.360 --> 34:48.360] Interesting, that means you have standing to discover the insurer. [34:48.360 --> 34:53.360] And I made that motion too, yes. [34:53.360 --> 35:04.360] Now, normally you give advice, do not quote a dissenting opinion, but that's all I really had going for me. [35:04.360 --> 35:11.360] On the exact day that he filed some of his paperwork, the state of Wisconsin Supremes came out with an opinion. [35:11.360 --> 35:22.360] And there was a dissenting opinion, which explicitly went to this idea of if you're not a registered corporation, you don't get to start lawsuits in Wisconsin. [35:22.360 --> 35:25.360] So you've got to be a foreign registered corporation. [35:25.360 --> 35:40.360] Now, what's interesting, this credit card company, if I slice and dice the numbers equally across 50 states and what they claim their debt is, Wisconsin wants $1,000 for every $1,000 of money floating around. [35:40.360 --> 35:44.360] They want three bucks with your registration. [35:44.360 --> 35:50.360] So the registration potential here is $6 million. [35:50.360 --> 35:54.360] You think you might create some politics there? [35:54.360 --> 35:55.360] Thanks, Judge. [35:55.360 --> 36:10.360] How would you like to go ahead and face the voters and going, yeah, I decided I wasn't going to ask for $6 million to the state of Wisconsin coffers by making these guys liable? [36:10.360 --> 36:13.360] No, I can't say that to the judge. [36:13.360 --> 36:15.360] I don't think I can. [36:15.360 --> 36:18.360] It's probably ill-advised. [36:18.360 --> 36:30.360] This thing of them not being registered in the state, that's pretty consistent across all of the states because the corporation is illegal fiction. [36:30.360 --> 36:44.360] It's not a citizen and doesn't have the rights of its citizen unless the rights are conferred based on certain behaviors of the illegal fiction. [36:44.360 --> 36:55.360] And one of which, they have no right to access the courts unless they're registered in the state and pay taxes in the state. [36:55.360 --> 36:57.360] Yeah, that's what I'd like to think. [36:57.360 --> 37:12.360] But this attorney, besides, you know, faking stuff, not responding at all to discovery, not showing up for the motion hearing, I went ahead and said that his motion to throw out my response, [37:12.360 --> 37:21.360] which the appropriate sanction is to throw out his request to throw out my answer and counterclaim. [37:21.360 --> 37:28.360] So he's busy when I said, hey, what about this not being registered? [37:28.360 --> 37:31.360] Oh, I've never heard of such a thing. [37:31.360 --> 37:42.360] Now I have one of the Supremes in the dissenting opinion explicitly said you don't have the right to sue in Wisconsin unless you're registered. [37:42.360 --> 37:43.360] Okay, hold on. [37:43.360 --> 37:59.360] This dissenting opinion, does the dissenting opinion go against the opinion in the case or is this portion of the dissenting opinion explanatory? [37:59.360 --> 38:08.360] It seems to be explanatory because the case is all about what's called statute 180.1507. [38:08.360 --> 38:27.360] And but however, they mentioned my concern, 1501 and 1502, and she explicitly says it's further clear if you do the legal research and she cites a whole paragraph of legal research for me. [38:27.360 --> 38:30.360] Oh, beautiful. [38:30.360 --> 38:41.360] So this case wasn't specifically about a corporation not registered in the state being unable to do business in the state, but it was ancillary. [38:41.360 --> 38:50.360] And so her opinion didn't go against what I'm saying is it didn't contradict the ruling in the case. [38:50.360 --> 38:51.360] Right. [38:51.360 --> 38:52.360] Right. [38:52.360 --> 38:55.360] So that makes it sizable. [38:55.360 --> 39:00.360] Yep. Well, I already did cite it because I went ahead and said that's a better handy. [39:00.360 --> 39:03.360] It said this kind of thing. [39:03.360 --> 39:06.360] What other little gems here? [39:06.360 --> 39:09.360] I did like my insurance thing. [39:09.360 --> 39:20.360] Oh, and besides, you know, these true complete and accurate records in the middle of their brief, they refer to me as she. [39:20.360 --> 39:31.360] Well, it's minor, it's probably a typo, but, you know, be nice if you kept your gender pronouns the same boys and girls. [39:31.360 --> 39:40.360] You're going to go ahead and claim your nice complete and true complete and accurate. [39:40.360 --> 39:51.360] You could do the sale. I've done stuff like that in suits once. I named the lawyer. [39:51.360 --> 40:03.360] I put in the lawyers name here and after referred to as shyster off through the case and shyster this and shyster that. [40:03.360 --> 40:15.360] And the judge is reading it and he's trying to keep from laughing and he said, Mr. Calton, I'm sure you thought that will. [40:15.360 --> 40:21.360] And you just dropped out again. [40:21.360 --> 40:23.360] All right, I'll try to. [40:23.360 --> 40:26.360] Testing 123. [40:26.360 --> 40:27.360] You're back. [40:27.360 --> 40:33.360] Okay, so the judge said, I guess you thought that was a humorous old judge. [40:33.360 --> 40:36.360] I meant to do a search and replace. [40:36.360 --> 40:39.360] I was just having a little fun while I was writing it. [40:39.360 --> 40:41.360] He said, sure, you meant to. [40:41.360 --> 40:43.360] We won't do that again. [40:43.360 --> 40:45.360] Will we? Oh, no, no. [40:45.360 --> 40:47.360] But clearly he got a kick out of it. [40:47.360 --> 40:53.360] He was grinning to the old thing and the lawyer didn't find it a bit funny. [40:53.360 --> 40:57.360] And I still knew. [40:57.360 --> 41:05.360] Well, in, you know, kicking kicking a credit card company, one of the ones that does subprime stuff in the teeth. [41:05.360 --> 41:07.360] You know, it's punching up. [41:07.360 --> 41:12.360] People seem to be more tolerant when you're punching up. [41:12.360 --> 41:19.360] You might have you considered petitioning for sanctions for the boy. [41:19.360 --> 41:23.360] I have. You're going to love this little trick though. I'm going to try. [41:23.360 --> 41:33.360] I'm going to go for a supervisory rip and demand that the supreme's step in to don't slap some of these people around. [41:33.360 --> 41:42.360] Because here's what's neat about Wisconsin's small claims action because it's a court of no record for the first go around. [41:42.360 --> 41:44.360] You guys can do whatever you want. [41:44.360 --> 41:48.360] And then if you want to appeal, it becomes a court of record. [41:48.360 --> 41:53.360] So then they have the right stuff for the appellate court. [41:53.360 --> 41:59.360] But of course, with all this paperwork that's there in these here and we've had one here. [41:59.360 --> 42:03.360] Hold on. Step back once. [42:03.360 --> 42:05.360] It's not a court of record. [42:05.360 --> 42:11.360] Therefore, in an appeal, it's trial. [42:11.360 --> 42:22.360] No, the way in which I read the wording when the first started talking with you is the way this statute was coded. [42:22.360 --> 42:29.360] What if you do an appeal, you get to start the whole thing over, but it'll be on the record this time. [42:29.360 --> 42:35.360] Okay, that's try that's generally I'm going to trial the novel. [42:35.360 --> 42:45.360] Because when you get trial to know, well, that means that you don't have to appeal on a writ of error. [42:45.360 --> 42:46.360] Okay. [42:46.360 --> 42:59.360] However, what it doesn't mean is you can do dirty rotten lowdown Scheister stuff in that first trial and it doesn't carry over to the second. [42:59.360 --> 43:07.360] Or you can do make statements that amount to collateral estoppel and they can't be used in the second trial. [43:07.360 --> 43:09.360] No, no, no, no. [43:09.360 --> 43:15.360] It's only trial. [43:15.360 --> 43:20.360] And you cut out again. [43:20.360 --> 43:23.360] All right. [43:23.360 --> 43:40.360] If they come in the trial court and they make a statement that is takes a specific position, then they come into the court of record and take a different position. [43:40.360 --> 43:47.360] You can go back to the original and claim collateral estoppel because they don't really get a free ride. [43:47.360 --> 43:55.360] And that's what they do is they think, you think, hang on, about to go to break Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [44:18.360 --> 44:21.360] First place up for grabs of Spikes Tactical AR-15. [44:21.360 --> 44:27.360] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm pistol from Defense Distributed. [44:27.360 --> 44:30.360] Third place, the AR-308 80% lower. [44:30.360 --> 44:34.360] Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower from Fat Sal's Deli. [44:34.360 --> 44:37.360] Fifth place, $100 gift card for Fat Sal's Deli. [44:37.360 --> 44:40.360] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:40.360 --> 44:42.360] That's the logosradionetwork.com. [44:42.360 --> 44:47.360] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [44:47.360 --> 44:51.360] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get 10 chances to win. [44:51.360 --> 44:54.360] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:54.360 --> 45:23.360] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:24.360 --> 45:27.360] Step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.360 --> 45:34.360] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.360 --> 45:43.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.360 --> 45:52.360] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.360 --> 45:56.360] Please visit LulaVlogRadio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.360 --> 46:18.360] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:18.360 --> 46:24.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, LulaVlogRadio, and we're talking to Mark in Wisconsin. [46:24.360 --> 46:35.360] Okay, but that's been an issue with me, this thing of... [46:35.360 --> 46:41.360] In there, I can hear the music and not Randy. [46:41.360 --> 46:43.360] Wait, say that again? [46:43.360 --> 46:46.360] I said I could hear the music and not you. [46:46.360 --> 46:51.360] I heard you say, well, this has been an issue this evening, and you cut out again. [46:51.360 --> 46:52.360] Okay. [46:52.360 --> 47:02.360] Anyway, the other two things that occurred with this particular account, they explicitly have a sheet of paper that says your account has charged off, [47:02.360 --> 47:14.360] which I'm not 100% sure if the credit card company meant my account got on a horse and ran off or, you know, went off a cliff or something, but it charged off. [47:14.360 --> 47:22.360] The other thing, when I contacted the credit card company, never in their responses did they say, we're not talking to you. [47:22.360 --> 47:24.360] We've got a lawsuit with you. [47:24.360 --> 47:26.360] Talk with our lawyer. [47:26.360 --> 47:30.360] They went ahead and wrote back and going, this is not an attempt to collect a debt. [47:30.360 --> 47:32.360] Here's the answer to your question. [47:32.360 --> 47:35.360] This is not an attempt to collect a debt. [47:35.360 --> 47:45.360] So I'm pretty sure, you know, these guys claiming that they're the bank is wrong. [47:45.360 --> 47:46.360] I asked for discovery. [47:46.360 --> 47:50.360] They didn't respond to any of it. [47:50.360 --> 47:59.360] Did you check the number to see if it's listed to a bank number? [47:59.360 --> 48:01.360] The phone number? [48:01.360 --> 48:07.360] Yeah, you need to move the mic down a little way from your mouth to breathing real heavy in the mic. [48:07.360 --> 48:08.360] All right. [48:08.360 --> 48:09.360] How about that? [48:09.360 --> 48:10.360] Much. [48:10.360 --> 48:13.360] You did not check the number, but that's good. [48:13.360 --> 48:16.360] That's a good idea to do. [48:16.360 --> 48:25.360] The only other thing I've done was I went ahead and said, all right, who is a virtual bank? [48:25.360 --> 48:34.360] And the only bank that I can think of that has almost no offices is Ally Bank, which used to be GMAC financing. [48:34.360 --> 48:41.360] They went ahead and got a state of Wisconsin for incorporation registration. [48:41.360 --> 48:48.360] So I don't know on what basis they don't have a registration other than nobody's called us on it. [48:48.360 --> 48:57.360] Well, the fact that they the fact that they didn't don't or may or may not have a office in Wisconsin is irrelevant. [48:57.360 --> 49:13.360] Under international shoe, if they're doing business in Wisconsin, they have minimum contacts and still require to be international shoe actually goes to jurisdiction, but it places them in the state. [49:13.360 --> 49:18.360] If they're making a profit from Wisconsin, they'd have to be registered. [49:18.360 --> 49:19.360] All right. [49:19.360 --> 49:29.360] Well, one of the things that has happened in Wisconsin, they Wisconsin's thing statutes that says you don't need to register if blah, blah, blah. [49:29.360 --> 49:35.360] There's a section E that says, you know, everybody's independent contractors. [49:35.360 --> 49:46.360] And I found an ATM vendor that explicitly says, oh, we give zero fee for this credit card company, which sounds to me like they're not. [49:46.360 --> 50:00.360] Then there's a contractual relationship with an entity that has physical presence and does something physical that isn't an independent contractor status. [50:00.360 --> 50:04.360] Okay, that made no sense to me. [50:04.360 --> 50:05.360] Okay. [50:05.360 --> 50:11.360] If I have a, if I, if I walk into a bank and say, I want to cash advance on this credit card, the bank is going to go, here's our fee. [50:11.360 --> 50:12.360] Thank you very much. [50:12.360 --> 50:15.360] And any bank can charge any fee they want. [50:15.360 --> 50:17.360] They could even say, you've got to have account with us. [50:17.360 --> 50:19.360] Otherwise, go pound sand. [50:19.360 --> 50:27.360] However, and if you walk up to nearly any ATM, they'll go ahead and say, yeah, well, hand you cash, but you got to pay a fee. [50:27.360 --> 50:34.360] This particular series of ATMs do not charge a fee. [50:34.360 --> 50:43.360] So that would indicate to me that there's a contract of some kind, which if there's a, sometimes they're not independent contractor. [50:43.360 --> 50:49.360] They're not charging you because they're charging the other end. [50:49.360 --> 50:50.360] Right. [50:50.360 --> 51:04.360] So to do that, there has to be some kind of contract, which would seem to exceed Wisconsin's well, if you're an independent contractor, maybe you don't need to be registered as part of one of the sections of the statute. [51:04.360 --> 51:06.360] So I threw that against the wall. [51:06.360 --> 51:09.360] We'll see if that sticks. [51:09.360 --> 51:12.360] Okay. [51:12.360 --> 51:23.360] Unless you can think of another way to attach that I can't find any call centers or any physical branches in the state. [51:23.360 --> 51:29.360] Well, if they're sending you notices in the state. [51:29.360 --> 51:43.360] And asking you to pay in the state, if they're a bank, the bank they're claiming to represent is. [51:43.360 --> 51:48.360] And all I heard was is. [51:48.360 --> 51:56.360] That they, these debt collectors claim to represent a national association. [51:56.360 --> 51:59.360] They claim to represent the National Association. [51:59.360 --> 52:05.360] The National Association lists themselves as an umbrella for all their various businesses. [52:05.360 --> 52:15.360] And in fact, the National Association apparently is in control of a few web design firms that they bought out. [52:15.360 --> 52:25.360] So this is why I asked for a notice of appearance, which they didn't bother with. [52:25.360 --> 52:34.360] So that should be ground enough to toss this law firm is having no standard. [52:34.360 --> 52:37.360] Did you have a subject matter jurisdiction challenge? [52:37.360 --> 52:38.360] I have. [52:38.360 --> 52:39.360] I have. [52:39.360 --> 52:46.360] And in fact, the hearing that we're supposed to have this next week, which is supposed to be an evidentiary hearing, I explicitly [52:46.360 --> 52:57.360] motioned and said this needs to be stayed until this motions hearing where we deal with the jurisdictional problems is heard. [52:57.360 --> 53:08.360] And the court acknowledged that I filed the request for stay, but they haven't said yes, we're going to give the stay. [53:08.360 --> 53:13.360] Of course, I'll show and we'll see what all happens. [53:13.360 --> 53:21.360] My guess is they're trying to steamroll me to judge the court is trading on being nice. [53:21.360 --> 53:33.360] I when there is a jurisdictional challenge in the works has has the opposition responded to the jurisdictional challenge. [53:33.360 --> 53:34.360] Nope. [53:34.360 --> 53:38.360] Now, to be fair, the jurisdictional channel will actually the jurisdictional challenges. [53:38.360 --> 53:39.360] Yes, they did respond. [53:39.360 --> 53:42.360] They called them nonsensical. [53:42.360 --> 53:51.360] And then they didn't show for the actual motion hearings where, you know, in my answer and counterclaim is where I first made the, you [53:51.360 --> 53:57.360] know, looked at these problems, then I wrote up actual motions and scheduled motion hearing. [53:57.360 --> 54:02.360] Now, what's nice is the motions. [54:02.360 --> 54:12.360] All in e-filing system, once you've gotten past is the party served, every document e-filed is considered service. [54:12.360 --> 54:17.360] And so they did get proper service for the motion hearing. [54:17.360 --> 54:26.360] And of course, I have him on video and audio refusing the notice of motion to the motion hearing personally. [54:26.360 --> 54:29.360] Oh, wonderful. [54:29.360 --> 54:34.360] So he can't, he can't bring lack of notice as an issue. [54:34.360 --> 54:36.360] Right, right. [54:36.360 --> 54:47.360] That's why I, you know, part of the reason I'm going to ask the Supremes to step in that they have obviously an errant law firm and an errant attorney here. [54:47.360 --> 54:58.360] In addition to the two errant judges, the first judge, or I should say court commissioner, I walked in because it hadn't served me. [54:58.360 --> 55:03.360] I walked in and thumped my chest loudly and said that I am here by special appearance. [55:03.360 --> 55:12.360] And he kept insisting I was here by general appearance and I kept insisting personal appearance and it started getting emotional. [55:12.360 --> 55:15.360] And so I just, you know, let it slide. [55:15.360 --> 55:27.360] Then the, at the actual motion hearing in front of the judge, the judge was not believing out of my own mouth that e-filing system, he served. [55:27.360 --> 55:36.360] I subsequently filed paperwork pointing out where the Supreme Court of Wisconsin wrote a 127 page memo about it. [55:36.360 --> 55:39.360] And on page 31 they have a comment. [55:39.360 --> 55:45.360] And so I excerpted that comment. [55:45.360 --> 55:49.360] Okay, that'll probably get their attention. [55:49.360 --> 55:51.360] I would hope so. [55:51.360 --> 56:04.360] And because of the whole resetting of things with it being small claims and not getting to appeal, that allows me to do a supervisory writ and meet one of the criteria for supervisory writ to the Supremes. [56:04.360 --> 56:11.360] So I figure I throw a supervisory writ there and they'll just be going, why? [56:11.360 --> 56:13.360] What is the supervisory writ? [56:13.360 --> 56:16.360] I've never heard of that anywhere else. [56:16.360 --> 56:21.360] I'll send you a link to a Wisconsin law article. [56:21.360 --> 56:45.360] Apparently, at any given time, if you happen to think that there's going to be a great harm by the Supreme Court or another court not hearing something or it is of general, there's a clause three, which is what I'm going to ding on, it is of general importance to the larger population that the Supremes get involved. [56:45.360 --> 56:49.360] Your other higher judges get involved. [56:49.360 --> 56:51.360] You can do a supervisory writ. [56:51.360 --> 56:53.360] Supervisor, come on in here. [56:53.360 --> 56:55.360] Take a look at this. [56:55.360 --> 56:57.360] Interesting. [56:57.360 --> 57:03.360] Yeah, so I'll take you to the Wisconsin law article on learn how to write a supervisory writ. [57:03.360 --> 57:07.360] You may never need it, but it's a good tool to have. [57:07.360 --> 57:27.360] Interesting, because in Texas and we don't have supervisory wits, however, if Wisconsin has addressed the issue and the legislature in Wisconsin found the issue important enough to write law on, I should be able, under full faith and credit, I should be able to bring it to Texas. [57:27.360 --> 57:30.360] Yes, that would give you then something to work with. [57:30.360 --> 57:32.360] I'll send that to you. [57:32.360 --> 57:34.360] Wonderful. [57:34.360 --> 57:38.360] All right, I think that's everything. [57:38.360 --> 57:45.360] Thank you very much for the go look up the phone number and see who is who it goes to. [57:45.360 --> 57:50.360] And I have, oh, I know this is the other question I had for you. [57:50.360 --> 57:58.360] All right, as a feather in state of Wisconsin, we have no pre lawsuit discovery, but we have music coming. [57:58.360 --> 58:00.360] So I'll have to catch this question on the other side. [58:00.360 --> 58:04.360] Okay, music is better than a lawsuit any day. [58:04.360 --> 58:05.360] Go ahead. [58:05.360 --> 58:07.360] You've got 45 seconds. [58:07.360 --> 58:08.360] All right. [58:08.360 --> 58:19.360] Since we don't have pre lawsuit discovery in Wisconsin, but under is full and a couple and to wake or something on the federal, there is pre lawsuit discovery. [58:19.360 --> 58:26.360] Can I use that pre lawsuit discovery to get whether or not these clowns had a contract with the credit card company? [58:26.360 --> 58:33.360] You can certainly ask the court to allow it because it's done for the purpose of judicial economy. [58:33.360 --> 58:34.360] Hang on. [58:34.360 --> 58:35.360] About to go to break. [58:35.360 --> 58:36.360] Randy Kelton. [58:36.360 --> 58:38.360] We'll be right back. [58:50.360 --> 58:54.360] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.360 --> 59:01.360] The Schools for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.360 --> 59:06.360] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.360 --> 59:13.360] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.360 --> 59:18.360] The free books are a three volume set called basic elements of the Christian life. [59:18.360 --> 59:27.360] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.360 --> 59:40.360] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.360 --> 59:49.360] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.360 --> 59:59.360] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.360 --> 01:00:22.360] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, provided you're deli bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:22.360 --> 01:00:45.360] Markets for Wednesday the 13th of September 2017, closed with gold at $1,323.24 an ounce, silver $17.78 an ounce, Texas crude $48.23 a barrel, Bitcoin is about $3,876, and dashcoins it's about 300 U.S. currency. [01:00:45.360 --> 01:00:55.360] Today in history, the year 1541, after three years in exile, John Calvin returns to Geneva to reform the church under a body of doctrine known as Calvinism. [01:00:55.360 --> 01:01:00.360] Today in history. [01:01:00.360 --> 01:01:18.360] In recent news, Hillary Clinton's new already on discount book would happen officially hit store shelves Tuesday of the many things she blamed for her loss in the 2016 presidential race. She mentioned Russia in the election within the first few pages, quote, the press treated our warnings about Russia like it was spin we'd cooked up in order to distract from embarrassing revelations. [01:01:18.360 --> 01:01:33.360] She blamed President Trump saying that listening to Trump it almost felt like there was no such thing as truth anymore, that his strategy consisted of an appeal to the ugliest impulses of our national character. She blamed Wall Street. I didn't think many Americans would believe that I'd sell a lifetime of principle and advocacy for any price. [01:01:33.360 --> 01:01:38.360] I should have stayed away from anything having to do with Wall Street. I didn't. That's all me. [01:01:38.360 --> 01:01:50.360] Yeah, right, Hillary. Closed door meetings with Wall Street corporate donors could have had no foreseeable problems. She blamed the scandal over State Department emails on her private server. It was a dumb mistake, she said, but even a dumber scandal. [01:01:50.360 --> 01:02:03.360] It was like quicksand. The more you struggle, the deeper you sink. She blamed former FBI Director James Comey saying that quote, Comey made the choice to extricate me in public in July and then dramatically reopen the investigation on October 28. [01:02:03.360 --> 01:02:15.360] Oh, while refusing to say a word about Trump in Russia, not for those decisions, everything would have been different. And she even blamed patriarchy, stating that sexism and misogyny played a role in the 2016 presidential election. [01:02:15.360 --> 01:02:19.360] Exhibit A is the flagrantly sexist candidate one. [01:02:19.360 --> 01:02:29.360] Days after Hurricane Harvey's onslaught across the Lone Star State, the coast was still very much littered with dead fish and other sea creatures. [01:02:29.360 --> 01:02:37.360] Pretied to say of the National Auburn Society, discovered a strange-looking sea animal posting a photo of it on Twitter to see if anyone knew what it was. [01:02:37.360 --> 01:02:47.360] Experts responded with guesses that it was some sort of eel, possibly a fingtooth snake eel. Harvey was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. [01:02:47.360 --> 01:02:51.360] It killed at least 70 people and dumped at least 51 inches of rain. [01:02:51.360 --> 01:03:19.360] This is Brook Rody with your lowdown for September 13, 2017. [01:03:19.360 --> 01:03:29.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with our radio and we were talking to Mark in Wisconsin. [01:03:29.360 --> 01:03:52.360] All right, do you have any good samples of somebody doing pre-loss suit on the federal level? And, you know, so I get a good example because I'd love to be able to dial in the date because these guys have been filing 20 to 30 suits a week against other people. [01:03:52.360 --> 01:03:59.360] And I'd love to be able to dial in that, oh yeah, it turns out they didn't have a contract to actually represent. [01:03:59.360 --> 01:04:10.360] Oh, that would be wonderful. However, federal pre-litigation discovery goes to deposition only. [01:04:10.360 --> 01:04:22.360] Deposition only, huh? Yes. Oh boy, yeah, I really don't want the expense of trying to depose the credit card company or depose the... [01:04:22.360 --> 01:04:26.360] You should be able to depose them with a questionnaire. [01:04:26.360 --> 01:04:43.360] Oh, well, all right, great then because they know me down at the federal courthouse here. The DOJ attorney suggested, or DOJ trial attorney suggested that perhaps I should be less livid in my filings. [01:04:43.360 --> 01:04:49.360] So, they know me. [01:04:49.360 --> 01:04:58.360] Serious enough for them, huh? Well, I told her, I said, you know, you should have seen what was there. This is the cleaned up presentation. [01:04:58.360 --> 01:05:04.360] I should have seen what was there before. And I can't. I called and walked out the room. [01:05:04.360 --> 01:05:16.360] Anyway, I believe that's all of the entertainment information and answers that I can get out of you. Hopefully you find the supervisory writ to their email useful. [01:05:16.360 --> 01:05:23.360] Thank you. And it even has case law. Yeah, I'll be looking forward to that. [01:05:23.360 --> 01:05:35.360] Okay. Have a good evening, sir. Thank you, Mark. Now we're going to John in New York. Hello, Johnny. Whoops, hold on, hold on, wrong one. [01:05:35.360 --> 01:05:42.360] I'll get this in a minute. Gotcha. Okay. Go ahead, John. [01:05:42.360 --> 01:05:52.360] Hello, John. Are you there? Okay, it looks like we've lost John in New York. We're going to... [01:05:52.360 --> 01:05:57.360] It says Arianne, but it's supposed to be... [01:05:57.360 --> 01:06:05.360] That's the link. [01:06:05.360 --> 01:06:19.360] Glock Hall? You've probably never heard that joke before. Or maybe a hundred times. Okay. What do you have for us today? [01:06:19.360 --> 01:06:29.360] Wait a minute. Are you on a speakerphone? I cannot understand you at all. [01:06:29.360 --> 01:06:35.360] Can you hear me now? Oh, that's much better. [01:06:35.360 --> 01:06:48.360] Okay. This is Emily. I talked to you previously about my home. My son's from Arianne County. And we sent you some papers. [01:06:48.360 --> 01:06:59.360] I'm the one who sent you some papers. Would you please read them? I am having a terrible time understanding you. [01:06:59.360 --> 01:07:14.360] This is Jermaine's mother in Tennessee. And I talked to you about the foreclosure of my home. Oh, okay. Now... [01:07:14.360 --> 01:07:24.360] Can you hear me? I can hear you. Okay. Go ahead. Do you have a question? [01:07:24.360 --> 01:07:29.360] Yeah. I was trying to find out if you could get the papers that I sent. [01:07:29.360 --> 01:07:47.360] Okay. One place to do that. I would send me an email. And I will look at that in the morning. Right now, I can't go into the emails and look at it. [01:07:47.360 --> 01:07:52.360] And I'm not sure which one you're talking about. [01:07:52.360 --> 01:08:02.360] I talked to you a few weeks ago about the foreclosure on my home. Wait, wait, wait. I get lots of people talking to me about foreclosures on my home. [01:08:02.360 --> 01:08:16.360] So I'm not sure which one. I have another woman in... Are you in Memphis? Yes, I am. [01:08:16.360 --> 01:08:24.360] Yeah. I'm Jermaine's mother in Tennessee. Okay. Okay. Now I know who you are. [01:08:24.360 --> 01:08:34.360] No, I didn't look at them, but if you will send me an email. When I get up in the mornings, I go through all my emails and documentation. [01:08:34.360 --> 01:08:41.360] I will do that in the morning and I'll respond to you. Okay. [01:08:41.360 --> 01:08:47.360] Okay. And I'm getting... We've got a really bad connection here, so it's hard for us to talk back and forth. [01:08:47.360 --> 01:09:01.360] So send me an email. Remind me say, hey, look at my documents already. And I'll get on that and I'll get you a respond with an analysis of what I see. [01:09:01.360 --> 01:09:05.360] Okay. I sure will do that. Thank you. I appreciate it. [01:09:05.360 --> 01:09:13.360] Okay. Thank you. Okay. Now we're going to Ken in New York. Hello, Ken. [01:09:13.360 --> 01:09:21.360] Hello, Randy. Well, I'm so glad my problems aren't nearly as complicated as some of the other people that call you up. [01:09:21.360 --> 01:09:32.360] In reference to what we were discussing last night about mortgage documents fraud, you were giving a lesson while I called. [01:09:32.360 --> 01:09:38.360] And you asked me a question at the beginning and I got to admit I was embarrassed because I didn't have a good answer for you. [01:09:38.360 --> 01:09:45.360] You asked me what I expected as an outcome. And I'm thinking to myself, I know I was silent for a minute or so. [01:09:45.360 --> 01:09:52.360] And I was thinking to myself, I don't want to be so crafty so I'm looking for a day at the racetrack. [01:09:52.360 --> 01:10:03.360] Later on in the lesson you were talking about, you provided the answer and you said that because the loan was halfway through 15 years on a 30-year loan, [01:10:03.360 --> 01:10:11.360] and the amount wasn't very much, which it was 134K, there might be rather than laying cash out for a claim, [01:10:11.360 --> 01:10:17.360] they might just let the rest of the loan go because they probably made a lot of money out of the ready. [01:10:17.360 --> 01:10:28.360] And so the choice would be between using an old movie line, a fistful of dollars, which probably wouldn't go very far, or a quiet title, [01:10:28.360 --> 01:10:36.360] which from another movie line it sounds like the jelly club in a month because it just keeps on giving. [01:10:36.360 --> 01:10:39.360] And that's the one I would choose. [01:10:39.360 --> 01:10:50.360] And that is probably not an honor. [01:10:50.360 --> 01:10:54.360] You just went dead. [01:10:54.360 --> 01:11:01.360] Which is worthless. Doesn't cost them any less to adjudicate. [01:11:01.360 --> 01:11:06.360] I just lost what you said. You went dead for a second. [01:11:06.360 --> 01:11:17.360] Okay, I had them come in and rebuild all my wiring for my connection. I should be getting a good connection. It may just be this microphone. [01:11:17.360 --> 01:11:22.360] Just cut out for a second. I just lost what you said if you could just repeat what you started to say. [01:11:22.360 --> 01:11:25.360] Okay. [01:11:25.360 --> 01:11:34.360] Just because the amount you owe is not so great, as far as the bank is concerned, makes no difference. [01:11:34.360 --> 01:11:41.360] They have to pay their lawyers the same if it's a million dollar loan or a hundred thousand dollar loan. [01:11:41.360 --> 01:11:55.360] So the bank is all about money. So if they're looking at paying more than what you owe in attorney fees. [01:11:55.360 --> 01:11:59.360] Is this one out again? [01:11:59.360 --> 01:12:07.360] Is that any better? [01:12:07.360 --> 01:12:10.360] There maybe I can get that mic to stick. [01:12:10.360 --> 01:12:27.360] If you can ask the court to order mediation, then the other side can come to you and not lose face and not wind up in a position to where they look like they're coming forward to make a deal. [01:12:27.360 --> 01:12:33.360] If the court orders them to come to mediation, now they can come with plausible deniability. [01:12:33.360 --> 01:12:41.360] And now they're in a position to where if they don't mediate in good faith, you can go back to the court and sting them. [01:12:41.360 --> 01:12:55.360] So that gives them plausible deniability to make you a deal you can live with and they just might, if not get rid of the whole thing, they might cut it sharply just to cut their own losses. [01:12:55.360 --> 01:13:08.360] Well, when you mentioned they could say they had a banking error and if it worked out in their favor, of course they wouldn't get that far because they just wouldn't say anything as long as they didn't miss the payments there shouldn't be a problem. [01:13:08.360 --> 01:13:16.360] But if you said that there was a situation where there's a banking error, why should I be responsible for their error? [01:13:16.360 --> 01:13:29.360] Well, you would have to file a suit to adjudicate the claim, you would have to show in court. [01:13:29.360 --> 01:13:38.360] They're counting on the same things we are. [01:13:38.360 --> 01:13:48.360] So could I say I'm not worthy counsel and why should I know what the issue is? How would I know it? [01:13:48.360 --> 01:14:03.360] Yeah. Well, they're going to say that you signed the note, you agreed to pay a certain amount, you weren't paying that amount and you're going to say, well, you guys didn't ask for that amount. [01:14:03.360 --> 01:14:14.360] And they're going to say, well, the mortgage doesn't require us to ask for a specific amount. They've got an argument they can make. [01:14:14.360 --> 01:14:27.360] But what they're banking on is that you won't fight them or you won't know how to fight them. They just need to claim whether it's valid or bogus, they don't care. [01:14:27.360 --> 01:14:36.360] Because the vast majority of people can't fight them and they take grossly unfair advantage of that. [01:14:36.360 --> 01:14:46.360] So I try to help people take grossly unfair advantage of them. [01:14:46.360 --> 01:14:59.360] So all about the money, when I help people file lawsuits, don't really care if I got a case I can win because the judges are bought and paid for, they're going to rule against us out of hand at every turn. [01:14:59.360 --> 01:15:06.360] What I look for are the really hard issues to adjudicate. [01:15:06.360 --> 01:15:17.360] The ones where I send the lawyers back to the law books. Like I look at the deed of trust and I say, well, merge is to beneficiary, not this lender. [01:15:17.360 --> 01:15:24.360] This lender doesn't have any standing anymore. They're going to say, what kind of crazy thing is that? [01:15:24.360 --> 01:15:34.360] Well, it says beneficiary, prove it up. Now they have to go in and do massive amount of research. It's going to cost them a fortune. [01:15:34.360 --> 01:15:44.360] They know I'm doing this to cost them money, but if I'm doing it for you and your pro se, tough. Nothing to do about it. [01:15:44.360 --> 01:16:07.360] So we bring a lawsuit that will be hard to adjudicate. See if they bring them to the table. [01:16:07.360 --> 01:16:19.360] Let me try to mute them. Okay. I think I got you back. Okay. Can you there? [01:16:19.360 --> 01:16:31.360] Hello, Kenny, you there? Okay, we seem to be having some issues. John, are you there? [01:16:31.360 --> 01:16:39.360] Well, it looks like nobody's there. So we must be having some call board problems. I've got both lines unmuted. [01:16:39.360 --> 01:16:47.360] So if you can hear me and you can speak, just speak into the mic and I'll hear you and pick you back up. [01:16:47.360 --> 01:16:59.360] We're about to go to break. Randy, Randy Kelton, we'll radio a call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:16:59.360 --> 01:17:04.360] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.360 --> 01:17:08.360] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. [01:17:08.360 --> 01:17:13.360] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.360 --> 01:17:20.360] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.360 --> 01:17:22.360] How can I help logos? [01:17:22.360 --> 01:17:27.360] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:17:27.360 --> 01:17:31.360] When you're supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.360 --> 01:17:37.360] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com, tick on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.360 --> 01:17:43.360] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.360 --> 01:17:44.360] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.360 --> 01:17:45.360] No. [01:17:45.360 --> 01:17:47.360] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.360 --> 01:17:48.360] No. [01:17:48.360 --> 01:17:49.360] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:17:49.360 --> 01:17:50.360] No. [01:17:50.360 --> 01:17:51.360] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.360 --> 01:17:56.360] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:17:56.360 --> 01:17:58.360] We are welcome. [01:17:58.360 --> 01:18:27.360] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:28.360 --> 01:18:54.360] Thank you. [01:18:54.360 --> 01:19:13.360] Thank you. [01:19:24.360 --> 01:19:52.360] Thank you. [01:19:52.360 --> 01:20:17.360] Thank you. [01:20:17.360 --> 01:20:43.360] Thank you. [01:20:43.360 --> 01:21:09.360] Thank you. [01:21:09.360 --> 01:21:35.360] Thank you. [01:21:35.360 --> 01:22:02.360] Thank you. [01:22:02.360 --> 01:22:31.360] Thank you. [01:22:31.360 --> 01:22:37.360] Thank you. [01:22:37.360 --> 01:22:39.360] Was that you? Are we back in? [01:22:39.360 --> 01:22:41.360] Yes, we're back on. [01:22:41.360 --> 01:22:43.360] Okay. [01:22:43.360 --> 01:22:53.360] Okay. Sorry, folks. We had a little technical glitch there, but it appears we're back up live. [01:22:53.360 --> 01:22:55.360] Ken, can you hear me? [01:22:55.360 --> 01:22:57.360] Yeah. [01:22:57.360 --> 01:22:59.360] Oh, good. Good. Good. We're back online. [01:22:59.360 --> 01:23:02.360] Okay. We had a little blank out there. [01:23:02.360 --> 01:23:03.360] Okay. [01:23:03.360 --> 01:23:13.360] Whatever that was, I had to reset my router and wait for the DSL to wind back up again. [01:23:13.360 --> 01:23:17.360] Government. It's a conspiracy. [01:23:17.360 --> 01:23:22.360] This appears to be something on the internet because we kind of crashed down as well. [01:23:22.360 --> 01:23:24.360] Okay. [01:23:24.360 --> 01:23:27.360] So, what do you want to do? [01:23:27.360 --> 01:23:31.360] I'm telling you that, well, I have a couple other things. [01:23:31.360 --> 01:23:39.360] It might be two other things that might be useful and they shouldn't take a lot of time. [01:23:39.360 --> 01:23:47.360] You were talking about, I think, something about a civil suit about, let me see if I can get this straight. [01:23:47.360 --> 01:23:59.360] In New York, the cause of action, in my case, I found it very strange that in a case where you have a state agency and they're suing you like a hospital, [01:23:59.360 --> 01:24:04.360] and I found the public law is trying to look for where's the cause of action. [01:24:04.360 --> 01:24:06.360] It turned out they have a law. [01:24:06.360 --> 01:24:09.360] I think it's public law 346 to 349. [01:24:09.360 --> 01:24:17.360] And all it says in it is this law gives a cause of action for the Attorney General to collect certain deaths. [01:24:17.360 --> 01:24:19.360] And they mentioned hospitals with a couple others. [01:24:19.360 --> 01:24:25.360] And there are no elements, nothing, no other information, nothing. [01:24:25.360 --> 01:24:33.360] And you answered a question, I don't know if it was last night, I think it might have been last night. [01:24:33.360 --> 01:24:46.360] Something about stating a party in the verified complaint, was that the case? [01:24:46.360 --> 01:24:50.360] I think it might come out again. [01:24:50.360 --> 01:24:53.360] Stating a party? [01:24:53.360 --> 01:24:55.360] I'm not sure what you're asking. [01:24:55.360 --> 01:25:03.360] All right, the first, I was trying to figure out for a long time the cause of action. It didn't seem to make any sense to me. [01:25:03.360 --> 01:25:13.360] The first one in the complaint said, Stony Brook University is now and always has been a division of the education department in the state of New York. [01:25:13.360 --> 01:25:19.360] And I'm sitting there and I was, even though I won the case, I could never figure out why they were doing that. [01:25:19.360 --> 01:25:25.360] And I think you said something about stating a party, you had to state the parties who was involved. [01:25:25.360 --> 01:25:30.360] And that's what I thought the answer might have been. [01:25:30.360 --> 01:25:37.360] I'm not sure of what the context is, so I don't know how to... [01:25:37.360 --> 01:25:42.360] Well, you have to say the cause of action someplace, right, in the complaint. [01:25:42.360 --> 01:25:43.360] Right. [01:25:43.360 --> 01:25:48.360] And death collection is the cause of action. [01:25:48.360 --> 01:25:53.360] Yeah, so it doesn't look like where you have a... [01:25:53.360 --> 01:25:59.360] It doesn't look like a situation where you have a law and then you have elements that have to be met. [01:25:59.360 --> 01:26:01.360] I didn't see any elements in this. [01:26:01.360 --> 01:26:06.360] I could never figure out what it meant or how they did that. [01:26:06.360 --> 01:26:10.360] And I actually called up someone from when I was working. [01:26:10.360 --> 01:26:12.360] This is when I knew absolutely nothing. [01:26:12.360 --> 01:26:14.360] This was back in 2013. [01:26:14.360 --> 01:26:18.360] And I called up a legal aid society and I said, I don't understand this. [01:26:18.360 --> 01:26:22.360] I can't find a cause of action law and there's no elements. [01:26:22.360 --> 01:26:28.360] And the woman that answered the phone, who happened to be pretty high up on the food chain with this organization, [01:26:28.360 --> 01:26:33.360] she said, oh my dear, you didn't violate a law, you just owe it death. [01:26:33.360 --> 01:26:40.360] And I was the guy with my hand over my eye and I'm getting a headache. [01:26:40.360 --> 01:26:56.360] Okay, then all they had to do is to state a cause of action for a death collection is to claim that you agreed to pay a debt and you didn't pay that debt. [01:26:56.360 --> 01:27:01.360] And that's it. [01:27:01.360 --> 01:27:10.360] Well, I mean, it completely got me by surprise because I had no idea what they were doing. [01:27:10.360 --> 01:27:21.360] I bought jurisdiction over here back in 2010 and I was just, I looked at everything and it didn't seem to really speak to death. [01:27:21.360 --> 01:27:28.360] And I always thought you had to have a cause of action and had to be stated in the law and there would be elements to it, but that's not the case. [01:27:28.360 --> 01:27:33.360] And I found something else. I had it someplace in one of my files. [01:27:33.360 --> 01:27:48.360] I came across it in my savings somewhere and it sounded even crazier where it said that if a complaint is cognizable to a judge, it's a cause of action. [01:27:48.360 --> 01:27:54.360] Yeah, but that's how causes of actions came about. [01:27:54.360 --> 01:28:18.360] Judges looked at the plaintiffs and at the petitions and in equity, it's reasonable that a person be able to collect, be able to achieve some type of remedy for this kind of harm because the law can't address everything. [01:28:18.360 --> 01:28:31.360] So it leads it to the courts to fill in the blanks and they filled in the blanks for civil actions by developing causes of action and they still create new ones. [01:28:31.360 --> 01:28:41.360] And if you don't have a cause of action for your specific issue, you can ask the court to declare one. [01:28:41.360 --> 01:28:53.360] Ah, okay. See, I didn't understand that at the time. I thought you had to have a law and the law would have to have elements and the elements would have to be met in order to make it a cause of action. [01:28:53.360 --> 01:29:16.360] If it is a criminal suit, you have to have a law. But if it's a civil suit, then you have, when I say cause of action, you actually have to have a cognizable claim where a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would look at your facts and look at the law [01:29:16.360 --> 01:29:27.360] and agree where reasonable people would agree that you would have a right to remedy in this case. [01:29:27.360 --> 01:29:40.360] And that will, you know, once the case, these issues are dealt with a time or two, the judges will work out a way to make this claim so it's consistent. [01:29:40.360 --> 01:29:47.360] And they'll call that a cause of action. Hang on. Go into break. Randy, can you help me? [01:29:47.360 --> 01:29:52.360] No, hang on. We'll pick you up on the other side. [01:29:52.360 --> 01:30:02.360] Okay. [01:30:02.360 --> 01:30:10.360] A picnic is a wonderful way to reduce stress and lower your blood pressure. But one item in your picnic basket may be doing the job better than medication. [01:30:10.360 --> 01:30:36.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in just a moment to tell you what it is. [01:30:36.360 --> 01:30:43.360] Thanks for watching. [01:31:06.360 --> 01:31:30.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.360 --> 01:31:37.360] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:37.360 --> 01:31:48.360] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:48.360 --> 01:31:55.360] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.360 --> 01:32:00.360] We deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:26.360 --> 01:32:31.360] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.360 --> 01:32:45.360] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. Mention the crypto show and get $100 off and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.360 --> 01:32:56.360] If those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.360 --> 01:33:01.360] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.360 --> 01:33:16.360] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadionetwork.com. [01:33:31.360 --> 01:34:00.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin rules our radio and we're talking to Ken in New York. [01:34:00.360 --> 01:34:03.360] Okay, where were we Ken? [01:34:03.360 --> 01:34:26.360] Okay, I sent just to wrap up the other stuff about the mortgage business. I sent you an e-mail and it starts with TV tech, which is what I used to do in a previous incarnation. [01:34:26.360 --> 01:34:31.360] I think you cut out again. I hope not. Hello? [01:34:31.360 --> 01:34:38.360] I'm not sure what's going on here because I can hear myself in my headset. [01:34:38.360 --> 01:34:39.360] You can hear me. [01:34:39.360 --> 01:34:40.360] Okay. [01:34:40.360 --> 01:34:50.360] So that means my mic is picking my voice up. So there must be something in the connection. I just had my internet worked on today. I may have to have them come back. [01:34:50.360 --> 01:34:51.360] Probably. [01:34:51.360 --> 01:34:54.360] So are you hearing me now? [01:34:54.360 --> 01:35:06.360] Yes, you're fine. So I sent you an e-mail and it starts with TV tech and I'll leave it at that. It has to do with you asking me to send you an e-mail. [01:35:06.360 --> 01:35:11.360] Okay, I'll remember that. I'll have a look at it in the morning. [01:35:11.360 --> 01:35:26.360] One at your convenience. I still have 15 years to pay on the loan. The last thing I'd like to offer is, I don't know if you're familiar with Massachusetts. There's a lawyer up there that I had gotten some ideas from. [01:35:26.360 --> 01:35:45.360] And what's interesting about him is he seems to be from the family with his own. And he wrote a book called, a booklet called How to Sue a Judge. He's written complaints about how to make a civil complaint against a state judge and a federal judge. [01:35:45.360 --> 01:35:59.360] And he seems to be really, same as David Grossack, G-R-O-S-S-A-C-K. And I find it amazing that a bar lawyer would do stuff like that. [01:35:59.360 --> 01:36:11.360] But apparently he has no fear of, he said that a judge, just because a judge says that he's immune doesn't mean that he is. And he gives a case for the supporter. [01:36:11.360 --> 01:36:22.360] Yes. And this is a guy after all in heart. So I certainly want to look this guy up. Because I found the same thing. You can sue a judge for anything you want to. [01:36:22.360 --> 01:36:35.360] And they'll get it. Most of them they will throw out, even if you have standing. But in the meantime, it really gives the judge a lot of grief. [01:36:35.360 --> 01:36:49.360] So if the judge wants to have himself an attitude, we'll see if we can adjust it for him by suing him. And the one time you can sue a judge is when he acts outside of scope. [01:36:49.360 --> 01:36:56.360] And when you file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction, that's why I like them so much. [01:36:56.360 --> 01:37:14.360] Subject matter jurisdiction is presumed when a case is filed, unless it's obvious on the face of the filing that the either the court is incompetent to hear the case because it doesn't fall within the scope of the judge's [01:37:14.360 --> 01:37:25.360] authority or the petitioner lacks standing or capacity to invoke subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [01:37:25.360 --> 01:37:35.360] If those aren't obvious that there's a problem there, then the court presumes jurisdiction. [01:37:35.360 --> 01:37:47.360] Well, it sounds like somebody after your own heart and he quotes something you might be familiar with. I think he says 48 something like it's Latin to condom section 86 or something like that. [01:37:47.360 --> 01:37:51.360] 42 US code 1983. [01:37:51.360 --> 01:38:00.360] No, 48, I think, and he says section 86. He says the condom or something like that. And there's like a Latin. [01:38:00.360 --> 01:38:07.360] And he was talking about the where they claim to have some kind of immunity. [01:38:07.360 --> 01:38:26.360] And he says that they are so worried that they have thought that the judges at I don't know what context he's speaking of, but he says they have gone to malpractice carriers and asked them to specifically write policies to protect them, which they said, [01:38:26.360 --> 01:38:38.360] there's no skin off their nose because we're paying for it anyway. Interesting. This is what I'd like to find out. [01:38:38.360 --> 01:38:43.360] But we want to understand where the judge lives. [01:38:43.360 --> 01:38:50.360] What's he concerned about? What doesn't bother him? What does he not worry about and what concerns him? [01:38:50.360 --> 01:39:01.360] And all that we do here, we're, when we say everything's political, this is the kind of politics we're always looking for. [01:39:01.360 --> 01:39:13.360] And if the judges are trying to cut out again. [01:39:13.360 --> 01:39:21.360] It has to be something in between because when I speak, my mixer feeds it back into my headset. [01:39:21.360 --> 01:39:32.360] And if I was cutting out on my mic, it would cut out in my ear in the headset and it's not. So it's probably not anything I can do about it. [01:39:32.360 --> 01:39:43.360] And here's two other little things that he engages in. One of his pet prides, he's primarily a debt collection attorney, but he calls himself a constitutional attorney. [01:39:43.360 --> 01:39:58.360] And he says that one of his, I wouldn't say it's a hobby. He's not part of it, but he goes after family court judges that died 99% of the time with women and go against fathers. [01:39:58.360 --> 01:40:07.360] I think just about everywhere I've been, family courts have been the most corrupt. [01:40:07.360 --> 01:40:19.360] And, you know, when I went to, I went to Australia and did some seminars down there. When I got to Australia, they picked me up. [01:40:19.360 --> 01:40:25.360] Cut out again. [01:40:25.360 --> 01:40:32.360] I was in a big banner in the, how corrupt the family courts were. [01:40:32.360 --> 01:40:38.360] So it's the same everywhere. [01:40:38.360 --> 01:40:41.360] I missed that. [01:40:41.360 --> 01:40:46.360] Okay, now you're cutting out. So this must be an internet problem. [01:40:46.360 --> 01:41:00.360] Okay. So, well, here's the last part. The last part is he says that he's the son of his mother and father were both psychiatrist. [01:41:00.360 --> 01:41:03.360] What? [01:41:03.360 --> 01:41:05.360] Psychiatrist. [01:41:05.360 --> 01:41:07.360] Oh. [01:41:07.360 --> 01:41:17.360] He's supposed to be rated as one of the 10 best lawyers in Massachusetts. [01:41:17.360 --> 01:41:22.360] I mean, I could tell you more about it, but maybe you might want to take a look. [01:41:22.360 --> 01:41:29.360] I found that by accident as a result of working for answers to my own problems early on. [01:41:29.360 --> 01:41:35.360] So I definitely want to try to get a hold of this guy. This guy, I'd like to get on the show. [01:41:35.360 --> 01:41:45.360] Scott Richardson brought me a name of another lawyer who lives in New York, but practices in Texas and goes after judges. [01:41:45.360 --> 01:41:50.360] I sent the guy an email and he responded. He's interested in going on the show. [01:41:50.360 --> 01:41:53.360] So I'll try to bring him on. [01:41:53.360 --> 01:42:00.360] And mainly I want to find out from them what the judges are most concerned about. [01:42:00.360 --> 01:42:04.360] There's a lot of things we try to do and they don't even care. It doesn't make any difference. [01:42:04.360 --> 01:42:07.360] I don't know what they... [01:42:07.360 --> 01:42:14.360] It's the ASSF in that pocket. [01:42:14.360 --> 01:42:23.360] That's why I've put together this request for financial disclosure from the judge. [01:42:23.360 --> 01:42:27.360] Because now we get into his personal business. [01:42:27.360 --> 01:42:42.360] The judge is definitely not going to like that because this request asks for complete financial disclosure of the judge and everyone related within three degrees of co-sanguinity. [01:42:42.360 --> 01:42:52.360] That means his brothers and sisters and aunts and uncles and nephews and first cousins. [01:42:52.360 --> 01:42:56.360] We're going to want financial statements from all of them. [01:42:56.360 --> 01:43:00.360] And the judge is going to have to go out and get his family to try to do this. [01:43:00.360 --> 01:43:02.360] They are not going to be happy. [01:43:02.360 --> 01:43:11.360] And then when he doesn't respond to the discovery, then we paint them with a nice, broad, negative brush. [01:43:11.360 --> 01:43:14.360] So we wind up poisoning their well. [01:43:14.360 --> 01:43:21.360] Even if the judge is completely honest, it still poisons his well. [01:43:21.360 --> 01:43:24.360] That's why I like it so much. [01:43:24.360 --> 01:43:29.360] Have you ever heard of judges where they have... [01:43:29.360 --> 01:43:31.360] They have all of these weird arrangements. [01:43:31.360 --> 01:43:36.360] So all of a sudden they'll get a mortgage on a property and then all of a sudden somebody will pay it off for them. [01:43:36.360 --> 01:43:38.360] Oh, yeah. [01:43:38.360 --> 01:43:44.360] Janet Faylin brought that on the air that she had been researching that. [01:43:44.360 --> 01:43:55.360] You're right back. [01:44:15.360 --> 01:44:20.360] People have been confused about this plan for over 80 years. [01:44:20.360 --> 01:44:22.360] And many still don't know what hemp is. [01:44:22.360 --> 01:44:25.360] So now you know hemp is not marijuana. [01:44:25.360 --> 01:44:27.360] And marijuana is not hemp. [01:44:27.360 --> 01:44:29.360] They are different varieties of the same species. 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[01:45:16.360 --> 01:45:21.360] From Central Texas Gunworks, first place, set for grants of Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:45:21.360 --> 01:45:25.360] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. [01:45:25.360 --> 01:45:30.360] From Defense Distributed, third place, the AR-308 80% lower. [01:45:30.360 --> 01:45:33.360] Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. [01:45:33.360 --> 01:45:37.360] From Fatsal, Delhi, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fatsal, Delhi. [01:45:37.360 --> 01:45:40.360] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:40.360 --> 01:45:42.360] That's logosradio network.com. [01:45:42.360 --> 01:45:47.360] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:45:47.360 --> 01:45:51.360] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:45:51.360 --> 01:45:55.360] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:55.360 --> 01:46:24.360] Go to logosradio network.com for details and donate today. [01:46:25.360 --> 01:46:38.360] Go to logosradio.com for details and donate today. [01:46:38.360 --> 01:46:40.360] Okay, we are back. [01:46:40.360 --> 01:46:44.360] Randy Kelton rules on radio and I apologize for my breaking up, [01:46:44.360 --> 01:46:48.360] but it appears to be an internet issue that I can't do anything about. [01:46:48.360 --> 01:46:50.360] We will get it worked on. [01:46:50.360 --> 01:47:00.360] Okay, Ken, I definitely want to talk to this lawyer because he's a guy after my own heart. [01:47:00.360 --> 01:47:02.360] I've got a couple of them. [01:47:02.360 --> 01:47:11.360] When we went out, we were talking about this financial disclosure for judges. [01:47:11.360 --> 01:47:12.360] Didn't I send you? [01:47:12.360 --> 01:47:14.360] Oh, you're not the one in New York. [01:47:14.360 --> 01:47:21.360] I sent a guy in New York that filed one and said the judge looked at it and jumped up and ran out of the courtroom. [01:47:21.360 --> 01:47:23.360] No, it wasn't me. [01:47:23.360 --> 01:47:27.360] That was great to hear. [01:47:27.360 --> 01:47:33.360] The fact that it affects them, that's the good part. [01:47:33.360 --> 01:47:39.360] Janet Phelan got on and she was talking about this money laundering thing. [01:47:39.360 --> 01:47:46.360] It kind of goes along with that. [01:47:46.360 --> 01:47:56.360] Yeah, that's exactly what she was saying is they take a mortgage out on their property and they'll take $250,000, $500,000 in equity out of their property, [01:47:56.360 --> 01:48:02.360] and then six months later it gets paid back. [01:48:02.360 --> 01:48:11.360] Two last things and then I'll promise I go, he has two pages written on a comparison between, I think you call it color of law. [01:48:11.360 --> 01:48:15.360] 42 USD was in 1983 or something. [01:48:15.360 --> 01:48:16.360] Yes. [01:48:16.360 --> 01:48:19.360] And business. [01:48:19.360 --> 01:48:24.360] He calls them theories and what's different and how they can be useful. [01:48:24.360 --> 01:48:25.360] Wait a minute. [01:48:25.360 --> 01:48:28.360] You said bigamy or baritry? [01:48:28.360 --> 01:48:36.360] I said the color of law type of suit and Bivens, B-I-V-E-M-S. [01:48:36.360 --> 01:48:38.360] Oh, a Bivens suit. [01:48:38.360 --> 01:48:39.360] Okay, Bivens. [01:48:39.360 --> 01:48:40.360] Yes. [01:48:40.360 --> 01:48:43.360] Okay, got it, got it. [01:48:43.360 --> 01:48:44.360] You got it. [01:48:44.360 --> 01:48:57.360] Bivens, that was the five IRS agents that were sued for acting outside of scope and they claimed they had immunity and this allowed you to sue them personally. [01:48:57.360 --> 01:49:04.360] Actually, Bivens led to the reinvigoration of 1983. [01:49:04.360 --> 01:49:11.360] 42 U.S. Code 1983 is part of the Ku Klux Klan Act passed in 1871. [01:49:11.360 --> 01:49:21.360] And Leigh Dorman. [01:49:21.360 --> 01:49:23.360] Cut out again. [01:49:23.360 --> 01:49:30.360] The second part was 42 U.S. Code 1983. [01:49:30.360 --> 01:49:39.360] The first part, 18 U.S. Code 242 and I like that one better because that's the criminal side. [01:49:39.360 --> 01:49:40.360] Okay, can you hear me, Ken? [01:49:40.360 --> 01:49:41.360] I'm about back in. [01:49:41.360 --> 01:49:42.360] Yes. [01:49:42.360 --> 01:49:43.360] Yes. [01:49:43.360 --> 01:49:44.360] Okay, fine. [01:49:44.360 --> 01:49:46.360] Yeah, this is an internet thing. [01:49:46.360 --> 01:49:49.360] I quit beating up my mic because it's not it. [01:49:49.360 --> 01:49:58.360] Well, if you're saying it's part of the Ku Klux Klan and you must be talking about the Democratic Party. [01:49:58.360 --> 01:50:05.360] Well, at the time, there was, I think there were the wigs still around. [01:50:05.360 --> 01:50:12.360] There was another party around in those days, but this was passed in 1871 after the reconstruction. [01:50:12.360 --> 01:50:32.360] The union left the mayors and the constables in place so that they have some way of maintaining control and gave them new directives and those. [01:50:32.360 --> 01:50:38.360] Cut again. [01:50:38.360 --> 01:51:04.360] Okay. [01:51:04.360 --> 01:51:15.560] essentially mimics 18 U.S. Code 242 in Texas, it's 39.03 penal code that makes it a crime [01:51:15.560 --> 01:51:21.200] for a public official to fail to perform a duty he's required to perform or to exert [01:51:21.200 --> 01:51:26.800] or purport to exert an authority he doesn't have and denies citizen and right. [01:51:26.800 --> 01:51:30.280] Everyone should have that memorized. [01:51:30.280 --> 01:51:33.320] That's a catch-all. [01:51:33.320 --> 01:51:39.560] So when I go in with my little tar baby, I just ask them to do something they're required [01:51:39.560 --> 01:51:44.800] to do when they refuse to do it, and they touch it, and I get to go to the next one [01:51:44.800 --> 01:51:50.520] and I use that code more than any other. [01:51:50.520 --> 01:51:56.800] I know when people listen to me spitting out all these codes, they think I've memorized [01:51:56.800 --> 01:51:57.800] a penal code. [01:51:57.800 --> 01:52:00.760] Well, that's not the case. [01:52:00.760 --> 01:52:06.400] There are just a relatively small group of these. [01:52:06.400 --> 01:52:09.560] I like the chicken dance. [01:52:09.560 --> 01:52:14.080] I hope you cut out again. [01:52:14.080 --> 01:52:17.080] I don't know what to do about that. [01:52:17.080 --> 01:52:18.560] This is going to be a problem. [01:52:18.560 --> 01:52:19.560] I don't know. [01:52:19.560 --> 01:52:22.760] I said chicken dance and they cut out. [01:52:22.760 --> 01:52:24.760] I like the chicken dance routine. [01:52:24.760 --> 01:52:28.080] Well, it's probably the feds. [01:52:28.080 --> 01:52:30.080] It's a conspiracy. [01:52:30.080 --> 01:52:38.240] They're trying to keep us from getting the information out, but yeah, I do a show on [01:52:38.240 --> 01:52:45.400] Monday night with Pastor Massad, and one of his mantras is that his is the most pro-government [01:52:45.400 --> 01:52:47.400] show on radio. [01:52:47.400 --> 01:52:58.000] Well, mine might not be the most pro-government show, but it's close because we are pro-government. [01:52:58.000 --> 01:53:04.320] We don't advocate the tearing down of the government or even the elimination of the [01:53:04.320 --> 01:53:06.960] laws as we use them. [01:53:06.960 --> 01:53:10.040] I'll take the laws the way they're using them. [01:53:10.040 --> 01:53:17.480] I just want them, the public officials, to follow the same law that they enforce against [01:53:17.480 --> 01:53:26.200] us and the more creative ways we can find to do it, the better. [01:53:26.200 --> 01:53:43.480] Moving after judges, you know, every time the judge adjudicates a case, somebody's not going [01:53:43.480 --> 01:53:46.920] to be happy with it. [01:53:46.920 --> 01:53:53.000] Problem with family law, everybody complains so much about family law being so corrupt, [01:53:53.000 --> 01:54:01.000] but if you're a family law judge and you're doing your job right, the likelihood is nobody's [01:54:01.000 --> 01:54:04.440] going to be happy when you get done. [01:54:04.440 --> 01:54:12.760] So these judges are rendering rulings that always leave someone unhappy, and the idea [01:54:12.760 --> 01:54:20.440] that they would be afraid or concerned about being sued is reasonable. [01:54:20.440 --> 01:54:23.960] And for my part, I want to heighten that concern. [01:54:23.960 --> 01:54:31.280] You know, my answer is, my answer to that is nobody put a gun that I have. [01:54:31.280 --> 01:54:36.400] They ran for a election and they probably get a retirement from a couple years. [01:54:36.400 --> 01:54:41.920] I have no sympathy for them. [01:54:41.920 --> 01:54:45.120] Yeah, exactly. [01:54:45.120 --> 01:54:57.480] I was a combat veteran, and I wasn't complaining that people were shooting at me. [01:54:57.480 --> 01:55:06.800] I chose this path, so I didn't have anything to whine about, and please come whining and [01:55:06.800 --> 01:55:12.400] crying that they have a dangerous job, well, go pick out, go out and pick up dead cats [01:55:12.400 --> 01:55:17.080] and skunks off the highway and then you won't have anything to complain about. [01:55:17.080 --> 01:55:20.080] But you didn't get paid so well. [01:55:20.080 --> 01:55:21.080] Exactly. [01:55:21.080 --> 01:55:27.520] Well, even the ones here, they don't, in Texas, they don't get paid well at all, but [01:55:27.520 --> 01:55:34.080] they really like carrying that pistol, and that's why I really like charging them a first [01:55:34.080 --> 01:55:37.080] degree felony aggravated assault. [01:55:37.080 --> 01:55:46.800] You see, our legislature said that if you're a public official and you exert or purport [01:55:46.800 --> 01:55:53.600] to exert an authority you don't have while prominently displaying that deadly weapon, [01:55:53.600 --> 01:55:56.920] that's a first degree felony. [01:55:56.920 --> 01:56:01.280] So they said to these officers, you put these guns on. [01:56:01.280 --> 01:56:19.120] You put on a, I have had more weapons pulled on me by policemen than I had pulled on me [01:56:19.120 --> 01:56:22.440] in combat. [01:56:22.440 --> 01:56:26.400] These policemen go for that gun at the drop of a hat. [01:56:26.400 --> 01:56:33.120] Well, I want to give them reason to leave that gun alone. [01:56:33.120 --> 01:56:40.960] I had a friend who was a policeman for 20 years and said he never had to pull this pistol. [01:56:40.960 --> 01:56:46.000] He had situations where he could have pulled this pistol, but he never had to. [01:56:46.000 --> 01:56:48.160] He found other ways of handling things. [01:56:48.160 --> 01:56:53.080] Now they're trained to go for the pistol in the first instance. [01:56:53.080 --> 01:57:02.120] I've just wrote up a lawsuit for a guy in Tyler, his son running around in a long, 14-year-old [01:57:02.120 --> 01:57:05.240] son running around with a Spider-Man hoodie on. [01:57:05.240 --> 01:57:09.160] They decided they didn't like it, told him to get out, and he's waiting for his dad to [01:57:09.160 --> 01:57:10.160] check out. [01:57:10.160 --> 01:57:15.760] So he didn't leave quick enough so they call the police. [01:57:15.760 --> 01:57:20.840] Brandishing, right? [01:57:20.840 --> 01:57:22.840] Brandishing a weapon. [01:57:22.840 --> 01:57:28.040] No, these are two kids sitting in the car with their parents, and I'm a 12-year-old [01:57:28.040 --> 01:57:31.120] girl, 14-year-old boy. [01:57:31.120 --> 01:57:33.480] Policeman opens the door, tells them to get out. [01:57:33.480 --> 01:57:39.640] They said, no, this boy told the girl not to talk to them. [01:57:39.640 --> 01:57:46.400] The policeman pulled his taser, pointed it in a 12-year-old girl's face, and threatened [01:57:46.400 --> 01:57:51.040] to shoot her in the face with it. [01:57:51.040 --> 01:57:52.040] What were they thinking? [01:57:52.040 --> 01:57:57.720] They groaned, too, groaned men with two children, had the policeman just sit on the edge of [01:57:57.720 --> 01:58:03.440] the seat and talk to them in a pleasant and conversational voice. [01:58:03.440 --> 01:58:11.840] These kids would have done anything he wanted, but pointed a taser in a 12-year-old girl's [01:58:11.840 --> 01:58:12.840] face. [01:58:12.840 --> 01:58:13.840] This is insane. [01:58:13.840 --> 01:58:14.840] They need to be chastised. [01:58:14.840 --> 01:58:23.080] Oh, we are going to wind their clocks. [01:58:23.080 --> 01:58:26.640] Okay, we are out of time. [01:58:26.640 --> 01:58:28.440] Thank you, Ken. [01:58:28.440 --> 01:58:31.040] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [01:58:31.040 --> 01:58:32.480] We'll be back next week. [01:58:32.480 --> 01:58:38.920] Thank you all for listening, and make sure you check out Eddie's traffic seminar or [01:58:38.920 --> 01:58:44.640] traffic show on Mondays starting at 8 p.m. central. [01:58:44.640 --> 01:58:47.360] We'll be back next Thursday at 8 p.m. [01:58:47.360 --> 01:58:49.000] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:49.000 --> 01:58:50.000] Good night. [01:58:50.000 --> 01:59:19.960] We'll be back next Thursday at 8 p.m. central. [01:59:20.000 --> 01:59:49.080] We'll be back next Thursday at 8 p.m. central. [01:59:51.000 --> 01:59:52.960] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.960 --> 02:00:21.040] We found it at LogosRadioNetwork.com.