[00:00.000 --> 00:07.840] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing the Delhi [00:07.840 --> 00:15.440] bulletins for the commodity 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 --> 00:29.720] Markets for Wednesday, 13 September 2017, closed with gold at $1,323.24 an ounce, silver [00:29.720 --> 00:38.480] $17.78 an ounce, Texas Crude $48.23 a barrel, Bitcoin is about $3,876, and Dashcoin sits [00:38.480 --> 00:46.440] about $300 U.S. currency. [00:46.440 --> 00:51.880] Today in History, the year 1541, after three years in exile, John Calvin returns to Geneva [00:51.880 --> 00:56.120] to reform the church under a body of doctrine known as Calvinism. [00:56.120 --> 01:04.920] In recent news, Hillary Clinton's new already-on-discount book, What Happened, officially hit store [01:04.920 --> 01:05.920] shelves Tuesday. [01:05.920 --> 01:09.920] Of the many things she blamed for her loss in the 2016 presidential race, she mentioned [01:09.920 --> 01:13.760] Russia in the election within the first few pages, quote, the press treated her warnings [01:13.760 --> 01:18.480] about Russia like it was spin we'd cooked up in order to distract from embarrassing revelations. [01:18.480 --> 01:21.980] She blamed President Trump, saying that listening to Trump, it almost felt like there was no [01:21.980 --> 01:26.560] such thing as truth anymore, that his strategy consisted of an appeal to the ugliest impulses [01:26.560 --> 01:28.080] of our national character. [01:28.080 --> 01:29.080] She blamed Wall Street. [01:29.080 --> 01:32.920] I didn't think many Americans would believe that I'd sell a lifetime of principle in advocacy [01:32.920 --> 01:33.920] for any price. [01:33.920 --> 01:36.840] I should have stayed away from anything having to do with Wall Street. [01:36.840 --> 01:37.840] I didn't. [01:37.840 --> 01:38.840] That's all me. [01:38.840 --> 01:40.080] Yeah, right, Hillary. [01:40.080 --> 01:44.320] Closed-door meetings with Wall Street corporate donors could have had no foreseeable problems. [01:44.320 --> 01:47.560] She blamed a scandal over State Department emails on her private server. [01:47.560 --> 01:51.040] It was a dumb mistake, she said, but even a dumber scandal. [01:51.040 --> 01:52.040] It was like quicksand. [01:52.040 --> 01:54.200] The more you struggle, the deeper you sink. [01:54.200 --> 01:57.960] She blamed former FBI Director James Comey, saying that, quote, Comey made the choice [01:57.960 --> 02:02.560] to extricate me in public in July and then dramatically reopened the investigation on [02:02.560 --> 02:06.640] October 28th, all while refusing to say a word about Trump and Russia. [02:06.640 --> 02:09.520] Not for those decisions, everything would have been different. [02:09.520 --> 02:14.120] And she even blamed patriarchy, stating that sexism and misogyny played a role in the 2016 [02:14.120 --> 02:16.160] presidential election. [02:16.160 --> 02:23.960] But 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 --> 02:30.360] much littered with dead fish and other sea creatures. [02:30.360 --> 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 --> 02:42.720] Experts responded with guesses that it was some sort of eel, possibly a fang-tooth snake [02:42.720 --> 02:43.720] eel. [02:43.720 --> 02:48.040] It was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. [02:48.040 --> 02:52.160] It killed at least 70 people and dumped at least 51 inches of rain. [02:52.160 --> 03:01.160] It used to rip roadie with your lowdown for September 13, 2017. [03:01.160 --> 03:22.160] It was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. [03:22.160 --> 03:31.120] It was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. [03:31.120 --> 03:36.880] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio on this Thursday, [03:36.880 --> 03:42.120] the 12th day of October, 2017. [03:42.120 --> 03:46.680] And we're starting out with a couple of callers on the board already, and since this is our [03:46.680 --> 03:51.800] two-hour show, then since I'm starting out with callers, I'll go to them first to make [03:51.800 --> 03:56.560] sure when the calls start coming in, we get to everybody. [03:56.560 --> 04:00.960] Chris in North Carolina, what do you have for us today? [04:00.960 --> 04:08.960] I have a situation that I ran to in McDowell County, North Carolina. [04:08.960 --> 04:15.920] I'm from Detroit originally, came here about six years ago, got married, had a child, he'll [04:15.920 --> 04:20.280] be two this on the 23rd of this month. [04:20.280 --> 04:25.400] The wife, she became a methamphetamine addict. [04:25.400 --> 04:32.040] I called McDowell County Sheriff's Department, DSS, did everything I could to try to solve [04:32.040 --> 04:33.320] this situation. [04:33.320 --> 04:37.800] They offered me no help whatsoever, none, called the task force to come to my house [04:37.800 --> 04:42.800] and get methamphetamine out of the house, no help, called DSS. [04:42.800 --> 04:48.040] She failed three drug tests, they did nothing about it. [04:48.040 --> 04:52.920] Back December 16th of last year, me and her were driving in the car. [04:52.920 --> 04:55.080] I was fed up, I didn't have any help. [04:55.080 --> 04:59.200] I made a wrong choice, I didn't stop for the police. [04:59.200 --> 05:04.920] They charged me outrageously, charged me with second degree kidnapping, felony fleeing [05:04.920 --> 05:09.640] to a loo, felony possession of methamphetamine, assault on a female and violation of a DVO. [05:09.640 --> 05:12.160] I've never done methamphetamine ever. [05:12.160 --> 05:15.760] Okay, you have terrible background noise. [05:15.760 --> 05:22.160] I'm sorry, I've never done methamphetamine ever. [05:22.160 --> 05:31.920] I was incarcerated and they, I've seen my lawyer one time in the last year and that [05:31.920 --> 05:34.240] was here on October 3rd. [05:34.240 --> 05:39.400] They came at me with a plea offer saying, plead guilty to a felonious rescuant, felony [05:39.400 --> 05:44.760] fleeing to a loo and assault on a female or we can take it to trial and you'll sit in [05:44.760 --> 05:49.560] the county jail till June of 2018 and we can get you a misdemeanor failure to yield for [05:49.560 --> 05:50.560] a blue light. [05:50.560 --> 05:55.320] I said, I can't do that, my son, my son's in jeopardy. [05:55.320 --> 05:57.320] So I took a plea. [05:57.320 --> 06:05.080] I was released October 11th at 12, I was out for about 15 hours, SWAT team showed up at [06:05.080 --> 06:07.080] my house. [06:07.080 --> 06:12.360] They put me in handcuffs, never marriantized me, never told me what I was charged with, [06:12.360 --> 06:17.920] brought me down to the police station, said that they had released me too early and I [06:17.920 --> 06:20.680] said, what do you mean, I had a release date. [06:20.680 --> 06:23.840] They said, well, we released you too early. [06:23.840 --> 06:25.840] Paperwork was messed up by the court's office. [06:25.840 --> 06:31.760] They held me for the last 24 hours and they catered to me. [06:31.760 --> 06:34.800] They were scared about the situation. [06:34.800 --> 06:40.040] They said I had 11 days jail credit over the course of 332 days. [06:40.040 --> 06:45.360] They fixed the paperwork, they offered me $100 and they wanted me to sign some paperwork. [06:45.360 --> 06:49.520] I said, I'm not signing anything, I'm not taking your money. [06:49.520 --> 06:55.320] Now the sheriff's, the captain, the lieutenant, they said, look, we want to make it very clear [06:55.320 --> 06:56.320] to you. [06:56.320 --> 06:58.960] We know you're going to file a lawsuit. [06:58.960 --> 07:02.400] Make it to the clerk's department, not the sheriff's office. [07:02.400 --> 07:06.160] They mentioned that five times to me when I walked out the door today. [07:06.160 --> 07:12.120] They're scared of what happened and my rights had been violated all the way around and I've [07:12.120 --> 07:16.440] never seen anything like it. [07:16.440 --> 07:19.200] Okay. [07:19.200 --> 07:21.200] Join a very large club. [07:21.200 --> 07:22.200] Yes. [07:22.200 --> 07:27.920] I'm not being crude or facetious. [07:27.920 --> 07:30.400] What do you want to do? [07:30.400 --> 07:37.040] Okay, hold on, before I ask that, let me back up a little bit. [07:37.040 --> 07:38.560] Look at your whole situation. [07:38.560 --> 07:40.480] This is a piece of leverage you have. [07:40.480 --> 07:41.480] Yes. [07:41.480 --> 07:47.720] Okay, apparently they screwed up and they subjected you to false imprisonment because [07:47.720 --> 07:51.120] of their screw up. [07:51.120 --> 07:58.200] You might want to look at revisiting your plea agreement or look at the possibilities. [07:58.200 --> 08:01.440] The sheriff's department doesn't want you coming after them. [08:01.440 --> 08:06.440] It seems pretty clear on that score. [08:06.440 --> 08:14.080] How can you, what would you like as an ultimate outcome? [08:14.080 --> 08:19.680] I really, I do want to file a lawsuit with them, but I also want to... [08:19.680 --> 08:22.120] Okay, hold on. [08:22.120 --> 08:25.480] Why do you want to file a lawsuit? [08:25.480 --> 08:27.520] Because my rights were violated all the way around. [08:27.520 --> 08:30.320] A big deal. [08:30.320 --> 08:35.080] I'm not being facetious, but at the end of the day, a big deal. [08:35.080 --> 08:40.800] At the end of the day, how would you like things in your life from a legal perspective [08:40.800 --> 08:43.840] to change? [08:43.840 --> 08:50.280] And how can you use this leverage to get that outcome? [08:50.280 --> 08:57.600] I want everyone to see what this justice system here in McDowell County is really like. [08:57.600 --> 08:58.600] Forget that. [08:58.600 --> 08:59.600] Forget that. [08:59.600 --> 09:00.600] Nobody's going. [09:00.600 --> 09:03.960] You're not going to change the world. [09:03.960 --> 09:06.160] What can you do to make your life better? [09:06.160 --> 09:12.880] The best way you can help fix the system is fix your circumstance. [09:12.880 --> 09:15.560] Yes, sir. [09:15.560 --> 09:20.480] You're not the only guy who's felt mistreated and betrayed and wanted to go back and get [09:20.480 --> 09:23.520] these guys to pay. [09:23.520 --> 09:25.200] Never works. [09:25.200 --> 09:31.120] I do that, and I've got other people doing that, but we don't have legal issues they [09:31.120 --> 09:32.320] can get at us with. [09:32.320 --> 09:41.720] But I'm about to go after a judge in Tennessee, but I'm going to go after him from Texas. [09:41.720 --> 09:44.400] He don't have any shot at me. [09:44.400 --> 09:45.920] My liberty's not at risk. [09:45.920 --> 09:47.640] My children are not at risk. [09:47.640 --> 09:50.240] I can afford to do this. [09:50.240 --> 09:53.640] I can afford to be self-righteous. [09:53.640 --> 09:57.640] Can you? [09:57.640 --> 10:04.480] I don't say I can afford it, but at the same time, my character wants it to be shown and [10:04.480 --> 10:05.480] it's who I am. [10:05.480 --> 10:06.480] Okay. [10:06.480 --> 10:07.480] I understand. [10:07.480 --> 10:08.480] Okay. [10:08.480 --> 10:09.840] Point I'm trying to make. [10:09.840 --> 10:11.840] You have a child. [10:11.840 --> 10:14.440] Yes, sir. [10:14.440 --> 10:19.400] How will what you're about to do affect this child? [10:19.400 --> 10:23.800] It probably will affect him greatly. [10:23.800 --> 10:30.800] When I first started after this big time, my second child got married and moved out of [10:30.800 --> 10:39.600] the house, and I told my wife, I have fulfilled my contract with life. [10:39.600 --> 10:41.640] Now I can do what I want to. [10:41.640 --> 10:45.040] She asked me why I was going after these guys. [10:45.040 --> 10:48.600] I said, now I can do what I want to. [10:48.600 --> 10:52.760] I don't have anybody depending on me. [10:52.760 --> 10:59.640] Before I had people depending on me, I couldn't do what I wanted to because I felt it was [10:59.640 --> 11:04.120] right or because I felt I was justified. [11:04.120 --> 11:08.840] I had to back up and look at the people around me and ask myself, how is this going to affect [11:08.840 --> 11:10.280] the people around me? [11:10.280 --> 11:16.360] Now, frankly, I do this show in order to find people to help me do what you're talking [11:16.360 --> 11:17.360] about doing. [11:17.360 --> 11:28.080] I would like nothing better than to sick you on these guys big time, but not at your expense. [11:28.080 --> 11:31.800] I just simply won't have it. [11:31.800 --> 11:37.480] If I look at what you're doing and I see that it will harm your child, I'm going to have [11:37.480 --> 11:39.240] nothing to do with it. [11:39.240 --> 11:50.280] The first thing I'm going to want to know, at the end of the day, what would be a positive [11:50.280 --> 11:53.440] outcome for you? [11:53.440 --> 11:58.560] Once we know what that is, now we know how to go about this thing. [11:58.560 --> 12:04.960] There's nothing worse for these guys than to have somebody coming after them strategically. [12:04.960 --> 12:11.480] They get a lot of guys coming after them, PO'd, they get pushed around and they come [12:11.480 --> 12:16.440] back after them and they know how to handle those guys, but they don't know how to handle [12:16.440 --> 12:24.360] the strategist because you don't always do what they expect to keep them off balance. [12:24.360 --> 12:32.400] They will figure out that you have an ultimate outcome and they don't know what it is. [12:32.400 --> 12:37.800] That makes you really hard to deal with. [12:37.800 --> 12:47.120] Before you start, decide what would be the best outcome you could reasonably achieve [12:47.120 --> 12:51.080] for you and your family. [12:51.080 --> 13:00.280] Write that down in stone and then we'll start looking at what's going on and how can we [13:00.280 --> 13:05.280] start going after these guys to push them toward that place. [13:05.280 --> 13:11.240] Once you start coming after them strategically, everything you do changes. [13:11.240 --> 13:12.920] They'll come and do something really crappy. [13:12.920 --> 13:15.560] I had a bailiff. [13:15.560 --> 13:19.880] I was at the court for the purpose of filing criminal charges against the district attorney [13:19.880 --> 13:23.480] with the grand jury. [13:23.480 --> 13:28.160] The bailiff and the investigator for the grant for the district attorney drugged me down [13:28.160 --> 13:34.520] the stairs, showed me the bailiff pushed me out the door, knocked me down, broke my elbow. [13:34.520 --> 13:38.840] That really hurt. [13:38.840 --> 13:48.360] What they did was absolutely outrageous and I looked at it and I compared it to my intended [13:48.360 --> 13:54.800] ultimate outcome and I said to myself, self, how can you frame going after this bailiff [13:54.800 --> 14:01.760] for doing something really, really stupid, a suit with him would have been dead bagged. [14:01.760 --> 14:08.600] How can you use that to help lead you toward your intended ultimate outcome? [14:08.600 --> 14:13.800] There was no way I could frame that in a way that would lead me further toward my ultimate [14:13.800 --> 14:14.800] outcome. [14:14.800 --> 14:18.280] So I didn't go after the bailiff. [14:18.280 --> 14:22.280] Turned out to be the single most powerful thing I've ever done. [14:22.280 --> 14:29.560] I am highly respected in this county and I am feared in this county because prosecuting [14:29.560 --> 14:33.680] attorney, the district attorney, the county attorney, county judge will all tell you do [14:33.680 --> 14:36.360] not screw with this guy. [14:36.360 --> 14:39.920] You get him after you and there's not anything going to stop him. [14:39.920 --> 14:41.320] You're not going to distract him. [14:41.320 --> 14:43.800] You're not going to get him to go in another direction. [14:43.800 --> 14:48.880] When he comes after you, he's going to stay after you. [14:48.880 --> 14:55.960] He wants to mess with me in this county because they know once I get after him, he can't manipulate [14:55.960 --> 14:56.960] me. [14:56.960 --> 15:01.000] He can't get me to dance for you, can't get me to do a song and dance. [15:01.000 --> 15:03.800] You can't lead me off track. [15:03.800 --> 15:06.240] You need to know what your track is. [15:06.240 --> 15:10.920] I realize that you're angry, you're frustrated, and you feel betrayed. [15:10.920 --> 15:18.200] I absolutely know that feeling, but I'm a combat veteran. [15:18.200 --> 15:20.800] You learn something in combat. [15:20.800 --> 15:25.320] You don't go into a fight just because you could win. [15:25.320 --> 15:31.320] You go into a fight because it will lead you toward an end result. [15:31.320 --> 15:38.380] We could go into fights we could win, but when we got done, we would have expended resources [15:38.380 --> 15:44.160] and would not be any further toward our ultimate outcome. [15:44.160 --> 15:50.680] You don't go into a fight you can't win unless the fight itself will lead you toward your [15:50.680 --> 15:52.480] intended outcome. [15:52.480 --> 15:59.640] I often start fights with these guys to get them to do things I can use elsewhere, but [15:59.640 --> 16:04.360] always I have an end result chiseled in stone. [16:04.360 --> 16:13.400] I know exactly where I'm going, and they can't prod me, push me, pull me. [16:13.400 --> 16:16.600] Because of that, they never know how I'm going to respond to them. [16:16.600 --> 16:23.800] There's nothing worse than to deal with someone that you have no idea how to predict what [16:23.800 --> 16:28.960] they're going to do. [16:28.960 --> 16:34.760] If you could have an ultimate outcome, what would it be? [16:34.760 --> 16:40.280] I'm not asking you to tell me now, but I'm asking you to think about it. [16:40.280 --> 16:46.880] If you're really upset at these guys, time to stop being upset and angry. [16:46.880 --> 16:56.040] Time to start getting mean and serious, strategic. [16:56.040 --> 17:22.000] The first thing I would want from you is a [17:22.000 --> 17:26.880] little bit of a talk. [17:26.880 --> 17:31.880] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:31.880 --> 17:37.760] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:37.760 --> 17:44.520] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, [17:44.520 --> 17:49.940] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:49.940 --> 17:50.940] new cookies. [17:50.940 --> 17:55.880] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.880 --> 17:56.880] radio network too. [17:56.880 --> 17:57.880] Cheers for cookie. [17:57.880 --> 17:58.880] Cheers for classified. [17:58.880 --> 18:08.880] It's the 2017 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks. [18:08.880 --> 18:10.960] Defense distributed in Fatsal, Delhi. [18:10.960 --> 18:14.200] Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter the win. [18:14.200 --> 18:16.880] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:16.880 --> 18:22.680] From Central Texas Gunworks, first place up for grabs, a spikes tactical AR-15, second [18:22.680 --> 18:30.840] place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm pistol, from Defense Distributed, third place, the AR-308 80% lower, [18:30.840 --> 18:37.680] fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower, from Fatsal, Delhi, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fatsal, [18:37.680 --> 18:38.680] Delhi. [18:38.680 --> 18:40.840] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:40.840 --> 18:43.360] That's logosradionetwork.com. [18:43.360 --> 18:48.400] Also if you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, Legal101, you get four chances to win. [18:48.400 --> 18:51.520] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get 10 chances to win. [18:51.520 --> 18:55.000] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:55.000 --> 19:23.000] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [19:23.000 --> 19:37.240] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with Law Radio. [19:37.240 --> 19:45.120] It looked like we lost our caller from North Carolina. [19:45.120 --> 19:57.720] So oh well, I didn't mean to sound patronizing there and if you're still listening, it never [19:57.720 --> 20:04.840] helps to go after these guys just because they've wronged you and you're angry and [20:04.840 --> 20:05.840] frustrated. [20:05.840 --> 20:11.360] You got to know they get this stuff all the time, they get people coming after them. [20:11.360 --> 20:17.720] And especially if they have allegations against you, they have a lot of leverage they can use. [20:17.720 --> 20:25.080] So when you have issues against you, you have to be a lot more careful, a lot more strategic. [20:25.080 --> 20:30.280] And I know I interrupted this guy, didn't let him go who he wanted to, and I didn't [20:30.280 --> 20:35.720] mean to do that, but I could hear the anger and frustration in his voice and he feels [20:35.720 --> 20:40.280] like he's been battling me, he's treated me and almost certainly has and he wants to [20:40.280 --> 20:43.520] get back at them. [20:43.520 --> 20:47.400] And I'm concerned that when we try to do that, it has a tendency to backfire in our [20:47.400 --> 20:49.440] faces unless we're real careful. [20:49.440 --> 20:51.440] Okay, enough on that subject. [20:51.440 --> 20:55.000] Now we're going to Mauricio in Texas. [20:55.000 --> 20:56.000] Hello, Mauricio. [20:56.000 --> 20:59.200] Hey, Randy, how are you doing? [20:59.200 --> 21:00.360] Welcome back to Texas. [21:00.360 --> 21:03.000] Oh, it's nice to be back in Texas. [21:03.000 --> 21:06.920] I really like Texas. [21:06.920 --> 21:09.120] I spent time in Tennessee. [21:09.120 --> 21:13.440] I was in West Tennessee and I am Ken, to West Tennessee. [21:13.440 --> 21:19.240] My daughter, when she was 16, spent the summer with my mother in West Tennessee and I told [21:19.240 --> 21:26.000] her, if you're driving around in West Tennessee with mom and somebody waves at you while they're [21:26.000 --> 21:29.000] Ken, ask mother, she'll tell you how. [21:29.000 --> 21:32.640] When my daughter came back, she said, Dad, I thought you were kidding. [21:32.640 --> 21:35.560] I said, no, I wasn't kidding. [21:35.560 --> 21:38.120] We're kidding to everybody. [21:38.120 --> 21:46.080] But when I walk around in West Tennessee, I look at these people and they look profoundly [21:46.080 --> 21:49.480] miserable. [21:49.480 --> 21:57.280] Now if I speak to someone, they warm up relatively quickly, but they won't look at you. [21:57.280 --> 21:59.880] They walk around looking at the ground. [21:59.880 --> 22:04.840] All of their faces are turned upside down into horrible frowns. [22:04.840 --> 22:09.760] It just makes the place feel cold and miserable. [22:09.760 --> 22:16.520] I come back to Texas and I walked into the drug store and a young girl at work had the [22:16.520 --> 22:22.840] high school t-shirt on or sweatshirt on and she said, can I help you? [22:22.840 --> 22:24.440] I said, yes, ma'am. [22:24.440 --> 22:32.640] I come to make a dope deal and her and the two pharmacists all started laughing immediately. [22:32.640 --> 22:38.760] Nobody had an attitude. [22:38.760 --> 22:39.760] Everybody was upbeat. [22:39.760 --> 22:45.960] I said, this is why I like Texas. [22:45.960 --> 22:49.600] Good to be back in Texas. [22:49.600 --> 22:55.520] Even though Tennessee's home, I'm came to everybody in West Tennessee two or three times, both [22:55.520 --> 22:56.840] sides of the family. [22:56.840 --> 23:00.440] I love Texas, it's my home. [23:00.440 --> 23:05.720] Okay, what do you have today? [23:05.720 --> 23:11.160] Well, I don't think you had a chance to overlook the timeline I sent you from the last time [23:11.160 --> 23:20.240] we spoke, which is quite all right, but on the 22nd of September, I received a certified [23:20.240 --> 23:24.440] letter and inside the certified letter was a no- [23:24.440 --> 23:26.440] Hold on, hold on, hold on. [23:26.440 --> 23:31.440] Give us a real quick synopsis to bring everybody up to speed. [23:31.440 --> 23:35.240] Absolutely, real quick. [23:35.240 --> 23:42.240] January 6th of this year, pulled over in Monard County by two sheriffs and two deputies for [23:42.240 --> 23:47.240] having snow on the license plate, stepped out of my private property, locked the door, [23:47.240 --> 23:51.440] met the officer in the back where he asked me to get when the last time I had smoked [23:51.440 --> 23:52.440] marijuana. [23:52.440 --> 23:57.240] After I didn't understand the nature of the question, he exploded on me, I was placed [23:57.240 --> 24:03.840] in handcuffs, they pulled me out of the pocket, opened up the door, get in the car, sent to [24:03.840 --> 24:08.880] jail, directly to jail, did not pass those, did not collect $200, don't even see the [24:08.880 --> 24:09.880] match straight. [24:09.880 --> 24:17.200] Go to jail, sat there for about 20 to 22 hours until the JT met straight in the out, paid [24:17.200 --> 24:24.440] the ransom to get my car back, went home, received the letter for the citations and [24:24.440 --> 24:25.440] the JP. [24:25.440 --> 24:31.080] Met with the JP in his office, had a little conversation, nothing has happened with the [24:31.080 --> 24:32.080] moving violation. [24:32.080 --> 24:33.080] Hold on. [24:33.080 --> 24:34.080] Yep. [24:34.080 --> 24:38.880] Met with the JP. [24:38.880 --> 24:41.080] What does that mean? [24:41.080 --> 24:44.920] Okay, hold up, let me take a step back from that. [24:44.920 --> 24:52.000] How did you come to know of a meeting or set up a meeting with the JP? [24:52.000 --> 24:58.880] Well, it was actually a summons for a bench trial, so I sent them back a letter stating [24:58.880 --> 25:04.800] that I did not request or condone or consent to a bench trial. [25:04.800 --> 25:05.800] Although it's a... [25:05.800 --> 25:12.680] Whoa, hold on, hold on, that took a jump over two or three things that should have happened. [25:12.680 --> 25:17.720] Was there no preliminary hearing of any content? [25:17.720 --> 25:23.240] Are we talking about the moving violations or are we talking about the community or... [25:23.240 --> 25:24.240] The moving violations? [25:24.240 --> 25:25.240] No. [25:25.240 --> 25:26.240] No. [25:26.240 --> 25:30.240] Okay, have you looked at trafficticket.website? [25:30.240 --> 25:40.120] Yes, I just haven't put it in the information, I'm getting things ready together to start [25:40.120 --> 25:41.840] doing all that. [25:41.840 --> 25:47.200] Move quickly, all you have to put in is the ticket, move quickly, subject matter jurisdiction [25:47.200 --> 25:53.560] challenge, criminal charges against the officers, T-close complaints against the officers. [25:53.560 --> 26:01.840] You will set the legal framework in place that you can use later on with the more serious [26:01.840 --> 26:02.840] charges. [26:02.840 --> 26:09.360] Well, actually, if you remember the last time we spoke, I kind of... [26:09.360 --> 26:13.760] I'm going to be out of state for November, December, and then when I come back, I'm going [26:13.760 --> 26:19.640] to be more than busy as kind of a light way of stating it for the next three months afterwards. [26:19.640 --> 26:26.400] So I don't have time to be playing with these guys, normally the way I would play with them. [26:26.400 --> 26:27.400] So... [26:27.400 --> 26:29.600] You just pay the fine. [26:29.600 --> 26:34.760] Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I'm not worried about the fine, the fine's not going to go [26:34.760 --> 26:35.760] anywhere. [26:35.760 --> 26:39.560] But I've already turned in the constitutional challenge and all that other stuff. [26:39.560 --> 26:44.960] But what was the nature of the constitutional challenge? [26:44.960 --> 26:49.880] It was towards the enactment towards Senate Bill 971. [26:49.880 --> 26:58.680] Well, hold on, Senate Bill 971, what code was that codified into? [26:58.680 --> 27:01.280] Was it passed into law? [27:01.280 --> 27:07.920] Yes, but what the constitutional...I see, and I don't know that he would appreciate [27:07.920 --> 27:11.200] me explaining what the whole challenge is about, but it's... [27:11.200 --> 27:25.240] Okay, my only issue is you can't cite a Senate Bill, have to cite code. [27:25.240 --> 27:28.480] So I don't know what code you're referring to. [27:28.480 --> 27:36.080] Well, is it fair to say that all of that is irrelevant because they're not...they haven't [27:36.080 --> 27:40.120] pursued it, and I'm more than certain he's not going to pursue it. [27:40.120 --> 27:43.920] When we had our conversation, I made it clear that I didn't care what they were going to [27:43.920 --> 27:44.920] do in the lower courts. [27:44.920 --> 27:49.240] I was just setting up my record for the appeal, and when it goes to the appeal, that's when [27:49.240 --> 27:50.240] it's all... [27:50.240 --> 27:51.240] Okay, that's what I'm getting to. [27:51.240 --> 27:55.720] How did you set up your record for appeal? [27:55.720 --> 27:58.720] Did you challenge subject matter jurisdiction? [27:58.720 --> 28:01.120] Oh, absolutely, and when I got there, the first thing I did... [28:01.120 --> 28:07.080] Did you challenge the authority of the police officer to enforce the statutory scheme? [28:07.080 --> 28:08.080] Absolutely. [28:08.080 --> 28:16.480] I got on subject matter, persona, all...I did it all, yes, absolutely, but it's not [28:16.480 --> 28:20.400] the first time I've done that, and that's not what the call is really about, either. [28:20.400 --> 28:21.400] Okay. [28:21.400 --> 28:26.400] It's a part of what led up to what my call is about. [28:26.400 --> 28:27.400] Okay. [28:27.400 --> 28:35.520] Like I say, I'm not worried about the moving violation, any of that, although I could argue [28:35.520 --> 28:39.960] since the initial stop was illegal, whatever they found in the car was fruit of the poison [28:39.960 --> 28:46.760] tree, but that's still here and there with the timeline and the violations of the code [28:46.760 --> 28:50.760] that we're putting together. [28:50.760 --> 28:57.760] What I'm calling about is, on the 22nd of September, I received certified letter telling [28:57.760 --> 29:05.760] me that I have a notice of setting, so on October 20th, which is next Friday, at 1.30, [29:05.760 --> 29:15.320] I'm to appear in front of Robert H. Hoffman of the 450-second district or judicial district [29:15.320 --> 29:16.320] court. [29:16.320 --> 29:18.880] Now, keep in mind... [29:18.880 --> 29:24.440] Why are you being called to appear? [29:24.440 --> 29:27.880] Because of the felony arrest and indictment that I received. [29:27.880 --> 29:29.360] No, no, no, no, no. [29:29.360 --> 29:30.360] What is the purpose of the hearing? [29:30.360 --> 29:35.360] That's a very good question, because it doesn't say anything on there. [29:35.360 --> 29:40.240] All it says is at the bottom, any pleadings, motions... [29:40.240 --> 29:41.240] Hang on, hang on. [29:41.240 --> 29:42.240] I'm about to go to... [29:42.240 --> 29:43.240] Oh. [29:43.240 --> 30:02.120] Break, Randy Kelton, Roova Radio, call in number 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [30:02.120 --> 30:07.400] We all laughed when cartoonist Scott Adams drew comics of cubicle hell, but his hero, [30:07.400 --> 30:09.800] Dilbert, now has science to back him up. [30:09.800 --> 30:14.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you the downsides of the dreaded office [30:14.280 --> 30:16.360] cubicle. [30:16.360 --> 30:17.920] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.920 --> 30:21.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.520 --> 30:26.320] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.320 --> 30:31.520] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.520 --> 30:34.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. 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[31:17.520 --> 31:22.800] Now, if I could just find a quiet place to think, I'll put that in a memo to the pointy-haired [31:22.800 --> 31:23.800] boss. [31:23.800 --> 31:25.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:25.360 --> 31:28.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:28.080 --> 31:34.920] Did you know there are three million edible food plants on earth, and none have the nutritional [31:34.920 --> 31:37.160] value of the hemp plant. [31:37.160 --> 31:39.440] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:39.440 --> 31:45.000] It does not contain chemicals or THC, is non-GMO, and is 100% gluten-free. [31:45.000 --> 31:50.200] Hemp protein powder burns fat, builds muscle, contains 53% protein, and feeds the body the [31:50.200 --> 31:51.680] nutrients it needs. [31:51.680 --> 32:02.120] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you, only at HempUSA.org. [32:02.120 --> 32:24.500] For more just on that, why don't we get right to see what you guys had. [32:24.500 --> 32:28.580] The former sheriff's deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has [32:28.580 --> 32:32.100] put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand [32:32.100 --> 32:35.340] what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.340 --> 32:39.300] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.300 --> 32:40.660] ordering your copy today. [32:40.660 --> 32:43.940] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:43.940 --> 32:47.620] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.620 --> 32:50.580] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.580 --> 32:54.580] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.580 --> 33:20.580] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:20.580 --> 33:38.380] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Mauricio from [33:38.380 --> 33:39.380] Texas. [33:39.380 --> 33:40.380] Okay, go ahead Mauricio. [33:40.380 --> 33:44.380] But where do we leave off? [33:44.380 --> 33:45.380] I'm sorry. [33:45.380 --> 33:46.380] Wait, say that again? [33:46.380 --> 33:52.580] I was asking, where did we leave off before the break? [33:52.580 --> 33:58.780] Oh, well you were getting to why you're actually calling me. [33:58.780 --> 34:04.180] Oh yes, the notice of setting. [34:04.180 --> 34:12.980] I am set up to appear before Hon. Robert F. Hoffman of the 452nd Judicial District Judge [34:12.980 --> 34:18.340] and Court on October 20th, which is next Friday at 1.30. [34:18.340 --> 34:28.340] Now it doesn't exactly state what it is and I'll leave the last part of the state anyway. [34:28.340 --> 34:31.580] Do you have any motions before this Court? [34:31.580 --> 34:33.780] No, I don't. [34:33.780 --> 34:35.780] See, I didn't want to. [34:35.780 --> 34:39.500] I see, and that's another thing I was thinking. [34:39.500 --> 34:45.020] When I showed up on that day, should I show up and tell them that I'm there under special [34:45.020 --> 34:47.420] appearance or should I just? [34:47.420 --> 34:48.420] Because... [34:48.420 --> 34:50.100] Hold on, hold on, hold on. [34:50.100 --> 34:55.580] Have you been called to a hearing in this Court prior to this state? [34:55.580 --> 34:59.580] No, not for this case. [34:59.580 --> 35:00.580] Okay. [35:00.580 --> 35:06.180] Then what this can be for is an arraignment. [35:06.180 --> 35:12.700] 2601 authorizes an arraignment in the matter of a felony or a misdemeanor punishable by [35:12.700 --> 35:13.700] imprisonment. [35:13.700 --> 35:15.700] That's 2601. [35:15.700 --> 35:24.820] 2602, an arraignment shall be held for the purpose of determining the identity of the [35:24.820 --> 35:28.980] accused and taking a plea. [35:28.980 --> 35:30.500] It can be for that. [35:30.500 --> 35:38.580] The only other things the judge can summon you to court for are motion hearings and [35:38.580 --> 35:40.900] trial on the merits. [35:40.900 --> 35:46.180] That's 28.01. [35:46.180 --> 35:54.300] What he's most likely summoning you to court for is to meet with a prosecuting attorney. [35:54.300 --> 35:59.700] And that, they don't have power to do. [35:59.700 --> 36:06.220] But couldn't I use that as a strategical advantage and sit down with them, present everything [36:06.220 --> 36:12.380] that they have going against me, explain the timeline, go through the timeline explaining [36:12.380 --> 36:18.860] where they've broken the code, explain how, show them that I'll wind up with suddenly [36:18.860 --> 36:24.060] criminal kidnapping charges and other charges against three of their deputies, two deputies, [36:24.060 --> 36:30.140] two DPS officers, a jailer, criminal charges against the J.P. who did the magistrating [36:30.140 --> 36:34.780] and more likely I'd go after you, not to mention all the people's complaints, not to [36:34.780 --> 36:39.100] mention the fact I'm going to hit you with barcay with dirt and judicial cannons. [36:39.100 --> 36:42.780] And then the fact that I was sitting in jail for 20 hours, well, according to Travis Ann [36:42.780 --> 36:46.740] out of Florida, that's going to be over a $2 million lawsuit. [36:46.740 --> 36:49.060] I'm kind of a hassle to deal with. [36:49.060 --> 36:56.020] So can we do each other a favor and just dismiss this and get my information out of the system [36:56.020 --> 36:59.580] and let bygones be bygones? [36:59.580 --> 37:00.580] Good luck with that. [37:00.580 --> 37:01.580] Really? [37:01.580 --> 37:09.020] I guarantee you they've heard this a thousand times, they're not impressed. [37:09.020 --> 37:16.180] What does impress them, if you're already coming in with T-closed complaints, bar grievances, [37:16.180 --> 37:21.900] judicial conduct complaints, and a set of motions, challenge subject matter, jurisdiction, [37:21.900 --> 37:26.940] special appearance, they're not going to be impressed with what you say you're going [37:26.940 --> 37:29.980] to do, I guarantee you. [37:29.980 --> 37:34.260] They will only be concerned with what you actually do because 99% of the people come [37:34.260 --> 37:37.540] in there in the health and puff and they do nothing. [37:37.540 --> 37:43.620] And these guys, they expect to hear this, they hear this all the time, oh yeah, I'm [37:43.620 --> 37:48.620] going to have your job, I'm going to sue you, blah, blah, blah, they hear this over and [37:48.620 --> 37:49.620] over. [37:49.620 --> 37:50.620] They don't care. [37:50.620 --> 37:51.620] I don't do that. [37:51.620 --> 37:52.620] I don't do that. [37:52.620 --> 37:57.820] So that is an easy way to get yourself blended as a patriot, not and dismissed. [37:57.820 --> 37:59.100] I do not do that. [37:59.100 --> 38:01.980] I go in very calmly and I show them everything in paperwork. [38:01.980 --> 38:06.580] I will have T-closed complaints, bar grievances, and all that other stuff, but for reading [38:06.580 --> 38:12.540] out in paper, I will have everything in paper to show to them and I will tell them that [38:12.540 --> 38:19.220] if, since you've already been set on the trap as my prosecutor, if they do issue me [38:19.220 --> 38:24.460] a public defender, I'll notify them that I'll have at least 28 different motions that [38:24.460 --> 38:28.620] he'll have to adjudicate and that I'll bar grieve him for every single one he does in [38:28.620 --> 38:35.740] a week in between that way they count and that I can play this game on for a long time. [38:35.740 --> 38:40.220] I understand where you think and under where people come out where they're huffing and [38:40.220 --> 38:45.660] puffing and I don't do that, I'm more methodical about that. [38:45.660 --> 38:53.420] If you come in and tell them what you're going to do, they've heard this 1,000 times. [38:53.420 --> 38:56.260] They're not going to be impressed. [38:56.260 --> 39:01.540] What they're going to be impressed with is what you've already done, what's already [39:01.540 --> 39:08.100] giving them problems that now they want to deal with you and get it to go away. [39:08.100 --> 39:11.580] I'm going to suggest if you go in there and tell them what you're going to do, they will [39:11.580 --> 39:14.260] not be the least bit impressed. [39:14.260 --> 39:19.420] The only thing that's going to get their attention is when you actually do it. [39:19.420 --> 39:22.180] Send the court a tort letter. [39:22.180 --> 39:25.940] Send the jurisdiction that arrested you a tort letter. [39:25.940 --> 39:30.900] Do something to show that you're actually going to move ahead. [39:30.900 --> 39:35.740] T-claws complaint to police officers, that's the easiest thing to do. [39:35.740 --> 39:38.860] Those officers are going to have a fit when you T-close them. [39:38.860 --> 39:39.860] Tough. [39:39.860 --> 39:43.540] They don't care about those guys. [39:43.540 --> 39:49.500] When you T-close the police officers, then the prosecutor knows if he knows to T-close, [39:49.500 --> 39:51.500] he knows to bar grieve. [39:51.500 --> 39:53.860] You don't have to threaten them with a bar grievance. [39:53.860 --> 39:59.140] If you have a reason to bar grieve them, you should already have them grieved. [39:59.140 --> 40:02.580] Because didn't know you're not kidding, you're not huffing and puffing, you're not threatening [40:02.580 --> 40:04.820] them with things you may or may not do. [40:04.820 --> 40:09.500] You're already doing it and they want to keep you from doing more. [40:09.500 --> 40:12.420] Fair enough. [40:12.420 --> 40:19.420] I have never seen them be impressed unless you've actually kicked them. [40:19.420 --> 40:27.380] So I should perhaps tomorrow start with the T-close, at least on the gentleman who pulled [40:27.380 --> 40:31.260] me over and issued the citation because he's the only one that I have the name of right [40:31.260 --> 40:32.260] now. [40:32.260 --> 40:35.260] T-close, unknown officers. [40:35.260 --> 40:40.260] I don't even imagine on that. [40:40.260 --> 40:48.980] T-close the one who you know and T-close the other ones as unknown, unidentified officers [40:48.980 --> 40:54.700] and leave it up to the Texas Commission on Law to figure out who they are because you [40:54.700 --> 40:58.940] tell them they wouldn't identify themselves. [40:58.940 --> 41:05.940] Here's a good one, one of them did identify himself as none of my God-darned business. [41:05.940 --> 41:12.740] Oh, that definitely needs, you need to file against none of my God-darned business. [41:12.740 --> 41:16.580] That definitely needs to be in there. [41:16.580 --> 41:24.940] That when the judge and the prosecutor reach that, they are not going to be happy campers. [41:24.940 --> 41:31.340] Oh, none of your God-darned business is going to have some explaining to do. [41:31.340 --> 41:40.180] Been there with that kind of issue and the county judge says, who is this my worst nightmare? [41:40.180 --> 41:45.180] The prosecutor said, well apparently someone introduced himself to Mr. Kelton as his worst [41:45.180 --> 41:46.180] nightmare. [41:46.180 --> 41:50.140] Yes, and I have a bone to pick with him. [41:50.140 --> 41:58.500] So absolutely file against none of your G.D. business. [41:58.500 --> 42:02.660] The police officers, they're cannon fodder. [42:02.660 --> 42:05.780] Nobody cares about those guys. [42:05.780 --> 42:10.340] They're the sharp end of the spear, the prosecutor could care less about those chumps. [42:10.340 --> 42:16.940] Police officers come and go, they're a dime a dozen, but that's warning, that's direct [42:16.940 --> 42:23.220] warning to the prosecutor that he's next because you actually filed something. [42:23.220 --> 42:25.380] You've actually taken action. [42:25.380 --> 42:34.540] You need a special appearance and subject matter jurisdiction challenge actually filed. [42:34.540 --> 42:37.980] All your motions in pleading should already be filed. [42:37.980 --> 42:44.140] And then the bar grievances, the judicial conduct complaints, the criminal complaints, [42:44.140 --> 42:49.900] you can wave those at them, but if you already stuck your Brady motion in and all of these [42:49.900 --> 42:55.580] other documents where you have demonstrated to them that you're coming after them, that [42:55.580 --> 43:05.020] you're going to fight this, then you can use the things that will hurt them specifically. [43:05.020 --> 43:10.260] And I suggest never threaten them directly. [43:10.260 --> 43:14.300] If I walk up to you and I push you, I have you hold your hand up with your palm out and [43:14.300 --> 43:19.940] I retake my hand and set it against your palm and I push against it. [43:19.940 --> 43:26.660] You will resist, it's in your jeans. [43:26.660 --> 43:34.260] When you do that to the prosecutor, he's going to resist, it's in his jeans. [43:34.260 --> 43:39.780] Hang on, we're going to break, we'll pick this up on the other side. [43:39.780 --> 43:43.660] It sounds like I'm being pedantic, but I'm not. [43:43.660 --> 43:48.980] You have to give the prosecutor some level of plausible deniability. [43:48.980 --> 43:53.300] You have to give him a way to walk out of this trap and save face. [43:53.300 --> 43:58.740] Hang on, Randy Cowden with my radio, Randy Cowden with Stephen, we'll be right back. [43:58.740 --> 44:08.140] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by our [44:08.140 --> 44:13.300] store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet Dean here in Austin, Texas, find brave new books [44:13.300 --> 44:16.780] and chase things to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very [44:16.780 --> 44:17.780] own eyes. [44:17.780 --> 44:22.620] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.620 --> 44:26.620] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our all shallot emu oil, [44:26.620 --> 44:34.780] lotion candles, olive oil soaps and colloidal silver and gold, call 512-264-4043 or find [44:34.780 --> 44:43.220] us online at naturespureorganics.com, that's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.220 --> 44:48.740] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [44:48.740 --> 45:04.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.500 --> 45:11.260] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand 4-CD course [45:11.260 --> 45:15.220] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.220 --> 45:21.020] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing, if you don't have a lawyer, [45:21.020 --> 45:26.380] know what you should do for yourself, thousands have won with our step by step course and [45:26.380 --> 45:28.140] now you can too. [45:28.140 --> 45:34.900] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.900 --> 45:39.340] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.340 --> 45:43.740] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.740 --> 45:49.860] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.860 --> 45:52.340] pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.340 --> 46:18.340] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:18.340 --> 46:44.340] or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:44.340 --> 47:14.260] Okay, we are back with our radio, Randy Kelton. [47:14.260 --> 47:24.740] Debra Stevens, and we're talking on this, October the 12th, 2017, and we're talking to [47:24.740 --> 47:30.820] Mauricio in Texas, and we're talking about, really, here are the politics. [47:32.180 --> 47:39.700] If you want a prosecutor to write you a deal, you have to give him some kind of plausible [47:39.700 --> 47:45.060] deniability. You have to give him reason to do it, and then you have to give him a way to do it. [47:47.060 --> 47:53.940] It may not sound reasonable to think that you have to give this prosecutor a way to save face. [47:56.900 --> 48:02.740] It's talked about a lot in other countries, like especially Oriental countries. It's not [48:02.740 --> 48:09.060] talked about much here, but it's just as real. You're going to have to give this prosecutor [48:09.060 --> 48:15.300] a way to save face. If you push him up into a corner, he's going to come out like a bulldog [48:15.300 --> 48:26.260] and fight you like a tiger. That's not what I want. He can keep face all that he wants. All I [48:26.260 --> 48:34.340] want is to preserve my liberty and wage life right now. You need to talk to Mike Handel. [48:34.340 --> 48:43.700] Mike Handel's been fighting them for years over a water bottle at TSA. [48:46.900 --> 48:50.980] He backed them in a corner, and they've been fighting him like a tiger ever since. [48:53.780 --> 48:59.300] If he could have finished this, but he stayed in their face and never backed up. [48:59.300 --> 49:08.740] He'd never give them room to find a way out of it and save face. They came to court and [49:08.740 --> 49:15.860] complained in the classy misdemeanor case that Mike Handel had cost them on the order of $70,000. [49:19.300 --> 49:25.940] That's how hard he fought them, but they would not back up. They just, no matter what, [49:25.940 --> 49:33.380] stop. You shove him into a corner and he is not going to back up. He'll care what you do. [49:33.380 --> 49:40.660] He will never stop because he's loose face. Now, that sounds ignorant, [49:42.740 --> 49:45.540] but it's the way human beings are put together. [49:45.540 --> 49:54.500] You've got to give him a way out. If you don't go after him and go after everybody else, [49:56.500 --> 50:03.140] then he gets to make a deal with you and pull you off the judge and the police officers and [50:03.140 --> 50:10.500] the sheriff's department and the DPS. He gets to be the good guy and pull you off of him and he [50:10.500 --> 50:16.340] saves face. If you go after him, he can never stop coming after you. [50:17.540 --> 50:23.700] Well, that's a great plan. The only reason why I figured we'd go up there and present him with [50:23.700 --> 50:30.100] everything before actually doing this because two weeks ago when we spoke, it almost portrayed [50:30.100 --> 50:35.780] like that was a good idea to do and we were going to create a timeline and all the go down. [50:35.780 --> 50:41.300] It finally never, you were in fraction of the code because, well, we didn't care they were [50:44.020 --> 50:47.300] convicted. We just cared if they could get indicted. That way we could. [50:48.100 --> 50:54.980] I don't remember the idea of taking this to him and waving at him because for me, that's a red flag. [50:56.500 --> 51:02.100] Okay, fair enough. We may have misunderstood because for me, that would have drawn an immediate [51:02.100 --> 51:13.140] red flag. Never give fair warning. It's one of my rules and this is giving fair warning. [51:14.820 --> 51:17.460] You don't actually want to tell him you're going to bar grieve him. [51:20.180 --> 51:22.900] You want him to figure out that you're going to bar grieve him. [51:22.900 --> 51:31.220] Okay. If you TECOs complaint the officers, TECOs complaint the sheriff himself. [51:31.860 --> 51:39.860] If they're, you know, file a complaint against the director of the DPS as responding at superior. [51:41.700 --> 51:45.940] Demonstrate that you're not concerned about going after the guys at the top. [51:45.940 --> 51:56.980] Do you have a 16.17 order in the record concerning a determination of probable cause? [52:00.260 --> 52:05.140] If you don't, file against the judge. Judicial conduct complaints the judge. [52:07.940 --> 52:09.300] But not the prosecutor. [52:09.300 --> 52:15.700] Give him a way out so he could pull you off all these guys. [52:17.700 --> 52:18.100] Fair enough. [52:19.460 --> 52:25.220] Okay, you're charged with a felony and they will say that in a misdemeanor case, [52:25.220 --> 52:30.260] you don't have a right to an examining trial. You don't have a right to one in a felony. [52:30.260 --> 52:34.260] Oh, I've got a good argument for the misdemeanor side, but in the felony there is no argument. [52:34.820 --> 52:37.060] There must be an examining trial. You have a right to it. [52:37.060 --> 52:50.500] And after an examining trial, the magistrate is required to file a order under 16.17 showing [52:50.500 --> 53:01.060] whether or not he found probable cause. 16.17 says if there is no order filed within 48 hours, [53:01.060 --> 53:07.540] the accused has a right to a finding or to a dismissal of the case. [53:09.060 --> 53:14.100] I'm sorry, to a finding of no probable cause. So the code says, [53:16.420 --> 53:21.940] so if there's not one in there, then you file against the judge for lack of subject matter [53:21.940 --> 53:29.460] jurisdiction and official oppression for denying you and your right to a finding of no probable [53:29.460 --> 53:38.340] cause. But him explain that one. They never follow this code. Nobody ever brings it to their attention. [53:39.460 --> 53:50.020] But the code is clear. Under Chapter 14, they are absolutely required by statute to bring you [53:50.020 --> 53:55.780] before a magistrate and the magistrate is required to hold an examining trial under Chapter 16. And [53:55.780 --> 54:05.060] under Chapter 16, he is required to issue an order under 16.17 and 17.30 orders him to seal [54:05.060 --> 54:10.020] all the documents had in the hearing, cause his name to be written across the seal of the envelope [54:10.020 --> 54:16.020] before the clerk of the court of jurisdiction that 16.17 order is commanded to be there. [54:17.620 --> 54:21.220] If it's not in the record, the judge has violated a whole stack of laws. [54:21.220 --> 54:29.300] And you're right to do process and it gives you a statutory right to dismissal. That's the open [54:29.300 --> 54:36.900] door for the prosecutor. That's how he can pull the court off of you or pull you off the court. [54:36.900 --> 54:43.780] Say, we screwed up here. We needed that order. We don't have it. We need to dismiss this. He can [54:43.780 --> 54:51.700] dismiss it and not lose face and pull you off these guys and become the good guy. Does that make [54:51.700 --> 55:00.260] sense? Yes, sir. Now, I would bring that up to the prosecutor after he's been appointed to me. [55:01.300 --> 55:06.100] Yeah. Well, if he comes, if he wants to meet with you, first thing you want to ask him, [55:06.100 --> 55:14.420] where's my 16.17 order? Gotcha. He's going to say, say what? You're going to have an order [55:14.420 --> 55:24.820] under 16.17. If you look on jurismprudence.website, go to documents and research as the top frog on [55:24.820 --> 55:36.740] the right and go to the blanks folder. In there, you will find a 17.30 information request. [55:40.100 --> 55:49.220] Pull a copy of that, put your name on the top and such. And down at the, it requests all records, [55:49.220 --> 55:55.140] collected, assembled, and maintained by the department that are specifically referenced by [55:55.140 --> 56:02.980] article 17.30, Texas Code of current procedure. And 17.30 is real specific. [56:05.620 --> 56:09.860] Is that's the one that tells the magistrate after an examining trial, he's to seal all [56:09.860 --> 56:13.860] documents had in the hearing, cause his name to be written across the seal of the envelope [56:13.860 --> 56:22.100] for the court of jurisdiction. You want to see these documents. And the prosecutor's not going [56:22.100 --> 56:33.460] to have them. And now guys, subject matter jurisdiction, you don't have it. So if you [56:33.460 --> 56:41.300] can't produce it, then the judge himself is the one I will sue because he's exerting or [56:41.300 --> 56:45.780] purported to exert an authority does not express for having in the process denying me full free [56:45.780 --> 56:52.420] access to enjoyment. Right. That's a classic misdemeanor in Texas. It's also a tort. The only [56:52.420 --> 56:59.540] time you can sue a judge is when he lacks subject matter jurisdiction. And this is really specific [56:59.540 --> 57:06.900] in law. I can't find any way in law they can step around it. They're going to say, well, [57:06.900 --> 57:19.300] you had a magistration. Okay. Where is the order? If I had an examining trial and 16.01 says that [57:19.300 --> 57:26.100] in the matter of felony, the defendant has a right to an examining trial specifically stipulates [57:26.100 --> 57:38.100] you have a right to it. So if I had it, then there would statutorily be a 16.17 order in the record [57:38.100 --> 57:43.060] as required by 17.30. So you just walking down the code with them and these guys are not going [57:43.060 --> 57:50.900] to know any of these codes. They're going to have to go look them up. Hey, you know, it's funny [57:50.900 --> 57:56.660] while you're saying all that something clicked in my mind when I was being funded out by the JP. [57:57.540 --> 58:02.740] I sat in front of him and he was explaining things to me and I cut him off and told them [58:03.460 --> 58:10.980] I thought this was an examining trial or hearing and he got mad that though I'm setting your ball [58:10.980 --> 58:23.460] and put the mark. So he threatened he threatened you. Okay. That's witness tampering. You referenced [58:23.460 --> 58:28.980] your right and he threatened you. Now it doesn't make any difference what he intended. [58:29.700 --> 58:36.020] What makes a difference is how you took what he said. Hang on going to break. Randy Kelton, [58:36.020 --> 58:43.220] Deborah Stevens, Rue Law Radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. We seem to have an open board [58:43.220 --> 59:09.620] tonight. So if you have a question, comment, give us a call. We'll be right back. [59:13.300 --> 59:19.380] But the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. Difficult and profound [59:19.380 --> 59:24.900] passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word [59:24.900 --> 59:30.340] beyond which you've ever experienced before. Bibles for America would like to give you a [59:30.340 --> 59:36.020] free recovery version simply for the asking. This comprehensive yet compact study Bible [59:36.020 --> 59:47.620] is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.620 --> 59:59.060] That's freestudybible.com. You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.060 --> 01:00:07.540] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star of Lowdown, providing you [01:00:07.540 --> 01:00:15.460] daily bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [01:00:15.460 --> 01:00:25.780] into the tides of the alternative. Markets for Wednesday the 13th of September 2017 [01:00:25.780 --> 01:00:34.340] closed with gold at $1,323.24 an ounce, silver $17.78 an ounce, Texas crude $48.23 a barrel. [01:00:34.340 --> 01:00:40.500] Bitcoin is about $3,876 and dash coin sits about 300 US currency. [01:00:46.180 --> 01:00:52.020] Today in history, the year 1541, after three years in exile, John Calvin returns to Geneva to [01:00:52.020 --> 01:00:56.740] reform the church under a body of doctrine known as Calvinism, today in history. [01:01:00.900 --> 01:01:04.740] In recent news, Hillary Clinton knew already on discount book what happened officially hit [01:01:04.740 --> 01:01:09.460] store shelves Tuesday. Of the many things she blamed for her loss in the 2016 presidential race, [01:01:09.460 --> 01:01:12.660] she mentioned Russia in the election within the first few pages. Quote, [01:01:12.660 --> 01:01:16.740] the press treated our warnings about Russia like it was spin we'd cooked up in order to distract [01:01:16.740 --> 01:01:20.820] from embarrassing revelations. She blamed President Trump saying that listening to Trump, [01:01:20.820 --> 01:01:24.980] it almost felt like there was no such thing as truth anymore, that his strategy consisted of an [01:01:24.980 --> 01:01:29.300] appeal to the ugliest impulses of our national character. She blamed Wall Street. I didn't [01:01:29.300 --> 01:01:33.860] think many Americans would believe that I'd sell a lifetime of principle and advocacy for any price. [01:01:33.860 --> 01:01:38.100] I should have stayed away from anything having to do with Wall Street. I didn't. That's on me. [01:01:38.660 --> 01:01:42.260] Yeah, right, Hillary. Closed door meetings with Wall Street corporate donors could have [01:01:42.260 --> 01:01:46.660] had no foreseeable problems. She blamed the scandal over State Department emails on her [01:01:46.660 --> 01:01:51.940] private server. It was a dumb mistake, she said, but even a dumber scandal. It was like quicksand. [01:01:51.940 --> 01:01:56.340] The more you struggle, the deeper you sink. She blamed former FBI Director James Comey, [01:01:56.340 --> 01:02:00.100] saying that quote, Comey made a choice to extricate me in public in July and then [01:02:00.100 --> 01:02:05.060] dramatically reopened the investigation on October 28th, all while refusing to say a word [01:02:05.060 --> 01:02:09.620] about Trump and Russia. Not for those decisions, everything would have been different. And she [01:02:09.620 --> 01:02:14.740] even blamed patriarchy, stating that sexism and misogyny played a role in the 2016 presidential [01:02:14.740 --> 01:02:18.740] election. Exhibit A is the flagrantly sexist candidate one. [01:02:23.700 --> 01:02:26.740] Days after Hurricane Harvey's onslaught across the Lone Star State, [01:02:26.740 --> 01:02:30.180] the coast was still very much littered with dead fish and other sea creatures. [01:02:30.180 --> 01:02:34.420] Pretied to say of the National Auburn Society, discovered a strange-looking sea animal, [01:02:34.420 --> 01:02:38.740] posting a photo of it on Twitter to see if anyone knew what it was. Experts responded [01:02:38.740 --> 01:02:43.300] with guesses that it was some sort of eel, possibly a thing-tooth snake eel. [01:02:43.300 --> 01:02:48.420] Harvey was the longest hurricane that remained a name stormed after landfall in Texas. It killed [01:02:48.420 --> 01:02:55.140] at least 70 people and dumped at least 51 inches of rain. This was Brook Rody with your [01:02:55.140 --> 01:03:23.700] lowdown for September 13, 2017. [01:03:25.140 --> 01:03:38.020] I am ready. It's not a joke there, guys. Randy Kelton, [01:03:38.020 --> 01:03:44.180] Ruda Law Radio. Randy Kelton, Debra Steves, I'm all screwed up here. [01:03:46.100 --> 01:03:50.100] Debra, go ahead and fix that thing. We're playing dueling mouses here. [01:03:50.100 --> 01:03:56.900] Okay, went back. Things go on on the break sometimes. [01:03:57.940 --> 01:04:02.020] Okay, Mauricio, I got distracted. Where were we? [01:04:04.100 --> 01:04:06.900] Oh, we were doing the magistrate thing. [01:04:09.780 --> 01:04:16.660] This is something that gives them a big problem. The last thing they're going to want to happen [01:04:16.660 --> 01:04:24.180] is to have you get this before the Court of Appeals or before the Supreme, [01:04:25.780 --> 01:04:33.860] because this goes to the leeway that was granted in Gerstein Pew. Gerstein Pew said there had to [01:04:33.860 --> 01:04:40.580] be a preliminary hearing, but they didn't dictate to the states specifically how they would hold [01:04:40.580 --> 01:04:49.060] that preliminary hearing. When I look at the different states, it reminds me of why I keep [01:04:49.060 --> 01:04:56.820] saying Texas has the best corpus jurus of body of law of any state in the Union. [01:04:57.860 --> 01:05:05.300] Because in Texas, when it goes to preliminary hearing, the law is extremely detailed and [01:05:05.300 --> 01:05:13.060] pedantic. We have a whole chapter on this is precisely what you would will do in the hearing, [01:05:13.780 --> 01:05:22.580] but we have two prior chapters that says you must statutorily hold this hearing. [01:05:23.860 --> 01:05:28.820] If you arrest someone without a warrant, you must take them without reciting their [01:05:28.820 --> 01:05:35.460] magistrate, does not say may, might, or can if he wants to, and the magistrate must hold an [01:05:35.460 --> 01:05:43.300] examining trial. And then the magistrate has to issue an order under 16.17 or there can be no [01:05:43.300 --> 01:05:53.700] probable cause. It's real specific, hard to dance around it. They try to use the Clark decision [01:05:53.700 --> 01:05:59.860] in misdemeanors that says only a person charged with a felony has a right to an examining trial. [01:05:59.860 --> 01:06:09.700] That's horse manure. The statute requires the police to bring the person to the magistrate [01:06:09.700 --> 01:06:15.460] and the magistrate to hold an examining trial under chapter 16. That goes to due process, [01:06:16.820 --> 01:06:22.580] and you do have a right to due process. So there's no way getting around, even with a [01:06:22.580 --> 01:06:30.020] misdemeanor, you have a right to it. Okay. If you go for the 16.17, this is a real pedantic argument, [01:06:30.020 --> 01:06:36.660] real technically detailed in law, and these prosecutors are going to hate this. [01:06:38.820 --> 01:06:44.820] Back to the politics. You got to know that prosecutor is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. [01:06:44.820 --> 01:06:52.020] If he was the sharpest knife in the drawer, he would be out making the big bucks. But most likely, [01:06:52.020 --> 01:06:56.900] he got out of college and he thought he was a mascot for the beer companies in college. [01:06:56.900 --> 01:07:04.500] So when he got out, no law firm picked him up. So he wound up going to work for the government [01:07:04.500 --> 01:07:10.660] where he doesn't have to perform. And he can't perform, so he can't get out and make the big [01:07:10.660 --> 01:07:16.260] bucks. So he stays with the government, rises up, and finally becomes the elected district attorney. [01:07:17.940 --> 01:07:25.060] Well, he's still not the sharpest knife in the drawer. He knows it. The last thing he wants to do [01:07:25.060 --> 01:07:35.700] is have to build a brief to prevent the way everybody does business in taxes from changing. [01:07:35.700 --> 01:07:45.220] Because if he loses it, he will be the scumbag prosecutor of Texas because he ruins everything [01:07:45.220 --> 01:07:54.740] for everybody. They do not want to get into court with a case that will change everything for them. [01:07:55.940 --> 01:08:02.260] They know they're doing it wrong. They can read the code. But they also know everybody's been [01:08:02.260 --> 01:08:10.740] doing it this way for 30 years. Am I going to be the guy that screws it all up? I'll never [01:08:10.740 --> 01:08:20.020] hear the end of this. You know, prestige, you know, he's not going to save face. So that's a suggestion. [01:08:22.420 --> 01:08:29.780] It might be enough. You know, when you throw 16.17 at him and 17.30, if you send me an email, [01:08:29.780 --> 01:08:34.260] I'll send you those arguments, he's not going to know what you're talking about. [01:08:36.260 --> 01:08:42.500] You drop that 17.30 information request in front of him, and he's going to be scratching his head, [01:08:42.500 --> 01:08:50.980] wondering what the heck that is. And if he's dumb enough to say, well, I don't know what this is. [01:08:51.620 --> 01:08:57.620] Look it up. Read the code. I told that to a clerk once. She said, [01:08:57.620 --> 01:09:03.300] I gave her one, and she said, well, Mr. Countland, I'm not sure what you're asking for. [01:09:03.300 --> 01:09:12.900] Read the code. I'm not going to explain it. And then they have to go back and read the code, [01:09:12.900 --> 01:09:21.300] and it's really, really clear. Now they've got to try to do a song and dance together and get around [01:09:21.300 --> 01:09:32.100] that. If they can't get around it, you change the way everybody in Texas does business. So [01:09:33.780 --> 01:09:39.460] this is a pretty powerful challenge. Does it sound like fun? [01:09:39.460 --> 01:09:48.900] Yeah. It sounds like fun. I'm still digesting everything. [01:09:50.980 --> 01:09:55.060] I'm going to send you an email probably before we even get off the phone. That way it'll be [01:09:55.700 --> 01:10:01.540] one of the fresher ones on your email. Okay. The one thing if I can make one point here [01:10:02.500 --> 01:10:06.420] is, yeah, yeah, we want to look at the code. And you know, I'm the code guy. [01:10:06.420 --> 01:10:11.460] So, yeah, I'm pedantic about the code. I look at it in detail. But at the end of the day, [01:10:12.420 --> 01:10:17.540] the code is not going to carry the day. The politics is going to carry the day. [01:10:19.060 --> 01:10:24.660] So how do we go back and use the code to manipulate the politics? [01:10:24.660 --> 01:10:33.220] Okay. So does that give you any ideas? [01:10:38.740 --> 01:10:44.340] Yes. Yes. And I'm still kind of, I'm drawing, just drawing, for some reason I've drawn a blank [01:10:44.340 --> 01:10:51.300] today. I am. Okay. Well, I have thrown a curve at you. I threw a lot of information at you. [01:10:51.300 --> 01:11:02.340] This is something I'm trying to work out a way of presenting in a manner that makes sense. [01:11:02.340 --> 01:11:09.940] This is my job doing this show. It's not just to figure out how to do things in a way that [01:11:10.580 --> 01:11:18.100] will get us positive outcome. But I also have to figure out a way to frame what I'm doing in a [01:11:18.100 --> 01:11:25.060] manner so that people who are not as knowledgeable in these areas as me can make sense of it. [01:11:27.460 --> 01:11:32.180] Because once you make sense of it, you can come up to speed relatively quickly. [01:11:33.380 --> 01:11:39.220] And a test of my skill is to be able to frame this in a way that makes sense. And I've been 30 [01:11:39.220 --> 01:11:46.100] years trying to work out how to do this. Actually, been 10 years on the radio constantly working [01:11:46.100 --> 01:11:52.980] out how I present these and I still stumble a lot. And this is one of my biggest [01:11:54.580 --> 01:12:02.340] problems and most important issues is right here is demonstrating the difference between [01:12:02.340 --> 01:12:08.980] the statute and the politics and how to meld the two together so we can find remedy. [01:12:08.980 --> 01:12:28.980] So I would suggest, do you have the arguments on the Texas Transportation Code 701.001? [01:12:28.980 --> 01:12:41.780] Would that be in the Eddie's seminar material? I'm not sure if it's in there or not. It probably is. [01:12:44.900 --> 01:12:52.820] 701.001, that is the section that authorizes the Sheriff's Department [01:12:52.820 --> 01:13:01.060] or authorizes the County Commissioners Court to appoint five sheriff's deputies to enforce the [01:13:01.060 --> 01:13:11.780] Transportation Code. And they all have to ride motorcycles. That's 701.003. But the County [01:13:11.780 --> 01:13:16.340] Commissioners Court has to appoint them and they have to allot funds to support them. [01:13:16.340 --> 01:13:22.420] So you have some sheriff's deputy. You have a sheriff's deputy that stopped you. [01:13:24.100 --> 01:13:32.740] You want to see his authorization under 701.001? That really gets them hopping. I'm in Wise County [01:13:33.780 --> 01:13:40.580] and I went to the judge of the County Commissioners Court and I told him I wanted to see [01:13:40.580 --> 01:13:51.060] the documentation for the appointment of the five sheriff's deputies authorized by 701.001 [01:13:51.060 --> 01:13:57.620] to enforce the Texas Transportation Code. And he said, Mr. Kelton, I have no idea what you're [01:13:57.620 --> 01:14:04.100] talking about. We'll go figure it out. I need to see this authorization. You have a sheriff's deputy [01:14:04.100 --> 01:14:11.540] that just wrote me a citation. I need to see his authorization to do so and you're the only one [01:14:11.540 --> 01:14:19.140] who can authorize him to do that. About four months later, I was at the Sheriff's Department [01:14:19.140 --> 01:14:26.260] on a totally different issue. And they sent out a lieutenant to talk to me. They always send a [01:14:26.260 --> 01:14:33.380] lieutenant or a captain because they know who I am. And we were talking about a different issue [01:14:33.380 --> 01:14:39.860] and this came up and I referenced 701.001 and he said, oh yeah, Mr. Kelton, I'm familiar with that. [01:14:43.380 --> 01:14:50.500] That he is. He almost certainly got a call from the judge of the County Commissioners Court saying, [01:14:50.500 --> 01:14:57.940] what is this Kelton guy talking about? Because when the police officer, the sheriff's deputy, [01:14:57.940 --> 01:15:04.260] wrote me the ticket, I filed first degree felony aggravated assault against the police officer. [01:15:06.660 --> 01:15:16.740] And this is how I got there. The police officer pulled me over under authority of 546.350 something, [01:15:16.740 --> 01:15:23.060] I believe, or 450 something. There's one in there that says that when a police officer turns his [01:15:23.060 --> 01:15:30.420] lights on you, that you must pull over or you'll be charged with flight to evasion arrest. That's [01:15:30.420 --> 01:15:40.660] in the transportation code. Well, there's nothing in the penal code that requires me to pull over. [01:15:42.500 --> 01:15:49.460] Nothing. It's only in the transportation code. In the penal code, if he turns his lights on me [01:15:49.460 --> 01:15:56.260] and I move over, then I'm required to move over to let him go around. But nothing in the penal [01:15:56.260 --> 01:16:01.700] code tells me I have to stop. Only the transportation code. So when I pulled over, he pulled me over [01:16:01.700 --> 01:16:08.740] under transportation code. He got out and he approached my vehicle while, hold on, I'm going [01:16:08.740 --> 01:16:14.180] to have to mute you, a lot of banging in the background. He approached my vehicle while [01:16:14.180 --> 01:16:23.220] prominently displaying a dead weapon cloaked in the uniform of a sheriff's deputy. And he purported [01:16:23.220 --> 01:16:28.020] to enforce the transportation code. I want to see your authority to enforce the transportation [01:16:28.020 --> 01:16:32.980] code. If you don't have it, you exerted or purported to exert an authority you did not expressly have. [01:16:32.980 --> 01:16:39.620] You seized me in my right to routinely my freedom of movement for Fourth Amendment rights. And you [01:16:39.620 --> 01:16:46.900] did so while prominently displaying a dead weapon the way I read 2202 B2A Texas Penal Code. [01:16:47.540 --> 01:16:53.060] First degree felony aggravated assault. Let's dance. Hang on. Pick this up on the other side. [01:16:53.060 --> 01:17:03.300] Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost [01:17:03.300 --> 01:17:07.700] as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my [01:17:07.700 --> 01:17:13.380] truth pick. I'd be lost without logos. And I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd [01:17:13.380 --> 01:17:17.620] love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money [01:17:17.620 --> 01:17:23.700] to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.700 --> 01:17:29.140] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.140 --> 01:17:34.660] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosregulnetwork.com. [01:17:34.660 --> 01:17:39.780] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, [01:17:39.780 --> 01:17:45.780] you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do anything [01:17:45.780 --> 01:17:52.580] different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving without doing [01:17:52.580 --> 01:17:59.380] anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. You're welcome. Happy holidays, [01:17:59.380 --> 01:18:08.500] logos. It's the 2017 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser, sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks. [01:18:08.500 --> 01:18:13.940] Defense distributed in Fapsiles, Delhi. Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:13.940 --> 01:18:19.380] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. From Central Texas Gunworks, first place up for [01:18:19.380 --> 01:18:27.700] grads of Spikes Tactical AR-15. Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. From Defense distributed, [01:18:27.700 --> 01:18:34.500] third place, the AR-308 80% lower. Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. From Fapsiles, [01:18:34.500 --> 01:18:40.580] Delhi, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fapsiles, Delhi. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:40.580 --> 01:18:45.300] That's logosradionetwork.com. Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, [01:18:45.300 --> 01:18:50.020] Legal 101, you get four chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, [01:18:50.020 --> 01:18:55.300] get 10 chances to win. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to [01:18:55.300 --> 01:18:58.980] logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:25.300 --> 01:19:42.660] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with the Law Radio. We're talking to Mauricio from Texas. [01:19:44.500 --> 01:19:53.620] And okay, you had a surest deputy pool you over. The fact that two DPS officers were [01:19:53.620 --> 01:20:01.860] present is irrelevant because the DPS officers have no power to delegate their authority to a [01:20:03.060 --> 01:20:10.180] surest deputy. The surest department has the power to delegate their authority to a DPS officer, [01:20:11.860 --> 01:20:16.260] but not the other way around. Because the administrative code that creates the department [01:20:16.260 --> 01:20:24.420] of public safety says, department of public safety shall not enforce the criminal laws, except that [01:20:24.420 --> 01:20:30.180] under the request, at the request of and under the direction of local law enforcement. So, [01:20:30.180 --> 01:20:36.340] local law enforcement can delegate their authority to enforce the penal laws to the DPS. [01:20:37.300 --> 01:20:42.820] Nothing authorizes the DPS to delegate the authority to enforce the transportation code [01:20:42.820 --> 01:20:51.940] to surest department. 701.001 authorizes that, and that has to be done by the County Commissioner's [01:20:51.940 --> 01:20:58.660] Court. Well, this officer did not have that authorization. So, when he turned his lights [01:20:58.660 --> 01:21:03.460] on, he exerted or purported to exert an authority he did not express for having in the process, [01:21:04.260 --> 01:21:09.780] seized me, arrested my freedom of movement, and seized me for purposes of Fourth Amendment rights. [01:21:09.780 --> 01:21:20.980] And he did so, well, first, that's a violation of 39.03 penal code, official oppression. [01:21:22.180 --> 01:21:31.700] But he did that while he was cloaked in the authority of a public official, specifically [01:21:31.700 --> 01:21:37.700] he was dressed in a surest deputy's uniform. But he could not act in the capacity of a surest [01:21:37.700 --> 01:21:46.020] deputy. Therefore, he was impersonating a public official. Glass beaten, the second degree felonies, [01:21:46.020 --> 01:21:56.660] the first degree state jail felony, I believe, in Texas. However, at the time, prominently [01:21:56.660 --> 01:22:04.740] displaying a deadly weapon, 2202B2A says that if a person commits simple assault, you're resting [01:22:04.740 --> 01:22:10.900] my freedom of movement with the simple assault. And he is prominently displaying a deadly weapon [01:22:10.900 --> 01:22:20.500] that's a felony of the second degree, unless he is a public official acting under the color or [01:22:20.500 --> 01:22:27.380] pretense of an official capacity in which case it's a felony of the first degree. Guys, I didn't [01:22:27.380 --> 01:22:35.220] make it up. I just read it. So I filed that. And I know the surest department got a copy of that [01:22:35.220 --> 01:22:42.660] complaint. And they're saying, what in the heck is he talking about? They went down my codes and [01:22:42.660 --> 01:22:50.020] found that every code I referenced said exactly what I told them it said. So when I talked to [01:22:50.020 --> 01:22:57.700] this Lieutenant, he knew exactly what I was talking about. So this will get their attention. [01:22:57.700 --> 01:23:02.900] And now you've got the prosecutor in a position to where he's kind of stuck. [01:23:05.140 --> 01:23:11.460] If you go sit down with this prosecutor, I suggest you take a verified criminal affidavit [01:23:11.460 --> 01:23:20.100] alleged, alleged against the officer, this violation, put it on the desk in front of him. [01:23:20.100 --> 01:23:25.540] This is for you. You don't have to give him legal advice. [01:23:27.300 --> 01:23:35.940] 2.03 Texas penal code says that when a prosecuting attorney is made known and I'm paraphrasing [01:23:35.940 --> 01:23:40.820] because it's kind of wordy, but essentially says that when a prosecuting attorney is made known [01:23:40.820 --> 01:23:46.100] in any manner that a public official has violated a law relating to his office, [01:23:46.820 --> 01:23:54.660] he shall reduce the complaint when information submitted to the grand jury for it. No discretion [01:23:54.660 --> 01:24:03.540] whatsoever. My local district attorney, his ADA, she was going to work for a college as a law professor. [01:24:03.540 --> 01:24:11.860] She was his smart one in the group. He got a meeting with me and him and her [01:24:13.060 --> 01:24:17.860] because I'm bringing first degree felon. He aggravated assault charges against the district [01:24:17.860 --> 01:24:23.860] judge and I'm wanting to give him to the grand jury and I'm wanting him to stay out of my way. [01:24:25.540 --> 01:24:28.820] So he brought her in and we had a meeting for this purpose [01:24:28.820 --> 01:24:33.540] and I took her to the codes and wiped the floor with her. [01:24:35.140 --> 01:24:41.780] She said, he's right. It's what the code says. I can't find a way around it. [01:24:43.220 --> 01:24:50.340] So you give this to the prosecuting attorney. You just invoked his duty under article 2.03 [01:24:50.340 --> 01:25:01.140] 0 discretion. When he refuses to take it, now you get to file against him or at least let [01:25:01.140 --> 01:25:10.020] him know and here it is. But what I did last time I went to my prosecutor is I took him one [01:25:10.020 --> 01:25:21.620] that wasn't verified and I told him, this one's for your information. It is not verified therefore [01:25:21.620 --> 01:25:27.940] it's not official but this is where I'm going. Do you want to go there with me [01:25:29.940 --> 01:25:36.420] or do you want to do something else? That's kind of the route I was wanting to take. [01:25:36.420 --> 01:25:43.460] Yeah. So this would be a good way to give him something to work with and he's going to say, [01:25:44.340 --> 01:25:46.660] I don't know what you're talking about. I'll have to research this. [01:25:47.700 --> 01:25:55.300] Can you tell him a research way? If he wants to research the requirement to give it to the grand [01:25:55.300 --> 01:26:09.700] jury, you can go to Jurisimprudence.website and there is a link on there to the document I [01:26:09.700 --> 01:26:21.300] filed in the Tom Delay case and I don't know if I've put the Rick Perry document on there or not [01:26:21.300 --> 01:26:30.500] but I filed a habeas in the Tom Delay case and I filed a document with his lawyer, [01:26:33.620 --> 01:26:41.540] Governor Rick Perry's lawyers showing them this problem with the grand jury. It makes the grand [01:26:41.540 --> 01:26:49.060] jury arguments. If you want to see them, I'll get both of those to you and then you can [01:26:49.060 --> 01:27:00.260] show him this has chapter and verse. So you want to argue this with me in court? We can go here [01:27:00.260 --> 01:27:06.100] because this is where I'm going to take you and he just decided to decide if he wants to go there. [01:27:06.100 --> 01:27:12.420] So they filed everything they could against you so that they could then come to the table and say, [01:27:12.420 --> 01:27:19.620] these are all the horrible awful things we're going to do to you if you don't make us a deal. Now [01:27:19.620 --> 01:27:24.020] you get to come to the table and say, here's all the horrible awful things I'm going to do to you [01:27:24.980 --> 01:27:27.460] if you don't give me a deal I can live with. [01:27:31.380 --> 01:27:35.700] And seeing how I've never been arrested, would it be so outrageous to ask for a dismissal and [01:27:35.700 --> 01:27:44.660] to have my intervention taken out of a computer? Yeah, dismissal and a expungement. There you go. [01:27:45.380 --> 01:27:51.140] Now that wouldn't cost him anything so that wouldn't be something expensive for him. [01:27:52.340 --> 01:27:59.620] Great, perfect. Oh, you might ask him, you know, you might settle for a classy misdemeanor [01:27:59.620 --> 01:28:10.660] license, snow on your license plate. Once you get all the charges gone, [01:28:11.620 --> 01:28:15.140] now you can come back and sue the judge because he doesn't have subject marriage jurisdiction [01:28:15.140 --> 01:28:22.100] never had in the first place. And you've seen another good point. I've never been found guilty [01:28:22.100 --> 01:28:27.620] on the move in violation. They've never been on the trial and more likely they'll hit their [01:28:27.620 --> 01:28:35.460] two statute of limitation. That's not why he doesn't have jurisdiction. Okay. He doesn't have [01:28:35.460 --> 01:28:40.100] jurisdiction because the sheriff's deputy never had authority to pull you over in the first place. [01:28:41.780 --> 01:28:47.700] Yes, sir. No, they had some DPS officers they could have, but they didn't. [01:28:50.500 --> 01:28:51.620] And they can't delegate. [01:28:51.620 --> 01:28:58.020] The sheriff can't do that job for them. So they're stuck. They just did it wrong. [01:28:59.140 --> 01:29:05.460] Seeing now another curiosity question, the deputy's accompanies the sheriff that took me to jail [01:29:05.460 --> 01:29:10.180] and walked me into the jail. So would they be on the hook for the kidnapping as well? [01:29:10.180 --> 01:29:21.460] Absolutely. Okay. It's the tar baby. I go around to these officials. I got this little tar baby. [01:29:22.260 --> 01:29:28.900] It's kind of invisible, but you want to touch it? Go ahead. Touch it. Touch it. Anybody who has [01:29:28.900 --> 01:29:35.300] anything to do with it touches the tar baby. And they all stick to it. You get to go after all of [01:29:35.300 --> 01:29:41.140] them. And that's how you use the politics. You go after the guy who's essentially innocent. [01:29:42.580 --> 01:29:47.220] Follow the tort letter against the jailers. They'll have a fit. Hang on. Going to break. [01:29:47.220 --> 01:29:51.220] Randy Kelton, we'll go to the radio. We'll be right back. [01:29:51.220 --> 01:30:06.740] I'm not a mind reader, but there's a good chance I can guess your password. Most people choose [01:30:06.740 --> 01:30:12.340] passwords from a limited repertoire. So hacking in is a piece of cake. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:30:12.340 --> 01:30:18.100] and I'll be right back with the solution. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about [01:30:18.100 --> 01:30:23.380] yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms [01:30:23.380 --> 01:30:29.300] will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information [01:30:29.300 --> 01:30:34.580] to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to [01:30:34.580 --> 01:30:40.820] you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start [01:30:40.820 --> 01:30:47.620] over with StartPage. It's hard to remember a complicated password, but that's no excuse for a [01:30:47.620 --> 01:30:52.580] pathetic one. Recent security breaches have exposed millions of passwords, so we know what [01:30:52.580 --> 01:31:00.980] people are choosing. The most common password is 123456, followed by 12345. I love you is also in [01:31:00.980 --> 01:31:06.340] the top 10. If your password is too easy, beat it up. It takes just a few seconds to guess a [01:31:06.340 --> 01:31:11.460] password with seven lowercase letters, but add capital letters and numbers and things get much [01:31:11.460 --> 01:31:16.900] harder. Add some other character like a dollar sign and increase the length to 10 characters, [01:31:16.900 --> 01:31:21.460] and suddenly cracking your password is virtually impossible, and that's good security. [01:31:22.340 --> 01:31:26.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.660 --> 01:31:36.100] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.100 --> 01:31:41.620] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:31:41.620 --> 01:31:45.940] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, [01:31:45.940 --> 01:31:50.740] and thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural [01:31:50.740 --> 01:31:54.900] engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his [01:31:54.900 --> 01:32:07.700] son. We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:25.460 --> 01:32:30.820] 0 complaints. You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof [01:32:30.820 --> 01:32:38.500] right the first time. Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.500 --> 01:32:43.460] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos radio [01:32:43.460 --> 01:32:48.260] network to help continue this programming. So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, [01:32:48.260 --> 01:32:56.580] your door should be locked in. That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.580 --> 01:33:00.900] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. I mean, I actually be kidding about Kim Trails. [01:33:00.900 --> 01:33:17.700] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:30.900 --> 01:33:49.620] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with Logos Radio, and we're talking to Mauricio in Texas. [01:33:49.620 --> 01:34:01.860] I'm hoping this makes sense. I kind of used you, Mauricio. I don't think I owe you an apology, [01:34:01.860 --> 01:34:11.780] but I used you to examine the political side. We kind of got to take a closer look. We don't [01:34:11.780 --> 01:34:17.620] have any other colors, so we had time to take a closer look at the political side. [01:34:17.620 --> 01:34:26.500] One of the things I like to do from a political perspective is you want to find somebody who's [01:34:26.500 --> 01:34:34.820] engaged in the process who is essentially innocent. I filed against my local JP once, [01:34:36.020 --> 01:34:42.980] and Mark Autry, I used to tell everybody on the show when he was JP that it was my opinion [01:34:42.980 --> 01:34:48.260] that Mark Autry would do what he thought was right if it heraly up the pope. [01:34:50.580 --> 01:34:58.340] I believe that. I considered ourselves personal friends and went to him once and told him that, [01:34:58.340 --> 01:35:04.420] you know, Mark, I got to tell you something. He said to Mr. Kelton, am I going to like this? [01:35:04.420 --> 01:35:12.420] No, no, I don't think so. Well, what is it, Mr. Kelton? Well, I filed a few criminal charges [01:35:12.420 --> 01:35:18.980] against you with the attorney general. Oh, you did, Mr. Kelton. Yeah, I did. Well, would it help to [01:35:18.980 --> 01:35:26.340] know that I filed against all the other JP's too? No, Mr. Kelton, that doesn't help. Well, would it [01:35:26.340 --> 01:35:33.380] help if I told you that I wrote yours last? No, Mr. Kelton, that does not help. And he said, well, [01:35:34.260 --> 01:35:37.860] you know, I told him, I'm sorry I had to file against you because right there, I like you. [01:35:37.860 --> 01:35:45.300] He said, Mr. Kelton, if you like me, then why did you file against me? I said, well, [01:35:45.860 --> 01:35:52.420] you're the best one for me to file against. Nobody's going to say that I filed against [01:35:52.420 --> 01:36:00.420] you out of anger or avarice because I like you and I trust you. Well, why did you file against [01:36:00.420 --> 01:36:05.780] me? Because you're not filing at all. Well, I'm doing what I'm trying to do. I know that. That's [01:36:05.780 --> 01:36:14.420] my whole point. I want the training changed and I don't want them to to dilute my claim by asserting [01:36:14.420 --> 01:36:23.540] that I'm just acting out of anger or some other malicious reason. He said, I see your point. [01:36:24.900 --> 01:36:33.380] I don't have to like it, but I see it. So you take someone who is essentially innocent. [01:36:33.380 --> 01:36:39.540] You take the jailer who was the nicest to you. You file against that one. [01:36:41.140 --> 01:36:45.380] Now, you've got jailers in there who are real jerks. You don't file against them. [01:36:46.180 --> 01:36:52.340] You file against a nice one. And they're going to blame the jerk. So your fault that you filed [01:36:52.340 --> 01:36:57.300] against me. If you'd have treated him like a decent human being, I wouldn't be having to fight this [01:36:57.300 --> 01:37:04.180] fight. And he'll go to, you know, that's why I like filing a T close complaint against the police officer. [01:37:05.860 --> 01:37:09.860] Police officers just doing his job. They for the most part don't like writing tickets. They want [01:37:09.860 --> 01:37:15.540] to go out catching bad guys. That's what they do. But they got to spend half their time writing [01:37:15.540 --> 01:37:23.300] tickets to generate dollar flow for the city and wind up alienating the people that they [01:37:23.300 --> 01:37:30.180] won't need on their side. So this is an honorous duty that police have to do. And then you file [01:37:30.180 --> 01:37:38.740] a T close complaint against him for following the rules. He is not going to be a happy camper. [01:37:40.100 --> 01:37:45.380] And he's going to be going to his boss saying, what in the heck is going on? I get six of these [01:37:45.380 --> 01:37:54.180] and I can't get bonded. I get fired. Nobody will hire me. Nothing he can do about it. [01:37:56.020 --> 01:38:00.900] So he's getting this T close complaint and he didn't do anything. He just followed the rules. [01:38:02.020 --> 01:38:10.500] Sorry, Bubba. I didn't make the rules. I made the law. I followed it. You didn't deal with it. [01:38:10.500 --> 01:38:16.500] So he's going to go to his boss and tell his boss, you want to write those tickets? You want to follow [01:38:16.500 --> 01:38:20.980] that flawed policy? You go follow that policy. I ain't going out there getting those T close [01:38:20.980 --> 01:38:28.660] complaint. We create a bit of dissension in the ranks. I've got one in Highland Park, [01:38:28.660 --> 01:38:34.260] real small community in North Dallas. But he's got two of my complaints so far. One for me and [01:38:34.260 --> 01:38:41.780] one from somebody else. Two T close complaints against him. And he was a really nice guy. Sorry, [01:38:41.780 --> 01:38:48.100] Bubba. Life is tough. So nobody will say I filed against this officer because I was upset with [01:38:48.820 --> 01:38:53.780] him. Because I was telling him he's a real nice guy. He didn't do anything out of line or inappropriate. [01:38:54.420 --> 01:39:00.660] He was always dignified and respectful. But he didn't follow code. [01:39:00.660 --> 01:39:07.940] So now he's getting his career jeopardized for following their policy. Does that make [01:39:07.940 --> 01:39:17.460] sense, Mirishu? No, absolutely it does. So look at the actors in the process. [01:39:18.740 --> 01:39:26.260] You want to find the guys that will make the argument, I was just following the rules. [01:39:26.260 --> 01:39:31.780] It didn't work in the Nuremberg trials. Maybe it'll work better here. [01:39:33.780 --> 01:39:40.580] Now if you wanted to add a little bit of pressure, you know, you argument the gentleman that pulled [01:39:40.580 --> 01:39:49.380] you over was a peace officer pretending to be a police officer. Therefore, whatever funds collected [01:39:49.380 --> 01:39:56.900] through those citations are collected through Prodigy Act. So in theory, I could file a money [01:39:56.900 --> 01:40:03.140] laundering lawsuit against this spouse. Wait a minute. There's a statute somebody else brought [01:40:03.140 --> 01:40:12.900] to my attention. I think it's 3906. 3906 or 3905. That goes exactly to that. [01:40:12.900 --> 01:40:24.260] Where public official fraudulently collects funds under the color of his office. [01:40:25.140 --> 01:40:32.180] But oh, there's nothing like introducing an official to the court of angry wife. [01:40:35.140 --> 01:40:40.260] It was several years ago that was first brought to my attention and I really liked the idea. [01:40:40.260 --> 01:40:46.020] Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It's all about the politics, right? And then we've got what, [01:40:46.020 --> 01:40:50.420] three deputies and two DPS. I'm sure all of their wives are going to be upset. [01:40:51.220 --> 01:40:59.380] Oh, it doesn't matter if the suit gets thrown out or not. Mama is not going to be a happy camper. [01:41:00.740 --> 01:41:03.860] When she gets named in a suit for what hubby did. [01:41:03.860 --> 01:41:10.580] I have a sister-in-law. She's married to butch the pollock. [01:41:11.940 --> 01:41:16.100] Butch the pollocks always trying to get my wife upset at me. We're always playing let you and [01:41:16.100 --> 01:41:29.460] him fight. Well, his problem is if his wife gets mad, she's mad. Now I go to her and tell her just [01:41:29.460 --> 01:41:36.260] a whole stack of whoppers and she just gets furious. Then I tell her, oh, Pat, I just made all that [01:41:36.260 --> 01:41:44.740] stuff up. He didn't do any of that stuff. It don't make any difference. Once she's mad, she's mad. [01:41:46.980 --> 01:41:55.460] So that's what's going to happen. You see the wife, she is going to have a fit and the husband [01:41:55.460 --> 01:42:00.980] can tell her, oh, that was all improper. They don't have any standing. She is not going to care. [01:42:03.140 --> 01:42:10.740] Yes. So I do like that idea. And about a year ago, I guess you could say they're still recovering [01:42:10.740 --> 01:42:20.100] from some bad press because apparently a year ago, he pulled over a young lady that was passing [01:42:20.100 --> 01:42:26.820] through the town. She was a traveling nurse in an enterprise car. Her name was Brittany Morris. [01:42:26.820 --> 01:42:34.340] You can YouTube it and look her up. I know about that. Yes. Well, that's the exact county that [01:42:34.340 --> 01:42:41.860] I'm going to be going up against on Friday. So yeah, no, they tried to hit her with four [01:42:41.860 --> 01:42:48.420] different felonies and at the end of the body camera, you could see where an undressed officer [01:42:48.420 --> 01:42:54.180] tells the other guy, hey, shut that off. So it's one of those counties. [01:42:57.620 --> 01:43:04.980] Well, it generally has been my experience that the more corrupted jurisdiction is, [01:43:05.700 --> 01:43:13.620] the more afraid they are. They're always afraid that you're going to look behind the curtain. [01:43:13.620 --> 01:43:19.940] Have you gotten a copy of my financial disclosure request from judges? [01:43:21.780 --> 01:43:29.460] No, no, no. These are all those things that I need to beg of you that we get together in the [01:43:29.460 --> 01:43:37.060] email. That way I can set up a proper game plan. So when I do go up there on Friday, we can play [01:43:37.060 --> 01:43:43.940] game. Okay, let me come back. I'll talk about this financial disclosure for judges. Oh, this is [01:43:43.940 --> 01:43:50.980] so much fun. Hang on, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Wheel of Law Radio. We'll be right back. [01:44:00.180 --> 01:44:06.420] Nutritious food is real body armor. It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion and feeds [01:44:06.420 --> 01:44:11.140] the entire body, the nutrients it needs. 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[01:46:53.380 --> 01:47:00.500] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. Something in this world we'll never [01:47:00.500 --> 01:47:29.740] Okay, we are back Randy Kelton with our radio and we had a little technical issue someone [01:47:29.740 --> 01:47:38.900] snuck in here and muted my mic when I was looking. Not my fault, I never take responsibility. [01:47:38.900 --> 01:47:47.460] It's a guy thing. Okay, we were talking about judicial disclosure. This is so rotten. It's [01:47:47.460 --> 01:47:55.020] the kind of thinking rotten low down tricks they tend to pull on us. I looked around through [01:47:55.020 --> 01:48:04.420] the different states for what kinds of financial disclosures judges had to make and the best [01:48:04.420 --> 01:48:14.900] one was California. They had the most extensive disclosure requirements. So I made up a petition [01:48:14.900 --> 01:48:21.900] for disclosure, financial disclosure by the judge and I listed all of the things listed [01:48:21.900 --> 01:48:28.340] by California and it essentially goes to complete financial statement by the judge [01:48:28.340 --> 01:48:37.380] and by everyone associated with the judge within three degrees of co-sanguinity. Ants, [01:48:37.380 --> 01:48:53.220] uncles, nephews, cousins, in-laws, everybody. The judge is not going to be happy. And then [01:48:53.220 --> 01:48:58.620] it was Sarah, it was Ms. Palin that I want to call her Sarah Palin but she's not Sarah [01:48:58.620 --> 01:49:14.380] Palin. That's the politician. Anyway, Ms. Palin is the one that brought this to my attention [01:49:14.380 --> 01:49:23.700] because she was digging into how judges launder money. The primary way she found that they [01:49:23.700 --> 01:49:28.860] laundered money, at least the federal judges, is they would take a property they owned and [01:49:28.860 --> 01:49:34.900] get a mortgage on it and pull equity out of the property and then in six months the mortgage [01:49:34.900 --> 01:49:42.940] would be paid back. The judge wasn't paying back the mortgage. So he could pull the equity [01:49:42.940 --> 01:49:47.740] out and that money is laundered and then they don't ask where this money comes from [01:49:47.740 --> 01:49:57.020] to pay it back. So we want to look at all of the mortgages the judges got on this property. [01:49:57.020 --> 01:50:08.820] And I researched every way I could find that judges were disciplined for laundering money. [01:50:08.820 --> 01:50:15.540] I found a whole bunch of different ways. And I crafted a set of questions asking for information [01:50:15.540 --> 01:50:24.340] going to those methods and put this all in an information request under discovery. You [01:50:24.340 --> 01:50:34.620] have a right to know if your judge has a conflict of interest. If the judge is dirty it's going [01:50:34.620 --> 01:50:41.780] to tell the judge that you're looking behind the curtain. If the judge is not dirty it's [01:50:41.780 --> 01:50:51.540] going to paint him with the same brush. Now, this is really a low down dirty rotten shister [01:50:51.540 --> 01:51:03.500] lawyer trick. Life is tough. Deal with it. I just got an email from someone in a traffic [01:51:03.500 --> 01:51:12.020] case and he said that the motion had exactly the effect he wanted it to. So it made the [01:51:12.020 --> 01:51:20.260] judge furious. But I tell the judge, why are you upset? If you don't have anything to hide [01:51:20.260 --> 01:51:28.780] you shouldn't have a problem with this. Anyway, I can show these letters to the prosecutor [01:51:28.780 --> 01:51:34.780] and one for the district judge and one for the JP who did the magistrate. Correct? Yeah, [01:51:34.780 --> 01:51:40.300] go ahead and send it to the magistrate and the district judge. The district judge is [01:51:40.300 --> 01:51:45.780] going to have a fit and he's not going to want to answer it. And he's going to want [01:51:45.780 --> 01:51:53.460] the prosecutor to get this to go away. If you just threaten to send it it won't have [01:51:53.460 --> 01:52:02.340] any effect. But if you send it all it is is discovery. And it's the first issue. You [01:52:02.340 --> 01:52:10.980] need to know you have a right to have fair and competent jurist in the first instance. [01:52:10.980 --> 01:52:18.500] So you want to make sure that the jurist is fair and competent. So it's a reasonable [01:52:18.500 --> 01:52:28.300] request. And then the district judge is going to want the prosecutor attorney to make this [01:52:28.300 --> 01:52:37.300] go away. Now you've got something to bargain with. It's a great thing to bargain with because [01:52:37.300 --> 01:52:45.700] don't cost you anything. Now here's a little curiosity question as well. Now I haven't [01:52:45.700 --> 01:52:54.260] yet to confirm this. So let's just take this as hearsay. When I asked the, because I was [01:52:54.260 --> 01:53:01.140] notified that I had a court hearing by my bond lady before I received the notice in [01:53:01.140 --> 01:53:06.460] the mail. And I asked her in her opinion what it would be. And she said, well, more likely [01:53:06.460 --> 01:53:12.860] you'll go and do a pleading and be appointed a court appointed attorney and move on from [01:53:12.860 --> 01:53:25.220] there. Excuse me. I am. I'm sorry. [01:53:25.220 --> 01:53:35.220] Court appointed attorney. Yes, yes, yes, yes. I've locked my mother. My mother just turned. [01:53:35.220 --> 01:53:43.620] She's going to turn 95 next week. And she, she tells me this is not going to get better. [01:53:43.620 --> 01:53:51.780] No, gosh, I don't know that. If she, if she can remember that, if she can remember that [01:53:51.780 --> 01:53:58.900] dance. Thank you. Anyway, we were talking about doing things to them that they don't [01:53:58.900 --> 01:54:09.380] like. Yeah, like the, the judicial discovery and suing the wife about the financial disclosures [01:54:09.380 --> 01:54:15.860] of doing a lie. Putting out against both in the JP and the district judge. Come on. I [01:54:15.860 --> 01:54:21.860] know it's going to come to me in a minute. Yeah. And the nice things about these requests [01:54:21.860 --> 01:54:31.500] for disclosures is on the surface from the reasonable person of ordinary prudent standard. [01:54:31.500 --> 01:54:40.300] It draws the question. If you're not dirty, what's your problem? You're essentially required [01:54:40.300 --> 01:54:45.740] to reveal this information anyway. And these judges file disclosures, but they never fill [01:54:45.740 --> 01:54:55.540] them out completely. So you maintain that the required to disclose this information anyway. [01:54:55.540 --> 01:55:02.060] So they don't have a reasonable, reasonable objection. So when they start to object, it's [01:55:02.060 --> 01:55:10.180] just like when the policeman says, can I search your car? And you say, heck no. Well, if you [01:55:10.180 --> 01:55:17.980] don't have anything illegal, why do you eject? And I tell them, because you're a police officer [01:55:17.980 --> 01:55:23.660] and I have reason to believe you would lie with the truth to do better. So I don't want [01:55:23.660 --> 01:55:33.420] your face in my car. But you do the same thing back to them. You paint even the honest judge. [01:55:33.420 --> 01:55:41.660] You paint him with the dirty brush. And this is something that'll carry beyond this case. [01:55:41.660 --> 01:55:45.620] So the judge is not going to be happy camper. And he's going to be coming back, crawling [01:55:45.620 --> 01:55:51.860] down this prosecutor's throat, wanting to prosecute and make this go away. Well, you [01:55:51.860 --> 01:56:01.620] filed a motion here you really don't care about. They have filed a bunch of extra complaints [01:56:01.620 --> 01:56:07.100] against you that they don't care about, that they know they cannot convict you on. And [01:56:07.100 --> 01:56:13.340] they're just using those for leverage to get you to cop the one they want you to so they [01:56:13.340 --> 01:56:22.300] don't have to fight it. Well, you can play the same game. The guys want to play hard [01:56:22.300 --> 01:56:27.140] ball, I'll welcome you to the deep end of the pool. Now we go after the judge and the [01:56:27.140 --> 01:56:35.060] judge's credentials. And when the judge doesn't respond to the disclosure request, biology [01:56:35.060 --> 01:56:40.780] is a conduct complaint against him. Now he's really going to be unhappy because now that [01:56:40.780 --> 01:56:48.300] affects his bond rating. Now, would it be wise for you? Oh, you were talking about them [01:56:48.300 --> 01:56:57.580] appointing you counsel. I needed to issue a warning. If you think they're going to appoint [01:56:57.580 --> 01:57:04.460] you counsel, you get every motion you want in the record in the record first, get everything [01:57:04.460 --> 01:57:10.420] filed. Okay, then court appointed counsel inherits them. The first thing you tell court [01:57:10.420 --> 01:57:17.380] appointing counsel is what I told mine. I've got motions filed in the court. I've got 19 [01:57:17.380 --> 01:57:23.060] due process violations, you will adequately adjudicate every single one of them, you fail [01:57:23.060 --> 01:57:29.420] to adequately adjudicate a single one of them, I'll margrieve you. Mr. Kelton, you would [01:57:29.420 --> 01:57:37.940] grieve me and a heartbeat. Now he's terrified that I'm going to end his career. They dismissed [01:57:37.940 --> 01:57:44.260] that case to protect my lawyer from me. And that works for me too. So that means I would [01:57:44.260 --> 01:57:49.620] have five days to get them in the mail because according to their letter, any treaties or [01:57:49.620 --> 01:57:57.260] motions need to be heard submitted no less than five days prior to date hearing. [01:57:57.260 --> 01:58:09.060] Then no, no, no, before trial. Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, by that. Okay, okay, okay. But [01:58:09.060 --> 01:58:13.980] you want them in before they appoint counsel because once they appoint counsel, they won't [01:58:13.980 --> 01:58:19.220] let you file it. See, but that stuff is going to happen to me on Friday. Is they all appoint [01:58:19.220 --> 01:58:25.660] counsel? Just go on traffic ticket dot website, fill out the ticket information. I'll spit [01:58:25.660 --> 01:58:32.900] you out 125 pages. Everything is in there, including the judicial disclosure. File it [01:58:32.900 --> 01:58:38.860] and then yeah, go ahead, appoint me counsel. I'll wind his clock. We are out of time. Randy [01:58:38.860 --> 01:58:43.100] Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio. Thank you all for listening. We'll be back [01:58:43.100 --> 01:58:50.460] tomorrow night with our four hour info marathon and I'm glad to be live. Thank you for listening. 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