[00:00.000 --> 00:28.400] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 closed with gold $1,353.22 [00:28.400 --> 00:58.200] Today in history, the year 1968, [00:58.200 --> 01:03.600] President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, which prohibited private [01:03.600 --> 01:07.960] businesses from discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. [01:07.960 --> 01:13.200] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:13.200 --> 01:18.200] in public schools, in employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:18.200 --> 01:20.200] Today in history. [01:20.200 --> 01:28.680] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to reach new levels after a chemical attack on civilians [01:28.680 --> 01:32.920] in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which is being blamed [01:32.920 --> 01:37.520] on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, by the United States [01:37.520 --> 01:42.000] and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified evidence as [01:42.000 --> 01:43.320] of yet. [01:43.320 --> 01:47.160] President Trump tweeted today Wednesday that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and [01:47.160 --> 01:51.520] all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice and new [01:51.520 --> 01:56.360] and smart, going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal [01:56.360 --> 01:58.600] who kills its people and enjoys it. [01:58.600 --> 02:02.640] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [02:02.640 --> 02:06.520] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [02:06.520 --> 02:11.040] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the organization [02:11.040 --> 02:15.560] for the prohibition of chemical weapons to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [02:15.560 --> 02:19.400] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [02:19.400 --> 02:24.000] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [02:24.000 --> 02:28.760] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [02:28.760 --> 02:32.520] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [02:32.520 --> 02:37.880] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakhova posted on Facebook [02:37.880 --> 02:42.200] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [02:42.200 --> 02:46.760] has been fighting terrorists, or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart [02:46.760 --> 02:50.320] missile strike, and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to [02:50.320 --> 03:16.320] look at. [03:50.320 --> 04:17.520] Okay, we are back. [04:17.520 --> 04:21.680] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue LeVeaux Radio, we're back. [04:21.680 --> 04:22.680] No, no, no. [04:22.680 --> 04:24.240] This is the start of the show. [04:24.240 --> 04:26.680] My brain is out of gear today. [04:26.680 --> 04:35.960] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue LeVeaux Radio on this May the 3rd, 2018. [04:35.960 --> 04:41.200] And I haven't discussed this with the dev yet, but I'm going to go ahead and do it. [04:41.200 --> 04:52.840] We are trying to get an on-air position, but we need another $1,000 a month in order to [04:52.840 --> 05:01.000] expand our reach with the whole network. [05:01.000 --> 05:12.080] If any of you can pitch in, say, $10 a month, $15 a month, something to help us establish [05:12.080 --> 05:18.480] this, we can get this word out to a whole lot more people that are not hearing it. [05:18.480 --> 05:24.400] If you're concerned about the condition of the legal system right now, I'm going to [05:24.400 --> 05:32.400] suggest to you that you're not going to find any place that will bring you closer to being [05:32.400 --> 05:37.920] able to navigate the legal system than right here on LeVeaux Radio Network. [05:37.920 --> 05:44.600] We've got the people, we've got the information, but we need to be able to get it out. [05:44.600 --> 05:48.120] I can go in and beat up the courts. [05:48.120 --> 05:55.280] You can go in and beat up the courts using our tools, and the people who know about us [05:55.280 --> 06:01.080] and are listening to us, they can beat up the courts, but we're not enough. [06:01.080 --> 06:05.800] We need to get enough people doing this so that we reach a tipping point. [06:05.800 --> 06:13.120] We have approximately, the last figures I came across from the State Bar Association [06:13.120 --> 06:24.880] in Texas is, it used to be 20%, now they're saying 25% of all cases are pled by the process, [06:24.880 --> 06:29.320] and when it was 20%, they were complaining that this is horrible, but it's increasing, [06:29.320 --> 06:31.480] it's increasing quickly. [06:31.480 --> 06:39.440] We need to be able to provide that 25% who are standing up for themselves with the tools [06:39.440 --> 06:42.800] to do it. [06:42.800 --> 06:49.000] We need some committed, regular income to be able to cover this. [06:49.000 --> 06:55.160] So if you can, if you can help us get this word out. [06:55.160 --> 07:03.600] This could be the place you look back on in years to come and say, the germ of what changed [07:03.600 --> 07:10.040] everything originated right here, and I was part of it. [07:10.040 --> 07:15.920] So we don't like to ask for money, we kind of like public radio, they don't like to [07:15.920 --> 07:21.360] either, but they have to, and we don't like to, but we really have to in order to expand [07:21.360 --> 07:22.360] this thing. [07:22.360 --> 07:32.080] So if you can, pitch in 5, 10, just, we need to be able to see an increase of $1,000 every [07:32.080 --> 07:40.840] month, pretty well guaranteed, then we're really to commit to a major project that will [07:40.840 --> 07:44.520] get us out there and relatively permanent. [07:44.520 --> 07:50.040] So if you can help us out, we sure appreciate it, and that's all the begging for money I'm [07:50.040 --> 07:53.000] going to do today. [07:53.000 --> 08:04.600] Okay, the project that I'm working on, let me turn the phone lines on, phone lines are [08:04.600 --> 08:09.480] on, call in number, 512-646-1984. [08:09.480 --> 08:13.320] If you have a question or comment, give us a call, we'll be taking your calls all night. [08:13.320 --> 08:17.480] I'm going to start out with the project that I'm working on. [08:17.480 --> 08:28.960] Last week I indicated my reluctance to launch a part of this, and if you've been listening [08:28.960 --> 08:39.720] to this show for a while and hope you're beginning to understand why me after 30 years of research [08:39.720 --> 08:46.480] and work in this industry, in this area, I'm finally really getting inside it. [08:46.480 --> 08:53.480] When I started in this, I really never imagined that just some two-bit jump from Podum, Texas [08:53.480 --> 08:55.160] could change everything. [08:55.160 --> 09:03.080] I'm still right, some two-bit pump from Podum, Texas can't change everything. [09:03.080 --> 09:08.440] But with the right tool, we get this tool implemented. [09:08.440 --> 09:14.720] The tool could very well change everything. [09:14.720 --> 09:24.360] It could bring technology into the public. [09:24.360 --> 09:31.680] In the 90s and the 80s and 90s, when we first started getting desktop-type computers, when [09:31.680 --> 09:35.240] I was 16, I worked for Olivetti Underwood. [09:35.240 --> 09:39.680] Now, if you were my age, you would recognize Olivetti Underwood. [09:39.680 --> 09:46.920] That was the premier typewriter manufacturer on planet Earth. [09:46.920 --> 09:55.800] I worked on a desktop computer, the first desktop computer ever. [09:55.800 --> 10:02.760] It was three feet wide, foot-and-a-half tall and two feet deep, took two people to pick [10:02.760 --> 10:04.400] it up. [10:04.400 --> 10:11.200] It was really just an enhanced electric typewriter. [10:11.200 --> 10:15.680] That was 1968. [10:15.680 --> 10:19.680] That was 1968. [10:19.680 --> 10:26.320] Then when I came back from, I'm sorry, that wasn't 1968, that was 1965. [10:26.320 --> 10:33.320] Then I went to Vietnam, I came back, I went to college, 1970, I worked for a teletype. [10:33.320 --> 10:38.160] We were trying to design the first PC. [10:38.160 --> 10:46.680] We were doing primary research and development on metal and silicon technology. [10:46.680 --> 10:47.680] They crashed. [10:47.680 --> 10:48.680] They didn't get it done. [10:48.680 --> 10:52.960] Now, teletype doesn't exist anymore, just like Olivetti Underwood doesn't. [10:52.960 --> 11:02.560] In that period from 1970 to the year 2000, we were developing technology. [11:02.560 --> 11:10.240] When we wrote programs back then, I first wrote programs in machine language. [11:10.240 --> 11:18.160] Machine language is one step up from binary, ones and zeros. [11:18.160 --> 11:24.720] From machine language, we've advanced to some very sophisticated, high-level programming [11:24.720 --> 11:27.720] languages. [11:27.720 --> 11:40.000] Over this time, we've reached the maximum processing speed and storage speed that the [11:40.000 --> 11:51.120] current technology will allow, but over this time, the human imagination has not kept up. [11:51.120 --> 11:59.000] We have incredible computing capacity, but the human imagination has not kept up with [11:59.000 --> 12:01.520] that ability. [12:01.520 --> 12:11.960] We'll begin to take advantage of the fact that we're no longer restricted in our programming [12:11.960 --> 12:15.160] by resources. [12:15.160 --> 12:21.760] The vast majority of all of the programs out there are built on machine language. [12:21.760 --> 12:27.960] Turbo Pascal was built on top of machine language, and a number of Fortran and a number of other [12:27.960 --> 12:35.920] original programming languages were built two steps away from binary. [12:35.920 --> 12:46.680] Each one of these would design tools, one to copy, one to pay, one to access a directory. [12:46.680 --> 12:52.880] All these really basic features that we now don't even notice to bear it so deep in the [12:52.880 --> 12:57.520] high-level programming languages, we don't even know they're there, but they were built [12:57.520 --> 13:03.160] on machines where resources were scarce. [13:03.160 --> 13:09.680] So they limited what they could do based on lack of resources. [13:09.680 --> 13:17.280] Now we have a highly structured programming environment built on a system designed to [13:17.280 --> 13:23.600] be computer-centric, because the computer was limited, it didn't have the resources [13:23.600 --> 13:30.480] to allow us to actually have a free reign of our imagination. [13:30.480 --> 13:35.760] We had to constrain ourselves within the limitations of the technology. [13:35.760 --> 13:41.920] We don't have those limitations anymore, but all of our basic programming is built on top [13:41.920 --> 13:44.920] of those limitations. [13:44.920 --> 13:52.280] Part of what we're doing right now is we're stepping back and rethinking. [13:52.280 --> 14:00.760] I've spoke on the show about sitting down one time and mapping out the living mind from [14:00.760 --> 14:08.560] the perspective of a third party who couldn't dissect the human creature. [14:08.560 --> 14:11.400] All we could do was watch. [14:11.400 --> 14:15.640] We couldn't interfere with it at all, but what can we determine from the human animal [14:15.640 --> 14:17.160] just by observing? [14:17.160 --> 14:20.120] And I put together a mental map. [14:20.120 --> 14:22.320] This map doesn't care about resources. [14:22.320 --> 14:27.080] This is how the mind appears to do what it does, and when it got done with it, it looked [14:27.080 --> 14:32.360] just like a computer model with some variations. [14:32.360 --> 14:41.600] And right now we're expanding that paradigm into actual online programs, but the tools [14:41.600 --> 14:51.440] we're building now, the first thing I tell my programmer, I don't care about resources. [14:51.440 --> 14:58.560] I tell them, when you create a database table for me, you give me a name that an ordinary [14:58.560 --> 15:04.560] human being with no database or programming knowledge can read that name and know what's [15:04.560 --> 15:05.560] in that table. [15:05.560 --> 15:08.360] Well, I'll use up a lot of resources. [15:08.360 --> 15:12.800] I do not care how much resources it uses. [15:12.800 --> 15:16.440] Give me one aid that is intuitive for a human being. [15:16.440 --> 15:24.680] We are building human-centric systems, and these tools will give us the ability to produce [15:24.680 --> 15:33.640] a product that an ordinary human being who knows nothing about programming or resources [15:33.640 --> 15:37.960] and computers don't know anything about that, don't need to. [15:37.960 --> 15:46.440] Don't know anything about the subject can use this tool and extract all of the information [15:46.440 --> 15:55.120] they need and function within the environment as effectively as the most experienced expert. [15:55.120 --> 15:59.720] That's what this tool is designed to do, and that's what it absolutely looks like it's [15:59.720 --> 16:03.120] going to be able to do. [16:03.120 --> 16:05.120] We're close. [16:05.120 --> 16:11.680] I'm in the process now of working out how to launch this thing so that when the guys [16:11.680 --> 16:17.480] with really deep pockets look at what we're doing and realize what we're doing, they don't [16:17.480 --> 16:22.920] come in and throw several million at it and land on us and take the project away from [16:22.920 --> 16:23.920] us. [16:23.920 --> 16:28.840] They can certainly do that, but we are very close to really launching this thing, and [16:28.840 --> 16:36.480] part of it we're going to need this radio station and others like it to bring this information [16:36.480 --> 16:38.000] out to the general public. [16:38.000 --> 16:40.200] Guys, we can change everything. [16:40.200 --> 16:41.200] Hang on. [16:41.200 --> 16:42.200] Got some calls. [16:42.200 --> 16:45.680] Callers will pick you up when we come back on the other side. [16:45.680 --> 16:53.440] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rula La Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [16:53.440 --> 17:00.440] This will be right back. [17:23.440 --> 17:26.760] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.760 --> 17:32.960] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.960 --> 17:34.480] Bye bye yucky cookies. [17:34.480 --> 17:40.160] Now I go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand [17:40.160 --> 17:46.200] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.200 --> 17:47.200] new cookies. [17:47.200 --> 17:48.200] No cookies? [17:48.200 --> 17:49.200] Or me? [17:49.200 --> 17:51.000] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:51.000 --> 17:55.760] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.760 --> 17:56.760] radio network too. [17:56.760 --> 17:57.760] These are cookies. [17:57.760 --> 17:58.760] These are classified. [17:58.760 --> 18:05.760] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.760 --> 18:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Merris Proven Method. [18:09.240 --> 18:13.680] Michael Merris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.680 --> 18:14.680] can win two. [18:14.680 --> 18:19.400] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.400 --> 18:25.160] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.160 --> 18:29.800] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [18:29.800 --> 18:34.000] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.000 --> 18:39.120] The Michael Merris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.120 --> 18:41.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.240 --> 18:46.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner [18:46.800 --> 18:49.680] or email michaelmerris at yahoo.com. [18:49.680 --> 18:59.400] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.400 --> 19:00.400] next. [19:00.400 --> 19:18.440] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network at logo-s-radio-networks.com. [19:18.440 --> 19:41.560] Thank you very much for listening to the Logos Radio Network at logo-s-radio-networks.com. [19:41.560 --> 19:50.640] Okay, we are back. [19:50.640 --> 19:55.720] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, or rule of law radio, and we're going to the call boards. [19:55.720 --> 19:57.960] We're going to Ted in Utah. [19:57.960 --> 19:58.960] Hello, Ted. [19:58.960 --> 20:01.360] What do you have for us today? [20:01.360 --> 20:07.680] Oh, my usual lack of can't find stuff. [20:07.680 --> 20:08.680] Being computer illiterate. [20:08.680 --> 20:15.960] Funny you should say that, you know, I started the show talking about how we were designing [20:15.960 --> 20:27.000] a whole different paradigm and what I talked to the programmer about today was new linguistic [20:27.000 --> 20:38.320] programming, a term in new linguistic programming called referential index, how to find things. [20:38.320 --> 20:47.760] We were designing a whole different way of presenting information on a computer screen [20:47.760 --> 20:54.480] that is designed based on the concept of referential index. [20:54.480 --> 21:03.080] We were born essentially tabula rasa blank slate, I say essentially because not really. [21:03.080 --> 21:09.800] We were born with instinctual imperatives, what primary instinctual imperative that human [21:09.800 --> 21:13.280] beings have is humans heard. [21:13.280 --> 21:16.200] We have a herding instinct. [21:16.200 --> 21:17.200] We're not tigers. [21:17.200 --> 21:20.480] We're not solitary hunters. [21:20.480 --> 21:22.440] We gather together in groups. [21:22.440 --> 21:32.040] That's why you can get children to go to war and fight for some obscure thing called the [21:32.040 --> 21:39.880] people because the people are part of the herd and human beings will risk their life [21:39.880 --> 21:45.640] to save the herd, the instinct for personal survival of secondary to the instinct to protect [21:45.640 --> 21:46.640] the herd. [21:46.640 --> 21:53.680] We have instinctual imperatives and on top of those instinctual imperatives we learn [21:53.680 --> 21:54.680] things. [21:54.680 --> 22:04.880] We learn the ability to look out at our environment and create meaning from our environment. [22:04.880 --> 22:10.800] When I read in the Bible where it says that God created man in his own image, I don't [22:10.800 --> 22:17.320] take that to mean that God created men to look like God. [22:17.320 --> 22:23.640] He created man with a special ability that's like God. [22:23.640 --> 22:30.120] We look out on the world and we see happenings. [22:30.120 --> 22:37.040] We divine those happenings and combine them into realizations and understandings. [22:37.040 --> 22:44.320] We create meaning from otherwise meaningless behavior. [22:44.320 --> 22:46.960] We are as God's in that respect. [22:46.960 --> 22:52.800] That's what he gave us that made us special and everything I see in the Bible talks about [22:52.800 --> 22:53.800] that. [22:53.800 --> 23:00.600] That we have this special ability and we are charged with the responsibility of making [23:00.600 --> 23:03.880] absolutely sure we use it. [23:03.880 --> 23:06.920] If we don't, he's not going to be happy with us. [23:06.920 --> 23:14.320] Okay, a little off point, but in going to how we do that, we start out by having some [23:14.320 --> 23:21.320] experience and we wrap a context around that experience, danger. [23:21.320 --> 23:28.160] We can see two or three events occur and it triggers a context called danger and once [23:28.160 --> 23:38.640] we've opened that context, then we look inside danger for more sophisticated contextual levels. [23:38.640 --> 23:45.880] Danger coming from weather, danger coming from a wild animal, danger coming from an [23:45.880 --> 23:48.200] attack by angry wife. [23:48.200 --> 23:56.200] We've got all these different contextual references for types of danger and within each one of [23:56.200 --> 24:03.040] those, we develop more and more sophisticated understandings of realizations. [24:03.040 --> 24:17.680] We're building a tool that every step in the process addresses how human beings save, [24:17.680 --> 24:21.240] restore, and retrieve information. [24:21.240 --> 24:27.480] We don't care how much resources we use, because right now we've got plenty of resources. [24:27.480 --> 24:29.640] That's not a problem anymore. [24:29.640 --> 24:35.560] We're developing a tool that will help you to find what you're looking for very quickly. [24:35.560 --> 24:40.520] Okay, you touched one of my buttons and got me off on a tangent. [24:40.520 --> 24:45.120] Okay, and I gave you some time to figure out what you were missing. [24:45.120 --> 24:46.120] Okay. [24:46.120 --> 24:47.760] What do you have for us tonight Ted? [24:47.760 --> 24:52.480] You're getting a lot of background noise, a lot of scraping and moving. [24:52.480 --> 24:59.640] Microphones pick up external noise better than they do voice, so be careful in the background. [24:59.640 --> 25:02.520] Go ahead. [25:02.520 --> 25:13.000] You've told me once how to find a copy of a tort letter to pirate or plagiarize. [25:13.000 --> 25:19.680] One of the things I do with a tort letter is before I write a tort letter, I want to [25:19.680 --> 25:30.560] write a basic lawsuit of what are you going to claim if you have to sue these people? [25:30.560 --> 25:32.520] What would be your claim against them? [25:32.520 --> 25:36.880] What would be the cause of action that you would bring? [25:36.880 --> 25:43.200] Then once you've looked up, you can go online and look up causes of action. [25:43.200 --> 25:48.880] Criminal case, the cause of action is always statute, but in a civil case, you can't just [25:48.880 --> 25:54.120] say this guy was dirty rotten rascal and he did this bad thing and that bad thing and [25:54.120 --> 25:55.120] the other. [25:55.120 --> 26:02.600] In a civil case, you have to make your claim in terms of a defined cause of action. [26:02.600 --> 26:08.040] Or if there is no cause of action that fits your circumstance, you have to design it in [26:08.040 --> 26:12.240] a way that it looks like a cause of action. [26:12.240 --> 26:14.080] Let me explain. [26:14.080 --> 26:24.200] Every cause of action has a set of elements that must be present, fraud by nondisclosure. [26:24.200 --> 26:33.400] The defendant gave disclosure to the plaintiff. [26:33.400 --> 26:41.880] The defendant had knowledge of information he did not disclose to the plaintiff. [26:41.880 --> 26:51.400] The defendant had reason to believe that the plaintiff did not have the knowledge that wasn't [26:51.400 --> 26:53.520] disclosed. [26:53.520 --> 27:06.600] The plaintiff believed a defendant and the plaintiff made a decision based on the information [27:06.600 --> 27:09.280] provided by the defendant. [27:09.280 --> 27:16.760] There's a different decision that the plaintiff would have made had he had the omitted information. [27:16.760 --> 27:24.960] If each one of those there, you do not have, I'm sorry, one more, and plaintiff was harmed [27:24.960 --> 27:25.960] thereby. [27:25.960 --> 27:30.240] You're going to have each one of those or you don't have a claim. [27:30.240 --> 27:37.920] Every cause of action has a set of elements and if it's a tort as opposed to a contractual [27:37.920 --> 27:49.400] violation, then the defendant was reckless or negligent, defendants actions, harmed plaintiff, [27:49.400 --> 27:51.960] and you ask for it back. [27:51.960 --> 27:56.680] Even in torts, there are cases that define types of torts. [27:56.680 --> 27:59.880] You need to know how your torch should be claimed. [27:59.880 --> 28:10.400] We look for a suit that somebody has filed that is based on a similar claim, a city operator [28:10.400 --> 28:16.600] operating city equipment stuck a backhoe stinger through my side window. [28:16.600 --> 28:24.000] You find a suit similar to that and then you create the structure of the suit you would [28:24.000 --> 28:27.000] file. [28:27.000 --> 28:34.120] You start a suit with a court heading, plaintiff, defendant, the court, blah, blah, blah. [28:34.120 --> 28:42.800] Take that off and put on top of it a business letter heading and go through your suit and [28:42.800 --> 28:51.800] take out all the specific legalese and turn that suit that you would file into notice [28:51.800 --> 28:54.760] an opportunity. [28:54.760 --> 29:01.240] This is what the person did and you state your claim in terms of all of the elements. [29:01.240 --> 29:08.640] You state that you were harmed thereby and ask the receiver of the tort letter to make [29:08.640 --> 29:10.640] you hold your be sued. [29:10.640 --> 29:12.640] Does that make sense? [29:12.640 --> 29:14.960] Is there anything I left out? [29:14.960 --> 29:15.960] Yes. [29:15.960 --> 29:20.800] Yes, that all makes sense and I've got all those reasons. [29:20.800 --> 29:27.720] What this also does is it tells the lawyer on the other side, this guy is not getting. [29:27.720 --> 29:32.480] He is fixing to sue us because he's already got it written and it gives you a step up [29:32.480 --> 29:35.680] on the lawsuit if you do have to file it. [29:35.680 --> 29:38.240] Hang on, go into break. [29:38.240 --> 29:44.520] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Ruth of Law Radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. [29:44.520 --> 29:46.520] This is the bottom of the hour of breaks. [29:46.520 --> 29:52.800] It's a good time to go to Logos Radio Network and check out my e-book and Eddie's Traffic [29:52.800 --> 29:56.320] Seminar and help support this network. [29:56.320 --> 29:57.320] We'll be right back. [29:57.320 --> 30:07.320] Is your home as neat as a pin or is it jam packed with stuff? [30:07.320 --> 30:11.080] Look at your Catherine Albright and if you're tripping over things you'll never use but [30:11.080 --> 30:12.080] just can't throw away. [30:12.080 --> 30:16.240] I've got some advice that can help you streamline your life. [30:16.240 --> 30:18.400] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.400 --> 30:22.800] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:22.800 --> 30:27.000] is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.000 --> 30:32.240] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.240 --> 30:34.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.760 --> 30:40.400] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [30:40.400 --> 30:42.080] Yahoo and Bing. [30:42.080 --> 30:45.640] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.640 --> 30:53.760] If you're drowning in a sea of your own possessions you may need to change the way you think about [30:53.760 --> 30:54.760] things. [30:54.760 --> 30:59.760] Simplicity expert Leo Babauta says clutter may mean you're holding on to the past, especially [30:59.760 --> 31:03.400] if you're keeping things to help you remember people or events. [31:03.400 --> 31:08.280] My husband and I struggled with a ton of sentimental baggage ourselves till we finally hit on a [31:08.280 --> 31:09.280] workable solution. [31:09.280 --> 31:14.680] Rather than hang on to that 8th grade chess trophy or that old guitar you played in college, [31:14.680 --> 31:17.600] take a photo of it then get rid of the original. [31:17.600 --> 31:20.840] The clutter leaves your home but the precious memory remains. [31:20.840 --> 31:49.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:49.840 --> 31:57.980] The [31:57.980 --> 32:08.040] Mm hmm hmm hmm hmm. [32:08.040 --> 32:13.040] These people are ever going to have a free society and we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.040 --> 32:17.040] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.040 --> 32:20.040] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.040 --> 32:25.040] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.040 --> 32:31.040] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.040 --> 32:35.040] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.040 --> 32:40.040] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.040 --> 32:45.040] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [32:45.040 --> 32:47.040] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.040 --> 32:50.040] Hundreds of research documents and further useful resource material. [32:50.040 --> 32:54.040] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.040 --> 32:59.040] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:59.040 --> 33:06.040] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:29.040 --> 33:36.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, Deborah Stephens, the Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Ted in Utah. [33:36.040 --> 33:41.040] There is one thing I missed, Ted. [33:41.040 --> 33:49.040] When you're going to put together a lawsuit and if you're going to send a tort letter and you want that tort letter to be released, [33:49.040 --> 33:59.040] do it in the form of a lawsuit. But the first thing you want to do when you're considering filing a lawsuit, [33:59.040 --> 34:09.040] the first thing you have to determine if, in fact, what you complain about is something that can be adjudicated. [34:09.040 --> 34:19.040] And do you do that by determining what the cause of action would be? [34:19.040 --> 34:25.040] Would it be a civil cause of action or would it be a civil tort? [34:25.040 --> 34:36.040] When you figure out what the cause of action is, then go online and look up the law. [34:36.040 --> 34:40.040] What do you call it? [34:40.040 --> 34:50.040] A jury charge, a patterned jury charge. For every tort, for every claim, there is a patterned jury charge. [34:50.040 --> 34:55.040] That is the last thing that happens in the court. [34:55.040 --> 34:59.040] The judge will read to the jury the jury charge. [34:59.040 --> 35:11.040] And what it consists of, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, this is what you must find. [35:11.040 --> 35:22.040] If you are arguing something in your suit or in your claim that's not included in that jury charge, you are wasting your time. [35:22.040 --> 35:31.040] It is irrelevant at the end of the day. The patterned jury charge will tell you exactly how to make your claim. [35:31.040 --> 35:38.040] So get the patterned jury charge. It will state the claim with the cause of action. [35:38.040 --> 35:46.040] It will tell the jury you must find this element, this element, this element. [35:46.040 --> 35:55.040] If any one of these elements are not present, you cannot find for the plaintiff, period. [35:55.040 --> 36:07.040] So if you don't have the patterned jury charge, you don't know if you are arguing issues that will get you to your outcome or not. [36:07.040 --> 36:17.040] So get the patterned jury charge, then you always start out with a short introduction. [36:17.040 --> 36:25.040] And generally, you shouldn't write the introduction. You should write something in an introduction, but it's working. [36:25.040 --> 36:32.040] When you finalize the document, the last thing you finalize is that introduction. [36:32.040 --> 36:37.040] That's when you're writing the conclusion, when you're writing the prayer. [36:37.040 --> 36:50.040] You may put in things that the introduction doesn't point to. You may want to go up and get the introduction to point at the conclusion and the prayer. [36:50.040 --> 36:55.040] You don't want anything that will cause an interruption. [36:55.040 --> 37:01.040] Most everybody here has probably saw the movie Lord of the Rings. [37:01.040 --> 37:05.040] So many of you have actually read the trilogy. [37:05.040 --> 37:20.040] When I read the trilogy, after Frodo was stabbed by the Ringwraith, and Strider is taking them to Rivendale, and this elf shows up. [37:20.040 --> 37:31.040] In the book, it's a male elf, and they spent 50 pages giving us that elf's entire life history. [37:31.040 --> 37:38.040] When I finished Return of the King, I was furious. [37:38.040 --> 37:45.040] Three books, and he never brought that elf back. [37:45.040 --> 37:51.040] What the heck? I spent 50 pages? I was furious. [37:51.040 --> 37:53.040] We're at the whole trilogy for me. [37:53.040 --> 38:07.040] In the movie, they replaced that elf with a female elf, and that female elf came back later in the movie, so it's worth spending some time on. [38:07.040 --> 38:26.040] When you bring something up in your motion, make sure that when they get to the conclusion and the prayer, that what you've brought up is included in their rationale to come to their final decision. [38:26.040 --> 38:35.040] Otherwise, you've let them down a rabbit trail, and you'll confuse your reader, or the jury, or the judge. [38:35.040 --> 38:37.040] Does that make sense? [38:37.040 --> 38:39.040] Yeah, that makes sense. [38:39.040 --> 38:51.040] I've been reading your e-book, and so far, everything I've read so far is what you've talked about. [38:51.040 --> 38:54.040] It's just slow reading. [38:54.040 --> 38:56.040] I'm sorry, say that again? [38:56.040 --> 39:05.040] On your e-book? Everything I've read so far in reading it is you've talked about on the program? [39:05.040 --> 39:06.040] Yes. [39:06.040 --> 39:08.040] On how to do things? [39:08.040 --> 39:18.040] Did you read the section? In the e-book, I go into greater detail. Did you read the section on mental flow? [39:18.040 --> 39:20.040] Not yet. [39:20.040 --> 39:29.040] As you get down into it, you'll get into some more sophisticated sections that I don't talk about on the show. [39:29.040 --> 39:38.040] Part of the reason is, in order for me to talk about mental flow, it takes a lot of setup to get you there. [39:38.040 --> 39:49.040] Once we get there, that's probably the most valuable tool in the whole thing, and what I just related to, you went to mental flow. [39:49.040 --> 40:02.040] When you look at the whole way that I set things up, I talked to my programmer today about how I wanted to set a webpage up, [40:02.040 --> 40:08.040] because I want my user to stay in mental flow. [40:08.040 --> 40:11.040] I do complicated research. [40:11.040 --> 40:16.040] I'm sitting here at my computer, and I've got three screens up. [40:16.040 --> 40:24.040] I'm not researching right now, but I've probably got 10 documents up, because I don't want to lose them. [40:24.040 --> 40:34.040] I lost one the other day. I had about 25 documents up on these three different screens, and somebody calls me and interrupted me, knocked me completely out of flow. [40:34.040 --> 40:49.040] I come back, and I shut down the wrong browser and lost the case that I had been looking for forever, and I have no idea where it was. [40:49.040 --> 40:58.040] That is so frustrating, and everybody who does some serious research on the web has had that same kind of problem. [40:58.040 --> 41:04.040] We went back to the concept of mental flow. [41:04.040 --> 41:13.040] How does a human being keep track of where he's going and where he's been? [41:13.040 --> 41:19.040] Have you ever walked out into a dense wood and got lost? [41:19.040 --> 41:20.040] Yes. [41:20.040 --> 41:30.040] Let me give you a suggestion. This is how human beings, before we had all this technology and we lived in dense woods, [41:30.040 --> 41:36.040] how do you imagine people got around and didn't get lost? [41:36.040 --> 41:42.040] This, you know, was it Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone? [41:42.040 --> 41:48.040] They went out into these deep woods and they didn't get lost. How do they do that? [41:48.040 --> 41:53.040] We have primal tools that are built into us. [41:53.040 --> 42:01.040] About every 50 to 100 feet, if you will stop and turn around and look behind you, [42:01.040 --> 42:12.040] your mind will take a mental image of what the path you just walked looks like from the other end of the path. [42:12.040 --> 42:20.040] So if you get lost, then you turn around and look behind you, and if you've been taking mental images, [42:20.040 --> 42:27.040] you will see a clue, a pointer that looks familiar looking back. [42:27.040 --> 42:32.040] If you never look behind you, you don't know what it looks like going home. [42:32.040 --> 42:42.040] Okay, so we're building a platform where I have a site map. [42:42.040 --> 42:51.040] It is just a menu bar or navigation pane, but I have the navigation pane running in the background. [42:51.040 --> 43:01.040] The page you're looking at is superimposed over the top of that, but it pops up like a modal pop-up. [43:01.040 --> 43:07.040] These windows you get that pop up that stay there until you turn them off that are so annoying. [43:07.040 --> 43:17.040] Well, on our page, that modal pop-up will pop up and it will fill the page except for a little bit around the edges. [43:17.040 --> 43:22.040] And in that edge, you can see the site map. [43:22.040 --> 43:31.040] So you can move off that modal pop-up off to the edge of the page and click on it and the site map will pop up. [43:31.040 --> 43:42.040] So when you click on a link in whatever you're looking at, it will create a site map of your research. [43:42.040 --> 43:52.040] It will create an extra node with the link you just went to and I'm about to go to break. I'll go back to this on the other side. [43:52.040 --> 44:02.040] We'll be right back. [44:02.040 --> 44:12.040] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespuroorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. [44:12.040 --> 44:18.040] Find brave new books and chase things to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.040 --> 44:22.040] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.040 --> 44:30.040] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil, soaps and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.040 --> 44:37.040] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespuroorganics.com. [44:37.040 --> 44:43.040] That's 512-264-4043 naturespuroorganics.com. [44:43.040 --> 44:47.040] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.040 --> 45:01.040] naturespuroorganics.com. [45:01.040 --> 45:04.040] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.040 --> 45:19.040] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.040 --> 45:23.040] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.040 --> 45:34.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.040 --> 45:43.040] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.040 --> 45:56.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.040 --> 46:15.040] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:15.040 --> 46:44.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and we're talking to Ted in Utah and on the break, Deborah reminded me that I could always use browser history. [46:44.040 --> 46:56.040] I know that and I've tried to use browser history but when you're doing complex research, your browser history really gets complicated. [46:56.040 --> 47:06.040] And I'm talking about another way of doing this. I'm creating something like walking through the woods and looking behind you. [47:06.040 --> 47:17.040] You can do this without having this tool by you click on a page and you find some really good information. [47:17.040 --> 47:26.040] Now you need to stop right there and look behind you and set referential index. [47:26.040 --> 47:36.040] Go in your mind and say, okay, how did I get here? What page led me here? Let me go back and look at that page. [47:36.040 --> 47:48.040] And if there was another page before that that you skipped through, go back to the page before and get a mental image of how you got here. [47:48.040 --> 47:55.040] That way you don't just have to look for this page. You can look for one of the pages that got you here. [47:55.040 --> 48:02.040] It's just like looking behind you in the woods and what we're trying to develop here, what we're putting together is a site map. [48:02.040 --> 48:14.040] So you click on a page and instead of going to that page, it takes the modal, the pop-up window that you have up and pushes it behind the site map. [48:14.040 --> 48:21.040] The site map pops up and the site map adds a node for this link you just clicked. [48:21.040 --> 48:27.040] And it shows the node before it and the node before that and the node before that. [48:27.040 --> 48:34.040] You know how when you open a page and there's a link you've already clicked and it's a slightly different color? [48:34.040 --> 48:43.040] Well, we'll make three nodes back of faded out color less. Each one is less and less. [48:43.040 --> 48:58.040] So when you click on a link instead of going to the page, it pops up a site map, adds the link you just clicked and shows you what the path behind you looks like. [48:58.040 --> 49:07.040] You click on the link, it just added in and it'll take you to the next page. Now that takes an extra click. [49:07.040 --> 49:14.040] And the first time or two somebody uses it will be somewhat confusing, but after you've done it a time or two, you know this thing's going to pop that page up. [49:14.040 --> 49:16.040] You just click on it, it'll go. [49:16.040 --> 49:25.040] We don't have to tell you that your mind will take a mental image of the path to this page. [49:25.040 --> 49:29.040] The brain does that all by itself. [49:29.040 --> 49:35.040] I could give you a map of a place to go in a city you haven't been to. [49:35.040 --> 49:45.040] And you could read that, look at that map and chart out your route and then fold the map up and put it down and see. [49:45.040 --> 49:53.040] And then you drive in, you get into the city and something says to you, wait a minute, wait a minute, something's not right here. [49:53.040 --> 49:57.040] I'm not seeing what I think I should be seeing. [49:57.040 --> 50:03.040] And you pick up the map and check it and most of the time you're right. You've made a wrong turn. [50:03.040 --> 50:06.040] Now, how do we do that? [50:06.040 --> 50:25.040] Human beings, because we travel around as we were becoming more sophisticated, we developed all of these incredibly sophisticated tools that the brain can use to keep track of where you're at. [50:25.040 --> 50:34.040] You not only know to look behind you, when you look behind you, your brain takes an image and stores it. [50:34.040 --> 50:40.040] And you look in front of you and it projects where you're wanting to go. [50:40.040 --> 50:44.040] And it creates a mental image of the path where you want to get to. [50:44.040 --> 50:52.040] So if you take a step off the wrong path, that mental image pops up and says, wait a minute, wait a minute, wrong way, you got to back up and go straight. [50:52.040 --> 50:57.040] This has become instinctual. [50:57.040 --> 51:02.040] We actually transmit knowledge instinctually. [51:02.040 --> 51:09.040] Japan, there was one bird that had a particular hawk that only preyed on that bird. [51:09.040 --> 51:22.040] And they took three eggs and took them to Okinawa where they didn't have this hawk. And they had a bird there who was like a nurse bird that would hatch other eggs and raised chicks. [51:22.040 --> 51:29.040] And they had these chicks raised on Okinawa where this predator bird didn't exist. [51:29.040 --> 51:37.040] And once the birds were grown, they brought a recording of this hawk and played it. [51:37.040 --> 51:42.040] All the birds that were native to Okinawa just didn't pay any attention to it. [51:42.040 --> 51:47.040] But these three birds went berserk. They were terrified. [51:47.040 --> 51:52.040] We do transmit knowledge. That's why we're not blank slate. [51:52.040 --> 51:55.040] We transport knowledge and abilities. [51:55.040 --> 52:02.040] And this is what human beings developed and we transmitted, we literally transmitted it in our genes. [52:02.040 --> 52:07.040] The ones who got it survived. The ones who didn't, the hawks got them. [52:07.040 --> 52:11.040] Or something else after them. Anyway, we've got these incredible tools. [52:11.040 --> 52:18.040] So we're designing this website to use this innate ability all human beings have. [52:18.040 --> 52:21.040] Does that make any sense Ted? [52:21.040 --> 52:29.040] Makes a lot of sense. You know, it's been probably older than you. [52:29.040 --> 52:31.040] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [52:31.040 --> 52:38.040] I got dirt in my front yard. They know it was me. [52:38.040 --> 52:46.040] I was born in the first half of the last century. [52:46.040 --> 52:51.040] Well, I was a pretty war baby over the last century. [52:51.040 --> 52:55.040] Then you might be older than me. [52:55.040 --> 52:59.040] I used to have Jeff Cedric. I really love Jeff Cedric. [52:59.040 --> 53:03.040] And he'd come on the air and I never caught him any slack. [53:03.040 --> 53:10.040] I used to tell him that everybody that Jeff Cedric was the only person that calls in that's older than me. [53:10.040 --> 53:13.040] And I got dirt in the yard. It's not as old as me. [53:13.040 --> 53:16.040] And Jeff took my abuse really well. [53:16.040 --> 53:20.040] We lost him a couple of years ago. I broke my heart. [53:20.040 --> 53:22.040] Anyway, okay. [53:22.040 --> 53:25.040] That's the problem with getting older. We lose our friends. [53:25.040 --> 53:36.040] Yes, we do. Dr. Bill V. used to come on the show years ago and he's a clinical psychologist who treats people in old folks homes. [53:36.040 --> 53:43.040] And he said getting older is about learning to cope with loss. [53:43.040 --> 53:46.040] We lose our neighbors. We lose our friends. [53:46.040 --> 53:56.040] We lose our memory. We lose the ability to control our body functions. It's just one loss after another. [53:56.040 --> 53:59.040] But it gets... [53:59.040 --> 54:06.040] You know, as we get older, we have to face losing people we've known all our lives. It gets tough. [54:06.040 --> 54:07.040] Anyway. [54:07.040 --> 54:09.040] That's what I got going. [54:09.040 --> 54:11.040] Okay. [54:11.040 --> 54:13.040] Did I answer your question? [54:13.040 --> 54:21.040] That's pretty bad. You'll have pretty much, you know, where I want to go is pattern... [54:21.040 --> 54:24.040] Pattern jury charge. [54:24.040 --> 54:25.040] Yeah. [54:25.040 --> 54:31.040] Just do a search for that. You'll find lots of links on pattern jury charges. [54:31.040 --> 54:39.040] That's one of the magic keys in my how to build documents section is to met pattern jury charge. [54:39.040 --> 54:44.040] That's one of the six largest banks in the nation. [54:44.040 --> 54:47.040] I had a checkbook stolen. [54:47.040 --> 54:49.040] A forged check popped up. [54:49.040 --> 54:55.040] We closed the account, got it all straightened out, and it's grief. [54:55.040 --> 55:00.040] And another check popped up and they cashed it on the new account. [55:00.040 --> 55:03.040] Ooh. [55:03.040 --> 55:11.040] That ought to be pretty straightforward. Did you file a complaint with the... What's the board that regulates banks? [55:11.040 --> 55:14.040] The banking board. [55:14.040 --> 55:22.040] File a complaint with them and then file a complaint with a better business bureau. [55:22.040 --> 55:27.040] Oh, that gets them so unhappy. [55:27.040 --> 55:35.040] Well, this last round, I'm down at the local branch here and I live in a town of, well, maybe 4,000 now. [55:35.040 --> 55:40.040] But I told the gal that's ill with me. [55:40.040 --> 55:48.040] I says, ask her if she knows how much her lawyers cost that bank per hour. [55:48.040 --> 55:57.040] And how much would it cost the bank per hour if the first law firm quit because I bar grieved them out of business? [55:57.040 --> 56:01.040] Because of bar grievances. [56:01.040 --> 56:08.040] I just want to cause you a bunch of grief like you caused me. [56:08.040 --> 56:18.040] And what I'd like to tell them, I'm fixing to give you a romp through the legal system you are not going to believe. [56:18.040 --> 56:24.040] So, yeah, I know what my summer is going to be doing. [56:24.040 --> 56:30.040] Well, that's what I told the last police officer who wrote me a traffic ticket. [56:30.040 --> 56:40.040] Bubba, I'm going to give you a romp and I could not get the county attorney to bring the case to trial. [56:40.040 --> 56:47.040] And I actually, I told him, James, you need to take your chicken suit off. [56:47.040 --> 56:52.040] He said, Mr. Kelton, I am not going to get into court with you. [56:52.040 --> 56:58.040] Oh, but James, I was planning on having so much fun at your expense. [56:58.040 --> 57:03.040] Yes, I know. [57:03.040 --> 57:06.040] I'm going to let you get the other callers. [57:06.040 --> 57:14.040] Keep in mind when you sue them, ask the court to order mediation. [57:14.040 --> 57:20.040] That way the lawyer come to the table and deal without losing face. [57:20.040 --> 57:24.040] He don't want to lose face to a two bit chump pro se. [57:24.040 --> 57:28.040] What was it? [57:28.040 --> 57:32.040] One of them was pro se beach bomb. [57:32.040 --> 57:36.040] The lawyer didn't want to lose face to a pro se beach bomb. [57:36.040 --> 57:43.040] But if you get the court to order mediation, then they can come to the table. [57:43.040 --> 57:45.040] Okay. [57:45.040 --> 57:48.040] Yeah, we just spend hours, you know, they got to travel. [57:48.040 --> 57:49.040] I don't. [57:49.040 --> 57:50.040] Yeah. [57:50.040 --> 57:52.040] And we got so many tools to be up with. [57:52.040 --> 57:54.040] Okay. Thank you, Ted. [57:54.040 --> 57:55.040] I need to get going. [57:55.040 --> 58:01.040] We got a bunch of callers and I took too much time here going to my issues instead of yours. [58:01.040 --> 58:02.040] Well, yeah, but they're interesting. [58:02.040 --> 58:04.040] You have a wonderful evening. [58:04.040 --> 58:05.040] Okay. Thank you, Ted. [58:05.040 --> 58:06.040] Okay. [58:06.040 --> 58:12.040] Now we're going to Ramadan in Arizona. [58:12.040 --> 58:13.040] Hello, Ramadan. [58:13.040 --> 58:16.040] What do you have for us today? [58:16.040 --> 58:20.040] Hey, how are you doing there, Andy? [58:20.040 --> 58:26.040] I wanted to talk about this case that I got in the Arizona Court of Appeals. [58:26.040 --> 58:30.040] Quick brief update on where you're at. [58:30.040 --> 58:32.040] Oh, maybe not. [58:32.040 --> 58:33.040] We're about to go to break. [58:33.040 --> 58:35.040] We'll pick that up on the other side. [58:35.040 --> 58:42.040] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, rule of law radio are called in number 512-646-1984. [58:42.040 --> 58:44.040] John Jeff, I see you both there. [58:44.040 --> 58:45.040] We'll get to everybody. [58:45.040 --> 58:52.040] We'll be right back. [59:15.040 --> 59:22.040] We'll be right back. [59:45.040 --> 59:52.040] We'll be right back. [01:00:15.040 --> 01:00:41.040] Okay, in history. [01:00:41.040 --> 01:00:47.040] The year 1989, Iran and the United Kingdom break diplomatic relations after a fight over [01:00:47.040 --> 01:00:55.040] Simon Rushdie's controversial novel, The Cetanic Verses, today in history. [01:00:55.040 --> 01:01:00.040] In recent news, President Trump's top economic advisor, Gary D. Cohn, stated yesterday, Tuesday, [01:01:00.040 --> 01:01:05.040] that he was indeed resigning this after giving a heads up last week that he was considering [01:01:05.040 --> 01:01:10.040] doing so if President Trump decided to follow through with his tariffs on imported aluminum [01:01:10.040 --> 01:01:11.040] and steel. [01:01:11.040 --> 01:01:14.040] Of course, with President Trump's announcement last week that he would indeed levy tariffs [01:01:14.040 --> 01:01:19.040] on aluminum and steel imports, the reason for Mr. Cohn's departure seems obvious for [01:01:19.040 --> 01:01:27.040] many, considering he was one of the lone vocal opponents of any such measures in the administration. [01:01:27.040 --> 01:01:32.040] According to a report by The Daily Mail, skeletal biology expert Richard Jantz, out of the University [01:01:32.040 --> 01:01:37.040] of Tennessee, believes he may have found the spelt of remains of Amelia Earhart on a Pacific [01:01:37.040 --> 01:01:38.040] Island. [01:01:38.040 --> 01:01:43.040] Amelia went missing in 1937 when her plane and navigator, Fred Newman, were never to be [01:01:43.040 --> 01:01:44.040] found. [01:01:44.040 --> 01:01:48.040] At least until now, Richard Jantz stated that, what I can say scientifically is that they, [01:01:48.040 --> 01:01:53.040] the recent Pacific Island remains, are 99% likely to be hers. [01:01:53.040 --> 01:01:58.040] Interesting timing for this finding to be released, considering that the 1932 Hudson Essex Terraplane, [01:01:58.040 --> 01:02:04.040] which once belonged to Earhart, was reportedly stolen on Friday, February 23, 2018, only to [01:02:04.040 --> 01:02:14.040] be found three days later on the street corner in the Sereno neighborhood in LA. [01:02:14.040 --> 01:02:19.040] The crypto market took a big blow today, Wednesday, with the top 10 currencies suffering 5-10% losses. [01:02:19.040 --> 01:02:22.040] This downturn right after the Securities and Exchange Commission announced that it would [01:02:22.040 --> 01:02:26.040] be requiring digital asset exchanges to register with them. [01:02:26.040 --> 01:02:30.040] According to the sex statement, quote, if a platform offers trading of digital assets [01:02:30.040 --> 01:02:35.040] that are securities and operates as an exchange as defined by the federal securities laws, [01:02:35.040 --> 01:02:40.040] then the platform must register with the SEC as a national securities exchange, or be [01:02:40.040 --> 01:03:02.040] exempt from registration. [01:03:02.040 --> 01:03:31.040] Thank you. [01:03:33.040 --> 01:03:41.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Ramadan in Arizona. [01:03:41.040 --> 01:03:46.040] Okay, go ahead, Ramadan. Where were we? [01:03:46.040 --> 01:03:53.040] Hey, we were talking about how my case admitted into the Arizona Court of Appeals. [01:03:53.040 --> 01:04:00.040] And this is the second time I'm appealing it. And they had, what they have done is they had a, [01:04:00.040 --> 01:04:05.040] I don't know what they're trying to do, but they had dismissed it, once it touched it. [01:04:05.040 --> 01:04:12.040] And the order in dismissing it, what they've done is they said appellant, appellant's appeal [01:04:12.040 --> 01:04:19.040] to the Superior Court does not challenge the validity of any tax imposed assessment told [01:04:19.040 --> 01:04:27.040] municipal fine or statute. And it states the statute, the specific statute. [01:04:27.040 --> 01:04:31.040] And I'm familiar with that one. As a matter of fact, if anything they were going to use, [01:04:31.040 --> 01:04:38.040] I thought it'd be that one. See, what it is, when I filed the appeal, I didn't mention the reasons why. [01:04:38.040 --> 01:04:44.040] I just filed the appeal. And what I read somewhere in the... [01:04:44.040 --> 01:04:48.040] Whoa, hold on, hold on. You filed a notice of appeal? [01:04:48.040 --> 01:04:50.040] Yes. [01:04:50.040 --> 01:04:53.040] Did you file an appellant brief? [01:04:53.040 --> 01:04:58.040] Yes, of course. No, no, no, no. Well, hold on. [01:04:58.040 --> 01:05:02.040] No, no, no, no. I have filed it. This is the second time I'm appealing. [01:05:02.040 --> 01:05:07.040] The first time I filed the brief, I filed that with the municipal court. [01:05:07.040 --> 01:05:17.040] But the brief is there. When I filed it, when I appealed it to the Superior Court, [01:05:17.040 --> 01:05:25.040] when I filed it with the Superior Court, it... I didn't request a oral argument. [01:05:25.040 --> 01:05:29.040] I just had to judge rule. And then she ruled incorrectly by stating some... [01:05:29.040 --> 01:05:36.040] by basically misinterpreting the statute, you know, about the unmarked car. [01:05:36.040 --> 01:05:41.040] She purposely misstated it. So I appealed it again. [01:05:41.040 --> 01:05:47.040] I appealed it. Not normally what I've learned is that, I guess, [01:05:47.040 --> 01:05:52.040] most lawyers, when they appeal to the Court of Appeals, they use a... [01:05:52.040 --> 01:05:59.040] they apply... they petition for a deteriorary or rid of mandamus. [01:05:59.040 --> 01:06:01.040] And... [01:06:01.040 --> 01:06:04.040] Whoa, hold on, hold on. [01:06:04.040 --> 01:06:09.040] Those are two different things. The certiori is an appeal to the Supreme, [01:06:09.040 --> 01:06:12.040] to the highest court in the state. [01:06:12.040 --> 01:06:18.040] A mandamus is a special pleading, asking the court, the higher court, [01:06:18.040 --> 01:06:24.040] to order a lower court to do something that the law commands them to do. [01:06:24.040 --> 01:06:26.040] Oh, okay. [01:06:26.040 --> 01:06:29.040] Right, right. Okay, that actually makes more sense, [01:06:29.040 --> 01:06:38.040] because I did the certiori in the Supreme Court's cases. [01:06:38.040 --> 01:06:42.040] What case did you... what court did you file the cert with? [01:06:42.040 --> 01:06:44.040] So I didn't... I didn't file one. [01:06:44.040 --> 01:06:47.040] That's what most cases... most attorneys, when they file an appeal, [01:06:47.040 --> 01:06:48.040] if they do that... [01:06:48.040 --> 01:06:50.040] Oh, okay, okay. [01:06:50.040 --> 01:06:56.040] The only time an attorney will file a cert is if they're going to the state supreme. [01:06:56.040 --> 01:06:59.040] You file an appeal to the Court of Appeals. [01:06:59.040 --> 01:07:02.040] You file a cert to the... from the Court of Appeals, [01:07:02.040 --> 01:07:08.040] you file a cert, the certiori to the supreme. [01:07:08.040 --> 01:07:10.040] Okay, I'm still confused about that. [01:07:10.040 --> 01:07:12.040] I actually have to read up more about it. [01:07:12.040 --> 01:07:16.040] But I just thought, and of course, to what it stated in the statute. [01:07:16.040 --> 01:07:21.040] Now, they responded back, stating the statute that... [01:07:21.040 --> 01:07:27.040] to challenge the validity of a statute, and that's specifically what I'm doing. [01:07:27.040 --> 01:07:29.040] So I filed a... [01:07:29.040 --> 01:07:31.040] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:07:31.040 --> 01:07:34.040] How are you challenging the validity of the statute? [01:07:34.040 --> 01:07:37.040] Now, let me explain why I asked that question. [01:07:37.040 --> 01:07:38.040] Are you... [01:07:38.040 --> 01:07:39.040] Okay. [01:07:39.040 --> 01:07:43.040] Claiming that the statute on its face is... [01:07:43.040 --> 01:07:45.040] Wait on its face. [01:07:45.040 --> 01:07:50.040] Or are you claiming that the statute, as it is applied to you, [01:07:50.040 --> 01:07:54.040] is either unconstitutional or whatever? [01:07:54.040 --> 01:08:01.040] Is your claim that the whole statute is faulty or just the application of the statute [01:08:01.040 --> 01:08:04.040] in this particular instance? [01:08:04.040 --> 01:08:07.040] The application of the statute. [01:08:07.040 --> 01:08:09.040] Good, that's the way to do it, [01:08:09.040 --> 01:08:13.040] because that's how you might get a good reading. [01:08:13.040 --> 01:08:20.040] Has anyone else claimed this kind of... [01:08:20.040 --> 01:08:27.040] Has anybody else made this kind of claim to this type of application of the statute? [01:08:27.040 --> 01:08:28.040] They have. [01:08:28.040 --> 01:08:30.040] In this particular statute, no. [01:08:30.040 --> 01:08:38.040] And also, in the end of the cases, using the statute, [01:08:38.040 --> 01:08:41.040] this particular statute about the unmarked cars, they haven't. [01:08:41.040 --> 01:08:47.040] Or what is called the requirement of designation on state issued and municipal... [01:08:47.040 --> 01:08:50.040] Municipality issue... [01:08:50.040 --> 01:08:53.040] State issued vehicles for municipality. [01:08:53.040 --> 01:08:56.040] That's what I'm contesting the validity on, [01:08:56.040 --> 01:09:02.040] because what the lower court did was they purposely misstated the statute. [01:09:02.040 --> 01:09:04.040] She did that on purpose. [01:09:04.040 --> 01:09:05.040] Okay. [01:09:05.040 --> 01:09:09.040] That's what you appeal. [01:09:09.040 --> 01:09:15.040] When you appeal a ruling, you appeal on writ of error. [01:09:15.040 --> 01:09:23.040] Specifically, did you argue that the lower court misinterpreted the meaning of the statute? [01:09:23.040 --> 01:09:25.040] That's exactly what I did. [01:09:25.040 --> 01:09:28.040] I'll have to pull it off. [01:09:28.040 --> 01:09:31.040] But this is what they're doing though, Randy. [01:09:31.040 --> 01:09:36.040] They're trying to throw it out, because it holds too much value. [01:09:36.040 --> 01:09:41.040] They know it's almost like they have been talking from the lower court attorney. [01:09:41.040 --> 01:09:45.040] Now, here's my biggest theme right here. [01:09:45.040 --> 01:09:49.040] What I'm looking at is, first of all, they dismissed the appeal. [01:09:49.040 --> 01:09:52.040] Second, I filed for a motion for reconsideration. [01:09:52.040 --> 01:09:59.040] This is the shortest explanation on denying the motion I've ever read. [01:09:59.040 --> 01:10:03.040] It says the court has considered appellant motion for reconsideration, [01:10:03.040 --> 01:10:07.040] and this court order dismissing this appeal. [01:10:07.040 --> 01:10:10.040] It is order denying the motion. [01:10:10.040 --> 01:10:11.040] That's it. [01:10:11.040 --> 01:10:12.040] Okay. [01:10:12.040 --> 01:10:13.040] Hold on. [01:10:13.040 --> 01:10:16.040] There needs to be a judgment. [01:10:16.040 --> 01:10:17.040] Right. [01:10:17.040 --> 01:10:21.040] The judgment amounts to findings, effect, and conclusions at law. [01:10:21.040 --> 01:10:25.040] So you need to ask for findings, effect, and conclusions at law. [01:10:25.040 --> 01:10:28.040] You can't argue anything at this point. [01:10:28.040 --> 01:10:30.040] You have been denied your... [01:10:30.040 --> 01:10:38.040] Now, you don't have a right to assertiori to the Supreme Court. [01:10:38.040 --> 01:10:43.040] But you do have a right to petition for assertiori. [01:10:43.040 --> 01:10:44.040] Right. [01:10:44.040 --> 01:10:48.040] And by not giving you findings, effect, and conclusions at law, [01:10:48.040 --> 01:10:51.040] they've denied you in your right to petition. [01:10:51.040 --> 01:10:56.040] And I'm being pedantic there because that's real important in how you make that argument. [01:10:56.040 --> 01:11:02.040] If you claim a right to assert, they're going to say you don't have one. [01:11:02.040 --> 01:11:04.040] It's discretionary. [01:11:04.040 --> 01:11:07.040] You have to claim your right to petition for assert. [01:11:07.040 --> 01:11:08.040] Okay. [01:11:08.040 --> 01:11:09.040] Go ahead. [01:11:09.040 --> 01:11:10.040] Okay. [01:11:10.040 --> 01:11:11.040] Good. [01:11:11.040 --> 01:11:13.040] Now, here's the thing is both of these... [01:11:13.040 --> 01:11:15.040] Here's where they went wrong. [01:11:15.040 --> 01:11:22.040] Both of these that dismissed the appeal and denied the motion for reconsideration, [01:11:22.040 --> 01:11:25.040] they're both pro temp judges. [01:11:25.040 --> 01:11:32.040] Now, what I looked up and there's actually found the Supreme Court order, [01:11:32.040 --> 01:11:42.040] the Supreme Court order that actually put these two particular pro temp judges and staff attorneys in office. [01:11:42.040 --> 01:11:44.040] And it has a list. [01:11:44.040 --> 01:11:46.040] And the attachment is that order. [01:11:46.040 --> 01:11:49.040] It has a list of the authorities they are to make. [01:11:49.040 --> 01:11:58.040] And then dismissing an appeal and denying a motion for reconsideration under this circumstance is not authorized. [01:11:58.040 --> 01:12:01.040] Ah, subject matter jurisdiction. [01:12:01.040 --> 01:12:10.040] Is you finally challenged the subject matter jurisdiction of the court? [01:12:10.040 --> 01:12:11.040] No. [01:12:11.040 --> 01:12:12.040] Okay. [01:12:12.040 --> 01:12:13.040] Hold on. [01:12:13.040 --> 01:12:14.040] Hold on. [01:12:14.040 --> 01:12:16.040] Let me make a little bit of a definition there. [01:12:16.040 --> 01:12:21.040] The court means the judge. [01:12:21.040 --> 01:12:31.040] The general court itself as defined by the legislature, it may have jurisdiction over this issue. [01:12:31.040 --> 01:12:39.040] But if the judge who's sitting is limited in his jurisdiction and it doesn't include this, [01:12:39.040 --> 01:12:47.040] then the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction and that can be challenged at any time. [01:12:47.040 --> 01:12:49.040] Yep. [01:12:49.040 --> 01:12:57.040] That is true because they're only pro temp and they're not even supposed to make these rules, [01:12:57.040 --> 01:12:59.040] at least not in this case. [01:12:59.040 --> 01:13:03.040] They're supposed to deal with certain cases, certain motions, but not the point. [01:13:03.040 --> 01:13:10.040] They brought these guys in as patsies to rule against you. [01:13:10.040 --> 01:13:12.040] That's what they brought them for. [01:13:12.040 --> 01:13:15.040] And it sounds like you called them. [01:13:15.040 --> 01:13:19.040] So now do a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:13:19.040 --> 01:13:21.040] Subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:13:21.040 --> 01:13:25.040] Would I find that in the court rules, but where it could be challenged? [01:13:25.040 --> 01:13:26.040] Oh, yes. [01:13:26.040 --> 01:13:28.040] Send me an email. [01:13:28.040 --> 01:13:32.040] I'll send you a whole stack of stuff on subject matter jurisdiction. [01:13:32.040 --> 01:13:35.040] You know, I get people calling in here. [01:13:35.040 --> 01:13:44.040] And for the most part, they call me at the last moment and they've already made some major errors and got rulings against them. [01:13:44.040 --> 01:13:46.040] So how do you fix that? [01:13:46.040 --> 01:13:49.040] The magic do the subject matter jurisdiction. [01:13:49.040 --> 01:13:54.040] If you can go back and make subject matter jurisdiction claim anywhere along the line, [01:13:54.040 --> 01:14:00.040] then you can interrupt everything and back everything back up because you can challenge subject matter jurisdiction at any time, [01:14:00.040 --> 01:14:02.040] no matter how remote in history. [01:14:02.040 --> 01:14:04.040] Send me an email. [01:14:04.040 --> 01:14:12.040] I'll send you my stuff on subject matter jurisdiction. [01:14:12.040 --> 01:14:17.040] Okay, should I do that or go after the petition for review? [01:14:17.040 --> 01:14:25.040] No, if you don't, if you have a ruling that doesn't include finding the fact and conclusions at law. [01:14:25.040 --> 01:14:29.040] No, no, first thing, go after jurisdiction. [01:14:29.040 --> 01:14:32.040] Doesn't matter what they've done is for it. [01:14:32.040 --> 01:14:39.040] If that gets ruled against, then you go back and ask for findings, the fact and conclusions law. [01:14:39.040 --> 01:14:50.040] I've got case law that says that it is a due process violation for a judge to fail to properly apply the law to the facts. [01:14:50.040 --> 01:14:54.040] And it's subject to extraordinary remedy. [01:14:54.040 --> 01:14:57.040] Extraordinary remedy means mandamus. [01:14:57.040 --> 01:15:02.040] You ask a higher court to order the lower court to properly apply the law to the facts. [01:15:02.040 --> 01:15:05.040] Okay, means something else to me. [01:15:05.040 --> 01:15:11.040] If a judge denies you due process, that's a crime in every state. [01:15:11.040 --> 01:15:14.040] So file against the judge criminally. [01:15:14.040 --> 01:15:20.040] The judge will say, well, if you don't like my ruling, you can always appeal. [01:15:20.040 --> 01:15:25.040] And I say, yeah, bubba, I can appeal to a grand jury to arrest you. [01:15:25.040 --> 01:15:27.040] See how that works for you. [01:15:27.040 --> 01:15:30.040] No, goodness, there you go again. [01:15:30.040 --> 01:15:39.040] That's what we haven't been doing. These judges think they can pull this shenanigans because they're just pro-tem, they're just appointed judges. [01:15:39.040 --> 01:15:43.040] They're not worried about losing a position they don't have anyway. [01:15:43.040 --> 01:15:52.040] So they can come in and pull these kind of shenanigans because they don't feel like there's any way you can get back at them. [01:15:52.040 --> 01:16:03.040] You start going to grand juries and pushing for their prosecution, and then when anybody stands in the way of the prosecution, you go after them, you create this horrible mess for them. [01:16:03.040 --> 01:16:09.040] Then that maneuver they're pulling doesn't work so well for them. [01:16:09.040 --> 01:16:11.040] Does that make sense? [01:16:11.040 --> 01:16:15.040] Yeah, it definitely does. I have no problem with that. [01:16:15.040 --> 01:16:19.040] You're the master of the servant. [01:16:19.040 --> 01:16:23.040] They want you not to understand that you're the master of the servant. [01:16:23.040 --> 01:16:31.040] When you find out and you start landing on them, then they've created a mess they can't fix. [01:16:31.040 --> 01:16:43.040] And the only way they can, the best opportunity they've got is to make everything against you go away, and maybe you'll go back to your life and quit making theirs life a living hell. [01:16:43.040 --> 01:16:54.040] Hang on, go into break, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, rule of law radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:17:13.040 --> 01:17:22.040] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help Logos? [01:17:22.040 --> 01:17:29.040] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.040 --> 01:17:34.040] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to LogosRegualNetwork.com. [01:17:34.040 --> 01:17:43.040] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.040 --> 01:17:44.040] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.040 --> 01:17:45.040] No. [01:17:45.040 --> 01:17:47.040] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.040 --> 01:17:48.040] No. [01:17:48.040 --> 01:17:49.040] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:49.040 --> 01:17:50.040] No. [01:17:50.040 --> 01:17:51.040] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.040 --> 01:17:57.040] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:17:57.040 --> 01:17:58.040] We are welcome. [01:17:58.040 --> 01:18:00.040] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:00.040 --> 01:18:05.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[01:18:41.040 --> 01:18:47.040] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, [01:18:47.040 --> 01:18:50.040] or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:18:50.040 --> 01:18:57.040] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:18:57.040 --> 01:19:00.040] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.040 --> 01:19:29.040] This is the Logos Logo Radio Network. [01:19:30.040 --> 01:19:32.040] Okay, we are back. [01:19:32.040 --> 01:19:37.040] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens from Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Ramadan in Arizona. [01:19:37.040 --> 01:19:45.040] Okay, you have a ruling that no findings affect. [01:19:45.040 --> 01:19:53.040] Generally, in the Fed, what the feds say is there's an order and there's a judgment. [01:19:53.040 --> 01:19:55.040] The order is just like what you have. [01:19:55.040 --> 01:19:56.040] You just have a strict order. [01:19:56.040 --> 01:19:58.040] This is what we rule. [01:19:58.040 --> 01:20:03.040] The judgment is findings affect and conclusions at law. [01:20:03.040 --> 01:20:10.040] And in the Fed, what the Fed says, there is no final ruling until there is a judgment. [01:20:10.040 --> 01:20:17.040] It doesn't say that in Texas state law, and it may not say that in Arizona state law, [01:20:17.040 --> 01:20:25.040] but you certainly should, the logical next step is to ask for findings affect. [01:20:25.040 --> 01:20:30.040] But if you have reason to believe that the judge in the case and what I'm doing is giving [01:20:30.040 --> 01:20:33.040] a synopsis to bring everybody back a tour wrap. [01:20:33.040 --> 01:20:40.040] It's to challenge the subject matter jurisdiction of the judges in the case. [01:20:40.040 --> 01:20:46.040] And if you have reason to believe that they don't have authority to do what they did, [01:20:46.040 --> 01:20:52.040] you're going to have a statute in Arizona that reflects 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:20:52.040 --> 01:20:59.040] What that says, and I'm paraphrasing here, is if a public official exerts or purports [01:20:59.040 --> 01:21:02.040] to exert an authority, doesn't express for heaven in the process, [01:21:02.040 --> 01:21:05.040] denies you the full free access to enjoyment, right? [01:21:05.040 --> 01:21:07.040] That's crime in every state. [01:21:07.040 --> 01:21:12.040] It's a class A misdemeanor in the Fed. [01:21:12.040 --> 01:21:18.040] So that particular action goes to due process. [01:21:18.040 --> 01:21:22.040] Due process rings equally in the state and in the Fed. [01:21:22.040 --> 01:21:28.040] So you could technically follow criminal charges against him with the special agent [01:21:28.040 --> 01:21:32.040] in charge of the local FBI. [01:21:32.040 --> 01:21:36.040] Not a thing to prevent that. [01:21:36.040 --> 01:21:41.040] And then when the SAC refuses to act, because what he's going to do, [01:21:41.040 --> 01:21:45.040] he's going to have one of his agents call the judge's office and say, [01:21:45.040 --> 01:21:50.040] what is going on here? I got a guy trying to get me to arrest you for fish repression. [01:21:50.040 --> 01:21:52.040] You want to tell me why I shouldn't? [01:21:52.040 --> 01:21:55.040] And, you know, he don't want to arrest a local judge. [01:21:55.040 --> 01:21:59.040] But he also needs to cover his behind. [01:21:59.040 --> 01:22:01.040] So this is just C.Y.A. [01:22:01.040 --> 01:22:04.040] He's going to send an agent out to talk to him. [01:22:04.040 --> 01:22:10.040] I can pretty well assure you that when the judge gets a visit from the FBI, [01:22:10.040 --> 01:22:17.040] you are going to get his attention, even if he is appointed in the Court of Appeals. [01:22:17.040 --> 01:22:21.040] He thinks he's beyond retribution. [01:22:21.040 --> 01:22:24.040] And you'll demonstrate to him that he is not. [01:22:24.040 --> 01:22:32.040] If he files in the state, the state actors are going to refuse to go after a judge. [01:22:32.040 --> 01:22:35.040] At least you hope they do. [01:22:35.040 --> 01:22:43.040] Because we never ask public officials to do anything we actually want them to do. [01:22:43.040 --> 01:22:46.040] Because we never ask them to do anything the law doesn't command them to do, [01:22:46.040 --> 01:22:48.040] so when they don't, we get to land on them. [01:22:48.040 --> 01:22:54.040] So we've got all these actions, these functionaries here trying to protect a judge, [01:22:54.040 --> 01:22:56.040] and as soon as they do, you land on them. [01:22:56.040 --> 01:22:58.040] And now they need somebody to protect them. [01:22:58.040 --> 01:23:02.040] They are not going to be happy campers. [01:23:02.040 --> 01:23:07.040] And the higher level judge you can go after the better. [01:23:07.040 --> 01:23:13.040] You get to go after the Court of Appeals for an ongoing criminal conspiracy. [01:23:13.040 --> 01:23:23.040] Who appointed this judge to sit in this case when the judge had no authority to sit in the case? [01:23:23.040 --> 01:23:32.040] Yeah, and I really hate to call him George or other call him Stoff and Tony. That's what they really are. [01:23:32.040 --> 01:23:39.040] But yeah, this is like, this is completely criminal because they didn't do anything. [01:23:39.040 --> 01:23:42.040] She just denied the motion, just like that. [01:23:42.040 --> 01:23:46.040] And this is like the quickest judgment that I've ever seen. [01:23:46.040 --> 01:23:49.040] It took like five days. [01:23:49.040 --> 01:23:54.040] Okay, judicial conduct complaint against the judge, criminal complaint against the judge. [01:23:54.040 --> 01:24:04.040] And if your state commission on judicial conduct is similar to Texas, and it certainly is, it has judges on the panel. [01:24:04.040 --> 01:24:12.040] If you include verified criminal affidavit in with your complaint, you invoke the duty of that judge as a magistrate. [01:24:12.040 --> 01:24:23.040] And if the judge is on the state commission on judicial conduct, don't convene and examine a trial based on the verified criminal affidavit, [01:24:23.040 --> 01:24:28.040] you file against them. [01:24:28.040 --> 01:24:36.040] They're not going to be happy campers when you start filing criminally against them, especially if you do it in the Fed. [01:24:36.040 --> 01:24:47.040] Yeah, I'm not. I'm sorry about doing that filing with the Department of Justice. [01:24:47.040 --> 01:24:50.040] No, no, not with the Department of Justice. [01:24:50.040 --> 01:24:57.040] With the special agent in charge of the FBI for your area. [01:24:57.040 --> 01:25:00.040] Okay, this goes to a whole process. [01:25:00.040 --> 01:25:05.040] You file it against the SAC, Special Agent in Charge. [01:25:05.040 --> 01:25:12.040] Because I hate acronyms, but in this case, the feds always call them an SACD. [01:25:12.040 --> 01:25:24.040] So you send a verified criminal affidavit to, you can't find out FBI agents' names except for one, the Special Agent in Charge. [01:25:24.040 --> 01:25:26.040] You can find out what his name is. [01:25:26.040 --> 01:25:28.040] It's freely available. [01:25:28.040 --> 01:25:31.040] So that's the only human being you know. [01:25:31.040 --> 01:25:34.040] The rest of them are secret police. [01:25:34.040 --> 01:25:38.040] So you send a complaint to him personally in his name. [01:25:38.040 --> 01:25:40.040] You don't have to call him SAC, just send it in. [01:25:40.040 --> 01:25:46.040] His name, registered return to C. [01:25:46.040 --> 01:25:52.040] When you don't get a response in a reasonable time, two weeks is reasonable. [01:25:52.040 --> 01:26:00.040] Then you file a complaint, you file a request to the United States Attorney General. [01:26:00.040 --> 01:26:05.040] And you want to see the notice, I'm sorry, I'm ahead of myself. [01:26:05.040 --> 01:26:16.040] When you don't receive a response from the SAC, then you file a criminal complaint against the SAC with the U.S. Attorney. [01:26:16.040 --> 01:26:30.040] When a federal official is made known that another federal official has violated a law, they are required to report that violation to the U.S. Attorney General. [01:26:30.040 --> 01:26:34.040] So you file it with the U.S. Attorney. [01:26:34.040 --> 01:26:52.040] You wait two weeks and send a request to the U.S. Attorney General, asking for the notice this U.S. Attorney sent him, notifying him that a federal official has violated a law relating to his office. [01:26:52.040 --> 01:26:57.040] And you're going to get some song and dance from the Attorney General. [01:26:57.040 --> 01:27:01.040] What they did to me was they said, well, we're investigating it. [01:27:01.040 --> 01:27:03.040] And I never heard anything back again. [01:27:03.040 --> 01:27:10.040] So my next step, this is when I file criminal charges against a federal district judge, Judge McBride. [01:27:10.040 --> 01:27:17.040] Judge McBride is a 90-something-year-old judge in Fort Worth, and he's a real stinker. [01:27:17.040 --> 01:27:25.040] And I filed against him, got him dead banged, doing some stupid arrogant, and I stung him for it. [01:27:25.040 --> 01:27:27.040] But what he was doing, he don't do anymore. [01:27:27.040 --> 01:27:29.040] I got that fixed. [01:27:29.040 --> 01:27:31.040] But I'm still after him. [01:27:31.040 --> 01:27:33.040] Now I've got the process started. [01:27:33.040 --> 01:27:39.040] Now I'll file against the U.S. Attorney with the grand jury. [01:27:39.040 --> 01:27:49.040] I'll send it to the federal grand jury by way of the U.S. Attorney's office, and the U.S. Attorney will open it. [01:27:49.040 --> 01:28:02.040] First page is a cover letter to the foreman of the grand jury saying that asking the foreman to please initial this document and return it in the stamp self-addressed envelope. [01:28:02.040 --> 01:28:09.040] Please do not sign it, because the U.S. Attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it. [01:28:09.040 --> 01:28:23.040] And the U.S. Attorney tends to shield public officials from prosecution, and we're concerned that the U.S. Attorney will try to hide this document, this complaint from you. [01:28:23.040 --> 01:28:24.040] So please initial it. [01:28:24.040 --> 01:28:29.040] Don't sign it, because we don't want the U.S. Attorney to rubber stamp it. [01:28:29.040 --> 01:28:38.040] Well, the U.S. Attorney is going to open it, and he's going to find a criminal complaint against himself. [01:28:38.040 --> 01:28:51.040] So does it make sense to you the term stuck on the horns of a thorny dilemma? [01:28:51.040 --> 01:29:03.040] He has just opened a document addressed to someone other than him, and it contains a criminal complaint against him. [01:29:03.040 --> 01:29:12.040] He's going to say that dirty rascals set me up, and yes, we did. [01:29:12.040 --> 01:29:13.040] Hang on. [01:29:13.040 --> 01:29:14.040] We're about to go to break. [01:29:14.040 --> 01:29:17.040] You will have way too much fun with this, Ramadan. [01:29:17.040 --> 01:29:36.040] You'll get the U.S. Attorney concerned, because when Trump took office, the U.S. Attorney had to send in his resignation, and he knows that Trump needs to appoint people who are behind Trump, and he needs to get rid of some U.S. Attorney so he can point his own. [01:29:36.040 --> 01:29:39.040] They're all terrified. [01:29:39.040 --> 01:29:40.040] Hang on. [01:29:40.040 --> 01:29:41.040] Be right back. [01:29:41.040 --> 01:29:48.040] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:29:48.040 --> 01:30:17.040] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:17.040 --> 01:30:19.040] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.040 --> 01:30:27.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.040 --> 01:30:29.040] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.040 --> 01:30:33.040] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.040 --> 01:30:35.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.040 --> 01:30:43.040] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:43.040 --> 01:30:46.040] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.040 --> 01:30:50.040] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:50.040 --> 01:30:51.040] Wrong. [01:30:51.040 --> 01:30:56.040] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:56.040 --> 01:31:03.040] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:03.040 --> 01:31:10.040] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners triggered the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:10.040 --> 01:31:16.040] Drinking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:16.040 --> 01:31:24.040] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:24.040 --> 01:31:30.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.040 --> 01:31:36.040] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.040 --> 01:31:38.040] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.040 --> 01:31:43.040] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.040 --> 01:31:46.040] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.040 --> 01:31:49.040] And thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:49.040 --> 01:31:50.040] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.040 --> 01:31:51.040] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.040 --> 01:31:52.040] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.040 --> 01:31:53.040] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.040 --> 01:31:55.040] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.040 --> 01:31:58.040] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.040 --> 01:32:01.040] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.040 --> 01:32:03.040] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.040 --> 01:32:06.040] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.040 --> 01:32:09.040] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails. [01:32:09.040 --> 01:32:11.040] But good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:11.040 --> 01:32:13.040] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:13.040 --> 01:32:14.040] But I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.040 --> 01:32:16.040] That's why you have insurance. [01:32:16.040 --> 01:32:21.040] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:21.040 --> 01:32:26.040] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.040 --> 01:32:32.040] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.040 --> 01:32:38.040] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.040 --> 01:32:40.040] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:40.040 --> 01:32:45.040] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.040 --> 01:32:50.040] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.040 --> 01:32:56.040] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.040 --> 01:32:58.040] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.040 --> 01:33:02.040] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:02.040 --> 01:33:31.040] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadionetwork.com. [01:33:31.040 --> 01:33:34.040] And we're talking to Ramadan in Arizona. [01:33:34.040 --> 01:33:38.040] Ramadan, or do we have anything else for you? [01:33:38.040 --> 01:33:48.040] Yeah, I'm just trying to get a little clarification on exactly how to file criminal charges against the program judges. [01:33:48.040 --> 01:33:56.040] Send me an email asking for that and I'll send you what I filed against Judge McBride. [01:33:56.040 --> 01:34:02.040] Yeah. Oh, that was so much fun. [01:34:02.040 --> 01:34:08.040] I bet that arrogant smart mouth guy never saw this coming. [01:34:08.040 --> 01:34:18.040] And your judges, they probably didn't see the prospect of you filing against him criminally coming either. [01:34:18.040 --> 01:34:24.040] But there is some research we'll need to do and if you'll send me an email, I'll talk about that. [01:34:24.040 --> 01:34:32.040] In some states they have special governmental units that are intended to handle complaints against public officials. [01:34:32.040 --> 01:34:35.040] We want to see if there's one in Arizona. [01:34:35.040 --> 01:34:46.040] But I've got someone that just got out of court and I want to bring him up and I'm going to bump him in front of Jeff and John and I hope they don't mind. [01:34:46.040 --> 01:34:55.040] If I'm pretty well caught up with you, Ramadan, anything else you need, any questions that I haven't answered? [01:34:55.040 --> 01:35:02.040] Yeah, I'll just email you about the two steps about the criminal complaint against the program judges. [01:35:02.040 --> 01:35:16.040] And about the petitioning for review, how to quote about that. I'll send you an email. [01:35:16.040 --> 01:35:23.040] Okay, send that to me. I'm writing a written mandamus right now. So I'm up on those issues. [01:35:23.040 --> 01:35:29.040] So give me an email and we'll talk off here. [01:35:29.040 --> 01:35:41.040] Okay, thank you. Now we're going to go, John and Jeff, I'm going to jump over you guys, but Charles just got out of court. [01:35:41.040 --> 01:35:48.040] Charles, you'll understand, Jeff, he's a truck driver and he's suffering from a deadheading. [01:35:48.040 --> 01:35:55.040] And he just got out of court and he's been taking these guys on apparently just for the fun of it. [01:35:55.040 --> 01:36:01.040] So Charles, what happened in court today? [01:36:01.040 --> 01:36:05.040] Get off that headset, will you, Trump? [01:36:05.040 --> 01:36:11.040] Oh man, I am in the truck. I'm actually not on the headset, unfortunately. [01:36:11.040 --> 01:36:12.040] Oh, okay. [01:36:12.040 --> 01:36:13.040] Can you hear me, buddy? [01:36:13.040 --> 01:36:15.040] I can hear you. [01:36:15.040 --> 01:36:19.040] Okay, great. [01:36:19.040 --> 01:36:27.040] I was expecting to go before the prosecutor and they didn't let me go before the prosecutor. [01:36:27.040 --> 01:36:31.040] I actually went right before the judge, not the magistrate. [01:36:31.040 --> 01:36:37.040] I asked him, was he a magistrate? He said he was the judge of the probate court today. [01:36:37.040 --> 01:36:41.040] And so I didn't get a chance to get him with that one. [01:36:41.040 --> 01:36:48.040] Oh wait, no, they were supposed to bring you before a magistrate, so that's perfect. [01:36:48.040 --> 01:36:50.040] Yep, they did not bring me. [01:36:50.040 --> 01:36:52.040] I asked him, was he the magistrate? [01:36:52.040 --> 01:36:54.040] He said no, he was not the magistrate judge. [01:36:54.040 --> 01:36:57.040] He was the magistrate. [01:36:57.040 --> 01:37:02.040] He was the probate judge. [01:37:02.040 --> 01:37:06.040] Okay, what happened at the hearing? [01:37:06.040 --> 01:37:09.040] Okay. [01:37:09.040 --> 01:37:11.040] They did not do an examining trial. [01:37:11.040 --> 01:37:18.040] I asked for an examining trial and they asked for a plea. [01:37:18.040 --> 01:37:23.040] And I plead innocent, not guilty. [01:37:23.040 --> 01:37:29.040] My standard plea is innocent as the driven snow. [01:37:29.040 --> 01:37:30.040] That's correct. [01:37:30.040 --> 01:37:33.040] And I did not plead not guilty or guilty or anything like that. [01:37:33.040 --> 01:37:37.040] I plead innocent and he accepted that plea. [01:37:37.040 --> 01:37:41.040] He asked me to swear, and I did not swear. [01:37:41.040 --> 01:37:44.040] I did not swear to anything. [01:37:44.040 --> 01:37:46.040] And he kind of threw at me there. [01:37:46.040 --> 01:37:51.040] He said, you will plead, I mean, you will swear in this court. [01:37:51.040 --> 01:37:54.040] I said, no, I won't swear anywhere. [01:37:54.040 --> 01:37:57.040] And he moved forward from that. [01:37:57.040 --> 01:37:58.040] So I'm not sure. [01:37:58.040 --> 01:38:00.040] I'll probably just kind of take them off. [01:38:00.040 --> 01:38:02.040] I mean, not doing that, but that's okay. [01:38:02.040 --> 01:38:03.040] It's okay. [01:38:03.040 --> 01:38:06.040] Ticking him off is okay. [01:38:06.040 --> 01:38:10.040] Because now you're going to take him off by filing charges against him. [01:38:10.040 --> 01:38:11.040] Okay. [01:38:11.040 --> 01:38:14.040] Did he do anything else in that court? [01:38:14.040 --> 01:38:15.040] Let's put any stuff back. [01:38:15.040 --> 01:38:16.040] He did what? [01:38:16.040 --> 01:38:23.040] Why were you summoned to court? [01:38:23.040 --> 01:38:26.040] I got a citation. [01:38:26.040 --> 01:38:29.040] I was summoned to court on a citation. [01:38:29.040 --> 01:38:30.040] No, no, no, no, no. [01:38:30.040 --> 01:38:31.040] That's not what I'm saying. [01:38:31.040 --> 01:38:42.040] Were you summoned to court to argue a motion filed before the court for an examining trial, [01:38:42.040 --> 01:38:44.040] for a arraignment hearing? [01:38:44.040 --> 01:38:45.040] Okay. [01:38:45.040 --> 01:38:47.040] First appearance. [01:38:47.040 --> 01:38:50.040] What does first appearance mean? [01:38:50.040 --> 01:38:51.040] Okay. [01:38:51.040 --> 01:38:58.040] I get a charge filed against me, and I'm ordered to appear before the court for first appearance. [01:38:58.040 --> 01:39:03.040] How do I prepare for that hearing? [01:39:03.040 --> 01:39:09.040] To prepare to make a plea of guilty... [01:39:09.040 --> 01:39:10.040] No, no, no, no. [01:39:10.040 --> 01:39:11.040] Hold on, hold on. [01:39:11.040 --> 01:39:19.040] How do you prepare based on what you were sent in the notice to appear? [01:39:19.040 --> 01:39:20.040] Oh. [01:39:20.040 --> 01:39:21.040] Okay. [01:39:21.040 --> 01:39:29.040] I'm not asking you to tell me what you think you were supposed to do. [01:39:29.040 --> 01:39:35.040] I'm asking you to tell me what the law says you were supposed to do. [01:39:35.040 --> 01:39:37.040] Oh, well, okay. [01:39:37.040 --> 01:39:47.040] According to the probate court law, the law says I'm supposed to show up for an arraignment [01:39:47.040 --> 01:39:52.040] slash examining trial. [01:39:52.040 --> 01:39:53.040] Oh. [01:39:53.040 --> 01:39:54.040] Okay. [01:39:54.040 --> 01:40:05.040] What does the law in Georgia say about a preliminary hearing? [01:40:05.040 --> 01:40:13.040] And I'm using preliminary hearing from Gerstin Pugh, a federal case that says that you have [01:40:13.040 --> 01:40:16.040] a right to a preliminary hearing. [01:40:16.040 --> 01:40:23.040] And generally, what a preliminary hearing means is an examining trial. [01:40:23.040 --> 01:40:30.040] So what does the law say in Georgia concerning a examining trial or preliminary hearing? [01:40:30.040 --> 01:40:31.040] Okay. [01:40:31.040 --> 01:40:34.040] Before you answer, let me preface that. [01:40:34.040 --> 01:40:40.040] In Texas, it says that when an officer arrests you for any reason, he is to take you directly [01:40:40.040 --> 01:40:43.040] to the nearest magistrate for an examining trial. [01:40:43.040 --> 01:40:50.040] If you, if it's a misdemeanor, he can allow you to sign a promise to appear. [01:40:50.040 --> 01:40:59.040] But the promise to appear specifically is a promise to appear before a magistrate, not [01:40:59.040 --> 01:41:00.040] a judge. [01:41:00.040 --> 01:41:01.040] Yes. [01:41:01.040 --> 01:41:04.040] How is it in Georgia? [01:41:04.040 --> 01:41:05.040] Okay. [01:41:05.040 --> 01:41:11.040] It is, according to the law, it is exactly that. [01:41:11.040 --> 01:41:14.040] Oh, perfect. [01:41:14.040 --> 01:41:15.040] 174-40. [01:41:15.040 --> 01:41:24.040] And also the probate court rules, which I was kind of confused on why I was having this [01:41:24.040 --> 01:41:25.040] thing in a probate court. [01:41:25.040 --> 01:41:32.040] But when you look at the probate court rules, it also says first appearance slash examining [01:41:32.040 --> 01:41:33.040] trial. [01:41:33.040 --> 01:41:36.040] And they did an arraignment. [01:41:36.040 --> 01:41:37.040] Okay. [01:41:37.040 --> 01:41:38.040] Perfect. [01:41:38.040 --> 01:41:41.040] So what do you do now? [01:41:41.040 --> 01:41:42.040] Okay. [01:41:42.040 --> 01:41:49.040] Since I played innocent, they removed the case from the probate court to the superior [01:41:49.040 --> 01:41:52.040] court of that county. [01:41:52.040 --> 01:41:53.040] Okay. [01:41:53.040 --> 01:41:58.040] But what do you do now? [01:41:58.040 --> 01:41:59.040] Okay. [01:41:59.040 --> 01:42:02.040] Loaded question. [01:42:02.040 --> 01:42:08.040] What did the court do wrong and how did that affect your rights? [01:42:08.040 --> 01:42:09.040] Okay. [01:42:09.040 --> 01:42:14.040] Didn't go before a magistrate for an examining trial. [01:42:14.040 --> 01:42:17.040] Violated my due process, right? [01:42:17.040 --> 01:42:26.040] So I'm taking you before a magistrate to review the facts of the case for a preliminary hearing. [01:42:26.040 --> 01:42:27.040] Okay. [01:42:27.040 --> 01:42:32.040] So I'm going to suggest, and this is the way I read the law in Texas, and it sounds the [01:42:32.040 --> 01:42:42.040] same in Georgia, that when a criminal accusation is made, the criminal accusation on its face [01:42:42.040 --> 01:42:47.040] does not give the trial court subject matter jurisdiction. [01:42:47.040 --> 01:42:56.040] What gives the trial court subject matter jurisdiction is a determination of probable cause by a magistrate. [01:42:56.040 --> 01:43:03.040] And you don't have one. [01:43:03.040 --> 01:43:12.040] Perfect for a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction of the trial court, and charge the probate [01:43:12.040 --> 01:43:19.040] court judge with official misconduct or official oppression if you have that statute in Georgia, [01:43:19.040 --> 01:43:20.040] most of them. [01:43:20.040 --> 01:43:25.040] In Texas, we have two separate, official misconduct, official oppression. [01:43:25.040 --> 01:43:32.040] Misconduct is misappropriation of public funds or public equipment or utilities. [01:43:32.040 --> 01:43:38.040] Official oppression is denial of a person in the exercise of a right. [01:43:38.040 --> 01:43:42.040] In most states, they call them both official misconduct. [01:43:42.040 --> 01:43:47.040] This judge denied you an examining trial that should get an official misconduct charge against [01:43:47.040 --> 01:43:48.040] a judge. [01:43:48.040 --> 01:43:49.040] Okay. [01:43:49.040 --> 01:43:54.040] In Texas, if we file a complaint against a public official, the state should be charged [01:43:54.040 --> 01:43:55.040] with this. [01:43:55.040 --> 01:44:00.040] The state legislature has set aside the Texas Ranger. [01:44:00.040 --> 01:44:03.040] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:44:03.040 --> 01:44:09.040] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, and feeds the entire body the nutrients it [01:44:09.040 --> 01:44:10.040] needs. 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[01:45:29.040 --> 01:45:35.040] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:35.040 --> 01:45:40.040] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:40.040 --> 01:45:44.040] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.040 --> 01:45:50.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.040 --> 01:45:53.040] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.040 --> 01:45:57.040] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:57.040 --> 01:46:02.040] Or call toll free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:02.040 --> 01:46:04.040] Hello. [01:46:04.040 --> 01:46:07.040] Oh, man, you're in jail. [01:46:07.040 --> 01:46:09.040] You got bumps in there? [01:46:09.040 --> 01:46:12.040] Oh, man, I'm broke, dude. [01:46:20.040 --> 01:46:25.040] Something in this world I will never understand. [01:46:25.040 --> 01:46:29.040] Something I realize foolish. [01:46:29.040 --> 01:46:33.040] Somebody's on the police, that police man. [01:46:33.040 --> 01:46:37.040] Somebody's on the police, the police. [01:46:37.040 --> 01:46:42.040] There's always room at the top of the hill. [01:46:42.040 --> 01:46:45.040] Okay, we are back. [01:46:45.040 --> 01:46:50.040] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio, and I kind of ran off to Clifter again. [01:46:50.040 --> 01:46:53.040] Okay, now's the time. [01:46:53.040 --> 01:46:55.040] Now use your opportunity. [01:46:55.040 --> 01:46:59.040] You went to that first hearing, they screwed up everything. [01:46:59.040 --> 01:47:02.040] Now's the time to start going after them. [01:47:02.040 --> 01:47:05.040] Cremal charges against the judge. [01:47:05.040 --> 01:47:14.040] First, a bar grievance against the lawyer for not telling the judge that he's screwing up. [01:47:14.040 --> 01:47:20.040] Is the probate judge a lawyer as well? [01:47:20.040 --> 01:47:25.040] I'm not sure what probate judge means in Georgia. [01:47:25.040 --> 01:47:38.040] If it means JP or municipal, a judge that only handles Class C, then he's probably a lawyer. [01:47:38.040 --> 01:47:41.040] But probably not. [01:47:41.040 --> 01:47:43.040] Let me explain that. [01:47:43.040 --> 01:47:55.040] When a judge gets in a position like county judge, district judge, they drop out of the bar because they can't practice law and be in this position at the same time. [01:47:55.040 --> 01:48:00.040] But if a lawyer gets elected as JP, he can still be a lawyer. [01:48:00.040 --> 01:48:02.040] Or as a municipal judge, he can be a lawyer. [01:48:02.040 --> 01:48:04.040] So you can stick them on both sides. [01:48:04.040 --> 01:48:08.040] So do you know if the probate judge can be a lawyer? [01:48:08.040 --> 01:48:13.040] I'm not sure. [01:48:13.040 --> 01:48:20.040] To hear him tell it, he's been practicing as a judge there for the last, you know, 15 to 20 years. [01:48:20.040 --> 01:48:23.040] Okay, he probably doesn't have a bar card then. [01:48:23.040 --> 01:48:28.040] So the judiciary called a complaint for judicial and competency. [01:48:28.040 --> 01:48:40.040] And for, I would create a criminal complaint against the judge, have it notarized and included in the judicial conduct complaint. [01:48:40.040 --> 01:48:49.040] Because I can almost guarantee you there are going to be judges on the commission for the judicial conduct commission. [01:48:49.040 --> 01:49:01.040] And when they hit the verified criminal, affidavit, and they don't act on it in their capacity as a magistrate, and you fall criminally against them for shielding from prosecution. [01:49:01.040 --> 01:49:05.040] Yes, they are not going to be happy. [01:49:05.040 --> 01:49:10.040] And they're going to let this judge know they're not happy. [01:49:10.040 --> 01:49:12.040] Politics. [01:49:12.040 --> 01:49:14.040] Yeah. [01:49:14.040 --> 01:49:24.040] Make sure you bar grieve the prosecutor into the stone age to quote Scott Richardson. [01:49:24.040 --> 01:49:31.040] Now funny, the prosecutor wasn't even in the room, I never even saw the prosecutor. [01:49:31.040 --> 01:49:33.040] Now everybody else in the courtroom did. [01:49:33.040 --> 01:49:35.040] I did not, because when I got there. [01:49:35.040 --> 01:49:37.040] Sting him anyway. [01:49:37.040 --> 01:49:41.040] File against the prosecutor anyway. [01:49:41.040 --> 01:49:48.040] Let him explain to the state bar that he wasn't in the room. [01:49:48.040 --> 01:49:51.040] So. [01:49:51.040 --> 01:49:54.040] They hold an arraignment. [01:49:54.040 --> 01:50:10.040] Okay, in Texas, 26.01, I'm sorry, 26.02 says an arraignment is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking a plea. [01:50:10.040 --> 01:50:19.040] You need to look in Georgia law and see if they have something equivalent to 26.01. [01:50:19.040 --> 01:50:34.040] 26.01 says an arraignment may be held in the matter of a felony or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [01:50:34.040 --> 01:50:38.040] I found that really odd. [01:50:38.040 --> 01:50:44.040] Why did the legislature go to specific purpose? [01:50:44.040 --> 01:50:51.040] And it's not like it was 26.2932 something way down there at the back. [01:50:51.040 --> 01:51:04.040] 26.01, very first one, restricted arraignments to felonies and misdemeanors punishable by imprisonment. [01:51:04.040 --> 01:51:09.040] That is odd. I don't know why they did that, but they did go to special trouble to do that. [01:51:09.040 --> 01:51:16.040] So there's a good chance that something in Georgia law did the same thing. [01:51:16.040 --> 01:51:30.040] Well, I had a question as to why these traffic tickets here in Georgia are misdemeanors and punishable by imprisonment. [01:51:30.040 --> 01:51:33.040] No, hold on, hold on. [01:51:33.040 --> 01:51:39.040] A traffic ticket is punishable by imprisonment in Georgia? [01:51:39.040 --> 01:51:41.040] Yeah. [01:51:41.040 --> 01:51:43.040] Holy mackerel. [01:51:43.040 --> 01:51:54.040] Then examining trial preliminary hearing becomes extremely important. [01:51:54.040 --> 01:52:04.040] You should file a subject matter jurisdiction challenge to the trial court, to the probate court. [01:52:04.040 --> 01:52:13.040] Okay. Now they have, and I guess that really doesn't matter, but still file that. [01:52:13.040 --> 01:52:20.040] Yes, they, without an examining trial, they can't have jurisdiction. [01:52:20.040 --> 01:52:25.040] And they're definitely not going to like that argument. [01:52:25.040 --> 01:52:32.040] Send me an email on that subject and I'll send you my arguments on that subject and case law. [01:52:32.040 --> 01:52:39.040] Okay. Got you. I will do that. I will do that. Listen, I'm going to get to the other callers. [01:52:39.040 --> 01:52:43.040] Okay. Thank you. [01:52:43.040 --> 01:52:51.040] And keep up the good fight. Jeff, John Jeff, I took Charles because Charles is fighting this thing just for the fun of it. [01:52:51.040 --> 01:52:57.040] He's out of Michigan and he's fighting the case in Georgia. I guess he drives there on occasion. [01:52:57.040 --> 01:53:01.040] You know, pretty regular, so he's not that big deal to get there. [01:53:01.040 --> 01:53:08.040] But he's fighting this just to help fix the system. That's why I took him first. [01:53:08.040 --> 01:53:14.040] And Charles, I really appreciate you. You're why I do this show. [01:53:14.040 --> 01:53:18.040] Thank you. I love listening to you. I'll talk to you soon. [01:53:18.040 --> 01:53:25.040] Okay. Now I'm going to John in New York. Hello, John. What do you have for us today? [01:53:25.040 --> 01:53:32.040] And Jeff, if we can't get to you today, will you call tomorrow and I'll take you in first. [01:53:32.040 --> 01:53:37.040] Matter of fact, Jeff called me tomorrow. We need to talk. [01:53:37.040 --> 01:53:43.040] Okay. Go ahead, John. Oops, hold on. I'm muted, Jeff. Okay. [01:53:43.040 --> 01:53:46.040] Okay. Go ahead, John. [01:53:46.040 --> 01:53:53.040] All right. I guess I found the note. I think I found the mortgage. [01:53:53.040 --> 01:54:03.040] I think all I need now is the truth and lending statement and I'll be willing to bet it's attached to the HUD one settlement statement. [01:54:03.040 --> 01:54:07.040] Did you find the HUD one? [01:54:07.040 --> 01:54:14.040] I think I did. I can't remember now. I'm very confused by all these documents. [01:54:14.040 --> 01:54:21.040] Okay. I know a guy who can tell you some vitamins to take to help your memory. [01:54:21.040 --> 01:54:26.040] His name is John in New York. [01:54:26.040 --> 01:54:31.040] Okay. Okay. You have the note. Tell me what the note says. [01:54:31.040 --> 01:54:33.040] Yeah. [01:54:33.040 --> 01:54:44.040] Right at the beginning, what I want to see in the note is I want to see the original principle, the original interest rate. [01:54:44.040 --> 01:54:49.040] And was the note a variable interest? [01:54:49.040 --> 01:54:59.040] Did the interest change? And if it changed, what was the index they used to calculate the changes with? [01:54:59.040 --> 01:55:05.040] You have one of these variable interest rate notes. They are a scam on their face. [01:55:05.040 --> 01:55:10.040] And the banks always screw them up. [01:55:10.040 --> 01:55:13.040] Well, it's fixed rate. [01:55:13.040 --> 01:55:14.040] You said that again? [01:55:14.040 --> 01:55:18.040] It was fixed rate. Fixed. [01:55:18.040 --> 01:55:21.040] It was fixed at 6.25, I think. [01:55:21.040 --> 01:55:29.040] Okay. Hold on. I'm having trouble. Your first words are blanking out. You need to move the mic either in front of your face. [01:55:29.040 --> 01:55:33.040] If the mic is right in front of your mouth, move it down a little bit and try again. [01:55:33.040 --> 01:55:36.040] Okay. Let's try it like this. How's that? [01:55:36.040 --> 01:55:37.040] Much better. [01:55:37.040 --> 01:55:41.040] Okay. Good. I think I was too loud. [01:55:41.040 --> 01:55:49.040] Long story short, I think it was 6.25% and it was a fixed rate, I think, but we'll see. [01:55:49.040 --> 01:55:52.040] Did you say 0.25? [01:55:52.040 --> 01:55:54.040] Yeah, 6.25. [01:55:54.040 --> 01:55:57.040] Oh, 6.25. Okay. [01:55:57.040 --> 01:56:09.040] Then what I want to see in that, if it's a fixed rate, then I'm going to run an amortization of the 6.25 at whatever the principle was. [01:56:09.040 --> 01:56:20.040] And then compare what the bank is actually charging to what the note says. [01:56:20.040 --> 01:56:37.040] And then when I get the HUD 1 settlement statement, I'm going to take the amount charged to the lender in the HUD 1 and claim that it's all bogus because they don't have any documentation to support it. [01:56:37.040 --> 01:56:43.040] And track that from the original payment as an overpayment and then run the note out. [01:56:43.040 --> 01:57:06.040] So if the amount they're actually charging matches precisely with what the note says, then we take off the amount from the HUD 1, run the note, and whatever the amount on the HUD 1 is, over the 30-year mortgage term, it will about triple. [01:57:06.040 --> 01:57:15.040] So at the end, you will have paid about three times the amount they put on the HUD 1 settlement statement. [01:57:15.040 --> 01:57:26.040] And what we maintain is, if there's a fraudulent fee assessed to the lender, that's the last thing you pay off. [01:57:26.040 --> 01:57:30.040] Otherwise, you would have it paid off sooner. [01:57:30.040 --> 01:57:36.040] So you pay interest on that fraudulent fee all the way to the end of the note. [01:57:36.040 --> 01:57:39.040] And that would generally triple the amount they put on there. [01:57:39.040 --> 01:57:44.040] And then we take that amount and say, this is fraud. [01:57:44.040 --> 01:57:47.040] This is fraud on its face. [01:57:47.040 --> 01:57:51.040] And fraud should get punitive, which is triple. [01:57:51.040 --> 01:58:03.040] So we take the amount on the HUD 1, triple that, then triple that again, and that's a claim we will get only for the HUD 1. [01:58:03.040 --> 01:58:08.040] If we get the truth and ending statement, we will calculate the differences between the values. [01:58:08.040 --> 01:58:10.040] We'll get another claim against them. [01:58:10.040 --> 01:58:14.040] And since this one's fixed, we don't get the variable rate note. [01:58:14.040 --> 01:58:16.040] They always screw up variable rates. [01:58:16.040 --> 01:58:18.040] We get another claim against them. [01:58:18.040 --> 01:58:24.040] But we will get a claim against them enough to cancel out the note. [01:58:24.040 --> 01:58:26.040] Okay, out of time. [01:58:26.040 --> 01:58:28.040] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:28.040 --> 01:58:32.040] I see Ken came up on the board, but I'm sorry, Ken. [01:58:32.040 --> 01:58:35.040] Either you got here later, I didn't see it. [01:58:35.040 --> 01:58:38.040] We weren't able to get to you, but we will tomorrow night. [01:58:38.040 --> 01:58:43.040] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:43.040 --> 01:58:50.040] Ken, hang on. I'll talk to you after the show. [01:59:13.040 --> 01:59:20.040] 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.040 --> 01:59:30.040] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps, and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.040 --> 01:59:33.040] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:33.040 --> 01:59:41.040] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll-free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.040 --> 01:59:49.040] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.