[00:00.000 --> 00:08.000] The following news flashes brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing the deli bulletins for the commodities market. [00:08.000 --> 00:20.000] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:20.000 --> 00:31.000] Markets for Wednesday the 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, [00:31.000 --> 00:39.000] oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, [00:39.000 --> 00:54.000] Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and EOS is at $2.32 of crypto coin. [00:54.000 --> 01:02.000] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications get the right to vote when the [01:02.000 --> 01:09.000] representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by parliament. [01:09.000 --> 01:16.000] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court stop the state from flagging about [01:16.000 --> 01:23.000] 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. The list was compiled after an 11 month long investigation by the [01:23.000 --> 01:30.000] office of the Texas Secretary of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were [01:30.000 --> 01:38.000] registered to vote when obtaining major arbitrage license. Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote it seems. However, further controversy was [01:38.000 --> 01:45.000] raised when it became clear that some of the names were not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.000 --> 01:50.000] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.000 --> 01:56.000] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. [01:56.000 --> 02:04.000] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment regarding this list and any [02:04.000 --> 02:09.000] updates pertaining to it. [02:09.000 --> 02:16.000] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.000 --> 02:24.000] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.000 --> 02:30.000] The vape store's smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [02:30.000 --> 02:37.000] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the Executive Director of Grow Local, South Texas, [02:37.000 --> 02:43.000] concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi [02:43.000 --> 02:53.000] Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. You can find the interview at kiitv.com. [02:53.000 --> 03:00.000] This is Rick Rodeo with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:00.000 --> 03:25.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rue Vareio, and I ran off the cliff again. [03:25.000 --> 03:34.000] We have a routine in order to get, and we keep saying you'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [03:34.000 --> 03:40.000] Right. I remember you saying that, and you also said we have to take them down one at a time, which we have to do. [03:40.000 --> 03:50.000] When you were asking me about how many violations they did, they did some of the same violations repeatedly, and they circumvented things. [03:50.000 --> 03:58.000] So one of my favorites was when the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in the First Chancery Division told them, [03:58.000 --> 04:07.000] you have not straightened out Chancery One. We cannot rule on it because it's incomplete. It's missing things. Go back and do it. [04:07.000 --> 04:24.000] Somehow they managed to put some kind of paperwork together, ignoring Summary One, and went right to Summary Judgment Two, which allowed them to get to mortgage foreclosure. [04:24.000 --> 04:30.000] That never would have happened if they had paid attention to what was going on with Summary Judgment One. [04:30.000 --> 04:40.000] That was one of the arguments that I did when I tried to get an appeal to the appellate court regarding the case in 2013. [04:40.000 --> 04:47.000] And I said, I'm trying to get this overturned. I have evidence to prove that you've never seen this coming from the government. [04:47.000 --> 04:55.000] It shows what I am saying, and I have proof that you've never received the proper government's papers at the time. [04:55.000 --> 05:03.000] And they also know that they broke the rules of law when they didn't see this, et cetera, and I want to present this to you. [05:03.000 --> 05:18.000] And the opposing counsel knew that the new method of setting things over there is by the FME filing system, which is worse than being on a computer and being computer illiterate [05:18.000 --> 05:28.000] because it cuts you out, it moves you around, and the bottom line is that the paperwork you send doesn't get there, gets there late, never been seen, [05:28.000 --> 05:34.000] and the opposing counsel uses that as a method to say, well, you never got that paperwork, blah, blah, blah, blah. [05:34.000 --> 05:41.000] But yet, when you're looking at the thing and it says yes, paperwork received, but somehow or other, it's mysteriously not received. [05:41.000 --> 05:44.000] Also sitting there calling me a lawyer. [05:44.000 --> 05:51.000] Okay, hold on. These are the things, okay, you're going way, way, way too fast. [05:51.000 --> 05:58.000] You're running wide over major claims that you have, like they're not even there. [05:58.000 --> 06:00.000] That's how they're treating them. [06:00.000 --> 06:06.000] We don't care. Okay, they're criminals. We got that. [06:06.000 --> 06:10.000] They're not going to follow any law. Okay, we got that too. [06:10.000 --> 06:14.000] So how do we handle it? [06:14.000 --> 06:18.000] That's where I am. This is where we come in. [06:18.000 --> 06:29.000] If you file documents with the court and you have evidence to show that they were received, but they're not available in the courts through the clerk. [06:29.000 --> 06:31.000] Yes. [06:31.000 --> 06:35.000] The clerk is the one that has the duty to keep the record. [06:35.000 --> 06:40.000] If she doesn't keep the record, let her explain why she didn't keep the record. [06:40.000 --> 06:49.000] And sue her as liable to you for failing to perform a duty she's required to perform in the process, deny you full free access to enjoyment right. [06:49.000 --> 06:52.000] That's, that's sufficient misconduct. [06:52.000 --> 06:53.000] Yes. [06:53.000 --> 06:55.000] That's a carton in every state. [06:55.000 --> 07:08.000] We're not upgrading the system in Cook County, Dorothy Brown, the circuit court clerk that did all that damage and the seven circuit court of appeals really hit her hard. [07:08.000 --> 07:17.000] Well, you come back and see if you can hit her with criminal. What's going to happen when you try to file criminal complaints against the clerk? [07:17.000 --> 07:30.000] Is everybody will line up to protect her to shield her from prosecution? At least you hope they do because then you get to file against them. [07:30.000 --> 07:40.000] There's just a whole routine. You start with a low level judge and it'll terrify them and they will tell you, well, you have to go to the police. [07:40.000 --> 07:49.000] No, I don't either. I'm coming to you. You guys do your job or not. I don't care. When you don't do your job, then they stick to your target. [07:49.000 --> 07:54.000] You just start running. You've got so many complaints here. [07:54.000 --> 07:55.000] Oh, God. [07:55.000 --> 08:04.000] At the end, at the end of the day, it goes to a grand jury. [08:04.000 --> 08:09.000] The grand jury is a grand jury of your peers, not their peers. [08:09.000 --> 08:27.000] Everything you do, you should think, what will play well before a grand jury of my peers? How do you put together a story that the grand jury will buy? [08:27.000 --> 08:34.000] You know, we're going and saying that the judges are corrupt, the lawyers are corrupt, everybody's corrupt. [08:34.000 --> 08:46.000] Well, how do you support that? How do you get ordinary people who depend on the legal system to protect them and keep them safe? [08:46.000 --> 08:53.000] How do you get those people to rule that they don't have any protection or safety at all? [08:53.000 --> 08:59.000] You have cognitive dissonance to get passed. [08:59.000 --> 09:12.000] You're asking them to admit that they're vulnerable. So in order to get that done, you need to craft a story that answers the questions they're going to have. [09:12.000 --> 09:18.000] If this is so illegal, how could they get by with it? Well, this is how they can get by with it. [09:18.000 --> 09:30.000] This lawyer does this illegal thing. And I went to the judge and gave notice of crime as is my duty under law. [09:30.000 --> 09:38.000] And the judge was required under law to hold a preliminary hearing and make a determination. [09:38.000 --> 09:49.000] But the judge didn't do that. He acted to shield these lawyers from prosecution. In Texas, it would be 3903 penal code or 3805 penal code. [09:49.000 --> 09:59.000] You've got one in Illinois. You just got to find it and you charge the judge with that. [09:59.000 --> 10:15.000] And when you try to charge the judge with that, then you go to the next hire official and he'll try to shield the judge from that claim because he's going to be a judge just like the other one and he's likely wind up in the same place. [10:15.000 --> 10:20.000] At least you hope that's what he does. Then you get to sting him. [10:20.000 --> 10:33.000] And I generally work it all the way up to the U.S. to the Supreme Court of the state. And once I get to the Supreme Court of the state with my complaints and always file them with the Chief Justice. [10:33.000 --> 10:46.000] And when he refuses to act, then we step right up to the Fed. Then we contact the special agent in charge of a local FBI and we file criminal charges with him. [10:46.000 --> 10:58.000] And then when he doesn't act, then we file with him and then we wait about three weeks and then we send a letter to the U.S. Attorney General. [10:58.000 --> 11:13.000] And we ask the U.S. Attorney General for a copy of the notice that the SAC sent to him as required by 28 USC 535. [11:13.000 --> 11:18.000] They're not going to see this one coming. [11:18.000 --> 11:29.000] 28 USC 535 is like a whistleblower statute. And I don't get to take credit for this. One of my listeners brought this to my attention. [11:29.000 --> 11:46.000] What it says is that if a governmental official, and this is a federal statute, so it's federal officials, have knowledge that another official has violated a law. [11:46.000 --> 11:55.000] It doesn't say a law related to their office. It says has violated a law. Then they don't go to their boss or their boss's boss. [11:55.000 --> 12:04.000] They don't go to their chain of command. They give notice to the U.S. and to the Attorney General in D.C. [12:04.000 --> 12:18.000] So you want to see that notice. And you will get, like I got, a response that says we're looking into your request and you won't ever hear anything more from them. [12:18.000 --> 12:37.000] So they got technically 60 days to respond. 61st day, you go back to the FBI with criminal charge against the Attorney General of the United States. [12:37.000 --> 12:53.000] And this time you don't go to the SEC. You make up your complaint and you file it. You mail it to the U.S. Attorney's Office, directed to the foreman of the grand jury. [12:53.000 --> 13:12.000] And you can call him grand jury foreman. You don't even know what his name is. And you include 24 copies, 25 copies. One for the foreman, one for the prosecutor, and 23 for each of the other grand jury members. [13:12.000 --> 13:27.000] Wait a minute. I think there's 23 grand jurors, so you need 24 copies. And then you wait. On the copy, you put each one in a separate manila envelope. [13:27.000 --> 13:41.000] And on the one that goes to the foreman of the grand jury, you include a letter. And in that letter, you ask the foreman to initial this document and return it to you. [13:41.000 --> 13:48.000] Please, in the included stamp self-addressed envelope, please do not sign it. [13:48.000 --> 13:58.000] As the U.S. Attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it, which he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments. [13:58.000 --> 14:09.000] And we want to make sure that the U.S. Attorney doesn't rubber stamp this and send them back to us and then hide these criminal complaints from the grand jury. [14:09.000 --> 14:22.000] Well, when it goes to the U.S. Attorney's office, the little clerk in the mailroom will just sign for all of them and send them up to the prosecution attorney. [14:22.000 --> 14:33.000] The U.S. Attorney will open it and he'll see that letter and oops, we got somebody that knows our dirty tricks. [14:33.000 --> 14:42.000] But he's going to hide that from the grand jury. What he might do is call you and threaten you. [14:42.000 --> 15:05.000] When I filed against a high up in IRS because he authorized a raid on this chiropractic clinic and the IRS agents came into the building during business hours with their guns in their hands. [15:05.000 --> 15:19.000] Naughty, naughty, naughty. Their manual says that an IRS agent may only draw his weapon when he has cause to draw and discharge. [15:19.000 --> 15:21.000] I understand. [15:21.000 --> 15:29.000] We charged, I forget what the guy was, but he was like six levels up from this IRS agent who did this. [15:29.000 --> 15:32.000] I don't think he knew anything about it. [15:32.000 --> 15:42.000] The best guy to charge is the guy who is innocent as to driven snow because he's going to go ballistic. [15:42.000 --> 15:59.000] So we filed against him with the U.S. Attorney and U.S. Attorney called me and told me that if I attempted to contact the grand jury again that he would charge me with jury tampering and obstruction justice. [15:59.000 --> 16:01.000] Oh, brother. [16:01.000 --> 16:11.000] And I said, well, knock yourself out. That'll work for me because I'm going to charge you with jury tampering and obstruction of justice. [16:11.000 --> 16:16.000] We'll see what the grand jury thinks of both of us. [16:16.000 --> 16:20.000] The next day they fired the IRS agent. [16:20.000 --> 16:22.000] Yeah, that makes sense. [16:22.000 --> 16:34.000] So these are guys that are, the U.S. Attorney, he don't have a dog in this hunt, but all these guys got their snouts in the same trough and they try to protect each other. [16:34.000 --> 16:38.000] We get them to do that so then we can sting them for it. [16:38.000 --> 16:48.000] When we come back, I'll talk about what every U.S. Attorney must do when a new president takes office and you're going to like this. [16:48.000 --> 16:53.000] If you need to help Rule of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [16:53.000 --> 17:19.000] I wonder. [17:19.000 --> 17:24.000] The traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [17:24.000 --> 17:34.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy, A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [17:34.000 --> 17:40.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [17:40.000 --> 17:47.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of your original 2009 seminar. [17:47.000 --> 17:50.000] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [17:50.000 --> 17:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [17:54.000 --> 18:01.000] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:01.000 --> 18:06.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:06.000 --> 18:10.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [18:10.000 --> 18:15.000] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too. [18:15.000 --> 18:21.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [18:21.000 --> 18:27.000] what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [18:27.000 --> 18:34.000] how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.000 --> 18:39.000] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.000 --> 18:41.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.000 --> 18:50.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [18:50.000 --> 19:15.000] To learn how to stop debt collectors now, click on the blue Michael Mearris banner or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [19:15.000 --> 19:23.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and we're talking to Carla in Illinois. [19:23.000 --> 19:31.000] Okay, this is kind of, this is the routine and this is why I say when you walk into the courthouse, [19:31.000 --> 19:42.000] you're the baddest motor scooter in a building because you can walk your way right to the top and crawl down everybody's throat in between. [19:42.000 --> 19:50.000] When you get to the U.S. attorney, he is ultimately vulnerable. [19:50.000 --> 19:58.000] When a new president takes office, every U.S. attorney in the country must tend to their resignation. [19:58.000 --> 20:08.000] Wait a minute, you need to move the mic or something, you're biking out on me. [20:08.000 --> 20:13.000] Sorry. Okay, that's better. Can you hear me now? [20:13.000 --> 20:20.000] You're needing a little closer. I'm sorry, my husband's hollering in my ear. Can you hear me now? [20:20.000 --> 20:26.000] Yeah, now I can hear you. Okay, stop yelling, Jim. [20:26.000 --> 20:41.000] He's over here going off on a whole tangent from what you were discussing before and I said, would you stop doing it? It's so distracting. [20:41.000 --> 20:44.000] That's my southern husband. Can you hear me? [20:44.000 --> 20:47.000] Yeah, I can hear you. Okay. [20:47.000 --> 21:08.000] You know, I appreciate you doing this thing with me and our case really goes all the way back like 1997, you know, and it doesn't get really nasty until the 2001 situation with the balloon payments and all the rest of the stuff, [21:08.000 --> 21:16.000] but Charles Head and his cronies were doing their stuff all the way back in 2001, so it's like a crisscross. [21:16.000 --> 21:21.000] Well, okay, that goes to ongoing criminal conspiracy. [21:21.000 --> 21:22.000] That's it. [21:22.000 --> 21:37.000] Predicate acts toward an ongoing criminal conspiracy. That's RICO. I had a federal judge tell me once when you file a RICO suit, it's like dropping an atomic bomb. [21:37.000 --> 21:38.000] They did. [21:38.000 --> 21:40.000] RICO special. [21:40.000 --> 21:42.000] The RICO. [21:42.000 --> 21:44.000] Have you ever looked into RICO? [21:44.000 --> 21:54.000] Yeah, that's exactly what they did with Operation Homewrecker. They got them mostly on the fraud, you know, with sending the stuff through the mail. [21:54.000 --> 22:05.000] Mail fraud, this, mail fraud, that, but they had them on racketeering and RICO statute, as you said, and the crossing the state lines, which they did. [22:05.000 --> 22:07.000] Okay, hold on. [22:07.000 --> 22:12.000] Why have you filed a RICO suit? [22:12.000 --> 22:25.000] I, my previous attorneys were trying to file stuff and things were, from 2013, things were just basically ignored or put under the table. [22:25.000 --> 22:35.000] Me being a novice and pro se, and you remember the old statute about the fool who represents himself as a fool for a client? [22:35.000 --> 22:41.000] Yes, but I represented myself one time in court. [22:41.000 --> 22:42.000] Then you know what? [22:42.000 --> 22:47.000] I'm pretty smart here, and the charges were absolutely, totally bogus. [22:47.000 --> 22:49.000] Of course they were. [22:49.000 --> 22:53.000] And the jury threw the book at me. [22:53.000 --> 22:55.000] So you're right about that. [22:55.000 --> 22:56.000] This is different. [22:56.000 --> 23:02.000] And the way that they go after me, like, I'll give you an example. I came in to get a jury trial. [23:02.000 --> 23:17.000] And I passed every single thing I was supposed to do. All that was supposed to be done was to go to this one particular judge who was in charge of assigning a date and a time, and how many jurors would be doing this thing. [23:17.000 --> 23:24.000] And I walked to him to do this, and he's engaged in conversation with the opposing counsel. [23:24.000 --> 23:32.000] He's jabbing away like I don't even exist. Then I go to hand him the document, which I was told to do. [23:32.000 --> 23:40.000] He promptly defers to the opposing counsel, and he says, yes, yes, we will deal with that later here. [23:40.000 --> 23:55.000] I want you to do this in triplicate. I want you to make sure that you do this in legalese. I want multiple copies, and I want it done in two days, and I want you to answer the question from the opposing counsel. [23:55.000 --> 24:10.000] And I take one look at the opposing counsel's question, and this question had been answered not once, not twice, but five different times by four different attorneys to completely halicution. [24:10.000 --> 24:19.000] You know, there was no question what they were answering. And I turned to the judge and I said, you're honored. This has been asked and answered over and over. [24:19.000 --> 24:25.000] Well, now I want it from you, but it has to be in legalese in two days, and I want multiple copies. [24:25.000 --> 24:27.000] You tell him no. [24:27.000 --> 24:29.000] How many multiple copies? [24:29.000 --> 24:31.000] Okay, I can help you with this part. [24:31.000 --> 24:36.000] That gets a petition for rid of mandamus. [24:36.000 --> 24:40.000] I got yelled at for coming in and not... [24:40.000 --> 24:45.000] I called 911 when I got yelled at. [24:45.000 --> 24:55.000] Mr. Bailiff, arrest this judge. You haven't lived and you stood in the courtroom and asked Bailiff to arrest the judge. [24:55.000 --> 25:12.000] Oh, as far as I'm concerned, well, the bailiff was with the judge, but as far as I am concerned, according to what I have been uncovering in the independent journalist sections that I have found dealing with all of this stuff, [25:12.000 --> 25:27.000] a lot of these judges are in the pockets of these banks by having pieces of property that they buy, that the banks pay off in a full, you know, mortgage that they don't have to pay anymore, [25:27.000 --> 25:31.000] and now they have the judge in their pocket. They own them completely. [25:31.000 --> 25:35.000] I know that. Who cares? [25:35.000 --> 25:39.000] Okay, you got to understand. Hold on. I'm an engineer. [25:39.000 --> 25:44.000] And as an engineer, I don't have philosophies. [25:44.000 --> 25:53.000] I don't have philosophies that say, oh, the judge should be honest and unbiased and all this kind of stuff. I don't have those. [25:53.000 --> 25:55.000] Only all I have is parameters. [25:55.000 --> 25:57.000] Yes, don't do that. [25:57.000 --> 26:02.000] The judges are bought and paid for. It's a parameter. [26:02.000 --> 26:11.000] I got that. I can accept that. I can deal with that. Have you seen a request to the judge for his financials? [26:11.000 --> 26:25.000] Have you specifically asked him about properties that he owns and a complete list of all mortgages taken out on those properties? [26:25.000 --> 26:32.000] I got one of those documents that goes to every way I can find that people launder money. [26:32.000 --> 26:40.000] And I asked the judge about every one of those methods, something that would point at each one of those methods. [26:40.000 --> 26:45.000] I have never had a judge answer one of those. [26:45.000 --> 26:47.000] I bet not. [26:47.000 --> 26:55.000] What you've just done is warned the judge that you're looking behind the curtain. [26:55.000 --> 27:01.000] You're the pro se. You're the baddest motor scooter in the building. [27:01.000 --> 27:06.000] They're criminals. Of course they're criminals. We can deal with that. [27:06.000 --> 27:12.000] My whole process is about dealing with the fact that they're criminals. [27:12.000 --> 27:19.000] But see the problem is they're all criminals. [27:19.000 --> 27:26.000] Yes, it's difficult, but not impossible. [27:26.000 --> 27:33.000] But you have to be able to change your mindset. [27:33.000 --> 27:41.000] Most people come into court with a mindset they developed in school. [27:41.000 --> 27:49.000] We are required by law to attend school, and most of us attend a public school. [27:49.000 --> 27:54.000] And in that school you have dealings with public officials. [27:54.000 --> 27:59.000] For the most part your whole life, that's the only time you deal with public officials. [27:59.000 --> 28:04.000] And these public officials, they tell you what great and wonderful rights that you have. [28:04.000 --> 28:07.000] Inalienable rights. [28:07.000 --> 28:13.000] However, while you're in this school, don't even think of trying to express one of those, [28:13.000 --> 28:18.000] and the whole weight of the system will land right square on your head, [28:18.000 --> 28:22.000] then you get out of school, you don't have any dealings with public officials, [28:22.000 --> 28:24.000] and you get a ticket. [28:24.000 --> 28:31.000] You're called into court, and you go inside and look for a set of behaviors that are appropriate [28:31.000 --> 28:36.000] to use when you're dealing with public officials. [28:36.000 --> 28:47.000] And for the most part, the only behavioral set you have is the sixth grader being sent to the principal. [28:47.000 --> 28:52.000] I was at court with a guy who had gotten a ticket. [28:52.000 --> 28:54.000] I didn't have a ticket, so I didn't have a dog in the hunt. [28:54.000 --> 28:58.000] And we're out in the hall before the court opens, and these guys are all saying, [28:58.000 --> 29:02.000] how are they going to get that cop's job, and blah, blah, blah. [29:02.000 --> 29:08.000] This one guy standing over there, real expensive suit, older man, real distinguished looking, [29:08.000 --> 29:11.000] you look like an executive. [29:11.000 --> 29:14.000] But go into court, they called him up first. [29:14.000 --> 29:18.000] He stepped up to the little microphone. [29:18.000 --> 29:21.000] He had some papers in his hand with notes on him. [29:21.000 --> 29:25.000] His hand was shaking so bad he couldn't read his notes. [29:25.000 --> 29:29.000] He could barely speak. [29:29.000 --> 29:35.000] He was a kid sent before the principal. [29:35.000 --> 29:39.000] That was the behavioral set he had. [29:39.000 --> 29:43.000] What we do in this show is we try to juxtapose that behavioral set. [29:43.000 --> 29:47.000] With the behavioral set you would use when you go to the principal, [29:47.000 --> 29:50.000] want to know what the heck you're doing with my kids. [29:50.000 --> 29:53.000] Oh, different behavior. [29:53.000 --> 30:00.000] Hang on, about to go to break, ready to go and move on radio, we'll be right back. [30:00.000 --> 30:08.000] In Africa, there's a tiny rat that would make a tasty snack for jackals and wildcats, [30:08.000 --> 30:11.000] but they won't touch him with a 10-foot pole. [30:11.000 --> 30:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and after the break, I'll tell you what his secret weapon is. [30:16.000 --> 30:18.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.000 --> 30:21.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.000 --> 30:26.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.000 --> 30:31.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.000 --> 30:34.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.000 --> 30:37.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:37.000 --> 30:41.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.000 --> 30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.000 --> 30:50.000] In Northeastern Africa, tiny creatures called crested rats can walk safely [30:50.000 --> 30:52.000] among the most voracious predators. [30:52.000 --> 30:56.000] They're slow and easy to catch and apparently very appetizing. [30:56.000 --> 30:57.000] So how do they survive? [30:57.000 --> 31:00.000] With one of the most ingenious defenses in the animal kingdom, [31:00.000 --> 31:05.000] they chew the roots and bark of a toxic plant called the acocanthera tree [31:05.000 --> 31:08.000] and rub the saliva on a row of quills down their backs. [31:08.000 --> 31:12.000] When an enemy approaches, they expose their flanks invitingly. [31:12.000 --> 31:17.000] Predators either smell the poison in bolts or take a bite and soon fall dead from heart failure. [31:17.000 --> 31:20.000] The toxin you see comes from the poison arrow tree, [31:20.000 --> 31:23.000] the same one hunters once used to kill elephants. [31:23.000 --> 31:25.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:25.000 --> 31:54.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:55.000 --> 32:03.000] Hi, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.000 --> 32:06.000] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.000 --> 32:09.000] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, [32:09.000 --> 32:11.000] but good luck getting them to pay for it. [32:11.000 --> 32:13.000] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, [32:13.000 --> 32:14.000] but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.000 --> 32:17.000] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements [32:17.000 --> 32:21.000] can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.000 --> 32:26.000] To accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints, [32:26.000 --> 32:32.000] you can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [32:32.000 --> 32:38.000] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, [32:38.000 --> 32:40.000] mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [32:40.000 --> 32:45.000] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.000 --> 32:50.000] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.000 --> 32:56.000] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:56.000 --> 32:58.000] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.000 --> 33:21.000] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:28.000 --> 33:43.000] Okay, we are back. [33:43.000 --> 33:48.000] Randy Kelton with our radio, and we're talking to Carla in Illinois. [33:48.000 --> 33:55.000] And what I'm promoting here is a whole different way of thinking about this. [33:55.000 --> 33:59.000] We come at it from a different perspective. [33:59.000 --> 34:06.000] We want them to act improperly so that when they do, we can go after them. [34:06.000 --> 34:10.000] They're doing a great job of that. [34:10.000 --> 34:17.000] Once you have done this one time, it could become a problem. [34:17.000 --> 34:26.000] And I've had to warn people several times about it because this can get to be way too much fun. [34:26.000 --> 34:29.000] I have that problem. [34:29.000 --> 34:34.000] I really, really like to do that to these guys. [34:34.000 --> 34:41.000] I go into a clerk's office in Arlington, Texas, and I ask to see some criminal files, [34:41.000 --> 34:43.000] and she said, well, are you an attorney? [34:43.000 --> 34:48.000] Oh, no, no, sleep well at night and keep hands among pockets. [34:48.000 --> 34:50.000] Well, are you the accused? [34:50.000 --> 34:52.000] No, nope, nope, not accused. [34:52.000 --> 34:54.000] I'm a good guy. [34:54.000 --> 34:58.000] Well, if you're not the attorney or the accused, you can't see these records. [34:58.000 --> 35:00.000] Yeah, that sounds familiar. [35:00.000 --> 35:04.000] Never give legal advice. [35:04.000 --> 35:10.000] I could have quoted her the statute, but I didn't. [35:10.000 --> 35:14.000] I turned to the bailiff. He's on the other side of the room, and I pointed at him. [35:14.000 --> 35:16.000] Yeah, come here. [35:16.000 --> 35:20.000] They hate that because he thinks he's a bad boy in the room. [35:20.000 --> 35:22.000] He come over, what can I do for you? [35:22.000 --> 35:24.000] Arrest that woman. [35:24.000 --> 35:26.000] Well, why would I arrest her? [35:26.000 --> 35:28.000] She wouldn't show me some records. [35:28.000 --> 35:29.000] He said, are you an attorney? [35:29.000 --> 35:30.000] Nope. [35:30.000 --> 35:32.000] She said, are you the accused? [35:32.000 --> 35:33.000] Nope. [35:33.000 --> 35:35.000] Well, you can't see those records. [35:35.000 --> 35:38.000] Oh, man, you shouldn't have said that. [35:38.000 --> 35:43.000] I took out my cell phone, and he said, you can't use a phone in here. [35:43.000 --> 35:48.000] I said, are you going to interfere with a 911 call? [35:48.000 --> 35:50.000] And the clerk said, leave him alone, leave him alone. [35:50.000 --> 35:54.000] He's just trying to get you to do something so he can try to get you arrested. [35:54.000 --> 35:56.000] And I said, too late for that. [35:56.000 --> 36:01.000] 911, I get the operator, and I asked him to send somebody out here to arrest, [36:01.000 --> 36:06.000] and I asked the bailiff what his name was, and he pointed at his name tag, [36:06.000 --> 36:09.000] and I told him, I'm elderly. [36:09.000 --> 36:11.000] I can't read it. [36:11.000 --> 36:13.000] Oh, my God. [36:13.000 --> 36:16.000] He wouldn't tell me, because that's okay. [36:16.000 --> 36:19.000] I need you to come arrest an unknown bailiff. [36:19.000 --> 36:21.000] I can point him out when you get here. [36:21.000 --> 36:23.000] He won't tell me who he is. [36:23.000 --> 36:25.000] And ma'am, what's your name? [36:25.000 --> 36:27.000] And she told me immediately. [36:27.000 --> 36:34.000] For Class A misdemeanor, official oppression, criminal violation, 39.03 penal code. [36:34.000 --> 36:38.000] Well, what did they do, not your business? [36:38.000 --> 36:40.000] Well, I need to know what they did. [36:40.000 --> 36:41.000] Are you an attorney? [36:41.000 --> 36:43.000] Are you a prosecutor? [36:43.000 --> 36:44.000] Well, no. [36:44.000 --> 36:49.000] Are you going to purport to make a legal determination here? [36:49.000 --> 36:50.000] I'll send someone out there. [36:50.000 --> 36:52.000] Thank you. [36:52.000 --> 36:58.000] The cops get there, and they refuse to take a complaint. [36:58.000 --> 37:03.000] And the first guy I talked to, the sergeant was behind him, and I turned to the sergeant. [37:03.000 --> 37:05.000] I said, what did you send him for? [37:05.000 --> 37:07.000] I need a real policeman. [37:07.000 --> 37:09.000] The sergeant said he is a real policeman. [37:09.000 --> 37:10.000] No. [37:10.000 --> 37:12.000] Right now, he's a perp. [37:12.000 --> 37:18.000] I need a real policeman to arrest those two and this guy. [37:18.000 --> 37:20.000] Well, they all got real excited. [37:20.000 --> 37:22.000] And I said, that's okay, guys. [37:22.000 --> 37:24.000] I'll take this to the grand jury. [37:24.000 --> 37:26.000] I need everybody's name here. [37:26.000 --> 37:28.000] And they're trying to duck and dodge. [37:28.000 --> 37:32.000] And the one guy covered his name tag. [37:32.000 --> 37:36.000] So I said, okay, I need to see your government ID. [37:36.000 --> 37:38.000] Well, I don't have to show you that. [37:38.000 --> 37:41.000] I said, we'll see about that. [37:41.000 --> 37:44.000] That's a government document. [37:44.000 --> 37:46.000] And yes, you do. [37:46.000 --> 37:52.000] The sergeant said, showing me your ID. [37:52.000 --> 37:54.000] And then I went out and went to your car. [37:54.000 --> 37:56.000] He had a guy with me. [37:56.000 --> 38:01.000] There's about 20 cops up there, and nobody's leaving. [38:01.000 --> 38:05.000] So I called dispatch and I said, do you have a supervisor [38:05.000 --> 38:09.000] or a captain or a lieutenant or someone a little higher? [38:09.000 --> 38:10.000] Well, I have a lieutenant here. [38:10.000 --> 38:12.000] We'll get the lieutenant, please. [38:12.000 --> 38:13.000] The lieutenant comes on. [38:13.000 --> 38:15.000] I told him where I was at and I had called and asked him [38:15.000 --> 38:18.000] to take some criminal complaints and they refused. [38:18.000 --> 38:23.000] And now I'm outside of your municipal court here. [38:23.000 --> 38:25.000] You're just in the peace court. [38:25.000 --> 38:28.000] And I have a bunch of your officers standing around here [38:28.000 --> 38:31.000] and they're not leaving. [38:31.000 --> 38:33.000] Do they have business here? [38:33.000 --> 38:37.000] Or are they planning to follow me when I leave this parking lot [38:37.000 --> 38:39.000] and stop me out there on the highway [38:39.000 --> 38:41.000] and let me know how much I annoyed them? [38:41.000 --> 38:43.000] Oh, I don't think they're doing that. [38:43.000 --> 38:46.000] He said, just a moment, let me check. [38:46.000 --> 38:51.000] In about 30 seconds, it looked like a Chinese fire drill. [38:51.000 --> 38:54.000] Those cops flooded out of that place, [38:54.000 --> 38:58.000] like somebody had opened up and said, poof, they were gone. [38:58.000 --> 39:02.000] Then I said, I'm not going to have to worry about one of them [39:02.000 --> 39:05.000] sitting down the highway waiting for me, am I? [39:05.000 --> 39:10.000] No, Mr. Kelton, you're not going to have to worry about that. [39:10.000 --> 39:14.000] I've been down this road before. [39:14.000 --> 39:17.000] You said about documents. [39:17.000 --> 39:20.000] One of the things that was done to me is the very first thing [39:20.000 --> 39:24.000] when they were trying to move the case through summary judgment [39:24.000 --> 39:29.000] to slash foreclosure was they sealed my documents [39:29.000 --> 39:32.000] from the chance redivision case, [39:32.000 --> 39:34.000] thereby preventing anybody, [39:34.000 --> 39:36.000] any lawyer from looking at it from my side, [39:36.000 --> 39:38.000] me from looking at it, [39:38.000 --> 39:40.000] they who? [39:40.000 --> 39:42.000] and make our proof of our case. [39:42.000 --> 39:44.000] Wait, who is they? [39:44.000 --> 39:46.000] Who stole them? [39:46.000 --> 39:48.000] I said, you know, I'm the victim in this case. [39:48.000 --> 39:50.000] I'm the public document, [39:50.000 --> 39:52.000] and I know that I'm allowed to see them. [39:52.000 --> 39:54.000] And the judge? [39:54.000 --> 39:56.000] Wait a minute. [39:56.000 --> 39:58.000] Who took them? [39:58.000 --> 40:00.000] Who took the documents? [40:00.000 --> 40:02.000] Yeah. [40:02.000 --> 40:04.000] And preventing me from getting them? [40:04.000 --> 40:08.000] The judge sealed the documents on the request [40:08.000 --> 40:10.000] of the opposing counsel. [40:10.000 --> 40:12.000] Notice what they eat. [40:12.000 --> 40:14.000] This is what they eat. [40:14.000 --> 40:18.000] That should get a...any time a judge renders a ruling [40:18.000 --> 40:20.000] this arbitrary or capricious, [40:20.000 --> 40:22.000] she filed a petition for rid of mandamus. [40:22.000 --> 40:24.000] Can you believe this? [40:24.000 --> 40:27.000] To protect me so that nobody would find out [40:27.000 --> 40:29.000] I was a bad tenant. [40:29.000 --> 40:31.000] Mind you, this is my house. [40:31.000 --> 40:33.000] I'm not a tenant. Bad tenant. [40:33.000 --> 40:36.000] Okay, wait. You're going to be jumping back into this. [40:36.000 --> 40:38.000] Oh, how horrible this is. [40:38.000 --> 40:40.000] I got that. [40:40.000 --> 40:43.000] I'm trying to get details on how we can go after them. [40:43.000 --> 40:47.000] If you go to a detail, you jump to something else. [40:47.000 --> 40:50.000] No, no, I don't think to exactly what you're saying. [40:50.000 --> 40:52.000] So I turn to the judge and I said, [40:52.000 --> 40:57.000] Your Honor, I need to have these documents open [40:57.000 --> 41:00.000] so that my attorney and I can look at them [41:00.000 --> 41:02.000] because they're paramount to my case. [41:02.000 --> 41:05.000] And sealing them is a violation against me [41:05.000 --> 41:08.000] being able to defend myself. [41:08.000 --> 41:11.000] And the judge didn't want to open it up. [41:11.000 --> 41:15.000] And the next day after I was told that this was for my protection [41:15.000 --> 41:18.000] and they were doing all this stuff in the internet [41:18.000 --> 41:21.000] in big bold letters was this very document [41:21.000 --> 41:24.000] that was quote unquote sealed for my protection. [41:24.000 --> 41:27.000] So I promptly went right back to the court [41:27.000 --> 41:29.000] and I presented it and boom, [41:29.000 --> 41:33.000] the next thing you know I had my documents. [41:33.000 --> 41:35.000] Okay, I thought you said, [41:35.000 --> 41:39.000] you said they sealed your document [41:39.000 --> 41:42.000] and I thought you said someone stole your documents. [41:42.000 --> 41:44.000] No, sealed. [41:44.000 --> 41:46.000] I missed that, okay. [41:46.000 --> 41:50.000] And then violated me by putting it in the internet. [41:50.000 --> 41:57.000] I'm looking for ways to change the playing field. [41:57.000 --> 42:01.000] If a judge renders a ruling in this arbitrary or capricious [42:01.000 --> 42:06.000] it should immediately get a petition for writ of mandamus. [42:06.000 --> 42:10.000] The vast majority of all writ of mandamus will be denied. [42:10.000 --> 42:14.000] And Texas 2% are granted. [42:14.000 --> 42:16.000] That's not the point. [42:16.000 --> 42:18.000] You're granted in Illinois. [42:18.000 --> 42:24.000] The point is you're waiving the judge's bad behavior [42:24.000 --> 42:27.000] before the appellate court. [42:27.000 --> 42:28.000] Gotcha. [42:28.000 --> 42:32.000] The judge is not going to like that. [42:32.000 --> 42:36.000] Have you filed judicial conduct complaints against him? [42:36.000 --> 42:38.000] No. [42:38.000 --> 42:41.000] Oh, you need to do that at every opportunity. [42:41.000 --> 42:43.000] Okay, you have to consider. [42:43.000 --> 42:48.000] The judge is going to rule you against you out of hand at every term. [42:48.000 --> 42:51.000] Okay, maybe he won't. [42:51.000 --> 42:56.000] But it behooves you to conduct yourself as if he will [42:56.000 --> 42:58.000] and be prepared for it. [42:58.000 --> 43:02.000] For me, that's not a problem, it's a parameter. [43:02.000 --> 43:05.000] I understand the judge is going to do that. [43:05.000 --> 43:07.000] I don't care what he does. [43:07.000 --> 43:12.000] I'm only there to set the record for appeal. [43:12.000 --> 43:18.000] Your only purpose in the trial court is to get the facts and the law on the record. [43:18.000 --> 43:21.000] You don't care what the judge does. [43:21.000 --> 43:24.000] Always expect him to rule against you. [43:24.000 --> 43:26.000] You'll win your case in the appellate court. [43:26.000 --> 43:28.000] That's right. [43:28.000 --> 43:31.000] So, do you have an appeal? [43:31.000 --> 43:34.000] Have you filed a notice of appeal in this case? [43:34.000 --> 43:37.000] I filed several notes of appeal. [43:37.000 --> 43:42.000] And like I said, the last one, did the appellate court [43:42.000 --> 43:48.000] never quote-a-quote receive the documents because the opposing council made them disappear. [43:48.000 --> 43:49.000] Okay, hold on. [43:49.000 --> 43:50.000] Hold on. [43:50.000 --> 43:51.000] I'm about to go to break. [43:51.000 --> 43:52.000] Randy Caldwell, Law Radio. [43:52.000 --> 43:55.000] And we'll talk about charges against the lawyers when we come back. [43:55.000 --> 43:57.000] We'll be right back. [44:01.000 --> 44:04.000] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.000 --> 44:09.000] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.000 --> 44:14.000] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality coins and precious metals. [44:14.000 --> 44:18.000] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [44:18.000 --> 44:24.000] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metal stealers and journalists. [44:24.000 --> 44:27.000] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [44:27.000 --> 44:32.000] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Pollen Burks. [44:32.000 --> 44:35.000] We also offer one-world-way mountain house storeable foods, [44:35.000 --> 44:39.000] Berkey water products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [44:39.000 --> 44:43.000] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept big coins as payment. [44:43.000 --> 44:46.000] Call us at 512-646-644-0. [44:46.000 --> 44:51.000] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.000 --> 44:54.000] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.000 --> 45:00.000] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-644-0. [45:00.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] The affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how, in 24 hours, you step by step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.000 --> 45:43.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:48.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:48.000 --> 45:52.000] forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [45:52.000 --> 45:56.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.000 --> 46:23.000] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:23.000 --> 46:30.000] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:30.000 --> 46:35.000] When I'm hungry, I like to know what I'm wishing for. [46:35.000 --> 46:41.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Helton, rule of radio. [46:41.000 --> 46:51.000] We're talking to Carla in Illinois, and I'm trying to get you to consider a different perspective. [46:51.000 --> 46:57.000] You're talking about bad things that are doing. [46:57.000 --> 47:02.000] You don't have a kill button on this machine. [47:02.000 --> 47:13.000] You're talking about bad things that are doing, and you give the impression that you feel cheated and primarily betrayed. [47:13.000 --> 47:19.000] And account on that. The worst feeling you can have is betrayal. [47:19.000 --> 47:22.000] I came back from Vietnam and bad, bad stuff. [47:22.000 --> 47:25.000] The last couple of weeks was really, really bad. [47:25.000 --> 47:27.000] And I'm in jungle fatigues. [47:27.000 --> 47:32.000] I've been in for a week, and my blood soaked from unloading helicopters. [47:32.000 --> 47:40.000] The Army had lost all of my clothes, so I stuck in the same set of jungle fatigues. [47:40.000 --> 47:44.000] I hit the stage at one o'clock in the morning. [47:44.000 --> 47:51.000] The SeaTek Airport had 15 cents in my pocket, and my brother had passed away in a third-field hospital. [47:51.000 --> 48:00.000] So I was there with him. I was trying to beat his body back because I didn't want two guys in uniform walking up my parents' steps. [48:00.000 --> 48:02.000] I wanted to be the one to tell them. [48:02.000 --> 48:07.000] So I'm trying to get back, and I'm walking down the terminal in SeaTek Airport. [48:07.000 --> 48:14.000] And this girl, who looks like her mid-20s, saw me coming, pushed her children behind her, [48:14.000 --> 48:20.000] got up against the wall and stood between me and them as I passed. [48:20.000 --> 48:22.000] And my brother. [48:22.000 --> 48:33.000] Of all that has had happened, that was by far the worst experience of my life. [48:33.000 --> 48:35.000] That I can't believe. [48:35.000 --> 48:39.000] Betrayal. There's nothing worse than betrayal. [48:39.000 --> 48:43.000] And that's what these guys count on. [48:43.000 --> 48:47.000] If you're pro se, they count on that because it tends to debilitate you. [48:47.000 --> 48:52.000] It tends to just make you not able to function. [48:52.000 --> 48:56.000] So we do this a little different. [48:56.000 --> 48:58.000] See, go ahead. [48:58.000 --> 49:00.000] Deal the documents. [49:00.000 --> 49:03.000] Goodie, goodie, goodie. [49:03.000 --> 49:08.000] Remember with the government documents, the class A misdemeanor in every state. [49:08.000 --> 49:10.000] Gotcha. [49:10.000 --> 49:12.000] I'm just looking for them to do something. [49:12.000 --> 49:15.000] So I run down the grand jury and try to get them indicted. [49:15.000 --> 49:20.000] And when the prosecutor tries to shield them, then I file bar grievances against the prosecutor. [49:20.000 --> 49:26.000] When a judge refuses to take my complaint, I file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge. [49:26.000 --> 49:29.000] Here's the deal. [49:29.000 --> 49:32.000] They will never be afraid of you. [49:32.000 --> 49:41.000] What they're afraid of is the political cannon fodder you can create for their political enemies. [49:41.000 --> 49:43.000] Right. [49:43.000 --> 49:48.000] I once got all the highest judges in Texas put in front of the grand jury. [49:48.000 --> 49:58.000] And I thought it was all the pressure I put on them going down there with camera crews and just making a nuisance of myself. [49:58.000 --> 50:12.000] And I found out it was the prosecuting attorney who was retiring, 25 year Democrat, all of these nine judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals through Republicans. [50:12.000 --> 50:19.000] He used my complaint as political cannon fodder to try to take those guys out with him. [50:19.000 --> 50:20.000] Sure. [50:20.000 --> 50:32.000] All politics. So when we shift gears and stop expecting our courts to protect us and follow law and come to expect them to do things wrong, [50:32.000 --> 50:39.000] we'll wind up like a friend of mine, Ken Magnussen was in court and the judge made a ruling. [50:39.000 --> 50:43.000] And as soon as he made the ruling, Ken picked up a document off the table. [50:43.000 --> 50:54.000] He said, Your Honor, I have a document I'd like to show the court. It was a document asking for reconsideration on the ruling he just made. [50:54.000 --> 51:04.000] The judge looked at it, looked at the document and looked up at Ken and said, Well, Mr. Magnussen, it seems you were a step ahead of the court. [51:04.000 --> 51:08.000] And Ken held up three fingers. [51:08.000 --> 51:22.000] If we're going to beat these guys, we need to be a little bit ahead of them. The best way to get ahead of them is to expect them to rule against you out of hand at every turn. [51:22.000 --> 51:30.000] You be ready. You know what your next step will be. And there is always a next step. [51:30.000 --> 51:37.000] We have powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal attorneys. [51:37.000 --> 51:43.000] Barg grievances. Barg grievances devastate lawyers. [51:43.000 --> 51:52.000] And there's nothing they can do about it. I once grieved the lawyer for parting his hair on the left. [51:52.000 --> 51:57.000] I was actually just screwing around, but the guy was such a jerk. [51:57.000 --> 52:08.000] I barred grievance for parting his hair on the left. And he came to me, he was going into court. He said, You really barred me for parting my hair on the left? I said, Yeah, I did. [52:08.000 --> 52:16.000] Why did you do that? I said, Well, if I barred grievance for the garbage you really did, they might have disbarred you. [52:16.000 --> 52:20.000] He didn't find the humor in that. [52:20.000 --> 52:28.000] But the point is they're making a difference. Doesn't make any difference what you file. They're going to send you that same letter. [52:28.000 --> 52:38.000] We are getting examined into your accusation. Find it does not rise to the level of misconduct. If you accuse them of throwing babies off a cliff, [52:38.000 --> 52:45.000] I accuse them of official oppression of aggravated perjury, tamper government document. [52:45.000 --> 52:51.000] Find does not rise to the level of misconduct. Makes no difference. And we don't care. And that's a good thing. [52:51.000 --> 52:57.000] Because the insurance carrier knows they're going to do that and insurance carriers want to steam them good. [52:57.000 --> 53:11.000] Just like you buy a new car, you get full coverage on it. You go down to Walmart, you come out, somebody has backed into Defender and bashed it in while you were in Walmart. [53:11.000 --> 53:15.000] We call the insurance company, they come out and fix it, they double your rates. [53:15.000 --> 53:22.000] You know, next month they bash in another one. They come out there, they fix it, they cancel. [53:22.000 --> 53:31.000] Your fault, their fault, nobody's fault. They don't care. You are an unacceptable risk period. [53:31.000 --> 53:43.000] There are nine underwriters for errors in emissions policies in the U.S. All of them are underwritten by Lloyds of London. All of them have the same standards. [53:43.000 --> 53:49.000] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. Two bar grievances, anyone year of practice, they cancel. [53:49.000 --> 53:53.000] Three, they cancel your law firms about practice insurance. [53:53.000 --> 54:01.000] And if you're a lawyer and you get a bar grievance, it stays on your record forever. [54:01.000 --> 54:12.000] If you've got three bar grievances and you go to court and you win for your client, but not as much as the client thought you should have. [54:12.000 --> 54:25.000] The client is likely to go to the law firm and say, what are you doing sending me this Trump? This is all that you got me. And the law firms know they will do that. [54:25.000 --> 54:33.000] So you did two or three bar grievances, no reputable firms going to hire you. [54:33.000 --> 54:40.000] Ken Magnuson, years ago before we realized how effective bar grievances were. [54:40.000 --> 54:45.000] He had a lawyer and the lawyer screwed him around. He filed a grievance. [54:45.000 --> 54:51.000] And they sent him the standard letter, blah, blah, blah. And he was frustrated. [54:51.000 --> 54:56.000] Two years later, he was an election judge. [54:56.000 --> 55:04.000] And another election judge was the head of a law firm that this lawyer was trying to get into. [55:04.000 --> 55:10.000] And he said, yeah, I knew about you guys because this lawyer was trying to get into your law firm and I bargained it. [55:10.000 --> 55:12.000] But it didn't do any good. [55:12.000 --> 55:22.000] He said the owner of that law firm leaned across the table and said, Mr. Magnuson, you hurt him far more than you can imagine. [55:22.000 --> 55:31.000] This is a prestigious law firm. This guy is trying to get on with the firm and he comes up with a bar grievance. [55:31.000 --> 55:36.000] And they told him, sorry guys, we can't put you on our firm. [55:36.000 --> 55:45.000] And any prestigious firm is not going to touch him because he's been bar grieved. It stains him. [55:45.000 --> 55:49.000] They're not ever going to tell you that. [55:49.000 --> 55:53.000] You get to sting them good and they got to act like you didn't do it. [55:53.000 --> 56:00.000] Judges, judiciconda complaints, same routine. [56:00.000 --> 56:15.000] The judge has a, the court has a bond and the bond is just an insurance policy for the court and the judge falls under that bond. [56:15.000 --> 56:22.000] Too many judiciconda complaints and the bond carrier is going to raise the bond. [56:22.000 --> 56:32.000] This is how you get rid of cops. Six complaints against the professional conduct, complaints against the police officer. [56:32.000 --> 56:39.000] He is, cannot be hired. He's unemployable. [56:39.000 --> 56:47.000] Because if anybody hires him, the bond rating for all of their officers goes up immediately. [56:47.000 --> 56:53.000] You give a cop right to your ticket, you file a professional conduct complaint against him. [56:53.000 --> 56:58.000] You won't be able to tie up a cop and throw him at you. [56:58.000 --> 57:04.000] That's a strategy we're using on tickets down here. It made the cops crazy. [57:04.000 --> 57:08.000] But we understand what their weakness is. [57:08.000 --> 57:15.000] You as a pro se, you can file all the judiciconda complaints you want to. [57:15.000 --> 57:23.000] If that judge says one word to you about it, you charge him with official misconduct. [57:23.000 --> 57:27.000] In Texas it would be official oppression. That's a nicer name for it. [57:27.000 --> 57:32.000] But both states call it official misconduct and it's a class A misdemeanor. [57:32.000 --> 57:37.000] And you run the routine on him. You try to get the prosecutor to arrest the judge and he's not going to. [57:37.000 --> 57:45.000] Good, good, good, good, good. Then you file against the prosecutor with a higher level judge. [57:45.000 --> 57:50.000] If it's a district judge you file first against, then you file with the court of criminal appeals. [57:50.000 --> 57:56.000] And these guys think they're big and bad and you file against them. [57:56.000 --> 57:59.000] And they are not going to be happy. [57:59.000 --> 58:09.000] You create a lot of negative vibes for the guys down on the bottom here and there's nothing they can do about it. [58:09.000 --> 58:15.000] Then you'll get them to where they'll get a lot more careful. [58:15.000 --> 58:18.000] This is, it's a different way of thinking about things. [58:18.000 --> 58:28.000] And one thing I wanted to talk about and I'm running out of time in this segment was what you're actually doing in the court. [58:28.000 --> 58:31.000] And what the judge's duty is. [58:31.000 --> 58:34.000] We're about to go to break. I'll pick this up on the other side. [58:34.000 --> 58:37.000] This is rule of law radio. [58:37.000 --> 58:50.000] Call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [58:50.000 --> 58:54.000] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.000 --> 59:01.000] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:06.000] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.000 --> 59:13.000] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.000 --> 59:18.000] The free books are a three volume set called basic elements of the Christian life. [59:18.000 --> 59:27.000] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.000 --> 59:40.000] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.000 --> 59:50.000] That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.000 --> 01:00:00.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:05.000] The following, these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.000 --> 01:00:21.000] Providing for daily bulletins for the commodities market. Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:21.000 --> 01:00:50.000] In the markets for Wednesday the 6th of February 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple, XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and EOS is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:52.000 --> 01:01:06.000] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by parliament. [01:01:06.000 --> 01:01:09.000] Today in history. [01:01:09.000 --> 01:01:33.000] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. The list was compiled after an 11th month long investigation by the office of the Texas Secretary of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining a garbage license. [01:01:33.000 --> 01:01:45.000] Over half of the 95,000 didn't indeed vote, it seems. However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:45.000 --> 01:01:50.000] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.000 --> 01:02:05.000] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:05.000 --> 01:02:20.000] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:20.000 --> 01:02:28.000] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [01:02:28.000 --> 01:02:47.000] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:47.000 --> 01:02:51.000] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [01:02:51.000 --> 01:02:58.000] This was Rick Brody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:21.000 --> 01:03:47.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, and it seems like I'm going through a lot of stuff. It's because we have a lot of stuff, and you're so deep in the process, Carla, that you need a set of tools, and that's what I'm trying to craft. [01:03:47.000 --> 01:03:54.000] And the primary tools are about how you hold your mind. [01:03:54.000 --> 01:03:56.000] How I hold my what? [01:03:56.000 --> 01:04:06.000] How you hold your mind, how you think about what they're doing, and how you respond to them. It changes everything. [01:04:06.000 --> 01:04:35.000] And when you go into the courthouse, courtroom, your only purpose is to set the record for appeal. And there are things you should do. If you have a case before the court, you should find the jury charge for whatever claims you're bringing. [01:04:35.000 --> 01:04:50.000] The jury charge is the last thing the judge is going to tell the jury. He's going to say, this is what you must find. You must find this and this and this and this. [01:04:50.000 --> 01:04:59.000] If you go into court and argue anything else other than these things, you're wasting your time and the time of the jury in the court. [01:04:59.000 --> 01:05:09.000] Meaningless. The only thing that matters is what is in the jury charge. This will help you get clear focus. [01:05:09.000 --> 01:05:21.000] You must put facts on the record and law as it goes to the facts. I once set as a judge in a mock trial. [01:05:21.000 --> 01:05:35.000] A friend of mine, Pastor Massett, was the prosecutor. And another friend of ours was being prosecuted in Pennsylvania for some patriot mythology he had been doing. [01:05:35.000 --> 01:05:44.000] And he got up there and he's feeding me all this patriot mythology stuff. And I'm thinking, okay, okay, okay, so what? [01:05:44.000 --> 01:05:52.000] You know, every time you're going to present something to a judge, always assume that he's going to say so what? [01:05:52.000 --> 01:06:01.000] And what so what means is how does this go to the adjudication of the case? [01:06:01.000 --> 01:06:14.000] Exactly. The only thing I could hear were facts as they related to the case and law as it related to those facts. [01:06:14.000 --> 01:06:22.000] Now, I was, I agreed with this guy and I knew what he was talking about. I did the show. I was no jump in this area. [01:06:22.000 --> 01:06:26.000] I knew exactly what he was talking about but didn't help. [01:06:26.000 --> 01:06:34.000] I could not, sitting as a judge, I couldn't use that. It was a good experience for me. It changed my perspective. [01:06:34.000 --> 01:06:43.000] And at one point he had a guy helping him. At one point I stopped everything. They had picked a jury from the street for a mock jury. [01:06:43.000 --> 01:06:46.000] So they didn't know, the jurors didn't know any of us. [01:06:46.000 --> 01:06:58.000] And I stopped the case and called him up and I said, look, you got this guy helping you? You have my permission if he gets up and says another word to shoot him. [01:06:58.000 --> 01:07:10.000] He's going to get you put in jail. Do not give me any more patriot garbage. [01:07:10.000 --> 01:07:17.000] Well, this is all true. Absolutely, but it's irrelevant. Give me facts and law or don't talk. [01:07:17.000 --> 01:07:25.000] I couldn't stop doing the Patriarch rhetoric. This jury found him guilty. They had another mock trial. [01:07:25.000 --> 01:07:32.000] The jury found him guilty. He was tried in Pennsylvania as far as I know he's still in jail. [01:07:32.000 --> 01:07:46.000] Facts and law, facts and law, nothing else. And the judge's job, I've got a case here in Texas. That's why I gave you a Walker v. Packer. [01:07:46.000 --> 01:07:52.000] Yeah, and I'm going to look that up. I think I saw it before, but I'm going to check it again. [01:07:52.000 --> 01:08:06.000] Oh, that is what I read that I said. Holy mackerel. A judge has no discretion. Abuse of discretion. [01:08:06.000 --> 01:08:25.000] If a public official or judge abuses his discretion and in the process denies a citizen full free access to or enjoyment of right, the abuse of discretion is outside of scope. [01:08:25.000 --> 01:08:37.000] It's not within the scope of the judge's authority to commit crimes. And it's criminal act. First place I want to go is grand jury. [01:08:37.000 --> 01:08:47.000] The judge says, oh, well, if you don't like my ruling, you can appeal. Well, you appeal to a bunch of more corrupt judges like him. [01:08:47.000 --> 01:09:02.000] Or you can appeal to a grand jury to indict the SOP. Now, with that said, I have never got a public official indicted. I've never wanted to get a public official indicted. [01:09:02.000 --> 01:09:12.000] The point was, let them know they can be. We could get rid of all the officials we got, replace them all with be in the same boat. [01:09:12.000 --> 01:09:23.000] Take the one I've got and get his attention. Now, they're pretty sure a grand jury is not going to indict them. [01:09:23.000 --> 01:09:38.000] But all nine judges at the Court of Criminal Appeals spent three months. The grand jury got the presentment their first day in office, held it till their last day in office. [01:09:38.000 --> 01:09:53.000] And it was appropriate that their first day in office was April Fool's Day. That was delicious. But these judges sat there for just three months, wondering if their career was going in tomorrow. [01:09:53.000 --> 01:10:11.000] I walked in my prosecuting attorney's office. He was district attorney. And he is distraught. And I said, Greg, what's the matter? He said, those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [01:10:11.000 --> 01:10:23.000] I raised both hands and looked up at the ceiling and said, there is a God. I could not have heard anything any better. [01:10:23.000 --> 01:10:39.000] I hear this nonsense about prosecutors controlling grand juries. Scalia and Montgomery v. State remarked that any prosecutor worth his salt could get a ham sandwich indicted. [01:10:39.000 --> 01:10:47.000] Well, probably. But the problem they have is keeping the ham sandwich from getting indicted. [01:10:47.000 --> 01:11:02.000] That's a whole other ballgame. And when you're down there making grand jury noises, who here wants to play Russian roulette with their career? [01:11:02.000 --> 01:11:13.000] Good luck, guys. It makes them crazy. They're not going to tell you the last thing they want for you to know that. [01:11:13.000 --> 01:11:27.000] So don't expect any feedback from them. Other than after you've done this to a couple of them, you're driving down the street and the car pulls in behind you and follows you about five minutes and then beers off. [01:11:27.000 --> 01:11:39.000] Over and over again. Because it comes up with this red deal across their computer screen. Do not detain. [01:11:39.000 --> 01:12:02.000] This takes a while because this process is deeply embedded. So you have to hammer them for a while. Okay, good. I've got time. I've got two more callers I want to get to. [01:12:02.000 --> 01:12:19.000] But this is my favorite subject. And I thought it was important that I kind of give you an idea where I'm going. We're going in there trying to get them to do something that we can then file criminally against them with and poison their will. [01:12:19.000 --> 01:12:20.000] Right. [01:12:20.000 --> 01:12:33.000] We want to take every stinking lot and low down dirty trick we can find and use it against them because they're going to pull every shister shenanigan they can. Turnabout is fair play. [01:12:33.000 --> 01:12:44.000] If I ruin your career, life is tough, Bubba. You need to learn how to say, do you want French fries with that burger? [01:12:44.000 --> 01:12:57.000] It won't take long. The most effective thing I ever did is I went into court with another guy. We're helping people stop foreclosures. [01:12:57.000 --> 01:13:10.000] He's hearing what's first. So he goes up and sits at the table and I walk up to the bar and just stood there. And the judge looked out and finally and said, can I help you? I said, yes, your honor, my name is Randy Kelton and I have a hearing deficiency. [01:13:10.000 --> 01:13:16.000] Well, Mr. Kelton, what's wrong with your hearing? This is Judge Hayes in Mansfield, real jerk. [01:13:16.000 --> 01:13:24.000] I said, old judge, I was down in Mexico the other day and I drank too much of that cheap tequila and lost my hearing aid. [01:13:24.000 --> 01:13:31.000] Well, I was lying. I had it in my pocket. Well, why are you telling me this? Do you have a competition for the hearing impaired? No, Mr. Kelton, I do not. [01:13:31.000 --> 01:13:45.000] I see you have a sound system here. Will you turn it down? No, I will not. Well, then will you pick up? And he did. He told the prosecutor if I didn't, he told the plaintiff if I didn't sound shut up, he's just throwing me out of the court. [01:13:45.000 --> 01:13:55.000] So I get my hearing. He starts the hearing objection. I am here at arms linked to the court. I have a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court. [01:13:55.000 --> 01:14:01.000] Yes, Mr. Kelton, you just filed that 20 minutes ago. Yes, your honor, as a matter of fact, that I did. Well, I'm going to deny that motion. [01:14:01.000 --> 01:14:10.000] You're going to deny that motion without even reading it? I mean, I've made my ruling. Yes, you have. We're done here. I close my folder. Walk to the bar, point it at the bailiff. [01:14:10.000 --> 01:14:26.000] Yes, come with me. I stormed out of the courtroom. The bailiff comes out. It's a big old boy, about six foot six, had to be four hundred pounds. He was huge. He said, Mr. Kelton, what can I do for you? I need you to arrest the judge. [01:14:26.000 --> 01:14:42.000] Why can't you arrest the judge? Just go in there and sell the cuffs on him and drag him off to jail. Heck, you don't have far to go. It's just down the basement. Well, why would I arrest the judge, class A, Mr. Mayor, official oppression, criminal violation, 39.03 penal code, [01:14:42.000 --> 01:14:57.000] in that he failed to perform a duty he has required to perform, and in the process denied me and full free access to or enjoyment right. Well, what right did he deny you had? He denied me and my right to accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:14:57.000 --> 01:15:15.000] He said, why didn't you tell the judge about the Americans with Disabilities Act? Heck, if I'd have done that, he might have turned the sound up. The bailiff stood there a minute and his grin come across his face. [01:15:15.000 --> 01:15:32.000] Well, you set him up. Yeah, he was a sucker for that, wasn't he? That's what he gets for being arrogant. Now, get in there and arrest him. Why can't you arrest the judge? Mr. Bailiff, look at you, big strapped in officer, got that pistol in your hip. I need you to take your kicking suit off. [01:15:32.000 --> 01:15:51.000] I'm not taking my chicken suit off. That got out, and the word got out, and if that counteness OB comes into your court, watch out, he is trying to set you up so he can try to get you arrested. And that's true, I am. [01:15:51.000 --> 01:16:07.000] That's it. That's true with me. This is the mindset I'm trying to formulate. Once you have that mindset, you'll go back and look at all these things they did. You'll say, oh, look how I can sting them here and I can sting them here. [01:16:07.000 --> 01:16:22.000] I'll make all of these guys, everybody in the county will be pee-o-ed at me, and even more pee-o-ed at them, forget me on them. This is when you start getting some movement in your direction. [01:16:22.000 --> 01:16:37.000] Oh, please, please, please, come and help me do that, pretty please. Okay, get me that. I need that timeline because when I look at the timeline, I'm looking for where they stepped across the legal line. [01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:45.000] And you're litigating your case, so you come and add it from a different perspective. I'll see things you never thought of. [01:16:45.000 --> 01:16:56.000] Okay, go on to break. I do need to move along. As soon as you can get just part of it together, send it to me and I'll show you what I'm doing. We'll be right back. [01:17:15.000 --> 01:17:25.000] We'll be right back. [01:17:45.000 --> 01:18:10.000] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fix. I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:10.000 --> 01:18:22.000] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a bloodite, and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:18:22.000 --> 01:18:31.000] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.000 --> 01:18:43.000] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. 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. [01:18:43.000 --> 01:18:44.000] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.000 --> 01:18:45.000] No. [01:18:45.000 --> 01:18:47.000] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.000 --> 01:18:48.000] No. [01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:49.000] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.000 --> 01:18:50.000] No. [01:18:50.000 --> 01:18:51.000] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.000 --> 01:18:57.000] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:18:57.000 --> 01:18:58.000] We are logos. [01:18:58.000 --> 01:19:01.000] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:28.000 --> 01:19:48.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Colton, rule of law radio on this, the 15th day of March, 2019. And we're going to Craig in Louisiana. Hello, Craig. What do you have for us today? [01:19:48.000 --> 01:20:06.000] I've got a battle. I'm just starting with my municipality. It's just over smart meters. Are you familiar with smart meters, electric meters? [01:20:06.000 --> 01:20:32.000] Yeah. Yes, I am. And after the show yesterday, when I spoke to someone about the emissions from those, you know, I'm an electrical engineer and my engineering background says that they're not so dangerous, but apparently I'm not correct. [01:20:32.000 --> 01:20:46.000] There's a lot of science to it that I'm not aware of. We must be, somehow it doesn't make sense to me, but the science is saying that I was wrong. [01:20:46.000 --> 01:20:54.000] Okay. What is the issue with the smart meter that you're taking on with the municipality? [01:20:54.000 --> 01:21:12.000] Well, they installed it on my house a few years ago. At the time they installed it, the house was rented. And I moved back in and I've been there about two years now. [01:21:12.000 --> 01:21:30.000] We have some medical issues going on with my daughter and her kids that when I've been reading from other people, you know, all the stuff they put out, it's the same symptoms as other people. [01:21:30.000 --> 01:21:46.000] So I got this document off the web. It's just 11 pages and it goes into all the detailed effects of all the negatives. [01:21:46.000 --> 01:22:02.000] Okay. Before we pass this part, send me an email and ask me about EMF and I will send it to someone that extensively researches that area. [01:22:02.000 --> 01:22:16.000] Okay. Let me tell you what. I sent them this document. It's basically a demand to remove the meter type thing. I gave them so many days. [01:22:16.000 --> 01:22:30.000] So the way this process is supposed to work, I send them a default letter, a couple of other notices and then if they don't do this, I can go and directly pull the meter out myself and put another one in. [01:22:30.000 --> 01:22:40.000] And I don't think that's a good idea, even with all the paper that I'm generating. [01:22:40.000 --> 01:22:56.000] Okay. Let me tell you what they will do. You can generally get the electric company to remove the meter, but they'll charge you like $100 a year or $100 six months to come out and read the meter. [01:22:56.000 --> 01:23:16.000] There's other things you can do. Get you a sheet of probably about 10 gauge metal and unscrew the bolts that hold the meter onto the building. Slide that metal behind it. [01:23:16.000 --> 01:23:25.000] You want the piece big enough so it extends about two feet to each side and top and bottom of the meter. [01:23:25.000 --> 01:23:36.000] And then clip a line to that and to a copper rod and shove it in the ground and then screw the meter back down. That's a fair day's screen. [01:23:36.000 --> 01:23:45.000] A 10 gauge metal, nothing that meter's putting out will go through that 10 gauge metal. [01:23:45.000 --> 01:23:59.000] If you're ever seeing these old tube type TVs or radios and you're looking there and these tubes have metal contained in that metal, deals around them. [01:23:59.000 --> 01:24:09.000] That's a fair day's screen and that's because the tube, when it builds, when you build power in it, it will build an electromagnetic field. [01:24:09.000 --> 01:24:18.000] And if that field moves across one of the other tubes, it will change the internal impedance of the tube so that your frequencies float all around. [01:24:18.000 --> 01:24:24.000] So they drop a fair day's screen over. It blocks all electromagnetic radiation. [01:24:24.000 --> 01:24:28.000] Now that'll block it from your house. That eliminates that problem. [01:24:28.000 --> 01:24:42.000] The other problem is the other side. And if you're unhappy with the area, if you want to block all of it, then build you a chicken cage screen out there. [01:24:42.000 --> 01:24:50.000] You want to keep some chickens out front. Or a cage for your pets or something. [01:24:50.000 --> 01:24:58.000] A wire mesh grounded is also an effective fair day's screen. [01:24:58.000 --> 01:25:03.000] It'll block all their transmissions. They won't go anywhere. [01:25:03.000 --> 01:25:11.000] Yeah. But one of the things that it does, it pulses and it actually goes through your house. [01:25:11.000 --> 01:25:23.000] Yeah. If you put that 10 gauge metal behind it, it'll pulse right into that metal, the metal absorb it and shoot it off the ground. [01:25:23.000 --> 01:25:38.000] When electromagnetic radiation passes through a conductor, it will induce electric current into the inductor and in doing so, it absorbs the energy out of the electromagnetic radiation. [01:25:38.000 --> 01:25:45.000] It'll shut it right off. That'll stop the pulses. [01:25:45.000 --> 01:25:49.000] Okay. I didn't know that. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:26:00.000] Yeah. That'll make a... Now, if where they're picking it up is behind your house, their problem, not your problem. [01:26:00.000 --> 01:26:16.000] Deal with it, guys. Whatever they transmit into the air, when it goes into the air, it becomes public domain. [01:26:16.000 --> 01:26:24.000] You know, if they're broadcasting it, they're using that and there's a metal building in the way, metal building will suck it right up. [01:26:24.000 --> 01:26:29.000] It won't pass the metal building, but it can't go make the person move to metal building. [01:26:29.000 --> 01:26:35.000] This is your house. If you want to put a metal plate on the side of your house, you can put a metal plate on the side of your house. [01:26:35.000 --> 01:26:48.000] Don't use aluminum. Aluminums not as good a conductor. It's a pretty good conductor, but it won't act as a Faraday screen as well as steel will. [01:26:48.000 --> 01:26:50.000] Right. [01:26:50.000 --> 01:26:58.000] But 10 gauge, no matter how strong their pulse is, it won't go through 10 gauge. [01:26:58.000 --> 01:27:01.000] That'll fix that issue. [01:27:01.000 --> 01:27:13.000] The other one is transmitting out near your yard and the only place where that can be a real problem is up close. [01:27:13.000 --> 01:27:23.000] A good example of how it drops... No, I guess that's not true. If you're using a... It depends on the frequency. [01:27:23.000 --> 01:27:30.000] If you're transmitting a high level frequency, it can pass a long way and maintain its strength. [01:27:30.000 --> 01:27:39.000] However, my problem with that has always been that we live in a soup of electromagnetic radiation. [01:27:39.000 --> 01:27:59.000] The Earth has an atmosphere because we have a core that moves and it's a generator. It generates an electromagnetic field around the planet, a monstrous electromagnetic field. [01:27:59.000 --> 01:28:09.000] And we're moving within that field all the time. And we have all sorts of trash coming in from outside. [01:28:09.000 --> 01:28:17.000] From the Sun for one thing and from pulsars and quasars. They send incredibly powerful bursts. [01:28:17.000 --> 01:28:24.000] And we've evolved in that electromagnetic soup. [01:28:24.000 --> 01:28:38.000] So it just didn't seem intuitive that an electromagnetic radiation that we created is somehow different than what we're exposed to all the time. [01:28:38.000 --> 01:28:54.000] You know, I'm an electrical engineer and when I build sensitive circuits, this is a real problem, especially with microcircuits, with printed circuitry. [01:28:54.000 --> 01:29:05.000] The metals are so thin that this trash that's in the air can fry them right in the case. [01:29:05.000 --> 01:29:12.000] So we have to protect them. Generally everything's in metal cases. And those metal cases are not there because they're convenient. [01:29:12.000 --> 01:29:16.000] They're there because they're a Faraday screen. [01:29:16.000 --> 01:29:21.000] And all this trash outside is not going to get in there and fry their chips in it. [01:29:21.000 --> 01:29:33.000] So if we can fry the chips just from what's in the air, it doesn't make sense to me that just because we're transmitting something in the air that all of a sudden is going to become lethal to us. [01:29:33.000 --> 01:29:43.000] Now it may. There's so much research on the subject that I could be wrong. I was once. [01:29:43.000 --> 01:29:53.000] I thought I had made a mistake, but I thought I had screwed up, but I was mistaken. I screwed that joke up. [01:29:53.000 --> 01:30:03.000] Hang on. Go to break Randy Kelton, move on radio. I'll try to get better jokes on the other side. [01:30:03.000 --> 01:30:17.000] Once marketers wanted to know all about you, but now they want to know all about your friends. I'm Dr. Cameron Albright and I'll be back to tell you about the tracking technique web advertisers call social retargeting in a moment. [01:30:17.000 --> 01:30:27.000] Privacy is under attack. 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. [01:30:27.000 --> 01:30:35.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.000 --> 01:30:46.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.000 --> 01:30:57.000] We know marketers can track our web surfing habits by placing cookies in our browsers. But now marketers aren't just tracking you. They're tracking who your friends are and what you share with them. [01:30:57.000 --> 01:31:09.000] Social retargeting works by mapping social networks without your knowledge. Companies do it by offering link shorteners or apps that make it easy to share an article or a link with your friends and family. [01:31:09.000 --> 01:31:24.000] But those links contain data that transmits your identity. When your friends click the links, you both get tracked together. Regular cookies are invasive enough, but seeing ads because some advertiser knows what your roommate likes is stepping way over the line. [01:31:24.000 --> 01:31:31.000] I'm Dr. Cameron Albright for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.000 --> 01:31:44.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. The government says the fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.000 --> 01:31:56.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:56.000 --> 01:32:03.000] I'm the American. And we deserve the true. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:03.000 --> 01:32:14.000] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. If we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:14.000 --> 01:32:17.080] rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own [01:32:17.080 --> 01:32:20.760] private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.760 --> 01:32:24.600] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.600 --> 01:32:26.440] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.440 --> 01:32:29.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:29.960 --> 01:32:33.760] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.760 --> 01:32:36.120] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.120 --> 01:32:40.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:32:40.120 --> 01:32:41.480] ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.480 --> 01:32:44.760] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.760 --> 01:32:49.200] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [01:32:49.200 --> 01:32:51.520] documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.520 --> 01:32:55.480] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.480 --> 01:33:21.480] For your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:21.480 --> 01:33:30.960] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Craig [01:33:30.960 --> 01:33:31.960] Louisiana. [01:33:31.960 --> 01:33:36.760] I kind of bushwhacked you there when you started. [01:33:36.760 --> 01:33:40.760] What issue about the meters did you want to address? [01:33:40.760 --> 01:33:43.400] I didn't give you a chance to do that. [01:33:43.400 --> 01:33:51.400] The meter was just the, that was the cause, what I was leading to was, okay, I didn't [01:33:51.400 --> 01:33:55.960] want to pull a meter out and go through that process because I'm scared that they're going [01:33:55.960 --> 01:34:01.680] to come back and pull my analog meter out, put theirs back in, or maybe just come and [01:34:01.680 --> 01:34:04.560] take the meter out all together and just leave me hanging. [01:34:04.560 --> 01:34:10.080] Yeah, I don't know what they'll do, but the way that they've handled it so far after, [01:34:10.080 --> 01:34:15.360] you know, they, somebody called me three weeks after I sent the letter and just said, hey, [01:34:15.360 --> 01:34:19.080] we haven't forgotten about it, and then, okay, but I haven't heard nothing else about it. [01:34:19.080 --> 01:34:28.160] That's five weeks ago, and, I mean, and they got people all through my neighborhood that [01:34:28.160 --> 01:34:34.280] tell people have it, they'll support meters and some don't, I mean, what's the big deal? [01:34:34.280 --> 01:34:39.880] So I don't want, I don't want to give them an option, like if I pull it, even though [01:34:39.880 --> 01:34:45.880] I got the paperwork, I still don't feel comfortable with doing that, so what I'm thinking is go [01:34:45.880 --> 01:34:53.880] the other route, the criminal complaint, okay, and I don't know anybody who's done that because, [01:34:53.880 --> 01:34:58.240] you know, this paper has this, you know, they're actually breaking it all. [01:34:58.240 --> 01:35:08.360] Have you done research and is there research that establishes that the meters cause injury [01:35:08.360 --> 01:35:13.960] and that the electric company is aware that they call it a cause injury? [01:35:13.960 --> 01:35:22.040] That they, I couldn't understand the last part of what you said, you, you, okay, there [01:35:22.040 --> 01:35:29.600] is apparently a lot of research that indicates that these meters can negatively affect your [01:35:29.600 --> 01:35:32.240] health. [01:35:32.240 --> 01:35:38.320] If there is evidence that these can hurt you and the company who put them there knows [01:35:38.320 --> 01:35:44.200] that, that's assault. [01:35:44.200 --> 01:35:47.320] At the very least, it's depraved heart assault. [01:35:47.320 --> 01:35:56.320] Do you have a metal five gallon bucket? [01:35:56.320 --> 01:36:05.440] Stick it over the meter, that'll make them nuts, and then I'll have to find a way to [01:36:05.440 --> 01:36:06.760] deal with it. [01:36:06.760 --> 01:36:11.360] But yes, if, if they're harming people and they know they're harming people and you can [01:36:11.360 --> 01:36:17.360] establish that they know they're harming people, you can charge them with assault. [01:36:17.360 --> 01:36:21.600] You're still there? [01:36:21.600 --> 01:36:25.760] I think we lost Brian. [01:36:25.760 --> 01:36:32.960] Oh, wait a minute, that wasn't Brian we were talking to. [01:36:32.960 --> 01:36:41.360] Uh, Louisiana, he's gone, Craig in Louisiana, we, he dropped, okay, he probably got to [01:36:41.360 --> 01:36:48.720] run over by a coon ass, and for those of you who don't know him in Louisiana, they, they [01:36:48.720 --> 01:36:55.560] call themselves red bones and coon asses, I'm not going to get into what coon ass means [01:36:55.560 --> 01:36:56.560] I never knew. [01:36:56.560 --> 01:36:59.920] Okay, we're going to go to Brian in California. [01:36:59.920 --> 01:37:00.920] Hello Brian. [01:37:00.920 --> 01:37:04.200] Hi Randy, thanks for checking my call. [01:37:04.200 --> 01:37:08.320] I had a question about closures. [01:37:08.320 --> 01:37:15.960] We are currently in foreclosure on our house, and we've had all kinds of problems even before [01:37:15.960 --> 01:37:19.640] this started up, problems with our lender. [01:37:19.640 --> 01:37:30.720] We, they basically raised the, the monthly mortgage on us, at some point we had like [01:37:30.720 --> 01:37:37.800] a trial period at a certain rate, and then it was set to expire after a while, and then [01:37:37.800 --> 01:37:41.320] it went up by about 2000. [01:37:41.320 --> 01:37:43.720] And how old is your mortgage? [01:37:43.720 --> 01:37:51.640] Uh, let's see, it's about, I would say about seven years old, so I want that. [01:37:51.640 --> 01:38:01.960] Seven years, okay, that's on the back side of 2010, so is, is it a variable rate mortgage? [01:38:01.960 --> 01:38:06.400] No, it's a fixed rate. [01:38:06.400 --> 01:38:10.560] And how did the payment change? [01:38:10.560 --> 01:38:17.240] Um, well it was fixed rate, but it was, there was a, I can't remember what they called it, [01:38:17.240 --> 01:38:24.320] but it was a trial or, uh, okay, so, so you had one percentage rate to start with, and [01:38:24.320 --> 01:38:29.360] then, uh, down the road it jumps up to a different one. [01:38:29.360 --> 01:38:30.360] Yeah. [01:38:30.360 --> 01:38:31.360] Okay. [01:38:31.360 --> 01:38:36.600] Shortly after that I lost my job, and we fell behind as a result of that, it was about [01:38:36.600 --> 01:38:45.120] a year before I found consistent employment, and I tried, um, you know, applying for mortgage [01:38:45.120 --> 01:38:49.320] modification with them, and they gave us all kinds of problems. [01:38:49.320 --> 01:38:56.520] We were with, um, you know, the original lender we were with, we were, um, sending in applications [01:38:56.520 --> 01:38:59.920] and they would keep telling us, we don't have everything we need, we need this and that [01:38:59.920 --> 01:39:05.680] paper, and sometimes we would just, I talked to a lawyer, I was having someone with their [01:39:05.680 --> 01:39:12.480] foreclosure issue in California, and she talked to a lawyer, and he asked her if she applied [01:39:12.480 --> 01:39:18.280] for a loan modification, she said, no, he said, the only thing I can win is loan modification [01:39:18.280 --> 01:39:20.080] fraud. [01:39:20.080 --> 01:39:27.600] California is probably the most corrupt state in the union, uh, I tell people, if you fight [01:39:27.600 --> 01:39:33.240] the foreclosure you're going to lose, well, you'll, you'll lose the decision at the end [01:39:33.240 --> 01:39:41.680] of the day, however, there's another way to go about this, and I've helped over 700 people [01:39:41.680 --> 01:39:48.400] file federal lawsuits, and one of the things I require when I help someone as a condition [01:39:48.400 --> 01:39:55.440] to be helping them is that they take at least half of the loan, of the mortgage payment [01:39:55.440 --> 01:40:02.120] that they would pay in every month, and put it in an account. [01:40:02.120 --> 01:40:11.040] Then you can keep, you can hold off the, the bank's, seven, ten years easy, and while you're [01:40:11.040 --> 01:40:19.480] building this nest egg, like, uh, you know, the last guy I did in more, in, uh, California, [01:40:19.480 --> 01:40:23.720] we found my four-page Who the Heck Are You suit. [01:40:23.720 --> 01:40:30.240] He got his loan through Wells Fargo, and Wells Fargo was foreclosing, but we filed a [01:40:30.240 --> 01:40:32.040] suit that who the heck are you? [01:40:32.040 --> 01:40:37.040] I don't know you, never entered into a contract with you, never entered into a contract with [01:40:37.040 --> 01:40:41.880] your alleged principal, prove up your claim. [01:40:41.880 --> 01:40:48.400] Six years later, the Supreme, California Supreme denied our cert, and I thought we had a really [01:40:48.400 --> 01:40:55.880] good one, but they denied it, and in the, in the interim, he had, his parents had passed [01:40:55.880 --> 01:41:02.760] away, and he inherited a million dollars, so he could have paid it off any time. [01:41:02.760 --> 01:41:08.760] But he was in an area that would cost him 3,000 a month in rent. [01:41:08.760 --> 01:41:12.320] He paid 350,000 for the property. [01:41:12.320 --> 01:41:19.920] He lived in it for seven years without paying on it, or six years without paying on it, [01:41:19.920 --> 01:41:25.480] and then once the Supreme turned down this cert, he was tired of fighting them, he sold [01:41:25.480 --> 01:41:34.680] it for 890,000, paid the bank 500,000, went to Phoenix and bought him another place. [01:41:34.680 --> 01:41:41.640] Point is, if you take half the mortgage, if you could pay the whole mortgage, don't give [01:41:41.640 --> 01:41:51.160] it to the bank, put it in your own bank, and beat them up for a while, and when they win [01:41:51.160 --> 01:41:55.600] the first suit, you come right back at them with a second suit. [01:41:55.600 --> 01:42:02.920] We're going to do this again, guys, and then ask the court to order mediation. [01:42:02.920 --> 01:42:05.960] You get them to come to the table. [01:42:05.960 --> 01:42:10.960] Once you've got a chunk of change you can work with, they'll come to the table and make [01:42:10.960 --> 01:42:11.960] a deal. [01:42:11.960 --> 01:42:15.320] They won't do it directly, but if you can get the court to force them to, then they'll [01:42:15.320 --> 01:42:17.480] come to the table and make a deal. [01:42:17.480 --> 01:42:22.200] Or you reach the point where you beat them up for a while, and you've got some funds [01:42:22.200 --> 01:42:31.520] ahead, then hire a lawyer for the purpose of brokering a deal, and I love to do that. [01:42:31.520 --> 01:42:37.000] You tell them what you want, and if he can do better now, he gets to keep it. [01:42:37.000 --> 01:42:40.440] Lawyers love that. [01:42:40.440 --> 01:42:45.280] That's the basic overall strategy. [01:42:45.280 --> 01:42:53.800] There are more things that we can use to get to that strategy than you can count. [01:42:53.800 --> 01:42:56.640] You had specific questions. [01:42:56.640 --> 01:42:59.240] Yes. [01:42:59.240 --> 01:43:03.880] After we were trying to apply for mortgage assistance, it never got accepted. [01:43:03.880 --> 01:43:08.280] Different reasons they would tell us we didn't send in something, and it was either something [01:43:08.280 --> 01:43:13.000] new that they hadn't asked for before or was something that we signed in, but they never [01:43:13.000 --> 01:43:18.040] received it, which I know was a lie because they got all the other stuff. [01:43:18.040 --> 01:43:22.880] After a while, we got a letter in the mail saying that the loan was being sold to someone [01:43:22.880 --> 01:43:23.880] else. [01:43:23.880 --> 01:43:30.040] This is in the middle of our process for trying to apply for modification. [01:43:30.040 --> 01:43:36.000] When I talked to the new lender, they said that the process had to be started over. [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:42.120] I started applying with them, and it was the same exact experience. [01:43:42.120 --> 01:43:52.600] You sound like you're going to have a good case for a modification for it. [01:43:52.600 --> 01:43:55.920] There are lawyers who will take that. [01:43:55.920 --> 01:44:00.720] We have hired a lawyer. [01:44:00.720 --> 01:44:05.360] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [01:44:05.360 --> 01:44:06.760] of nutrition. [01:44:06.760 --> 01:44:11.480] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.480 --> 01:44:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.120 --> 01:44:22.600] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [01:44:22.600 --> 01:44:25.960] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.960 --> 01:44:30.720] Logo's radio network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:44:30.720 --> 01:44:31.720] we reject. 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[01:46:26.000 --> 01:46:33.800] Okay, we are back, Randy Carlton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Brian in [01:46:33.800 --> 01:46:34.800] California. [01:46:34.800 --> 01:46:39.320] Okay, where were we when I ran off the cliff? [01:46:39.320 --> 01:46:47.760] Yeah, so I was saying that I have hired a lawyer, and I know that she's fighting the [01:46:47.760 --> 01:46:56.480] case on the basis of modification fraud, where she's basically filed a complaint, and we're [01:46:56.480 --> 01:47:02.640] waiting to hear back from opposing counsel at this point, and we're just waiting and [01:47:02.640 --> 01:47:06.560] waiting, and I'm hoping that this is going somewhere. [01:47:06.560 --> 01:47:15.640] Okay, the thing to understand, the best tool you have is time. [01:47:15.640 --> 01:47:24.600] If you will put some funds in the bank every month, that you would be paying for a mortgage. [01:47:24.600 --> 01:47:30.680] No matter what happens, you're going to have to pay rent or mortgage, and you spend all [01:47:30.680 --> 01:47:36.000] this time not paying any of that, and then it comes time that you have to rent a place [01:47:36.000 --> 01:47:41.160] in case you lose this, then you have to start paying this going to be very difficult. [01:47:41.160 --> 01:47:46.960] It won't be near so difficult if you pay yourself every month instead of them. [01:47:46.960 --> 01:47:53.680] This is a way you profit somewhat from their every, but it also puts you in a position [01:47:53.680 --> 01:48:03.280] to where if you pursue the loan modification suit and it's moving in your direction, you've [01:48:03.280 --> 01:48:11.440] got some funds that you can use for leverage, and the longer it takes them to get to the [01:48:11.440 --> 01:48:18.560] court with their suit, the more you get to collect. [01:48:18.560 --> 01:48:20.360] Don't expect to win the suit in the end. [01:48:20.360 --> 01:48:26.720] The only thing I've ever heard them win is mortgage fraud, but almost every time the [01:48:26.720 --> 01:48:36.720] lawyers will want to make a deal out before they get to court. [01:48:36.720 --> 01:48:44.960] Courts in California are probably the most corrupt courts I've ever dealt with. [01:48:44.960 --> 01:48:50.640] They would rule against you out of hand at every turn. [01:48:50.640 --> 01:48:51.640] What they do. [01:48:51.640 --> 01:48:57.720] That's not necessarily a problem, it's just a parameter. [01:48:57.720 --> 01:49:03.880] It just means that you have to look at the issue differently. [01:49:03.880 --> 01:49:06.280] Look at what you can do and what you can't do. [01:49:06.280 --> 01:49:10.960] When I say you cannot win, that's not exactly true. [01:49:10.960 --> 01:49:19.920] You can't expect to win a ruling in your favor, but you can win by taking advantage of time. [01:49:19.920 --> 01:49:26.640] Time gives you the opportunity to gather up funds, so even if you lose the whole thing, [01:49:26.640 --> 01:49:32.920] by the time you get to that point, you will have built up enough change that you can get [01:49:32.920 --> 01:49:36.240] into something else. [01:49:36.240 --> 01:49:42.400] Build up money that you're not paying them, and you can hold them off four or five years [01:49:42.400 --> 01:49:43.400] pretty easy. [01:49:43.400 --> 01:49:52.400] Now, is it worthwhile to fight them on the validity of the debt? [01:49:52.400 --> 01:49:53.640] You bet. [01:49:53.640 --> 01:49:59.760] You're living in the property, and you're not paying rent. [01:49:59.760 --> 01:50:05.320] That allows you to be able to take part of your income and save it, so it's definitely [01:50:05.320 --> 01:50:08.480] to your benefit. [01:50:08.480 --> 01:50:20.440] If you do save it, I stopped doing foreclosures because people just would not save their funds. [01:50:20.440 --> 01:50:25.400] If you can't put away at least half of what your mortgage would be, you can't afford that [01:50:25.400 --> 01:50:30.880] house anyway, so it's not being helpful. [01:50:30.880 --> 01:50:35.160] The only way I can help someone win, well, I can keep you in the property for five to [01:50:35.160 --> 01:50:41.000] seven years without paying rent, you'd win in that regard, but if you have a lot of equity [01:50:41.000 --> 01:50:44.560] in the property, then you lose. [01:50:44.560 --> 01:50:50.960] If this is an 07 note, you don't have a lot of equity in the property, so you really don't [01:50:50.960 --> 01:50:58.400] have much to lose, except your credit, and if you can deal them out at the end, you get [01:50:58.400 --> 01:51:01.240] your credit back. [01:51:01.240 --> 01:51:07.560] You could make a deal after five to seven years of holding them off while you're saving [01:51:07.560 --> 01:51:14.680] funds to buy another house with, then you make a deal for them to remove the mortgage [01:51:14.680 --> 01:51:18.120] off your credit, reestablish your credit. [01:51:18.120 --> 01:51:21.680] Now you've got funds to buy another property with. [01:51:21.680 --> 01:51:30.760] The only problem for you is properties are increasing in value like crazy in California. [01:51:30.760 --> 01:51:39.760] But it is my belief that California is going to crash big time. [01:51:39.760 --> 01:51:49.600] So in 2006 and 2007, I was telling people that if you got property, sell it, sell it [01:51:49.600 --> 01:51:52.080] fast, get out of it. [01:51:52.080 --> 01:51:59.640] This balloon is insane, can't keep going, and it didn't, okay, it didn't crash. [01:51:59.640 --> 01:52:06.560] And I had people that wanted to buy properties that don't buy properties, do not buy property [01:52:06.560 --> 01:52:07.560] today. [01:52:07.560 --> 01:52:10.440] Wait, hasn't bottomed out yet. [01:52:10.440 --> 01:52:16.440] 2011, it bottomed out and started back up, said now buy. [01:52:16.440 --> 01:52:24.440] And what I'm saying about California, California is increasing like crazy. [01:52:24.440 --> 01:52:29.920] What California has is the money is moving out of California like crazy. [01:52:29.920 --> 01:52:34.440] Most of us go into Texas. [01:52:34.440 --> 01:52:39.080] California is looking for another, looking at another crash. [01:52:39.080 --> 01:52:41.800] So you're in this property. [01:52:41.800 --> 01:52:47.000] If you keep them in court, you don't, if it's only an 07 note, you don't have a lot of equity [01:52:47.000 --> 01:52:49.520] built up in the property. [01:52:49.520 --> 01:52:53.120] So let it crash. [01:52:53.120 --> 01:52:56.480] Let it crash, stay in this house, keep them at bay. [01:52:56.480 --> 01:53:03.320] You can do that, you know, six, seven years easy, kept working there six years. [01:53:03.320 --> 01:53:04.520] And that was just the first suit. [01:53:04.520 --> 01:53:07.680] You can come right back and file a fraud suit against them. [01:53:07.680 --> 01:53:11.160] I got a dozen different suits you can file. [01:53:11.160 --> 01:53:13.480] And you put them right back in court. [01:53:13.480 --> 01:53:16.120] I had someone call me from Houston. [01:53:16.120 --> 01:53:20.120] They had been in foreclosure for 18 years. [01:53:20.120 --> 01:53:23.520] Is that insane? [01:53:23.520 --> 01:53:31.520] You can do that and then, you know, save some money so that when this crash occurs, it's [01:53:31.520 --> 01:53:35.440] going to drop down, bottoms them fall out of property. [01:53:35.440 --> 01:53:41.040] When you see it start to turn back up, then buy something. [01:53:41.040 --> 01:53:42.040] Okay. [01:53:42.040 --> 01:53:50.280] Now, one other detail is that when they finally did accept my application after probably about [01:53:50.280 --> 01:53:53.600] a year of going back and forth with them, they rejected it. [01:53:53.600 --> 01:53:58.560] I mean, they accepted the application as a complete application, but they denied me [01:53:58.560 --> 01:54:01.160] because they said I have equity in the house. [01:54:01.160 --> 01:54:04.440] I have about 300,000 in equity. [01:54:04.440 --> 01:54:08.480] And they said that it would be more worthwhile for me to sell it and pay off the loan that [01:54:08.480 --> 01:54:09.480] way. [01:54:09.480 --> 01:54:14.760] So they were refusing to do a modification just because of that. [01:54:14.760 --> 01:54:19.800] And if that says that legal, is that something I can fight them on? [01:54:19.800 --> 01:54:27.560] How much, okay, they may be right. [01:54:27.560 --> 01:54:28.800] Look at what's going on. [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:29.800] I'm an older guy. [01:54:29.800 --> 01:54:32.200] I've been around a while. [01:54:32.200 --> 01:54:36.160] I've seen these patterns go before. [01:54:36.160 --> 01:54:43.520] Okay, California is about got there themselves taxed into a hole. [01:54:43.520 --> 01:54:47.400] Companies are leaving California to get off under all the tax. [01:54:47.400 --> 01:54:51.160] And whenever this happens, it winds up with a crash following it. [01:54:51.160 --> 01:54:55.520] Look, you would upstate New York, you'll see that. [01:54:55.520 --> 01:55:01.200] Pastor Massett lives in Middleville, New York, and from Albany, you drive along the Erie [01:55:01.200 --> 01:55:05.840] Canal for about 100 miles to get to his place. [01:55:05.840 --> 01:55:12.560] And in that drive, I see six and seven storey huge factory buildings all shut down. [01:55:12.560 --> 01:55:15.040] Everything's closed down. [01:55:15.040 --> 01:55:19.000] Never seen that first barge on the Erie Canal. [01:55:19.000 --> 01:55:26.080] And what happened is New York just taxed itself out of the market. [01:55:26.080 --> 01:55:33.560] Everybody got the heck out of the Rust Belt because the Rust Belt got all this business [01:55:33.560 --> 01:55:38.120] in, and once they got them in and in trench, they started increasing the taxes. [01:55:38.120 --> 01:55:45.160] This is a 50-year pattern to increase the taxes until they can't pay anymore. [01:55:45.160 --> 01:55:47.880] They move out, go somewhere else. [01:55:47.880 --> 01:55:50.960] And then the whole area crashes. [01:55:50.960 --> 01:55:56.960] And finally, after they've been on the bottom long enough, they get together and start giving [01:55:56.960 --> 01:56:00.440] tax breaks to bring companies back in. [01:56:00.440 --> 01:56:04.040] That's a 50-year cycle. [01:56:04.040 --> 01:56:08.240] California is pushing the envelope big time. [01:56:08.240 --> 01:56:10.920] They're due for a major crash. [01:56:10.920 --> 01:56:14.120] When property crashes, that's when you want to buy. [01:56:14.120 --> 01:56:22.520] If you can, I'm not suggesting you do this, but if you sold that property and rented, [01:56:22.520 --> 01:56:28.520] good chance you would be better off because you sell your property at the high point. [01:56:28.520 --> 01:56:36.800] And then when property crashes in California, then you can take the funds you've saved and [01:56:36.800 --> 01:56:41.520] buy it at the bottom. [01:56:41.520 --> 01:56:48.000] But looking close at what's going on in California, it does not look good. [01:56:48.000 --> 01:56:56.680] Rick was born and raised in Carlsbad, California, and with what he saw going on, he said this [01:56:56.680 --> 01:56:59.280] is insane. [01:56:59.280 --> 01:57:00.960] I got to get out of here. [01:57:00.960 --> 01:57:04.160] This place is going to crash. [01:57:04.160 --> 01:57:11.440] And he bought a place for $200,000 in Phoenix that was better than the place he sold for [01:57:11.440 --> 01:57:13.360] $890,000 in California. [01:57:13.360 --> 01:57:14.360] What? [01:57:14.360 --> 01:57:23.840] If you look at the rest of the country, it's insane what it costs to live in California. [01:57:23.840 --> 01:57:29.000] That's going to drive all the business out, and then the whole system's going to collapse, [01:57:29.000 --> 01:57:33.520] and I think it's close. [01:57:33.520 --> 01:57:40.680] So you might consider just unloading that property as quick as you can, get clear of [01:57:40.680 --> 01:57:44.520] the debt, and make a deal with them. [01:57:44.520 --> 01:57:45.920] Sue them. [01:57:45.920 --> 01:57:53.800] You got them in court, ask the lawyer to see what kind of deal you can make, cash out [01:57:53.800 --> 01:57:58.840] of the property, and then let the system crash. [01:57:58.840 --> 01:58:05.160] If you didn't have any equity in it, that'd be different. [01:58:05.160 --> 01:58:13.040] I wasn't thinking about the fact that the California properties have gone up so much. [01:58:13.040 --> 01:58:20.760] That after the crash, after 07, everybody stopped building. [01:58:20.760 --> 01:58:27.840] But people kept coming of age and getting financially stable enough they could buy property. [01:58:27.840 --> 01:58:33.240] So the demand didn't stop, it's just they stopped building. [01:58:33.240 --> 01:58:42.440] So they ran out of demand, and this surge is filling up that demand. [01:58:42.440 --> 01:58:50.680] But we're close to the end, close to the end of that, and with the other problems in California. [01:58:50.680 --> 01:58:56.760] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.760 --> 01:58:57.960] Recovery Version. 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