[00:00.000 --> 00:05.780] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lowstar Lowdowns, providing you daily [00:05.780 --> 00:13.480] bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.480 --> 00:21.280] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.280 --> 00:27.660] Markets for Waze the 6th of February, 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver [00:27.660 --> 00:36.680] $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, brand crude $61.98 [00:36.680 --> 00:43.240] a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple [00:43.240 --> 00:50.720] XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and EOS is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [00:50.720 --> 00:59.620] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.620 --> 01:04.480] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.480 --> 01:05.980] was passed by parliament. [01:05.980 --> 01:13.620] Today in history, in recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting [01:13.620 --> 01:18.480] that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally [01:18.480 --> 01:19.840] registered to vote. [01:19.840 --> 01:24.640] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:24.640 --> 01:29.460] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. [01:29.460 --> 01:32.320] citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining H.R. [01:32.320 --> 01:33.320] Arbor's license. [01:33.320 --> 01:36.920] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:36.920 --> 01:41.080] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.080 --> 01:45.240] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.240 --> 01:49.740] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to [01:49.740 --> 01:50.740] vote. [01:50.740 --> 01:55.200] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.200 --> 01:57.040] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.040 --> 02:01.200] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.200 --> 02:08.960] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:08.960 --> 02:14.360] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.360 --> 02:16.760] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.760 --> 02:20.640] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.640 --> 02:24.240] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.240 --> 02:30.440] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.440 --> 02:35.200] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.200 --> 02:40.160] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.160 --> 02:44.720] conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.720 --> 02:47.440] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.440 --> 02:50.440] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:50.440 --> 03:19.440] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:19.440 --> 03:29.600] Okay, howdy howdy, this is Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, on this Friday, the 5th day of [03:29.600 --> 03:39.120] April, 2018, and we will have the phones on as soon as I get them turned on. [03:39.120 --> 03:40.120] Phones are on. [03:40.120 --> 03:41.960] We'll have the phone lines open all night. [03:41.960 --> 03:46.560] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [03:46.560 --> 03:58.040] We will be here for our four-hour info marathon, and I will start with an update on the electronic [03:58.040 --> 03:59.040] lawyer. [03:59.040 --> 04:02.040] Pieces are coming together. [04:02.040 --> 04:07.640] We are preparing a presentation for the Justice Department. [04:07.640 --> 04:13.680] Yes, we're going to become government contractors. [04:13.680 --> 04:16.600] We have a plan. [04:16.600 --> 04:21.400] We're looking at the politics, and if you've been listening to the show for a while, you [04:21.400 --> 04:26.120] know I talk a lot about how everything's political. [04:26.120 --> 04:36.760] In this case, if we think about it right and we do this right, we can use that understanding [04:36.760 --> 04:39.400] to facilitate this process. [04:39.400 --> 04:46.760] You know, I've talked about this tool eliminating the profession of lawyer and getting lawyers [04:46.760 --> 04:48.920] to pay us to do it. [04:48.920 --> 05:02.080] Well, the primary goal of the whole idea and program was to essentially hamstring the criminal [05:02.080 --> 05:07.720] justice system so that they can't railroad people anymore, so that people can actually [05:07.720 --> 05:18.160] achieve justice, and I think we may be able to maneuver them into that position. [05:18.160 --> 05:31.440] In the federal system, last year, their budget was $182 billion, I'm sorry, $182 billion. [05:31.440 --> 05:38.520] $81 billion of which was for the prison system. [05:38.520 --> 05:50.080] We are looking at making this questionnaire available to the government to use it for [05:50.080 --> 06:00.920] anyone who has been arrested and seeks court-appointed counsel under the guise of telling them that [06:00.920 --> 06:12.280] if a person understands that they have remedy, that they're more likely to pay for counsel [06:12.280 --> 06:16.520] to keep themselves out of jail if they expect that they have no options, then they won't [06:16.520 --> 06:24.120] bother to let the government pay for their attorneys and public defenders will just toss [06:24.120 --> 06:27.600] them under the bus. [06:27.600 --> 06:38.400] If we can use this questionnaire to encourage that statistically 27% of the population who [06:38.400 --> 06:46.080] are accused of crime who don't believe they're guilty to actually stand up and fight back [06:46.080 --> 06:55.600] a little bit, if by doing this we can decrease the bed space in the prisons by 1%, we save [06:55.600 --> 07:06.680] the prison system right at $1 billion a year, that is not term change. [07:06.680 --> 07:13.080] We get the criminal justice system to have a reason to do this and implement it once [07:13.080 --> 07:20.200] it's implemented, then this is a Pandora's box that once they've opened it, they won't [07:20.200 --> 07:21.960] be able to close it. [07:21.960 --> 07:29.160] Our call board is filling up very early, so without spending too much time on those issues, [07:29.160 --> 07:36.240] let me go, especially if you want to go to Ted Scarlett, Ted, you called in last night, [07:36.240 --> 07:44.600] you want to, if you have new issues, go back over what we talked about last night so we'll [07:44.600 --> 07:49.320] bring those people who weren't here last night up to speed. [07:49.320 --> 07:57.680] Okay, first, good evening Randy, hope you're doing well, and yes, I went to court on Wednesday [07:57.680 --> 08:07.840] this week and because my trial date was set for next Monday, April 8th, and it was on [08:07.840 --> 08:16.760] my motion to vacate the trial date, and part of the reason was because of what happened [08:16.760 --> 08:22.800] in hearings the previous week, I had two motion hearings that were denied, one for speedy [08:22.800 --> 08:28.120] trial and one for discovery issues. [08:28.120 --> 08:34.760] I got to go back another week further where I had a motion to dismiss the entire case [08:34.760 --> 08:42.840] on what they call a 995 motion because at the preliminary hearing, they did not establish [08:42.840 --> 08:49.840] a record with any testimony whatsoever in the record, and what I mean in the record, [08:49.840 --> 08:58.760] the transcript has nothing in it to hold me accountable for any of the allegations. [08:58.760 --> 09:11.120] So they denied all of those, and I took the first one, the 995 motion that they denied [09:11.120 --> 09:18.120] and I wrote a prohibition and filed it in the 6th District Court of Appeals. [09:18.120 --> 09:25.520] So I'm also asking the Court of Appeals to put a stay pending the outcome of the writ [09:25.520 --> 09:37.320] of prohibition, and so when I went into court this Wednesday, everything has changed. [09:37.320 --> 09:43.640] The judge, who in the past denied me a copy of the court case file, heard the meaner was [09:43.640 --> 09:55.240] different, and the hearing started with me, you know, because it's my motion and then [09:55.240 --> 10:03.240] the judge kind of stopped me and just said to Deputy DA, do you oppose the motion? [10:03.240 --> 10:10.000] And to my surprise, he said, no, I support the motion, and I'm concerned that Mr. Scarlett [10:10.000 --> 10:18.120] doesn't have all the discovery, he's said that he didn't, he can't read the disc or [10:18.120 --> 10:24.560] he can't get the material off of the CDs we provided and that he's once, you know, something [10:24.560 --> 10:32.040] more, you know, easy to handle, you know, the bottom line is this Deputy DA all along [10:32.040 --> 10:37.880] on the record over and over has said, we're not answering this, we're not doing this, [10:37.880 --> 10:45.960] we gave him discovery, he's been lying about even being served my motion and all of a sudden [10:45.960 --> 10:51.000] now it's like they gave him a head transplant. [10:51.000 --> 10:56.920] So the judge came back to me, looked at me and of course I started talking and you never [10:56.920 --> 11:05.160] there's an opportunity to talk, especially if you have something to say, but I said, [11:05.160 --> 11:11.400] well, judge, before we proceed, I also went on the record here that last time I was before [11:11.400 --> 11:16.760] you or we were before you, we had competing motions to continue the trial date, and by [11:16.760 --> 11:22.200] the way, she had already said as soon as he said he had concerns and he was actually [11:22.200 --> 11:27.080] supporting my motion, she said, okay, it's granted, so she was already trying to move [11:27.080 --> 11:33.840] forward and get a date for us to come back for another status and she didn't want me [11:33.840 --> 11:36.760] to talk, she wanted to get me out of there. [11:36.760 --> 11:43.160] That's the overall environment that was going on, how I do that and so I'm trying to get [11:43.160 --> 11:48.240] as much as I can on the record and I told her that last time we were here we had competing [11:48.240 --> 11:54.120] motions for continuance, however, I wasn't served the people's motion and I still don't [11:54.120 --> 11:55.400] have the court case filed. [11:55.400 --> 12:01.800] Mr. Scarlett, we understand that, we're just going to set a date, your Honor, I also would [12:01.800 --> 12:07.800] like the court to know that I have filed a writ of prohibition in the 6th District Court [12:07.800 --> 12:14.800] of Appeals and she didn't even flinch, it's obvious that they already know and so the [12:14.800 --> 12:23.960] overall tone of all of these people is a 180 from everything prior and I suspect the [12:23.960 --> 12:31.040] appellate court called down after reading my writ of prohibition and they're asking [12:31.040 --> 12:37.080] them what the hell are these people doing but also significant is some things going [12:37.080 --> 12:48.000] on in Southern California, a deputy DA has been suspended, the California Bar had a hearing, [12:48.000 --> 12:53.480] they do like a trial when there's serious complaints on these guys, I didn't know they [12:53.480 --> 13:01.320] did a deputy DA but they do and down there they're nailing this lady for not turning [13:01.320 --> 13:10.640] over discovery which is exactly what's going on in my case and initially they suspended [13:10.640 --> 13:16.360] her, disciplined her two years' suspension, the California Bar did but she went back and [13:16.360 --> 13:21.440] appealed and she's got it cut down to six months but a big slap on the hand and I think [13:21.440 --> 13:27.840] it's causing cases down there to fall apart left and right so that's also in the mix of [13:27.840 --> 13:34.280] what's going on but all of a sudden it's like these people have snapped to that they actually [13:34.280 --> 13:41.800] have to give me discovery, meaningful discovery and I think they know they're in trouble, [13:41.800 --> 13:49.520] I think they're shocked that I could write a writ of prohibition and they didn't see [13:49.520 --> 14:00.160] that coming and they were already a little bit not sure what to make of me because almost [14:00.160 --> 14:05.520] everybody whether you have a lawyer or not, private lawyer or not, almost everybody is [14:05.520 --> 14:14.520] in there peeing down their legs, shaking like a leaf, can't talk and so that's our system, [14:14.520 --> 14:21.400] the system that you want to change Randy is that it's not about whether you're guilty [14:21.400 --> 14:28.800] or innocent, it's that they've got you and just the fact that you are charged that you're [14:28.800 --> 14:33.040] going to leave out of there with something, you're going to take a deal and 99% of the [14:33.040 --> 14:37.280] people do and I don't blame them, they have families, they have homes, they have all these [14:37.280 --> 14:42.600] things they're going to lose but see with me they've already taken everything, there's [14:42.600 --> 14:52.320] nothing left to take including my health so I have nothing left and I don't know maybe [14:52.320 --> 14:58.280] God put me in this position because this county, Santa Clara County I've always known [14:58.280 --> 15:04.560] that it's the most corrupt county in the country and my roots are in the south, I was born [15:04.560 --> 15:09.520] in Jackson, Mississippi, my grandfather owned a big trucking company, I know how things [15:09.520 --> 15:17.560] work, my parents got stuck on some nonsense in Monks Corner, North Carolina so I have [15:17.560 --> 15:22.720] the experience of no, when I tell you this is backwood, here's Silicon Valley, the high [15:22.720 --> 15:31.720] tech capital of the world and we've got the most corrupt politicians and people on these [15:31.720 --> 15:38.640] benches in the entire country and part of it's because it is California, these judges [15:38.640 --> 15:42.520] do not get elected most of the time, they get appointed. [15:42.520 --> 15:46.120] Their first time is they're appointed, we've got judges that are buying their way onto [15:46.120 --> 15:55.480] the benches so we've got a huge, huge problem but now what's happening in my case because [15:55.480 --> 16:04.880] I filed criminal complaints, I've had them sent by registered mail to the former of the [16:04.880 --> 16:11.640] criminal grand jury, you send their mail to the district attorney's office but it was [16:11.640 --> 16:22.240] registered mail all over it saying to address the only and basically I sent five or six [16:22.240 --> 16:30.000] of those in there and to try to sum this up, the DA or the deputy DAs took each and every [16:30.000 --> 16:37.440] one of them, opened them, returned some of them and told me I couldn't make a complaint [16:37.440 --> 16:42.680] to the criminal grand jury and the music's coming on so I think that's a good place to [16:42.680 --> 16:43.680] do it. [16:43.680 --> 16:44.680] Okay, good segue. [16:44.680 --> 16:52.240] Okay, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, our call in number 512-646-1984, our call board [16:52.240 --> 16:57.720] is full right now so when somebody drops off then we can take one more, we can take four [16:57.720 --> 16:58.720] at a time. [16:58.720 --> 17:00.320] Okay, we'll be right. [17:00.320 --> 17:05.320] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar, in today's America [17:05.320 --> 17:08.680] we live in a us against them society and if we the people are ever going to have a free [17:08.680 --> 17:12.040] society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.040 --> 17:15.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [17:15.120 --> 17:19.360] act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right to due process of law. [17:19.360 --> 17:23.200] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.200 --> 17:24.680] our rights through due process. [17:24.680 --> 17:28.600] Former sheriff's deputy A. Craig in conjunction with rule of law radio has put together the [17:28.600 --> 17:32.360] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [17:32.360 --> 17:34.760] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [17:34.760 --> 17:38.760] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [17:38.760 --> 17:40.120] ordering your copy today. [17:40.120 --> 17:43.400] By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code, [17:43.400 --> 17:47.880] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of your original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [17:47.880 --> 17:50.160] documents and other useful resource material. [17:50.160 --> 17:54.160] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [17:54.160 --> 18:00.760] For your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [18:00.760 --> 18:06.080] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:06.080 --> 18:09.560] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.560 --> 18:13.880] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.880 --> 18:14.880] can win two. [18:14.880 --> 18:19.760] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.760 --> 18:21.400] civil rights statutes. [18:21.400 --> 18:26.160] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and [18:26.160 --> 18:30.560] phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial [18:30.560 --> 18:34.320] tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.320 --> 18:39.440] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.440 --> 18:41.600] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.600 --> 18:47.120] For more information please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.120 --> 18:50.120] or email Michael Mears at yahoo.com. [18:50.120 --> 18:57.800] For more information please visit ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.800 --> 19:05.800] To learn how to stop debt collectors now you can do a listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:05.800 --> 19:21.800] at my Logos Radio Network at yahoo.com. [19:21.800 --> 19:27.160] Okay we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and I didn't fall off the cliff that [19:27.160 --> 19:28.160] time. [19:28.160 --> 19:29.160] Thank you very much dad. [19:29.160 --> 19:32.160] Okay go ahead dad. [19:32.160 --> 19:37.960] So back to the hearing on Wednesday with that background information. [19:37.960 --> 19:39.960] I went on further. [19:39.960 --> 19:46.360] The judge is trying to keep me from talking but I told the judge that I, judge, I need [19:46.360 --> 19:54.400] a copy of the court case file and the clerk refused, hasn't given it to me. [19:54.400 --> 19:57.640] Well it went a little bit different because she interrupted me. [19:57.640 --> 20:04.080] I said something about, I'm not ready for, I'm not ready for trial because I don't, [20:04.080 --> 20:09.320] I don't have a copy of the court case file and that caused a prominent defense attorney [20:09.320 --> 20:12.520] to withdraw his, his offer of representation. [20:12.520 --> 20:15.000] That's why I'm without a lawyer. [20:15.000 --> 20:24.480] Mr. Carl, and I want, I'm going to file criminal charges against the clerk for not giving me [20:24.480 --> 20:28.880] a copy of the court case file. [20:28.880 --> 20:34.840] She, now I said it in court, I just said it monotone and I just said I'm filing charges [20:34.840 --> 20:43.920] on the clerk for denying me a copy of the court case file and boy, that was all it took. [20:43.920 --> 20:48.840] Right there she, I don't know how she did this, she's some kind of ventriloquist. [20:48.840 --> 20:53.720] She's talking to me and at the same time she's talking to her clerk, telling her clerk to [20:53.720 --> 20:58.040] call down there and have that clerk down in the records department start making copies [20:58.040 --> 21:04.720] right now. [21:04.720 --> 21:05.720] Funny how that works. [21:05.720 --> 21:10.160] But I swear to you, I don't know how she did that. [21:10.160 --> 21:14.920] I mean I'm looking back on it, I'm trying to, I guess she did talk to me and then she [21:14.920 --> 21:19.360] changed her, she lowered her voice a little bit and talked to the clerk. [21:19.360 --> 21:25.640] And I think I was probably responding and I was continuing to talk and I think she knows [21:25.640 --> 21:32.840] where this is all going, you know, Randy and I had a five minute conversation on this. [21:32.840 --> 21:38.840] And I agree, she knows, that judge knows that that clerk is not going down by herself. [21:38.840 --> 21:45.600] That clerk, instead of giving me, I filled out the form and I also submitted a fee waiver [21:45.600 --> 21:54.320] with it, that clerk should have given me an estimate of cost for the cost of copying the [21:54.320 --> 21:57.960] file and she didn't do that. [21:57.960 --> 22:01.480] She sent it up to the judge to run interference. [22:01.480 --> 22:10.240] I subsequently spent three days writing a paper for ancillary expenses. [22:10.240 --> 22:16.600] I'm entitled to ancillary expenses and I specifically asked for a copy of the court case file. [22:16.600 --> 22:22.120] And you know, you do it all on fancy paper and you got to put a salmon cover on it and [22:22.120 --> 22:26.520] you got a, you know, brass pin it and all this nonsense. [22:26.520 --> 22:32.920] We did it to the letter and she, the judge sat on it for a week and a half and then denied [22:32.920 --> 22:33.920] it. [22:33.920 --> 22:39.360] Now I also have transcripts from another hearing where I'm telling her in court, same thing [22:39.360 --> 22:44.040] I just said, that this lawyer isn't going to represent me without copy of that court [22:44.040 --> 22:45.040] case file. [22:45.040 --> 22:48.640] And she was saying, oh, you can come down and look at it. [22:48.640 --> 22:55.680] Now I should also tell you, I put in probably three demands. [22:55.680 --> 23:01.360] These were pleadings and it was, I did it three times over the last two years. [23:01.360 --> 23:04.800] Demand for return of the court case file to the court records department. [23:04.800 --> 23:09.920] Okay, because I kept going down there, I couldn't look at the court case file. [23:09.920 --> 23:17.880] Okay, so why I'm bringing this up is because you have to document everything, okay? [23:17.880 --> 23:21.680] And it's also always good to have one or two people with you. [23:21.680 --> 23:27.320] It's imperative that when you're in court that you take notes of everything. [23:27.320 --> 23:32.720] When who's appearing, who's there, who's the judge, who's the DA that's there, anybody [23:32.720 --> 23:39.840] that's in the room, and remember to speak at about this pace, well down in Texas maybe [23:39.840 --> 23:47.640] a little bit slower for the court reporter, but the point is is you're creating a record, [23:47.640 --> 23:48.640] okay? [23:48.640 --> 23:50.880] And they can't see what's going on in the court. [23:50.880 --> 23:56.520] So if the bailiff stands up and starts walking over towards me because the judge is trying [23:56.520 --> 24:02.680] to shush me, I would put on the record, judge, is the bailiff walking towards me? [24:02.680 --> 24:12.520] To intimidate me from representing myself? [24:12.520 --> 24:18.080] Are you, you know, you say what's going on in there that's visual so that you're getting [24:18.080 --> 24:22.440] it on the court reporter transcript, okay? [24:22.440 --> 24:29.080] One hearing I had, I was told, I didn't know, but these guys, four of them showed up with [24:29.080 --> 24:35.680] guns in suits, and then the second in command of the district attorney's office, I don't [24:35.680 --> 24:42.400] know his name, but one of the people in my group told me that's the second banana in [24:42.400 --> 24:43.400] the DA's office. [24:43.400 --> 24:50.720] He used us to really riled them up, and then he had two or three of his underlings with [24:50.720 --> 24:55.960] them, and then they had these investigator clowns with their suits and guns. [24:55.960 --> 25:04.880] So there was like eight, nine of them, I should have asked the judge, judge, I don't know [25:04.880 --> 25:09.400] who all these people are here in the courtroom, but it seems that you're a little bit intimidated [25:09.400 --> 25:10.400] by them. [25:10.400 --> 25:15.440] I understand this man right here is the assistant district attorney. [25:15.440 --> 25:18.320] Why are all these people here today, judge? [25:18.320 --> 25:21.120] Are they intimidating you? [25:21.120 --> 25:23.640] That's what I should have done. [25:23.640 --> 25:26.240] Exactly, on the record. [25:26.240 --> 25:33.160] Yeah, so the other people out there that are listening tonight, you have to do this, and [25:33.160 --> 25:37.240] the most important thing is everything's got to be in paper. [25:37.240 --> 25:47.240] It's a pain, but you better get good at writing pleadings and making a record of your case. [25:47.240 --> 25:53.560] So basically the judge on Wednesday was pretty freaked out. [25:53.560 --> 25:59.160] I also told her I planned on writing a couple more rips, and now all of a sudden they're [25:59.160 --> 26:03.360] following all over themselves to assist me in any which way they can. [26:03.360 --> 26:11.680] Okay, and funny how that works, when it reaches the point, and this was a struggle for the [26:11.680 --> 26:17.800] pixelers as well, while you're in the trial court and they're pulling all this trash, [26:17.800 --> 26:24.480] I kept telling the pixelers, never interfere with someone when they're screwing up. [26:24.480 --> 26:29.280] Once you get out of their little courtroom and start moving up into the higher courts, [26:29.280 --> 26:30.280] everything changes. [26:30.280 --> 26:35.840] And that is exactly what happened in the pixel case, and it sounds like it is exactly what's [26:35.840 --> 26:37.840] happening in your case. [26:37.840 --> 26:47.400] Yeah, let's not forget that my registered mail kept getting sent back, and by the way, [26:47.400 --> 26:52.520] I filed complaints with the bar over that, and they've got open investigations on a couple [26:52.520 --> 26:56.440] of these DAs, these deputy DAs. [26:56.440 --> 27:00.240] They've got one open on Jeff Rosen too, Jeff Rosen is the DA. [27:00.240 --> 27:05.960] They sent me a letter, they've all been assigned case numbers and investigators. [27:05.960 --> 27:15.440] And very, very important that I also filed complaints with the U.S. Post Office. [27:15.440 --> 27:22.400] And I got a little bit, I took your technique and I took it to the next level, the last [27:22.400 --> 27:28.760] one I sent out, which was a criminal complaint, I sent it registered mail, but I also insured [27:28.760 --> 27:31.680] it for $500. [27:31.680 --> 27:39.960] Of course, it didn't get there, and so now I put in for the insurance, and also there's [27:39.960 --> 27:44.520] an open investigation by the U.S. Post Office as to what happened to this thing, because [27:44.520 --> 27:49.960] we have mail tampering and secreting of my complaint to the criminal grand jury. [27:49.960 --> 27:56.000] And when you start getting into the pocket of the U.S. mail, even a little bit, they're [27:56.000 --> 27:58.360] not going to be happy. [27:58.360 --> 27:59.360] Right. [27:59.360 --> 28:05.200] Well, I think it's also important, because that's another way to get outside of this [28:05.200 --> 28:16.000] jurisdiction, to have an authority that absolutely has authority. [28:16.000 --> 28:21.800] And the guys at the Post Office, they love their job, these investigators. [28:21.800 --> 28:26.680] They love mail tampering, mail fraud. [28:26.680 --> 28:37.320] So I also have bolstered the writ of prohibition. [28:37.320 --> 28:41.840] I just filed today an additional 20 exhibits. [28:41.840 --> 28:46.760] I think I have a total of 27 exhibits. [28:46.760 --> 28:52.520] And when you see this, it's damning that I have done nothing wrong. [28:52.520 --> 28:57.680] And that's what people need to know here, is that I've been charged with a fake crime [28:57.680 --> 29:05.800] recording a quit claim deed, okay, on a house that I owned for 35 years. [29:05.800 --> 29:12.160] And a quit claim deed releases interest in the property if you have any. [29:12.160 --> 29:15.520] If you have none, it releases nothing. [29:15.520 --> 29:18.360] It's without warranty, okay? [29:18.360 --> 29:24.960] And it's actually in black spot dictionary definition, which is pretty much what I just [29:24.960 --> 29:25.960] recited. [29:25.960 --> 29:32.880] It goes on to say, if you have bad title, no title, if you don't know, if you know you [29:32.880 --> 29:35.800] have bad title, record a quit claim deed. [29:35.800 --> 29:38.200] That is right in the definition. [29:38.200 --> 29:48.600] So I don't, and then what we have here is, there was a substitution of trustee that was [29:48.600 --> 29:49.600] recorded. [29:49.600 --> 29:50.600] Okay, hold on. [29:50.600 --> 29:52.000] About to go to work. [29:52.000 --> 29:58.760] Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, on this Friday, the fifth day of April 2018, 19, we'll be [29:58.760 --> 29:59.760] right back. [29:59.760 --> 30:06.960] Radio frequency microchips are often used to track products as they make their way to [30:06.960 --> 30:09.200] stores, but would you want them in your socks? [30:09.200 --> 30:13.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you about the bizarre, privacy invasive new [30:13.840 --> 30:17.400] product called Smart Socks, next. [30:17.400 --> 30:19.120] Privacy is under attack. [30:19.120 --> 30:22.720] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.720 --> 30:27.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.680 --> 30:29.200] So protect your rights. [30:29.200 --> 30:32.920] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.920 --> 30:35.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [30:35.480 --> 30:41.080] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [30:41.080 --> 30:42.800] Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.800 --> 30:46.680] Start over with StartPage. [30:46.680 --> 30:51.240] Black Socks, a maker of men's dress socks, is embedding its products with radio frequency [30:51.240 --> 30:54.400] microchips or RFID technology. [30:54.400 --> 30:58.760] When scanned, each so-called smart sock transmits a unique ID number. [30:58.760 --> 31:03.760] The technology helps customers keep track of how many times their socks have been washed, [31:03.760 --> 31:07.880] how black their socks are, and which socks should be paired together. [31:07.880 --> 31:14.720] The cost $189 for a 10-pack, a scanner, and, yes, an iPhone app. [31:14.720 --> 31:19.480] Spite chip socks may make for a scientific sorting, but if you wear them, the floor itself [31:19.480 --> 31:21.360] could eventually track you. [31:21.360 --> 31:23.120] To me, that doesn't sound smart. [31:23.120 --> 31:24.120] It sounds spooky. [31:24.120 --> 31:31.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.640 --> 31:32.640] I lost my son. [31:32.640 --> 31:33.640] My nephew. [31:33.640 --> 31:34.640] My son. [31:34.640 --> 31:39.880] On September 11, 2001, most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.880 --> 31:44.040] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:44.040 --> 31:47.880] A little bit of the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7. [31:47.880 --> 31:52.720] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more [31:52.720 --> 31:53.720] to the story. [31:53.720 --> 31:54.720] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.720 --> 31:55.720] My uncle. [31:55.720 --> 31:56.720] My nephew. [31:56.720 --> 31:57.720] My son. [31:57.720 --> 31:58.720] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:58.720 --> 32:01.720] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.720 --> 32:04.280] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:04.280 --> 32:07.280] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:07.280 --> 32:10.920] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [32:10.920 --> 32:11.920] them to pay for it. [32:11.920 --> 32:15.560] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:15.560 --> 32:19.360] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:19.360 --> 32:24.600] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense, and we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus [32:24.600 --> 32:27.720] member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [32:27.720 --> 32:32.080] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [32:32.080 --> 32:33.080] first time. [32:33.080 --> 32:41.800] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show, and get $100 off, [32:41.800 --> 32:46.400] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:46.400 --> 32:51.560] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:51.560 --> 32:57.600] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:57.600 --> 33:04.600] Discounts are based on full roof replacement, mean I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:04.600 --> 33:10.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:10.600 --> 33:30.600] Yeah, I got the warrant, and I'm going to solve them, to the end of them, prosecute them. [33:30.600 --> 33:40.400] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of all radio, and we're talking to Ted and [33:40.400 --> 33:41.400] California. [33:41.400 --> 33:42.400] Okay, go ahead Ted. [33:42.400 --> 33:51.000] Okay, so the bottom line is their charges have no merit, and I think they were hanging [33:51.000 --> 34:02.160] their hat on the trespassing part, and these exhibits that I just submitted, I had quarters [34:02.160 --> 34:08.680] from the appellate court, now I'm talking about the superior appellate court civil. [34:08.680 --> 34:19.040] I had stays of the writ of execution of the eviction, okay, so I got several stays, and [34:19.040 --> 34:25.280] at one point the court, because the lawyer that was trying to get me out of the house [34:25.280 --> 34:30.400] lied to the appellate court, they lifted the stay, but I threw a paper, an emergency [34:30.400 --> 34:38.800] paper, they responded by striking the officer lifting the stay, and putting the stay back [34:38.800 --> 34:43.720] in place, and so what they're going to see when they see that stuff is, I think they [34:43.720 --> 34:49.760] were hanging their hat on, that I was trespassing, and they could prove it, and the fact is, [34:49.760 --> 34:55.160] I wasn't trespassing, I was rightfully in the home, and what they did was they come [34:55.160 --> 35:02.280] out with an army of more than 30 people, San Jose police, SWAT team, sheriff's department, [35:02.280 --> 35:10.840] and big four foot metal shields, machine guns, two armored vehicles, and drove me out of [35:10.840 --> 35:18.440] my house, took me to jail, locked me up for three days, tried to, wouldn't let me talk [35:18.440 --> 35:27.120] to anybody, and in the meantime, this, I don't know, predator is all I can think to call [35:27.120 --> 35:36.480] him, is at every foreclosure sale, a Chinese guy, who by the way, I believe is money laundering [35:36.480 --> 35:44.240] and posing as a third party buyer for the banks, and that guy, while they kept me locked [35:44.240 --> 35:51.520] up with no phone call, and so nobody knew who I was, he went in and cleaned out my house. [35:51.520 --> 35:59.400] I had a heart attack about a year into this thing, and four weeks after the heart attack, [35:59.400 --> 36:05.080] Judge Brown ordered me into the hearing, even though I sent notice and a doctor's letter [36:05.080 --> 36:11.240] from a cardiologist that said that I was subject to sudden death and couldn't be there. [36:11.240 --> 36:16.800] She said she would have me arrested if I didn't appear, so I went into the courtroom. [36:16.800 --> 36:22.280] We started the hearing, she had to check law, so she went off the bench. [36:22.280 --> 36:26.480] When she did, I told the bailiff, I'm sick. [36:26.480 --> 36:34.240] He went back, told the judge, I'm sick, and he came back out and said, you can't leave, [36:34.240 --> 36:39.680] and all we can do is call 911, and I said, then call 911. [36:39.680 --> 36:44.800] So paramedics and the ambulance are on the way, and the judge would pull back. [36:44.800 --> 36:48.760] The judge came out of her office, went back on the bench, and continued to prosecute me [36:48.760 --> 36:57.040] while I'm sitting there with blood pressure of 200 over 136, rapid pull, and they wouldn't [36:57.040 --> 36:59.040] provide me any medical attention. [36:59.040 --> 37:05.240] I asked for an aspirin, which is exactly what you're supposed to give somebody in my condition, [37:05.240 --> 37:10.960] and she went up on the bench, the judge did, and continued to prosecute me until she was [37:10.960 --> 37:18.960] told, they signaled her that the paramedics were in the elevator on the way out. [37:18.960 --> 37:21.720] That's depraved heart assault. [37:21.720 --> 37:25.920] I would say depraved heart attempted murder. [37:25.920 --> 37:33.560] I say every word out of her mouth, every word was attempted murder. [37:33.560 --> 37:41.480] And I tell everybody this because I want to motivate y'all that me, in the situation I [37:41.480 --> 37:49.000] found myself on, homeless in the streets, no money, no home, lost everything I owned [37:49.000 --> 37:51.760] if I can fight back anybody can. [37:51.760 --> 37:53.160] And I'm pretty much all alone. [37:53.160 --> 37:54.720] I'm the oldest of four. [37:54.720 --> 38:01.280] I was the big brother, I'm the one that took care of everybody. [38:01.280 --> 38:06.920] So my whole life, everybody has thought that I'm the accomplished and don't need any help. [38:06.920 --> 38:08.800] We all need help. [38:08.800 --> 38:14.720] And Randy, I have to say right here right now, I wouldn't even be alive if it wasn't [38:14.720 --> 38:15.720] for you. [38:15.720 --> 38:16.720] That's heavy. [38:16.720 --> 38:29.400] You told me the story, and for everyone out there, whatever you're feeling, whatever [38:29.400 --> 38:34.000] you're going through, you're not going crazy, you're not nuts. [38:34.000 --> 38:38.360] This other couple, I feel sorry because I understand that man went through a lot of health issues [38:38.360 --> 38:42.440] as well from what they do to you. [38:42.440 --> 38:47.520] It's absolutely terrorizing you. [38:47.520 --> 38:54.800] The problem in this country is that they've separated us out and that's why they get away [38:54.800 --> 38:55.800] with this stuff. [38:55.800 --> 39:00.160] Randy, you're trying to bring everybody together and you're doing a great job, but you sharing [39:00.160 --> 39:07.880] the story with me of both your experience with the jail and your combat experience, [39:07.880 --> 39:12.800] and you telling me that you would rather be in combat than in the jail or going through [39:12.800 --> 39:20.120] a criminal proceeding, it was just enough to keep me from pulling the trigger. [39:20.120 --> 39:26.560] That's scary. [39:26.560 --> 39:29.840] Sometimes with you, I never saw that. [39:29.840 --> 39:35.360] Sometimes I get someone on the show that scares me because I can tell that they're right on [39:35.360 --> 39:42.360] the edge, and that's difficult for me. [39:42.360 --> 39:48.560] I don't like things that serious, but it's our job. [39:48.560 --> 39:58.600] I have a set of techniques I use when I detect that, but I never felt that with you. [39:58.600 --> 40:03.080] You always wanted to fight these guys. [40:03.080 --> 40:08.920] I was waking up every hour on the hour at night absolutely terrorized that I was going [40:08.920 --> 40:11.160] to prison. [40:11.160 --> 40:18.760] The worst part of it is knowing that I didn't do anything wrong, knowing that I wouldn't [40:18.760 --> 40:19.760] do anything wrong. [40:19.760 --> 40:25.640] I have no criminal history, and the most terrifying thing that can happen to you is being falsely [40:25.640 --> 40:27.640] accused. [40:27.640 --> 40:28.640] Betrayal. [40:28.640 --> 40:36.840] There's nothing worse than betrayal, and when you're betrayed by the very people in [40:36.840 --> 40:41.360] the very country that you've put your faith in and put your life in their hands, that [40:41.360 --> 40:47.880] is the worst kind of betrayal of all the bad things that's happened. [40:47.880 --> 40:55.680] The worst, absolute worst thing was right after my brother passed away in Vietnam. [40:55.680 --> 41:02.320] I went to the chaplain and got the chaplain to let me use his Autobahn line. [41:02.320 --> 41:08.440] That was forbidden only chaplains and carnals and above could use the Autobahn, but he told [41:08.440 --> 41:15.800] me that I can't let you use that, but it is nine o'clock, and it is coffee break, but [41:15.800 --> 41:19.440] I don't have anybody to look after my office. [41:19.440 --> 41:21.360] Will you watch my office while I'm gone? [41:21.360 --> 41:25.400] I'll be gone for about 30 minutes, and whatever you do, don't let anybody use that Autobahn [41:25.400 --> 41:26.400] line. [41:26.400 --> 41:27.400] No, sir. [41:27.400 --> 41:36.520] Well, I used the Autobahn line and got a seat on the next aircraft out of country. [41:36.520 --> 41:45.760] In order to get that, I originally got a flight out of Udorn, but Udorn took incoming, so [41:45.760 --> 41:50.280] the next flight leaving country was out of Benoit. [41:50.280 --> 41:55.160] There was a C-130 going up to Benoit, but it was full. [41:55.160 --> 41:59.000] Since I was on emergency leave, this little tech sergeant had to bump someone off that [41:59.000 --> 42:06.480] airplane, and it was a major, and when the major come down the ramp of that C-130, he [42:06.480 --> 42:12.800] was viewing, and he looked at me and I was a buck sergeant. [42:12.800 --> 42:13.800] He said, an airman? [42:13.800 --> 42:16.720] I'm being bumped for an airman? [42:16.720 --> 42:20.520] Well, I got to Benoit. [42:20.520 --> 42:29.520] I got to Seattle, SeaTac Airport, one o'clock in the morning, with 15 cents in my pocket. [42:29.520 --> 42:37.080] I'm trying to get to Chicago so that my parents don't see two guys in uniform walking up their [42:37.080 --> 42:39.280] sidewalk. [42:39.280 --> 42:43.080] I wanted that to be me. [42:43.080 --> 42:46.640] I'm walking down the terminal at SeaTac Airport. [42:46.640 --> 42:50.760] When I'm in jungle fatigues, I've been in for a couple weeks because the Army lost my [42:50.760 --> 42:51.760] duffel bag. [42:51.760 --> 43:00.000] I've been unloading helicopters, and their blood soaked, they're pretty well tattered, [43:00.000 --> 43:06.440] and you forget when you're in the tropics that the tropics reek of mildew. [43:06.440 --> 43:10.920] This young girl with two little children with her were coming and walking toward me. [43:10.920 --> 43:16.880] She pushed her children up against the wall and stood between her children and me as I [43:16.880 --> 43:20.040] passed. [43:20.040 --> 43:30.600] To this day, that is by far the worst experience of my life, that she thought she had to protect [43:30.600 --> 43:38.560] her children from me, betrayal is nothing worse than betrayal. [43:38.560 --> 43:47.440] When your own system turns on you, the very people that should be protecting you are aware [43:47.440 --> 43:54.280] of how devastating it is to have them turn on you and they use that to their advantage. [43:54.280 --> 44:01.360] Hang on, be right back, Randy Kelton, Real Law Radio, about that all. [44:01.360 --> 44:04.920] At Capital Corn and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.920 --> 44:09.320] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.320 --> 44:13.200] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality [44:13.200 --> 44:14.800] coins and precious metals. [44:14.800 --> 44:18.640] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [44:18.640 --> 44:23.400] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metal stealers [44:23.400 --> 44:24.400] and journalists. [44:24.400 --> 44:27.400] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [44:27.400 --> 44:31.600] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products such as Beyond Tangy Pangerine and [44:31.600 --> 44:32.600] Pollen Burks. [44:32.600 --> 44:37.480] We also offer one-world way, Mountain House storeable foods, Berkey water products, ammunition [44:37.480 --> 44:39.640] at 10% above wholesale, and more. [44:39.640 --> 44:43.600] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept big coins as payment. [44:43.600 --> 44:46.600] Call us at 512-646-6404. [44:46.600 --> 44:51.560] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, sweet A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.560 --> 44:54.760] We're open Monday through Friday, 10-6, Saturdays, 10-2. [44:54.760 --> 45:01.440] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6404. [45:01.440 --> 45:04.640] Review the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit. [45:04.640 --> 45:11.360] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.360 --> 45:14.360] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.360 --> 45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.120 --> 45:23.320] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.320 --> 45:28.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.240 --> 45:34.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.240 --> 45:40.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [45:40.240 --> 45:43.240] and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.240 --> 45:50.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:50.240 --> 45:52.240] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:52.240 --> 46:01.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:23.240 --> 46:25.240] Okay, we are back. [46:25.240 --> 46:29.240] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Ted in California. [46:29.240 --> 46:30.240] Ted, I'm sorry I went there. [46:30.240 --> 46:32.240] I generally don't go to that place. [46:32.240 --> 46:39.240] But one thing I never forgot to mention in all this time that I owe it to Eastern Airlines, [46:39.240 --> 46:45.240] even though they're not in business, this was the time when the airlines were regulated [46:45.240 --> 46:52.240] and the flight I was on, that the airline put me on it for free to get me home. [46:52.240 --> 46:59.240] There were only two people on it, and the stewardesses talked to me the whole way home. [46:59.240 --> 47:06.240] When I got to the airport, they had a shuttle waiting for me, and they drove me straight to my house. [47:06.240 --> 47:11.240] So it wasn't all bad. [47:11.240 --> 47:15.240] But, Randy, I appreciate you sharing that. [47:15.240 --> 47:20.240] And like I said, you shared your other experience with me, and I swear to you, [47:20.240 --> 47:25.240] I probably would have pulled the trigger had you not shared it with me. [47:25.240 --> 47:32.240] And I just so much appreciate the work that you do. [47:32.240 --> 47:42.240] And we all have to, it's not enough to know your rights. You have to know how to enforce your rights. [47:42.240 --> 47:56.240] And the biggest tool you have is the criminal complaints when these bureaucrats and elected people violate the Constitution and violate human rights. [47:56.240 --> 48:06.240] The trick is getting it out of their hands, putting it into the hands of someone else, [48:06.240 --> 48:12.240] so that when someone else tries to protect them, you cause someone else difficulty. [48:12.240 --> 48:19.240] And the more innocent the person is, who you're causing difficulty to the better. [48:19.240 --> 48:29.240] Because they're going to be railing in righteous indignation for getting in trouble for trying to help this chump. [48:29.240 --> 48:38.240] I want to cut this off because there's other people waiting, and I just want to give a shout out to Central Texas Gun Works and Michael. [48:38.240 --> 48:45.240] Thank you for supporting this station and Randy. [48:45.240 --> 48:50.240] And let's just keep up the work. [48:50.240 --> 48:59.240] That show with Michael last night was good. Michael rocks. He's going after these guys big time. He is definitely one of us. [48:59.240 --> 49:06.240] Okay. Thank you, Ted. And keep us up to date. It sounds like it's finally getting to the good part. [49:06.240 --> 49:08.240] Thank you, sir. [49:08.240 --> 49:24.240] Okay. Thank you, Ted. Now we're going to Larry in Arizona. The Larry in Arizona winner of the AR-15 gun giveaway this year. Hello, Larry. [49:24.240 --> 49:29.240] I think we might have put Larry to sleep. [49:29.240 --> 49:32.240] Are you there, Larry? [49:32.240 --> 49:40.240] Okay. He might have lost. If you're trying to talk and we can't hear you, try hanging up and calling back in. I'll bring you up early. [49:40.240 --> 49:47.240] Okay. So I'm going to mute you. I'll try a little bit later if you're away from the phone or something. [49:47.240 --> 49:52.240] Now we're going to Tina in California. Hello, Tina. [49:52.240 --> 50:06.240] Randy, I don't have a question for you tonight, but I do have something that I want to share with your listeners that may help them with some of the legal things. [50:06.240 --> 50:22.240] I was recommended to go to the senior's legal counseling to ask questions about the filing of my declaratory judgment. [50:22.240 --> 50:25.240] Okay. Wait, wait. Say that again. [50:25.240 --> 50:28.240] It's senior legal counseling service. [50:28.240 --> 50:30.240] Can you spell that first word? [50:30.240 --> 50:34.240] Senior. Like as in senior citizen. [50:34.240 --> 50:36.240] Yeah. Okay. [50:36.240 --> 50:40.240] My accent. I'm practicing for going back to England in a couple of weeks. [50:40.240 --> 50:46.240] Oh, okay. I noticed you spoke with a strange foreign accent. [50:46.240 --> 50:54.240] I'm in Texas and we were in the donut shop one morning and a guy came in from England. He had a really beautiful accent. [50:54.240 --> 51:05.240] And he walked out and one of the guys in there said, I wish them darn foreigners would learn to speak the language. [51:05.240 --> 51:15.240] And everybody looked at him with this look that said, did you really say that? [51:15.240 --> 51:20.240] Okay. Senior legal services? [51:20.240 --> 51:30.240] Yes. Senior legal services. And the person who told me about it was one of the really nice clerks at the courthouse. [51:30.240 --> 51:38.240] And but she said, well, they can't give you legal advice, but they can and they won't write your forms out, but they can help you with certain things. [51:38.240 --> 51:45.240] Well, when I got there, you have a half hour appointment. It was an attorney and she said, of course they can give you legal advice. I'm an attorney. [51:45.240 --> 51:54.240] And she said, show me what you've got. Tell me a little about it. And I showed her and I said, I'm struggling with the right forms and especially the proof of service. [51:54.240 --> 52:07.240] And she read through it and she said, yes, doing a good job. But I would and she advised, you know, looking at it and looking at the statute, she said, I would advise you not to put the attorney on there. [52:07.240 --> 52:18.240] Because she said that he's going to do more and he's going to say this next. She said, make it simple. Just do the back. And she changed a few things like respondent bank and to clarify. [52:18.240 --> 52:26.240] She, you know, there was a few minor changes, but she said, this will make it clearer for the judge. And then she said, well, you haven't put damages in here. [52:26.240 --> 52:34.240] And I said, no, because I want to keep this simple. I don't want them to throw it out for claim. And she said, well, you only get one bite of the apple and it's worth $500 here. [52:34.240 --> 52:43.240] And then she read through it and she said, on second thought, forget it. Don't go there. Just keep it as it is. [52:43.240 --> 52:54.240] And then she, you know, showed me the right forms to fill out. We talked about proof of service. And according to the attorney, I have to serve, personally serve. [52:54.240 --> 53:00.240] I cannot mail it. I cannot certify mail it. I have to hire a process server to do it. [53:00.240 --> 53:04.240] And she said, yeah, it may not be fair, but that's the rules. You got to do it. [53:04.240 --> 53:10.240] But the good thing about it is she said, you know, if you get an answer back, she said, good luck. [53:10.240 --> 53:19.240] If you don't understand something, make another appointment, come back. Totally free service for anyone over the age of 60. [53:19.240 --> 53:30.240] And your other pounds that is may have that, they gave, you know, had legal books for other services for seniors there. [53:30.240 --> 53:37.240] I mean, just she could not have been more helpful and businesslike, but friendly. [53:37.240 --> 53:44.240] And they also told me many towns have them. I didn't know about this, but there's a court day. [53:44.240 --> 53:52.240] You get to know your court or something. And I won't be here because I'll be in England, but you get to go into the judges' courtrooms. [53:52.240 --> 54:00.240] The judges are sitting there. You get to ask questions. There are attorneys on hand that you can get to ask questions and learn a lot of things from. [54:00.240 --> 54:11.240] But they only have it once a year. But if everyone would, you know, ask about this service in your own town, your own city, they may have the same thing. [54:11.240 --> 54:16.240] It doesn't matter. As long as we've got an appointment available, you're more than welcome to come in. [54:16.240 --> 54:26.240] Wonderful. I've written them down. I will see if I can get a hold of them. Maybe I can get one of them to come on the show. [54:26.240 --> 54:43.240] What I'll do is I'll email you the exact, you know, what it's called, but I got the form from the courthouse. And I had no idea about it until this very friendly clerk said, [54:43.240 --> 54:56.240] you might need to do this because I told her I couldn't afford an attorney to ask for how to do these things. And she just handed me this sheet. And the other things on there were not very helpful to me. [54:56.240 --> 55:07.240] You had to have certain qualifications or something else. But this was amazing. I was just, and I thought maybe everybody else might be able to find something like that where they are. [55:07.240 --> 55:14.240] Even Ted might be able to find something like that to help him, you know, with some of the fine tuning of things. [55:14.240 --> 55:30.240] Wonderful. If you will send me their email, I will definitely contact them. And the tool that I'm developing, I would be more than happy to make it available to them [55:30.240 --> 55:46.240] so that anyone who has a legal issue, if we have a questionnaire developed for that issue, for that area, then they can go to this questionnaire and find out most of what they need to know about their issue before they come and talk to the lawyer [55:46.240 --> 55:50.240] and it will increase their effectiveness dramatically. [55:50.240 --> 56:02.240] That's true. I hadn't thought about that. Yeah. Yeah, it was, but it was just, you know, I just wanted to let people know because I had no idea and I've been doing this for what, five years or more than that. [56:02.240 --> 56:06.240] And it was very, very helpful to me. [56:06.240 --> 56:08.240] Wonderful. [56:08.240 --> 56:14.240] I'll let you go to people who have questions and I'll email this to you tonight or tomorrow. [56:14.240 --> 56:26.240] Okay, thank you. Now, okay, now we're going to go back to Larry. Larry's dropped off and called in again, so maybe he's cleared the line. Hello, Larry, are you there? [56:26.240 --> 56:28.240] Yeah, I'm here. Randy, can you hear me? [56:28.240 --> 56:42.240] Yes, I can. This is the Larry winner of our gun giveaway this year and regular support of the network. Okay, what do you have for us tonight, Larry? [56:42.240 --> 57:00.240] Well, Randy, I got into a discussion with some guys the other day about the homestead exemption here in Arizona and Arizona gives you $150,000 homestead exemption, which by modern terms isn't that big an exemption. [57:00.240 --> 57:18.240] Then we got to questioning, what's the value of the exemption? Would you value that exemption in real money or would you value that exemption in federal reserve notes? [57:18.240 --> 57:22.240] Because you've got a disparity of 15 to 1. [57:22.240 --> 57:38.240] Well, what is the Federal Reserve notes are the benchmark currency? What do you mean by real money? [57:38.240 --> 57:52.240] Well, okay, if I was posing this question to you in 1964, there would be, we wouldn't be having this discussion because a dollar was worth a dollar. [57:52.240 --> 57:56.240] 3.71 ounces of silver. [57:56.240 --> 58:16.240] Yes, and that was worth a Federal Reserve note dollar, but today there's a disparity of 15 to 1. And if you can read the Arizona Constitution, they refer to money, they don't refer to Federal Reserve notes. [58:16.240 --> 58:32.240] The reason I'm asking is there's a factor here. What you're doing is making a distinction without a difference. Federal Reserve notes and the term money and Federal Reserve notes are equivalent. [58:32.240 --> 58:36.240] They mean the same thing. [58:36.240 --> 58:50.240] Now granted, Federal Reserve notes are not equal to what a dollar was equal to at one time, but dollar... [58:50.240 --> 58:54.240] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.240 --> 59:06.240] The Bible for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.240 --> 59:13.240] 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. [59:13.240 --> 59:27.240] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. 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. [59:27.240 --> 59:49.240] 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. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:58.240 --> 01:00:20.240] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown. Providing your daily bulletins for the Commodity Market. Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.240 --> 01:00:34.240] Markets for Wazeva, 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. [01:00:34.240 --> 01:00:54.240] Brand crude, $61.98 a barrel. And cryptos in order of market capitalization. Bitcoin, $3,401.64. Ripple, XRP, $0.29. Ethereum, $10.03 an ounce. And Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:54.240 --> 01:01:06.240] 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. [01:01:06.240 --> 01:01:07.240] Today in history. [01:01:07.240 --> 01:01:33.240] 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 11-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 age arbitrage license. [01:01:33.240 --> 01:01:45.240] 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. [01:01:45.240 --> 01:01:50.240] Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.240 --> 01:02:05.240] 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. [01:02:05.240 --> 01:02:20.240] 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. [01:02:20.240 --> 01:02:28.240] 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. [01:02:28.240 --> 01:02:47.240] 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. [01:02:47.240 --> 01:02:59.240] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. This is Rick Brody with your bow down for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:18.240 --> 01:03:24.240] These warm-unders come by that turn right. [01:03:25.240 --> 01:03:37.240] I won't pay for the war with my body. I ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. I won't pay for the fun with my body. [01:03:37.240 --> 01:03:48.240] The plants wicked and their logic shiny. Ain't gonna pay for the oil with my body. I won't pay for the poison with my money. [01:03:48.240 --> 01:03:59.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Real Valor Radio. And we're talking to Larry in Arizona about a dollar. What is a dollar? [01:03:59.240 --> 01:04:15.240] A dollar used to be 26.7 grams of silver. Today's money, I think, the number was worth about $26. No, I'm sorry, about $13. [01:04:15.240 --> 01:04:37.240] A dollar is not silver anymore. A dollar is a measure of value. A dollar is simply a unit of value used for trading in value. [01:04:37.240 --> 01:04:53.240] Just like these ICO tokens. An ICO token has a specifically denominated trade value relative to something else. [01:04:53.240 --> 01:05:08.240] Most everybody sets that trade value relative to the US dollar. The US dollar is the primary currency of every country in the world. [01:05:08.240 --> 01:05:23.240] So a US dollar, unlike a pound, a dollar in Australia, a US dollar is worth a dollar. Everything else is worth something relative to that dollar. [01:05:23.240 --> 01:05:29.240] It has nothing to do with silver. It has nothing to do with gold. It's just a denomination. [01:05:29.240 --> 01:05:54.240] So the question of what money are we paying in? Now, that brings an interesting issue because the IRS went after a company who was paying their employees with $50 gold pieces. [01:05:54.240 --> 01:06:06.240] And the IRS went after them saying that you had to claim the value of the gold and the $50 gold piece. [01:06:06.240 --> 01:06:17.240] They said, uh-uh, that's money minted by the United States. It has the value printed on the money. [01:06:17.240 --> 01:06:32.240] And the courts ruled that yes it does. It was legal tender. So somebody making $10,000, they could pay them with, I forget how many gold pieces, [01:06:32.240 --> 01:06:43.240] and then they could claim the amount, the value of the $50 gold piece, not the actual value of the coin. [01:06:43.240 --> 01:06:51.240] So still I'm not sure where you were going with that question. [01:06:51.240 --> 01:07:04.240] Well, okay. Well, that's exactly where I was going because if I go to the US mint and I order, you know, a tube of US mint dollars, [01:07:04.240 --> 01:07:15.240] I'm getting this coin that's marked $1, but it takes 15 Federal Reserve notes to buy that dollar. [01:07:15.240 --> 01:07:20.240] So, okay, so let's back up to the original, to the original problem. [01:07:20.240 --> 01:07:32.240] There's a guy that has eight acres and a home here that they value at about 350,000 Federal Reserve notes that everybody deals in. [01:07:32.240 --> 01:07:38.240] And so that property is beyond our homestead exemption here in Arizona. [01:07:38.240 --> 01:07:50.240] But if you were to value that, divide that 350,000 by 15 and convert from Federal Reserve notes into silver dollars, [01:07:50.240 --> 01:08:02.240] now that home and property is only worth about $24,000, and it's well within the value of the homestead exemption. [01:08:02.240 --> 01:08:06.240] That is a good question. [01:08:06.240 --> 01:08:09.240] What value do you put on that property? [01:08:09.240 --> 01:08:23.240] A US dollar, a silver dollar, is minted currency and it has that value so far as the United States is concerned. [01:08:23.240 --> 01:08:28.240] That was the IRS, the ruling the IRS got. [01:08:28.240 --> 01:08:29.240] Yes. [01:08:29.240 --> 01:08:32.240] A $50 coin is a $50 coin. [01:08:32.240 --> 01:08:37.240] Does it make any difference if it's made out of paper, lead, gold, silver? [01:08:37.240 --> 01:08:42.240] If it says $50 on the front of it, it's $50. [01:08:42.240 --> 01:09:04.240] So if someone were to offer this person with a $350,000 home, a $160,000 in silver dollars, we accept it. [01:09:04.240 --> 01:09:07.240] Oh yeah, that would be a huge. [01:09:07.240 --> 01:09:09.240] That's fair market value. [01:09:09.240 --> 01:09:12.240] That establishes fair market value. [01:09:12.240 --> 01:09:16.240] I don't know, you know, this is a problem the government had. [01:09:16.240 --> 01:09:18.240] They minted this money. [01:09:18.240 --> 01:09:31.240] And I had asked once, several years ago, I wanted this, one of these gold and silver exchanges to set me up an account, [01:09:31.240 --> 01:09:34.240] a silver account. [01:09:34.240 --> 01:09:41.240] And I wanted to sell my services in silver so that I didn't care about the silver. [01:09:41.240 --> 01:09:43.240] I didn't want to take possession of it. [01:09:43.240 --> 01:09:48.240] But I wanted the exchange to create a ledger. [01:09:48.240 --> 01:10:01.240] And in this ledger, they would, I would put in a given amount of silver and they would mark on my ledger a given amount of silver. [01:10:01.240 --> 01:10:06.240] And then someone would pay me with green dollars. [01:10:06.240 --> 01:10:15.240] And then the exchange would take those green dollars and instead of logging them in my ledger at their green dollar value, [01:10:15.240 --> 01:10:23.240] they would log them in my ledger at the silver dollar value. [01:10:23.240 --> 01:10:26.240] So I pay tax on the silver dollar value. [01:10:26.240 --> 01:10:36.240] So I have a ledger that is kept in silver dollars rather than in green dollars. [01:10:36.240 --> 01:10:47.240] I don't know that I am required to use a specific denomination of currency. [01:10:47.240 --> 01:10:55.240] We don't have a $50 gold piece fiat coin. [01:10:55.240 --> 01:11:07.240] We don't have a silver dollar fiat coin, but we do have silver dollars and they are, although the government tried to collect them all up in the 18th and 1960s, [01:11:07.240 --> 01:11:11.240] they're still legal tender. [01:11:11.240 --> 01:11:22.240] So what would keep me from putting the mark on my ledger in silver dollars is probably something that would probably make a good fight to argue it. [01:11:22.240 --> 01:11:28.240] But since that time, at the time they didn't feel like they could do it, but now you can actually do that. [01:11:28.240 --> 01:11:39.240] You can create ledgers in gold or other currencies. [01:11:39.240 --> 01:11:47.240] If these guys have this concern, they may look at the crypto market. [01:11:47.240 --> 01:11:55.240] They may well be a way to do this in crypto currencies. [01:11:55.240 --> 01:12:00.240] Back to my original question, how would you argue this in court? [01:12:00.240 --> 01:12:04.240] That's something I would have to research out. [01:12:04.240 --> 01:12:14.240] I remember the argument or remember when the case came down and I believe the guy was in Arizona that was paying his employees [01:12:14.240 --> 01:12:19.240] in $50 gold piece denominations. [01:12:19.240 --> 01:12:21.240] Yeah, that was the Nevada case. [01:12:21.240 --> 01:12:24.240] Oh, Nevada, okay. [01:12:24.240 --> 01:12:27.240] He won that one. [01:12:27.240 --> 01:12:30.240] That case? What's that? [01:12:30.240 --> 01:12:33.240] As I recall, he won that case. [01:12:33.240 --> 01:12:42.240] Yes, he definitely won and said it was perfectly legal to declare each coin, even if it had a thousand dollar value, [01:12:42.240 --> 01:12:45.240] he only had to declare it as a $50 value. [01:12:45.240 --> 01:12:57.240] So the question is, did he have to physically put $50 gold pieces in the person's hand? [01:12:57.240 --> 01:13:08.240] Or could he ledger those values in terms of $50 gold pieces? [01:13:08.240 --> 01:13:20.240] Does the government have the power to tell me what denominations of its currency I must use? [01:13:20.240 --> 01:13:24.240] And I believe that's what the case was about. [01:13:24.240 --> 01:13:28.240] The problem with $50 gold pieces is there aren't enough of them. [01:13:28.240 --> 01:13:36.240] It goes to the velocity of money and that was the advantage of fiat currencies. [01:13:36.240 --> 01:13:47.240] An example of the velocity of money is the Federal Reserve system, the factoring where a bank could issue a loan [01:13:47.240 --> 01:13:56.240] and they could issue a loan against their Federal Reserve, the funds they had in the Federal Reserve. [01:13:56.240 --> 01:14:02.240] They could loan ten times the amount they had in the Federal Reserve. [01:14:02.240 --> 01:14:12.240] What they could do is they loan that out and then when the loan is paid back, the Federal Reserve would create that money out of the thin air. [01:14:12.240 --> 01:14:20.240] And when the money was paid back, it was paid back into the thin air that it came from. [01:14:20.240 --> 01:14:30.240] It did not increase the volume of money but increased the velocity of money so you could make more transactions. [01:14:30.240 --> 01:14:36.240] We simply did not have enough gold coins or silver coins to make all these transactions. [01:14:36.240 --> 01:14:42.240] And so they went to fiat currencies because they were easier to make these transactions. [01:14:42.240 --> 01:14:54.240] And we're about to make the next step into cryptocurrencies that will give us a very stable exchange. [01:14:54.240 --> 01:15:00.240] It won't have the weaknesses of the fiat, it's just the next step up. [01:15:00.240 --> 01:15:15.240] But back to your original question, do we have to have the physical coins or can we simply denominate in those types of coins? [01:15:15.240 --> 01:15:18.240] I don't have the answer to that. [01:15:18.240 --> 01:15:19.240] Okay. [01:15:19.240 --> 01:15:22.240] But it's really a good question. [01:15:22.240 --> 01:15:30.240] Okay, I'll look up that Nevada case and see if I get any hints from that. [01:15:30.240 --> 01:15:31.240] It might tell us. [01:15:31.240 --> 01:15:43.240] I am sure that if we try to do that, if we start doing that, the legislature, if we get any momentum there, will very quickly find a way to close that hole. [01:15:43.240 --> 01:15:53.240] If they haven't already, the Nevada case may have demonstrated the hole and the good chance they've already closed it. [01:15:53.240 --> 01:15:55.240] They definitely want to keep us trapped. [01:15:55.240 --> 01:16:03.240] This is in their currency and that's why so many people got so excited about the cryptocurrencies. [01:16:03.240 --> 01:16:08.240] The dollar is merely a unit of exchange. [01:16:08.240 --> 01:16:12.240] Well, that's what a cryptocurrency is. [01:16:12.240 --> 01:16:16.240] The fiat currency is a representation of value. [01:16:16.240 --> 01:16:24.240] Well, they make them in paper, but cryptocurrencies make them in bits and bytes and either. [01:16:24.240 --> 01:16:27.240] But at the end of the day, the same thing. [01:16:27.240 --> 01:16:35.240] And that would take the currency out of the hands of government, which we badly need. [01:16:35.240 --> 01:16:39.240] We need government not to control the value of currency. [01:16:39.240 --> 01:16:47.240] Hang on, about to go to break. Randy Kelton, we'll have our radio on this the fifth day of April, 2018. [01:16:47.240 --> 01:16:51.240] A call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:51.240 --> 01:16:56.240] We do have an empty space on the board, so if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [01:16:56.240 --> 01:17:00.240] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.240 --> 01:17:05.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.240 --> 01:17:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method. [01:17:09.240 --> 01:17:14.240] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:17:14.240 --> 01:17:20.240] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.240 --> 01:17:24.240] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:17:24.240 --> 01:17:26.240] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:17:26.240 --> 01:17:29.240] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:17:29.240 --> 01:17:33.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:17:33.240 --> 01:17:38.240] The Michael Maris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.240 --> 01:17:40.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.240 --> 01:17:49.240] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner or email Michael Maris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.240 --> 01:17:57.240] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.240 --> 01:17:59.240] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.240 --> 01:18:04.240] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.240 --> 01:18:08.240] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. [01:18:08.240 --> 01:18:13.240] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.240 --> 01:18:20.240] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.240 --> 01:18:21.240] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.240 --> 01:18:23.240] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.240 --> 01:18:26.240] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.240 --> 01:18:29.240] You can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.240 --> 01:18:31.240] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.240 --> 01:18:34.240] Now go to LogosRegulatework.com. [01:18:34.240 --> 01:18:37.240] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.240 --> 01:18:43.240] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.240 --> 01:18:44.240] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.240 --> 01:18:45.240] No. [01:18:45.240 --> 01:18:47.240] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.240 --> 01:18:48.240] No. [01:18:48.240 --> 01:18:49.240] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.240 --> 01:18:50.240] No. [01:18:50.240 --> 01:18:51.240] I mean yes. [01:18:51.240 --> 01:18:55.240] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [01:18:55.240 --> 01:18:56.240] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.240 --> 01:18:58.240] We are Logos. [01:18:58.240 --> 01:19:00.240] Happy Holidays Logos. [01:19:00.240 --> 01:19:10.240] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:10.240 --> 01:19:34.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Rural Flora Radio. On this Friday, the fifth day of [01:19:34.240 --> 01:19:41.240] April 2019 and we are talking to Larry in Arizona. [01:19:41.240 --> 01:19:42.240] Okay. [01:19:42.240 --> 01:19:49.240] Well, Larry, I think we have kind of beat that one to death. Do you have anything else for [01:19:49.240 --> 01:19:50.240] us? [01:19:50.240 --> 01:19:59.240] No, that's it, Randy. I was just curious on your opinion on that and I need to tell people [01:19:59.240 --> 01:20:02.240] to start donating to your beer fund. [01:20:02.240 --> 01:20:07.240] Good, good. My beer fund is a mess. Okay, thank you. [01:20:07.240 --> 01:20:14.240] Randy, I was really disappointed looking through the statistics of the fundraiser today. Less [01:20:14.240 --> 01:20:18.240] than 60 people sponsored that fundraiser. [01:20:18.240 --> 01:20:28.240] Yes, I know. This has been a tough year. For the most part, the hosts have supported this [01:20:28.240 --> 01:20:34.240] and I've put between five and ten grand a year in it for the last ten years. But it's [01:20:34.240 --> 01:20:38.240] been worth it. It's been of great value to me. [01:20:38.240 --> 01:20:44.240] It's a great value to the public too, but they need to support it. [01:20:44.240 --> 01:20:52.240] Well, mostly we provide a service to people who don't have funds. They come to us a lot [01:20:52.240 --> 01:21:01.240] of the times as a remedy of last resort. So most of the people that use us are struggling [01:21:01.240 --> 01:21:11.240] and we understand that part. It would be nice if we got more assistance, but we do what [01:21:11.240 --> 01:21:18.240] we can. If it was easy, someone else would have already done it. [01:21:18.240 --> 01:21:19.240] That's true. [01:21:19.240 --> 01:21:23.240] And I do have to give Deborah credits. She really struggles to keep this thing going. [01:21:23.240 --> 01:21:28.240] I don't know if I would have had the heart. I would have probably given up a long time [01:21:28.240 --> 01:21:32.240] ago, but Deborah really hangs in there. [01:21:32.240 --> 01:21:36.240] Okay, thank you, Larry. [01:21:36.240 --> 01:21:41.240] Now we're going to go to Danny in Tennessee. Hello, Danny. [01:21:41.240 --> 01:21:47.240] Let me touch. We've got Robinson in Wyoming and John in New York. [01:21:47.240 --> 01:21:52.240] Right now I don't have a call screener, so we don't have someone to let you know that [01:21:52.240 --> 01:21:56.240] we see you. So I wanted everybody that's on the board to know that I see you there and [01:21:56.240 --> 01:22:02.240] we will get to you. We're going to Danny in Tennessee. What do you have for us today, Danny? [01:22:02.240 --> 01:22:08.240] Well, that's two things you might kind of like, but I know a little while back we were talking [01:22:08.240 --> 01:22:19.240] about the prohibition of taking someone to jail before they've gone before magistrates. [01:22:19.240 --> 01:22:22.240] And how that's pretty much changed. [01:22:22.240 --> 01:22:30.240] That is, in my opinion, the key to repairing this system. [01:22:30.240 --> 01:22:39.240] I'm working on right now this questionnaire to come between the accused and the public defender, [01:22:39.240 --> 01:22:46.240] but that's not the real solution. The real solution is the statutory requirement to take [01:22:46.240 --> 01:22:54.240] directly to the nearest magistrate. That is, if there is a key to fix this problem, that's it. [01:22:54.240 --> 01:23:05.240] So yeah, I'm interested in that. Okay, well I've been thinking about this a bit and how to expand it [01:23:05.240 --> 01:23:15.240] to cover a lot all at one time. And so my thoughts on it were that, well, when I had the experience [01:23:15.240 --> 01:23:26.240] I was taken off and then like the next morning or something taken over to the magistrate or we had a video hearing, [01:23:26.240 --> 01:23:32.240] but also there was at least a dozen other people who were in the same situation. [01:23:32.240 --> 01:23:40.240] And one thing I'm wondering about is something like a duty that say an official has that he's aware [01:23:40.240 --> 01:23:50.240] that some other official is doing something really wrong. What kind of duty do they have to see about getting it corrected? [01:23:50.240 --> 01:23:56.240] They have the same duty every citizen has to report crime. [01:23:56.240 --> 01:24:02.240] And if a public official fails to perform a duty he's required to perform, that's crime. [01:24:02.240 --> 01:24:12.240] Tennessee has magistrates, as I understand, that aren't necessarily judges. [01:24:12.240 --> 01:24:17.240] They're appointed for this specific purpose. [01:24:17.240 --> 01:24:27.240] I haven't looked into this in Tennessee and I'm glad that you brought this up because I did start a fight with Weekly County. [01:24:27.240 --> 01:24:35.240] That's the county I'm in. I went down to the court and went in and watched the proceedings a little bit. [01:24:35.240 --> 01:24:42.240] And I called the bailiff over and asked him if he had accommodation for the hearing impaired and he said he didn't. [01:24:42.240 --> 01:24:49.240] So a little while later I called him over and asked him if he had an appearance docket for this hearing. [01:24:49.240 --> 01:24:55.240] It was a morning cattle call. And he said he didn't. He couldn't get me one. [01:24:55.240 --> 01:24:59.240] So I went out to go to the clerk and see if I could find one. [01:24:59.240 --> 01:25:07.240] And then when I came back the bailiff, a different bailiff outside said you can't go in there with that cell phone. [01:25:07.240 --> 01:25:13.240] I said, well, but I need that cell phone because I was going to use it to record the proceedings. [01:25:13.240 --> 01:25:19.240] Oh, you can't record the proceedings. I said, sure, I can. I just turn on the cell phone and pointed out I'm going to record everything. [01:25:19.240 --> 01:25:23.240] No, no, no, the judge said you cannot record the proceedings. [01:25:23.240 --> 01:25:27.240] I said, you know that's illegal. He said, yes, I know that. [01:25:27.240 --> 01:25:31.240] But these are the judge's orders. [01:25:31.240 --> 01:25:35.240] So I said, OK, can you hold this for me? No, I can't. You'll just put it in the car. [01:25:35.240 --> 01:25:41.240] So I'll go put it in the car and when I come back, they've got the courtroom locked. [01:25:41.240 --> 01:25:45.240] He said, we had to lock the courtroom. You can't go in there. [01:25:45.240 --> 01:25:49.240] I said, no, no, no. That's public court. You can't lock it. Unlock it. Let me in there. No, I can't let you in there. [01:25:49.240 --> 01:25:59.240] The judge said so. So two weeks later, I come back and I filed two criminal charges against the bailiff. [01:25:59.240 --> 01:26:05.240] One for denying me in my right to record public officials in the performance of their duty. [01:26:05.240 --> 01:26:10.240] And the other one denying me a public court. [01:26:10.240 --> 01:26:18.240] I didn't charge the judge because I don't really know if the judge actually had anything to do with that. [01:26:18.240 --> 01:26:23.240] The judge didn't deny me access to the court. The bailiff did. [01:26:23.240 --> 01:26:31.240] So the way the bailiff gets out from under it is he gets the opportunity to throw the judge under the bus. [01:26:31.240 --> 01:26:41.240] But in your bringing this issue up, I think I will go down Monday [01:26:41.240 --> 01:26:53.240] and ask to observe the morning preliminary hearing by the magistrates. [01:26:53.240 --> 01:26:58.240] And if they do it by video, they're probably going to... [01:26:58.240 --> 01:27:03.240] They may let me watch the video and that would be okay. [01:27:03.240 --> 01:27:12.240] If they don't do it by video and they do it in the jail, they're going to have a conniption bit when I want to observe. [01:27:12.240 --> 01:27:15.240] And that should be interesting. [01:27:15.240 --> 01:27:24.240] Danny, are you familiar with what the code says about that in Tennessee? [01:27:24.240 --> 01:27:33.240] Well, I did look it up once and I forgot exactly how it had it, but not allowed to... [01:27:33.240 --> 01:27:36.240] It says prison, but it really means a jail there. [01:27:36.240 --> 01:27:45.240] Let's say it was commit someone to prison before the magistrate. [01:27:45.240 --> 01:27:47.240] Yeah, that's what I suspected. [01:27:47.240 --> 01:27:53.240] It will probably be the same as every other state because it goes to Gerstein Pew. [01:27:53.240 --> 01:28:04.240] If they incarcerate as a matter of course and then bring the individuals to a magistrate at the convenience of the jail, [01:28:04.240 --> 01:28:08.240] then I will allege them in violation. [01:28:08.240 --> 01:28:16.240] What I told the county, I mean, when I filed the complaints, they sent me to the investigator for the district attorney [01:28:16.240 --> 01:28:24.240] and I told him that I really wasn't after these guys, that I'm using the local prosecutor as a crash dummy [01:28:24.240 --> 01:28:32.240] because I really want to go after Clarksville, whatever county that is. [01:28:32.240 --> 01:28:38.240] They're really bad boys and I want to go after them, so I want to know all the shenanigans the prosecutor is going to pull it for. [01:28:38.240 --> 01:28:41.240] I get there, so I'm using your prosecutor as a crash dummy. [01:28:41.240 --> 01:28:47.240] That wasn't true, but what I did want to do is hamstring them. [01:28:47.240 --> 01:28:57.240] I wanted them to feel like they had no way to negotiate with me because I'm using beating them up to get to some other outcome. [01:28:57.240 --> 01:29:14.240] You're bringing this up. I think Monday morning I will be down at the courthouse and request to observe these hearings, whatever they call them. [01:29:14.240 --> 01:29:22.240] I kind of bushwhacked you, Danny. You had a subject you wanted to go to. [01:29:22.240 --> 01:29:36.240] Well, it's all related to this, but it's just expanding it to the maximum because I got to see others treated the same way, put in complaints for that as well. [01:29:36.240 --> 01:29:40.240] You're always saying, make things look as bad as you can. [01:29:40.240 --> 01:29:49.240] Well, there seemed to be no purpose to this except for the personal comfort and convenience of the magistrate. [01:29:49.240 --> 01:29:55.240] Wait, wait, wait. No purpose for this. What did you mean by this? [01:29:55.240 --> 01:29:58.240] For them putting them in jail rather than going to the magistrate. [01:29:58.240 --> 01:30:00.240] Oh, okay, okay. [01:30:02.240 --> 01:30:10.240] A cup of Joe may keep your eyes open during late night study sessions, but that's not all it may be doing to your exhausted eyes. [01:30:10.240 --> 01:30:16.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright, back with some bad news about coffee and the health of your vision after this. [01:30:16.240 --> 01:30:22.240] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.240 --> 01:30:27.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.240 --> 01:30:32.240] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.240 --> 01:30:42.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.240 --> 01:30:45.240] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.240 --> 01:30:52.240] Coffee has got lots of perks. It lowers the risk of type 2 diabetes, colon cancer, gallstones, and Parkinson's disease. [01:30:52.240 --> 01:31:01.240] But a new study shows drinking too much can increase your chances for something else, glaucoma, the second leading cause of blindness. [01:31:01.240 --> 01:31:08.240] Harvard researchers looked at decades of data from tens of thousands of people and found that adults who drank three or more cups of coffee a day [01:31:08.240 --> 01:31:14.240] were a third more likely to develop glaucoma, a crippling disease that damages the optic nerve. [01:31:14.240 --> 01:31:21.240] It's apparently not the caffeine. The study found no link at all between glaucoma and other caffeinated beverages. [01:31:21.240 --> 01:31:24.240] So in that case, how about a spot of tea? [01:31:24.240 --> 01:31:29.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.240 --> 01:31:36.240] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.240 --> 01:31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.240 --> 01:31:44.240] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.240 --> 01:31:46.240] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.240 --> 01:31:49.240] And thousands of my fellow force respondents have died. [01:31:49.240 --> 01:31:50.240] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.240 --> 01:31:51.240] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.240 --> 01:31:53.240] I'm a New York City correctionalist. [01:31:53.240 --> 01:31:54.240] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.240 --> 01:31:55.240] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.240 --> 01:31:58.240] We are Americans, and we deserve the true go-to. [01:31:58.240 --> 01:32:01.240] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.240 --> 01:32:05.240] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.240 --> 01:32:08.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:08.240 --> 01:32:10.240] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.240 --> 01:32:13.240] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.240 --> 01:32:16.240] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.240 --> 01:32:18.240] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.240 --> 01:32:20.240] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.240 --> 01:32:24.240] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce [01:32:24.240 --> 01:32:26.240] and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.240 --> 01:32:29.240] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.240 --> 01:32:31.240] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.240 --> 01:32:35.240] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law. [01:32:35.240 --> 01:32:39.240] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:39.240 --> 01:32:41.240] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.240 --> 01:32:43.240] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.240 --> 01:32:45.240] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:45.240 --> 01:32:48.240] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.240 --> 01:32:51.240] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.240 --> 01:32:55.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.240 --> 01:33:03.240] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:03.240 --> 01:33:25.240] Looking for some truth? You found it, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:25.240 --> 01:33:33.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Danny in Tennessee. [01:33:33.240 --> 01:33:47.240] Okay, do you have what Tennessee law says about a preliminary hearing? [01:33:47.240 --> 01:33:58.240] Yeah, not right in front of me, but they do that, but that's after the first time before the magistrate. [01:33:58.240 --> 01:34:03.240] Have you looked at any of the code in Tennessee? [01:34:03.240 --> 01:34:08.240] I know Gerstein-Pew is the controlling case on this issue, [01:34:08.240 --> 01:34:16.240] and it does not allow for people to routinely be taken directly to jail. [01:34:16.240 --> 01:34:25.240] They're required to be taken directly to the magistrate. That was the original intent at the time of the Magna Carta. [01:34:25.240 --> 01:34:32.240] So I'll have to look at the requirements in Tennessee. [01:34:32.240 --> 01:34:44.240] Since I'm testing out Tennessee jurisprudence, I may go ahead and file against the department. [01:34:44.240 --> 01:34:51.240] I've got one particular officer I especially enjoy filing against. I call him Jack Boote McDade. [01:34:51.240 --> 01:34:56.240] He's the captain on the sheriff's department here. [01:34:56.240 --> 01:35:05.240] I'll accuse him of enforcing an illegal policy. [01:35:05.240 --> 01:35:12.240] So okay, I keep on rucking you. Where was it that you wanted to go, Danny? [01:35:12.240 --> 01:35:19.240] Oh, well, it's just expanding this to where it touches just about everybody in the county. [01:35:19.240 --> 01:35:31.240] Because you have the magistrate, well, he's aware of this, but seemingly letting it go on because, you know, it was more convenient for him. [01:35:31.240 --> 01:35:34.240] And so that gives reason to think it's happening in other cases. [01:35:34.240 --> 01:35:43.240] Well, you got the officer that did the arresting. He didn't do right. The magistrate allowed it to go on, but not bringing it up to him that he didn't do right. [01:35:43.240 --> 01:35:54.240] He took to jail. The jailer didn't do right because he accepted the person in for jail without having the papers shown he'd been before the magistrate. [01:35:54.240 --> 01:36:11.240] So he did. That gives you a reason to think that all the rest of the jailers may be involved in this kind of thing and suggest that they examine the records of the jail and those of the magistrates to see if this. [01:36:11.240 --> 01:36:22.240] And I would expect that within the period of the statute of limitations, there's hundreds, two thousandths of counts of this violation. [01:36:22.240 --> 01:36:27.240] You know, this is a problem that's consistent across the country. [01:36:27.240 --> 01:36:38.240] Every state I've looked at is violating this particular requirement in the same way. [01:36:38.240 --> 01:36:45.240] How do we fix this? [01:36:45.240 --> 01:36:56.240] Well, if I don't start with the criminal complaints against them, then trying to get them to do an investigation to see how far it's going. [01:36:56.240 --> 01:37:07.240] That's what I'm thinking. You know, I'm out here in a very small county and most everybody knows everybody. [01:37:07.240 --> 01:37:21.240] They don't have a extremely large budget. They might be a softer target than going after one of the larger jurisdictions. [01:37:21.240 --> 01:37:28.240] And since I'm in the town that is the county seat, they're nice and close and easy to get to. [01:37:28.240 --> 01:37:36.240] But the other problem is they know where I live. [01:37:36.240 --> 01:37:45.240] But that's not really a concern for me. Once you go after them, they want nothing to do with you. [01:37:45.240 --> 01:37:50.240] So I'm kind of, you know, I really don't have time for it because I've got so much other going. [01:37:50.240 --> 01:37:57.240] But I've been here a year and a half and it's time that I took something on. [01:37:57.240 --> 01:38:09.240] I haven't gotten a legal fight with anybody in such a long time. I feel like I'm losing my edge. [01:38:09.240 --> 01:38:15.240] So I'll look at getting a list of all the magistrates. [01:38:15.240 --> 01:38:30.240] I'll put in an information request to the Sheriff's Department and the city for a list of all the magistrates in the county. [01:38:30.240 --> 01:38:40.240] And they're probably going to give me a response saying that we don't have those records and we're not required to create them. [01:38:40.240 --> 01:38:48.240] And that will establish that not only do they not follow the law by taking someone to the nearest magistrate, [01:38:48.240 --> 01:38:53.240] they don't even know who the magistrates are. [01:38:53.240 --> 01:39:03.240] And then file against the jailer. I'm looking for the most innocent party. [01:39:03.240 --> 01:39:11.240] Head of the intake section of the jail. [01:39:11.240 --> 01:39:16.240] And this will probably be this captain. [01:39:16.240 --> 01:39:22.240] He's the one that asked me if I was a sovereign citizen. [01:39:22.240 --> 01:39:27.240] And I told him, you know, that's a contradiction of terms. [01:39:27.240 --> 01:39:32.240] And then he shut up and then I asked him if he was a Jack Booty thug. [01:39:32.240 --> 01:39:35.240] I didn't answer. [01:39:35.240 --> 01:39:42.240] I was surprised. I thought sure he would say absolutely. [01:39:42.240 --> 01:39:55.240] So you're in Jackson and actually the federal court is in Jackson and I expect to have a case that I'll file in that federal court before long. [01:39:55.240 --> 01:40:02.240] Okay. What have you seen in Tennessee? How long does it generally take them to? [01:40:02.240 --> 01:40:07.240] Do they always get them there the next morning? [01:40:07.240 --> 01:40:14.240] Well, if it's a weekday, if it's a Friday, I'm pretty sure hanging around until Monday morning. [01:40:14.240 --> 01:40:18.240] They don't get bonded out. [01:40:18.240 --> 01:40:30.240] To your knowledge, are there cases where a person is taken directly to a magistrate, say in a high profile case? [01:40:30.240 --> 01:40:34.240] Well, I'm not aware of any, but I'm not. [01:40:34.240 --> 01:40:42.240] Because I know in Texas, I had a friend who was doing a ride along with the Sheriff's Department. [01:40:42.240 --> 01:40:48.240] He was a bondsman and there was some reason he was doing that, but they got in a chase. [01:40:48.240 --> 01:40:56.240] They were chasing a guy who was wanted for multiple rapes and assaults. He was a really bad guy. [01:40:56.240 --> 01:41:05.240] And Jim was most impressed with their how well they handled the chase. [01:41:05.240 --> 01:41:10.240] They hurried him up onto the interstate. [01:41:10.240 --> 01:41:14.240] And once they got him on the interstate, he couldn't get off. [01:41:14.240 --> 01:41:21.240] Every exit he came to, there was a policeman sitting at the bottom of the exit until they got him where he wanted him. [01:41:21.240 --> 01:41:26.240] And then they had the exits blocked, the road blocked, and there was no where for him to go. [01:41:26.240 --> 01:41:34.240] Well, they stopped him. They pulled him out of the car and took him straight to the nearest magistrate. [01:41:34.240 --> 01:41:38.240] So that told me they knew the requirement. [01:41:38.240 --> 01:41:46.240] But since this guy was a really bad guy, they didn't want him to have any legal arguments. [01:41:46.240 --> 01:41:52.240] It was tacit admission that they knew their policy wasn't proper. [01:41:52.240 --> 01:42:00.240] When they had a case that would be highly visible, then they went straight to the magistrate and did what the law commanded them to do. [01:42:00.240 --> 01:42:06.240] I was wondering if you knew of any cases in Tennessee where they've done that. [01:42:06.240 --> 01:42:08.240] No, I'm not aware of one. [01:42:08.240 --> 01:42:17.240] Okay, that would come up tacit admission. I will look for that when I start doing my information requests. [01:42:17.240 --> 01:42:23.240] Have you read the Open Records Act in Tennessee? [01:42:23.240 --> 01:42:31.240] Well, not recently. I can't remember doing it a good long time ago, a few years back for some reason, but not recently. [01:42:31.240 --> 01:42:39.240] Do you remember if the Open Records Act in Tennessee is a criminal statute or a civil statute? [01:42:39.240 --> 01:42:42.240] No, I don't remember. [01:42:42.240 --> 01:42:50.240] Okay, I'll have to go look that back up. In Texas, the Open Records Act is a criminal statute. [01:42:50.240 --> 01:42:57.240] You know, you file with these guys and they say if you don't like our answer, you can always file suit. [01:42:57.240 --> 01:43:05.240] No, no, no, this is not civil. The violation of that act is an official misconduct class, a misdemeanor. [01:43:05.240 --> 01:43:20.240] But nobody does that and it's really difficult to get the agency to take the complaint, so I will file some information requests that are designed to not get a response. [01:43:20.240 --> 01:43:30.240] So I can take a few of those things on. I want to see if I can't take this jurisdiction and essentially wrap them up. [01:43:30.240 --> 01:43:40.240] Walk them right into all of the violations I expect that they do. I want them to know that they're being set up from the get-go. [01:43:40.240 --> 01:43:47.240] They're not going to like being set up from the get-go, so they're going to want to try to find a way to avoid that. That's what my hope is. [01:43:47.240 --> 01:43:55.240] Hang on, about to go to break. Randy Kelton, Will of Law Radio, I call it number 512-646-1984. [01:43:55.240 --> 01:44:00.240] We still have one empty spot on the board. John Robinson, I see. [01:44:00.240 --> 01:44:06.240] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.240 --> 01:44:11.240] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.240 --> 01:44:17.240] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.240 --> 01:44:25.240] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.240 --> 01:44:31.240] Logo's radio network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.240 --> 01:44:39.240] We have come to trust Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.240 --> 01:44:47.240] When you order from Logo's radio network dot com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.240 --> 01:44:51.240] As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.240 --> 01:45:00.240] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:00.240 --> 01:45:03.240] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.240 --> 01:45:14.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.240 --> 01:45:18.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.240 --> 01:45:22.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.240 --> 01:45:27.240] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.240 --> 01:45:34.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.240 --> 01:45:43.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.240 --> 01:45:52.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.240 --> 01:46:01.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EASY. [01:46:22.240 --> 01:46:35.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and just for the record, I did not run off the cliff that time. [01:46:35.240 --> 01:46:39.240] I just kind of stumbled off of it. [01:46:39.240 --> 01:46:42.240] But Deborah's going to get me anyway. [01:46:42.240 --> 01:46:46.240] Okay, Danny, you're a false, you should have told me. [01:46:46.240 --> 01:46:49.240] Well, I didn't hear it that time either. [01:46:49.240 --> 01:46:55.240] Okay, so what are we going to do, Danny? [01:46:55.240 --> 01:47:07.240] How are we going to give these guys good reason to do it right? [01:47:07.240 --> 01:47:24.240] Not sure altogether. You always talk about take the state to the feds, so if enough of them are just covering for each other, then you've got a big conspiracy that you can't straighten up within the state. [01:47:24.240 --> 01:47:28.240] And that would be a nice one to do. [01:47:28.240 --> 01:47:42.240] Well, you have everybody following policy and everybody doing what they believe they're paid to do and what they've been trained to do. [01:47:42.240 --> 01:47:57.240] Everybody thinks they're doing things right, and all of a sudden everybody's going to the fed with criminal charges against them. [01:47:57.240 --> 01:48:03.240] And it may be a lot easier in a smaller community this way. [01:48:03.240 --> 01:48:09.240] They don't have quite as deep pockets. [01:48:09.240 --> 01:48:16.240] They'll hurt their budget a lot more, so they'll be more prone to pay more attention. [01:48:16.240 --> 01:48:27.240] And if we could get a ruling in this smaller jurisdiction, it would have application in the larger jurisdictions. [01:48:27.240 --> 01:48:30.240] So you want to take this on, Danny? [01:48:30.240 --> 01:48:35.240] Well, yeah, I got something that I need to take care of. [01:48:35.240 --> 01:48:38.240] Anyway, this is just part of it. [01:48:38.240 --> 01:48:49.240] One thing also, from a little experience several years ago, I was a girl I knew who got put in jail through a JT, [01:48:49.240 --> 01:48:58.240] and so I started off to do habeas corpus and go on some courts the first day for that, didn't do anything. [01:48:58.240 --> 01:49:03.240] I think that might have been a Monday then the next day. [01:49:03.240 --> 01:49:13.240] That night, well, I had heard people talking about using the risk management office. [01:49:13.240 --> 01:49:27.240] So I took all the issues I had in the habeas corpus, rewrote it, set it up as a notice to the county's risk management office [01:49:27.240 --> 01:49:35.240] of a potential claim. Since I wasn't the one making the claim, I'm just letting them know that there's this potential claim out here [01:49:35.240 --> 01:49:42.240] with continuing and growing liability from her being in jail that way. [01:49:42.240 --> 01:49:48.240] And I didn't get right immediately to whoever needed to see it, but somebody took it. [01:49:48.240 --> 01:49:58.240] And so I then went back to the habeas corpus running around the town there, but she was supposed to get out on Saturday. [01:49:58.240 --> 01:50:02.240] I had gone by to see her on Friday, and she wasn't there. [01:50:02.240 --> 01:50:10.240] Then when I got a hold over again, she said that just all of a sudden they wanted to get her out. [01:50:10.240 --> 01:50:14.240] And once they decided that they wanted her out, they couldn't get her out fast enough. [01:50:14.240 --> 01:50:19.240] Put your shoes on, put your shoes on, get your clothes on, get your clothes on, go move, go move. [01:50:19.240 --> 01:50:26.240] And so it didn't save her but a day, but it showed that something happened once she got the right person. [01:50:26.240 --> 01:50:33.240] I guess it was no hurry because they're usually thinking the claim coming in to them is something that's already been done [01:50:33.240 --> 01:50:38.240] and finished and not continuing to accumulate liability. [01:50:38.240 --> 01:50:42.240] But that's another thing too, maybe. [01:50:42.240 --> 01:50:52.240] That's a very good idea, and that may be exactly the way to force them to fix their policy. [01:50:52.240 --> 01:51:01.240] While you may not be able to get them to do it directly, the same thing we do with bar grievances and professional conduct complaints [01:51:01.240 --> 01:51:11.240] is we have a third-party exert pressure in generally the insurance companies, and risk management is exactly what that is. [01:51:11.240 --> 01:51:13.240] That's a very good idea. [01:51:13.240 --> 01:51:26.240] So as I prepare to set up the county here, I may start researching risk management Monday. [01:51:26.240 --> 01:51:33.240] The worst thing you can do for them is come at them indirectly. [01:51:33.240 --> 01:51:39.240] And if I go down and start asking questions about risk management, [01:51:39.240 --> 01:51:44.240] they're going to wonder why I'm doing that, and I'm going to tell them, [01:51:44.240 --> 01:51:47.240] well, I expect to have some risk management issues. [01:51:47.240 --> 01:51:55.240] And when I get to those issues, I want to make sure that I know all the right people and all the right places to go to. [01:51:55.240 --> 01:51:59.240] And they're going to be wondering, what's this guy up to? [01:51:59.240 --> 01:52:02.240] And that's exactly what I want. [01:52:02.240 --> 01:52:05.240] I want them on pins and needles. [01:52:05.240 --> 01:52:12.240] I already filed criminal charges against them and one of their deputies for doing what the judge told them to. [01:52:12.240 --> 01:52:23.240] And I set up the prosecutor by telling him I'm just using him as a crash dummy so that I can get prepared to go for somebody else. [01:52:23.240 --> 01:52:34.240] So this is going to put them in a position to where they got somebody who doesn't care about them, somebody they can't negotiate with, can't deal with. [01:52:34.240 --> 01:52:38.240] So it should make me a lot more dangerous to them. [01:52:38.240 --> 01:52:42.240] And I want to see what they do. [01:52:42.240 --> 01:52:51.240] I'm hoping I can get them to demonstrate proper procedure. [01:52:51.240 --> 01:52:56.240] Do the right thing to get me off their case. [01:52:56.240 --> 01:53:08.240] If they do the right thing or the wrong thing, it doesn't matter. At the end of the day, if they do the wrong thing, then I get to demonstrate an ongoing problem throughout the state. [01:53:08.240 --> 01:53:14.240] If they do the right thing, I get to demonstrate how it ought to be done. [01:53:14.240 --> 01:53:18.240] So it doesn't matter how they do it, it works in my favor. [01:53:18.240 --> 01:53:23.240] We need more people setting up their jurisdictions this way. [01:53:23.240 --> 01:53:28.240] The one you best fight to have is the one you picked. [01:53:28.240 --> 01:53:32.240] You picked the fight, they got no shot at you. [01:53:32.240 --> 01:53:36.240] You know, once I picked this fight, I've already filed these criminal charges. [01:53:36.240 --> 01:53:45.240] If I have a sheriff's deputy just frown at me, I'll charge him with retaliation immediately. [01:53:45.240 --> 01:53:54.240] And they won't know how to deal with you. The only way they can deal with me is scrupulously adhere to the law. [01:53:54.240 --> 01:53:57.240] But they don't know how to do that. [01:53:57.240 --> 01:54:01.240] So maybe we can do them some practice. [01:54:01.240 --> 01:54:11.240] Okay Danny, did you have anything else you wanted to address or is there something in this you wanted to address that we didn't get to? [01:54:11.240 --> 01:54:18.240] Well, there's actually quite a few things, but I can let it go and maybe call later. [01:54:18.240 --> 01:54:24.240] Okay, well if we run low on calls toward evening, I'll keep track on when the call board is full. [01:54:24.240 --> 01:54:29.240] So if you want to call back in, if we run low, I'll let you know and we can address it. [01:54:29.240 --> 01:54:31.240] Okay. [01:54:31.240 --> 01:54:33.240] Okay, thank you Danny. [01:54:33.240 --> 01:54:40.240] Okay, now we're going to Robinson in Wyoming. Hello Robinson. [01:54:40.240 --> 01:54:44.240] Robinson in Washington. Hey, Randy. [01:54:44.240 --> 01:54:46.240] Wait, wait, you're in Washington? [01:54:46.240 --> 01:54:48.240] Yeah, yeah, this is great. [01:54:48.240 --> 01:54:54.240] Okay, somebody must type this wrong in the database because I've got Wyoming. [01:54:54.240 --> 01:54:57.240] Okay, Robinson in Washington. [01:54:57.240 --> 01:55:05.240] Yeah, hey, I don't really have any particular issues that I want to talk about, but I do get some questions because I don't understand a few things. [01:55:05.240 --> 01:55:10.240] I wrote a few questions down here for you to get right to the point. [01:55:10.240 --> 01:55:18.240] So my first question for you is, I don't understand placing the elements when I'm placing the elements on one. [01:55:18.240 --> 01:55:21.240] Okay, this is really important. [01:55:21.240 --> 01:55:27.240] I've kind of got a strategy of how to go about developing a case. [01:55:27.240 --> 01:55:28.240] Okay. [01:55:28.240 --> 01:55:30.240] And it's not the way you would expect. [01:55:30.240 --> 01:55:40.240] You would think that you want to go through all the facts and figure out what happened and then figure out what claims to make and then write up the claims. [01:55:40.240 --> 01:55:43.240] Well, it's not really like that. [01:55:43.240 --> 01:55:59.240] You want to put the facts together and look at the kinds of claims that they tend to point to and then go find a pattern jury charge for that kind of claim. [01:55:59.240 --> 01:56:11.240] In criminal, all of your claims are defined in terms of criminal statutes. [01:56:11.240 --> 01:56:25.240] In civil, all of your claims are made in terms of identified causes of action or torts. [01:56:25.240 --> 01:56:39.240] So you want to go find a pattern jury charge for the criminal accusation, the tort, or the cause of action. [01:56:39.240 --> 01:56:41.240] What's the pattern? [01:56:41.240 --> 01:56:42.240] Go ahead. [01:56:42.240 --> 01:56:44.240] What would I look for that pattern jury charge? [01:56:44.240 --> 01:56:47.240] I go down to the law library all the time. [01:56:47.240 --> 01:56:49.240] They have a section. [01:56:49.240 --> 01:56:52.240] They'll have a book on pattern jury charges. [01:56:52.240 --> 01:56:53.240] Oh, really? [01:56:53.240 --> 01:56:54.240] Okay. [01:56:54.240 --> 01:56:56.240] These are all laid out. [01:56:56.240 --> 01:57:02.240] They tell the judge that the charge to the jury is really important. [01:57:02.240 --> 01:57:08.240] In the bigger cases, they really fight about what goes in the charge to the jury. [01:57:08.240 --> 01:57:12.240] So the courts have developed a set of pattern jury charges. [01:57:12.240 --> 01:57:20.240] If the judge uses a pattern jury charge, neither side can object to it because it's already been well adjudicated. [01:57:20.240 --> 01:57:29.240] And what a pattern jury charge says is, this is what you must find. [01:57:29.240 --> 01:57:36.240] And it will step through each of the elements of the claim. [01:57:36.240 --> 01:57:39.240] Say fraud by non-disclosure. [01:57:39.240 --> 01:57:41.240] Fraud not by non-disclosure. [01:57:41.240 --> 01:57:47.240] There must have been a disclosure by the defendant. [01:57:47.240 --> 01:57:57.240] The defendant must have disclosed information that was not readily available or equally available to the plaintiff. [01:57:57.240 --> 01:58:07.240] The defendant must have misrepresented the truth of that disclosure to the plaintiff. [01:58:07.240 --> 01:58:18.240] The defendant must have intended that the plaintiff take the disclosure as true. [01:58:18.240 --> 01:58:25.240] The plaintiff must have taken the disclosure as true. [01:58:25.240 --> 01:58:27.240] And the disclosure must have been false. [01:58:27.240 --> 01:58:33.240] And the plaintiff must have been harmed thereby. [01:58:33.240 --> 01:58:38.240] I'm sorry, that wasn't non-disclosure, that was fraud. [01:58:38.240 --> 01:58:50.240] By non-disclosure, the defendant must have failed to disclose an important piece of information that the plaintiff did not have. [01:58:50.240 --> 01:58:58.240] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.240 --> 01:59:06.240] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.240 --> 01:59:09.240] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:09.240 --> 01:59:18.240] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.240 --> 01:59:27.240] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:27.240 --> 01:59:33.240] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.240 --> 01:59:43.240] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.240 --> 01:59:47.240] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.240 --> 01:59:57.240] That's freestudybible.com.