[00:00.000 --> 00:05.640] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star of Lowdown, providing your [00:05.640 --> 00:12.920] deli bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside [00:12.920 --> 00:21.360] scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.360 --> 00:29.200] Markets for Wazeva 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 [00:29.200 --> 00:37.000] an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil Texas Crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent Crude $61.98 a [00:37.000 --> 00:45.920] barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum [00:45.920 --> 00:51.760] $10.10 and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [00:51.760 --> 01:00.640] To history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications [01:00.640 --> 01:06.160] get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament. [01:06.160 --> 01:09.680] To date in history. [01:09.680 --> 01:14.360] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal [01:14.360 --> 01:19.080] court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered [01:19.080 --> 01:20.080] to vote. [01:20.080 --> 01:24.240] The lawsuit was compiled after an 11-month long investigation by the Office of the Texas [01:24.240 --> 01:28.760] Secretary of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify [01:28.760 --> 01:33.480] non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining a garbage license. [01:33.480 --> 01:37.160] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:37.160 --> 01:41.200] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.200 --> 01:45.760] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.760 --> 01:50.960] Like around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.960 --> 01:55.360] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.360 --> 01:57.200] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.200 --> 02:01.360] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.360 --> 02:09.120] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.120 --> 02:14.520] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.520 --> 02:17.040] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:17.040 --> 02:20.760] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.760 --> 02:24.360] An x-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.360 --> 02:30.560] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.560 --> 02:35.320] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.320 --> 02:40.280] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.280 --> 02:44.720] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.720 --> 02:47.560] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.560 --> 02:51.560] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.560 --> 03:19.560] This was Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:19.560 --> 03:30.540] Thank you for watching. [03:30.540 --> 03:32.540] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.540 --> 03:34.540] Bad boys, bad boys [03:34.540 --> 03:35.540] Whatcha gonna do? [03:35.540 --> 03:38.540] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.540 --> 03:41.540] When you were eight and your head's bad-tree [03:41.540 --> 03:43.540] You go to school and learn to golden rules [03:43.540 --> 03:46.540] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.540 --> 03:49.540] If you get hot and your muscles cool [03:49.540 --> 03:50.540] Bad boys, bad boys [03:50.540 --> 03:52.540] Whatcha gonna do? [03:52.540 --> 03:54.540] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.540 --> 03:56.540] Bad boys, bad boys [03:56.540 --> 03:57.540] Whatcha gonna do? [04:27.540 --> 04:33.540] Bad boys, bad boys, what's he gonna do, what's he gonna do when they come for you? [04:33.540 --> 04:40.340] Okay, Howdy Howdy, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue LeBlanc Radio on this, the second day [04:40.340 --> 04:51.260] of May 2019, and start off with a little update, I've been out in West Texas with the rattlesnakes [04:51.260 --> 04:57.380] and got someone out there that's, one of the rattlesnakes is a bank president, he wants [04:57.380 --> 05:04.900] me to pull some of his fangs, and I had some questions, maybe someone can answer some questions [05:04.900 --> 05:12.140] for me, I came across something I've never encountered before, this particular guy owns [05:12.140 --> 05:21.420] a large number of properties, and he's dealing with a banker who has somehow grouped all [05:21.420 --> 05:31.980] of these properties into a number of different notes, I've got one note with 20 properties [05:31.980 --> 05:39.860] in it as collateral, and I've got several of these notes, and I haven't went through all [05:39.860 --> 05:45.340] of them yet, but I suspect all of them will encompass all of the properties in all of [05:45.340 --> 05:50.220] these separate notes, so he's got multiple notes, all of them with multiple properties [05:50.220 --> 05:57.860] so that every property is put up as collateral for multiple notes, this is an incredible [05:57.860 --> 06:08.500] mess, but the question I had is, there is no warranty deed in the record, so the guy [06:08.500 --> 06:22.740] bought these properties, and he gave a deed of trust to the lender, but there is a warranty [06:22.740 --> 06:31.300] deed in the record, so what I'm trying to figure out is, what is the harm, it's one [06:31.300 --> 06:36.380] thing to say that something's wrong, that somebody didn't do something right, or what [06:36.380 --> 06:42.060] they were supposed to do, essentially it is the title company that files these documents [06:42.060 --> 06:49.740] in the record, that's part of their job, part of what they get paid for, but I couldn't [06:49.740 --> 06:57.420] figure out, with everything else it's such a mess, it seems as though this was deliberate, [06:57.420 --> 07:06.260] because in all my experience I've never come across a no warranty deed in the record, I [07:06.260 --> 07:13.140] was absolutely stumped, or perhaps there's one in the record and it's not possible to [07:13.140 --> 07:21.260] find, we are having troubles with these new electronic filing systems, the courts apparently [07:21.260 --> 07:30.020] don't have everything worked out, there is only one way to positively identify a piece [07:30.020 --> 07:39.900] of property, and that is meets and bounds, now there's a secondary way of identifying [07:39.900 --> 07:48.220] properties where there have been subdivisions, and that's with booking page and whatever [07:48.220 --> 07:56.820] division it comes from, and the problem is with most of these courts the only way to [07:56.820 --> 08:09.340] search for property is by an individual's name, so how do I tell if say a warranty deed [08:09.340 --> 08:17.140] has been filed in the record, I'm sorry, a mechanics lien has been filed in the record, [08:17.140 --> 08:24.340] a mechanics lien does not, the lien holder does not necessarily care about the person, [08:24.340 --> 08:33.060] they're filing a claim against the property, so you wouldn't necessarily find the person's [08:33.060 --> 08:41.860] name on that, so how would you find it, and the only way you can search is by someone's [08:41.860 --> 08:49.860] name, then you look in the record, I was a little distracted there, mom's in here sneaking [08:49.860 --> 08:58.100] up on me again, you know how moms are, I feel strange saying that at my age, but anyway [08:58.100 --> 09:07.220] I'm trying to figure out what the, you can't find these properties or documents that have [09:07.220 --> 09:13.900] been filed against a particular property, I have a friend that was in a foreclosure and [09:13.900 --> 09:25.660] I checked the record and I couldn't find a deed of trust for Chase, Chase was the original [09:25.660 --> 09:31.740] lender, and I couldn't find a deed of trust in the record, there was one, but by running [09:31.740 --> 09:40.620] his name, his first and last name, I didn't find it, and turned out they had filed it under [09:40.620 --> 09:52.140] his wife's name, so I go down to the record in good faith and I checked the record, I [09:52.140 --> 09:57.820] sold this someone a business that I'd had, and he couldn't pay for it by the way, so [09:57.820 --> 10:06.060] he authorized me to take a lien against his property, so I go down and I have the clerk, [10:06.060 --> 10:11.340] run this guy's name and give me a list of everything he found, I told the clerk I was [10:11.340 --> 10:16.900] computer intolerant and didn't understand these new fankle gadgets, could he give me [10:16.900 --> 10:24.380] a list of all of the properties that all of the documents that were filed on this particular [10:24.380 --> 10:29.300] property and he asked me, you owned it, and I told him, and he ran it by that name and [10:29.300 --> 10:38.860] gave me this list, so I didn't see a deed of trust from Chase Bank, okay, so I filed [10:38.860 --> 10:50.500] a mechanic's lien, and then a deed by Chase Bank shows up, so who has a problem here? [10:50.500 --> 10:56.300] Chase Bank filed their lien in the record, but they filed it by the wife's name and [10:56.300 --> 11:02.660] this guy owned the property before he got married, so it wasn't community property, [11:02.660 --> 11:08.940] but even if they had filed it another way, there were some other documents I found later [11:08.940 --> 11:18.300] that were filed under his name with a middle initial, so I ran the first and last name [11:18.300 --> 11:27.020] and I didn't get all of the records with that first and last name, I only got the records [11:27.020 --> 11:35.900] that exactly matched the name I put in there, so whose problem is this? [11:35.900 --> 11:40.740] When Chase came back and foreclosed on the property, now I'm going to sue Chase for [11:40.740 --> 11:46.220] the property, at least for the value of the mechanic's lien, and they're going to say, [11:46.220 --> 11:56.140] oh, we had our claim filed, I'm going to say so, your problem, not my problem, my problem [11:56.140 --> 12:04.220] is I looked in the record, I even had the clerk look in the record and whatever you [12:04.220 --> 12:11.060] found, whatever you filed was apparently not properly filed because the clerk couldn't [12:11.060 --> 12:19.220] find it, and under 13.001, Texas property code, any claim against real property, not [12:19.220 --> 12:24.100] properly acknowledged or proven and filed in the record, the boy is to the holder, so [12:24.100 --> 12:28.980] I don't care what you got, it's for it, and they're going to say, well, we filed a [12:28.980 --> 12:34.900] cracker, we'll take that up with the clerk, you don't get to take that up with me, so [12:34.900 --> 12:43.860] that was one issue, the real issue I'm looking at is no warranty deed, so this guy purchased [12:43.860 --> 12:54.460] the property and he invested money into those properties, and he has a debt charged against [12:54.460 --> 13:04.300] him for those properties, but he doesn't own those properties, however, there's no one [13:04.300 --> 13:15.300] else making a claim against him, so he hasn't, to this point, been harmed, so do you get [13:15.300 --> 13:24.220] to make a claim of exposure to harm, I would think we would, anybody has any ideas? [13:24.220 --> 13:28.820] Call me in, let's talk about this, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue de la Radio, [13:28.820 --> 13:35.460] our call in number is 512-646-1984, we do have a caller on the board, so we've got the [13:35.460 --> 13:42.220] call, call the board's open, we'll have them open all night, we've got Ted in California [13:42.220 --> 13:47.020] and we want to bring him on because we want to be, we want to hear about what's going [13:47.020 --> 13:50.660] on, Ted, what is up with your case? [13:50.660 --> 13:58.700] Good afternoon, Randy, well, yesterday, at the end of the day, the Sixth District Court [13:58.700 --> 14:12.900] of Appeals denied, summarily denied my writ of prohibition or writ of mandate, giving [14:12.900 --> 14:20.780] no, nothing else further, just denied, I'm pretty upset about it, that was filed back [14:20.780 --> 14:32.420] on March 29, so it took them over a month, and that filing was the writ of prohibition, [14:32.420 --> 14:40.580] then set one and set two of exhibits, and then I did an affidavit sworn off in front [14:40.580 --> 14:48.100] of a notary, and I didn't hold anything back, I told him that this was happening to me for [14:48.100 --> 14:55.700] suing Judge Socrates Peter Mnuchin, that everything happened to me after I sued him [14:55.700 --> 15:05.420] in federal court, and then I thought about it, and because they hadn't acted about a [15:05.420 --> 15:13.420] week and a half into it, I wrote a letter to the chief executive officer of the court, [15:13.420 --> 15:19.900] which is the clerk of the Sixth District Court of Appeals, I wrote that letter addressed [15:19.900 --> 15:31.140] to her, Susan Miller, and my mom's dog's barking in the background, I apologize about [15:31.140 --> 15:32.140] that. [15:32.140 --> 15:41.420] Anyway, I wrote that letter to her to inform her that in that filing, that writ of prohibition [15:41.420 --> 15:50.860] was evidence of a crime which was in the exhibits, including the extortion offer from the deputy [15:50.860 --> 15:57.980] district attorney, when he emailed me saying that if I dropped the civil lawsuit for my [15:57.980 --> 16:03.300] house, they would go easy on me on the criminal charge, he actually put that in writing. [16:03.300 --> 16:09.820] So I'm telling him in this letter, the clerk of the court, chief executive officer, that [16:09.820 --> 16:18.980] evidence in my petition of a crime, and there was other evidence, and testimony. [16:18.980 --> 16:27.820] Now I hand delivered that letter, and again, I took an extra copy to be file stamped so [16:27.820 --> 16:33.620] that I had proof that I dropped it off, rather than send it in certified mail, but I never [16:33.620 --> 16:37.940] expected them to file that into the case, and they did. [16:37.940 --> 16:38.940] So we went on. [16:38.940 --> 16:42.660] Wait, hang on, hang on, about to go to break. [16:42.660 --> 16:50.500] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, rule of law radio, I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [16:50.500 --> 16:55.220] Give us a call, we'll have the call phones, call boards open all night, we'll be right [16:55.220 --> 17:01.620] back. [17:01.620 --> 17:04.380] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic similar. [17:04.380 --> 17:08.060] In today's America, we live in a us against them society, and if we the people are ever [17:08.060 --> 17:12.180] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.180 --> 17:15.220] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [17:15.220 --> 17:19.460] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [17:19.460 --> 17:23.340] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.340 --> 17:24.740] our rights through due process. [17:24.740 --> 17:28.660] Former sheriff's deputy, A. Craig, in conjunction with rule of law radio, has put together the [17:28.660 --> 17:32.420] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [17:32.420 --> 17:34.820] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [17:34.820 --> 17:38.820] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [17:38.820 --> 17:40.140] ordering your copy today. [17:40.140 --> 17:43.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [17:43.500 --> 17:47.940] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [17:47.940 --> 17:50.220] documents and other useful resource material. [17:50.220 --> 17:54.220] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [17:54.220 --> 18:00.860] Through your copy today and together, we can have free society we all want and deserve. [18:00.860 --> 18:06.180] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with song calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:06.180 --> 18:09.620] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. 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[18:50.100 --> 18:57.860] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.860 --> 19:05.340] To learn how to stop debt collectors now, you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:05.340 --> 19:21.140] from LogosRadioNetworks.com. [19:21.140 --> 19:39.020] The Logos Radio Network is the solution for how to stop debt collectors out of your credit [19:39.020 --> 19:40.020] reports. [19:40.020 --> 19:57.900] The Logos Radio Network is the solution for how to stop debt collectors out of your credit [19:57.900 --> 19:58.900] reports. [19:58.900 --> 20:16.780] The Logos Radio Network is the solution for how to stop debt collectors out of your credit [20:16.780 --> 20:17.780] reports. [20:17.780 --> 20:33.540] Okay. [20:33.540 --> 20:34.540] We are back. [20:34.540 --> 20:42.820] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, and we have our special guest on, Mr. Kit Butt Bratt Fountain [20:42.820 --> 20:55.620] from North Texas who just last week worked over Rockwall, I'm going to call him Rockford. [20:55.620 --> 20:57.620] The Rockwall files. [20:57.620 --> 21:03.020] Yeah, Rockwall has been a problem. [21:03.020 --> 21:05.540] Scott Richardson had a big fight with Rockwall. [21:05.540 --> 21:08.340] I think he might have softened them up a little bit for you. [21:08.340 --> 21:11.540] Matter of fact, you were down there at one of the hearings. [21:11.540 --> 21:12.980] I was. [21:12.980 --> 21:20.140] I got to see them treating him ways that they never should. [21:20.140 --> 21:23.540] And it looks like they didn't get away with that with you. [21:23.540 --> 21:24.540] That's good. [21:24.540 --> 21:25.540] Okay. [21:25.540 --> 21:27.540] Let's go back to Ted. [21:27.540 --> 21:30.900] Let me unmute him. [21:30.900 --> 21:34.020] Okay, Ted. [21:34.020 --> 21:38.500] So you gave that to the clerk. [21:38.500 --> 21:43.380] What about the appellate court justices or judges? [21:43.380 --> 21:52.180] Well, the reason I gave it to the clerk, that is the chief operating officer of the court [21:52.180 --> 21:59.140] and my belief is that position is above the justices. [21:59.140 --> 22:02.020] No, not exactly. [22:02.020 --> 22:03.300] She's separate from them. [22:03.300 --> 22:04.300] She's elected. [22:04.300 --> 22:05.300] Oh, wait. [22:05.300 --> 22:06.300] This is court of appeals. [22:06.300 --> 22:08.300] I'm not sure how that works. [22:08.300 --> 22:15.180] The court of appeals clerk is not elected, at least not that I know of. [22:15.180 --> 22:24.100] However, however, if they filed it in the record, then now you need to file a request [22:24.100 --> 22:32.900] for a hearing setting on your allegations for a preliminary hearing on your allegations [22:32.900 --> 22:40.220] against these actors. [22:40.220 --> 22:42.540] You've given them notice of crime. [22:42.540 --> 22:47.060] You invoke their duty as a magistrate. [22:47.060 --> 22:50.820] Now you demand that they hold a preliminary hearing. [22:50.820 --> 22:59.860] Okay, I'm going to put that in, but what they did, Randy, is I've got a little experience [22:59.860 --> 23:00.860] up there. [23:00.860 --> 23:06.980] The third time I filed something up there, I did a habeas up there as well. [23:06.980 --> 23:12.340] Those got dismissed within seven days or so. [23:12.340 --> 23:21.940] This went on for 32 days and they just dismissed it yesterday, but here's the part that's intriguing. [23:21.940 --> 23:28.740] I just about an hour ago was able to get on a computer and look through it and I'm checking [23:28.740 --> 23:32.060] in the various categories, the docket and so on. [23:32.060 --> 23:41.100] What I found is, this was just decided yesterday and it was denied and the record, there's [23:41.100 --> 23:50.900] a notation, record purged and the file is sent to the state repository. [23:50.900 --> 23:54.940] I've never seen that before. [23:54.940 --> 23:56.340] Purged. [23:56.340 --> 24:00.580] What does purged mean in this context? [24:00.580 --> 24:08.180] I would say my understanding of it is that if you go down there to the Court, 6th District [24:08.180 --> 24:13.940] Court of Appeals and ask to look at the file, they're going to say they don't have it. [24:13.940 --> 24:15.260] It's gone. [24:15.260 --> 24:22.420] That's what I would have thought, but if you look in the trial court, you should still [24:22.420 --> 24:25.740] find it. [24:25.740 --> 24:33.540] All that's going to be in the trial court is notice of appeal that I put in. [24:33.540 --> 24:42.620] Check and see because if you file these documents, if they're not publicly available, someone [24:42.620 --> 24:52.620] is secreting these government documents and absent some specific authority. [24:52.620 --> 25:05.340] When the Court of Appeals doesn't have standing to secret public documents, especially when [25:05.340 --> 25:12.620] they contain evidence of crimes, especially, and if that's the case, if you can't find [25:12.620 --> 25:18.940] these documents that contain that evidence of crime, then you file with the Supreme against [25:18.940 --> 25:23.100] the Court of Appeals. [25:23.100 --> 25:33.940] Well that's, I intend on taking this up and that's really why I called you is that now [25:33.940 --> 25:36.940] I can go to the State Supreme Court. [25:36.940 --> 25:45.900] However, if I go to the State Supreme Court with this, then at that point, I don't think [25:45.900 --> 25:48.100] I can take it to the federal court. [25:48.100 --> 25:49.100] I think... [25:49.100 --> 25:50.580] Of course you can. [25:50.580 --> 25:53.900] Well, they'll argue a stopper. [25:53.900 --> 25:57.060] They don't care what they argue. [25:57.060 --> 26:08.020] If the State of California engages in a set of ongoing predicate acts toward denial of [26:08.020 --> 26:16.940] due process, that goes right to the Fed under RICO. [26:16.940 --> 26:19.340] There's no collateral stopper here. [26:19.340 --> 26:22.100] There's no Rooker-Felman here. [26:22.100 --> 26:23.100] This is criminal. [26:23.100 --> 26:28.460] You're accusing individuals of crimes and you have all these judges acting in concert [26:28.460 --> 26:34.460] and collusion. [26:34.460 --> 26:37.660] Rooker-Felman doesn't go to criminal. [26:37.660 --> 26:39.300] That's the other thing I want to stay around. [26:39.300 --> 26:45.660] It's becoming more and more obvious that California is... [26:45.660 --> 26:50.500] At every level, there's no remedy. [26:50.500 --> 26:55.220] There's no justice and they're covering for their... [26:55.220 --> 27:04.100] Keep in mind who the head of the executive branch of the federal government is. [27:04.100 --> 27:08.780] He is not happy with California. [27:08.780 --> 27:11.580] True. [27:11.580 --> 27:19.260] So soon you will have exercised all of your state remedies to no avail. [27:19.260 --> 27:25.740] Now you get to drag California into the Fed. [27:25.740 --> 27:34.940] You filed criminal charges with the Court of Appeals and they hit them, they secreted them. [27:34.940 --> 27:42.580] You hope they don't show up in the appellate record. [27:42.580 --> 27:50.060] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do because this is [27:50.060 --> 27:51.460] what it gives you. [27:51.460 --> 27:54.100] Now you get to step up. [27:54.100 --> 28:01.620] What they'll begin to see is you're stepping up past all of them. [28:01.620 --> 28:07.180] In this, we go to the Fed and we start working the Fed routine and we have a whole routine [28:07.180 --> 28:08.180] to work on the Fed. [28:08.180 --> 28:11.900] So we've got tools in the Fed. [28:11.900 --> 28:20.660] We first take criminal charges against the California Supreme Court to the local special [28:20.660 --> 28:25.580] agent in charge of the FBI. [28:25.580 --> 28:36.180] No chance he is not going to be a happy camper or maybe we don't understand the politics. [28:36.180 --> 28:44.420] So the thing about politics in this regard, if the politics is against you in California [28:44.420 --> 28:52.300] and the Fed in California, that will work in your favor in the Fed in D.C. [28:52.300 --> 28:56.340] If they're not against you in California, that will work in your favor anyway. [28:56.340 --> 29:01.620] So it doesn't matter what they do. [29:01.620 --> 29:07.460] And we have a president that's not crazy about the incredibly blue state of California. [29:07.460 --> 29:10.820] He might want to make some changes. [29:10.820 --> 29:18.460] Well, this is an excellent reason to do so. [29:18.460 --> 29:26.820] I mean, when you look at all that's been done here, it's unbelievable and for everyone [29:26.820 --> 29:34.060] out there, they've charged me with recording a quit claim deed. [29:34.060 --> 29:39.460] And they're charging that as PC-115, California statute. [29:39.460 --> 29:43.460] And they're saying that that's the filing of a false document. [29:43.460 --> 29:48.780] And it's just a legal impossibility. [29:48.780 --> 29:56.780] So that's what makes this just a very good example of why there needs to be changes. [29:56.780 --> 30:03.140] This is the one thing I keep. [30:03.140 --> 30:07.780] This performance enhancing drug shows up on drug tests, but it hasn't been banned from [30:07.780 --> 30:08.780] professional sports. [30:08.780 --> 30:12.740] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll bet you're taking this drug too. [30:12.740 --> 30:15.780] I'll be back to tell you what it is. [30:15.780 --> 30:17.380] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.380 --> 30:20.980] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.980 --> 30:25.780] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.780 --> 30:27.220] So protect your rights. [30:27.220 --> 30:30.780] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.780 --> 30:33.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.500 --> 30:37.820] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:37.820 --> 30:41.340] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.340 --> 30:43.700] Get over with StartPage. [30:43.700 --> 30:47.500] Caffeine, can it make you a better athlete? [30:47.500 --> 30:50.540] The verdict is as muddy as a cup of Joe. [30:50.540 --> 30:54.700] Researchers studying cyclists, runners, and rowers found caffeine does boost performance [30:54.700 --> 30:56.660] for short-term power events. [30:56.660 --> 31:00.340] Tennis players accuracy and speed improved and they had more endurance to get through [31:00.340 --> 31:01.340] the match. [31:01.340 --> 31:06.820] But caffeine doesn't help in all sports and the correct dose varies widely between individuals. [31:06.820 --> 31:07.820] Caffeine contributes to dehydration. [31:07.820 --> 31:13.940] Plus it can give you the jitters and nervousness is the last thing you want in a competition. [31:13.940 --> 31:18.300] Athletes quickly build up a tolerance to caffeine and its addictive, as anyone who's ever had [31:18.300 --> 31:20.380] a caffeine headache can tell you. [31:20.380 --> 31:30.820] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.820 --> 31:31.820] I lost my son. [31:31.820 --> 31:32.820] My uncle. [31:32.820 --> 31:33.820] My uncle. [31:33.820 --> 31:34.820] My son. [31:34.820 --> 31:35.820] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.820 --> 31:39.060] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.060 --> 31:43.220] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.220 --> 31:49.060] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.060 --> 31:52.820] and engineers looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.820 --> 31:53.820] Bring justice to my son. [31:53.820 --> 31:54.820] My uncle. [31:54.820 --> 31:55.820] My nephew. [31:55.820 --> 31:56.820] My son. [31:56.820 --> 31:57.820] Go to BuildingWhat.org. [31:57.820 --> 32:00.820] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.820 --> 32:03.380] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.380 --> 32:06.340] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.340 --> 32:10.020] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [32:10.020 --> 32:11.020] them to pay for it. [32:11.020 --> 32:14.620] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.620 --> 32:18.420] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:18.420 --> 32:21.180] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.180 --> 32:25.460] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [32:25.460 --> 32:26.780] zero complaints. [32:26.780 --> 32:30.980] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [32:30.980 --> 32:32.220] the first time. [32:32.220 --> 32:40.940] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and [32:40.940 --> 32:45.540] we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.540 --> 32:50.660] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.660 --> 32:56.660] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:56.660 --> 32:58.940] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.940 --> 33:05.940] We're not actually kidding about chemtrails. [33:28.940 --> 33:35.940] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [33:58.940 --> 34:05.940] That's 512-992-8745. [34:28.940 --> 34:35.940] That's 512-992-8745. [34:58.940 --> 35:11.060] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rural Law Radio, had a little extended [35:11.060 --> 35:12.220] break here. [35:12.220 --> 35:20.260] We're talking to Ted in California, and I was in the break trying to blame Brett for [35:20.260 --> 35:24.900] me running off the cliff, and they weren't going for that. [35:24.900 --> 35:29.460] Okay, go ahead, Scott. [35:29.460 --> 35:30.780] Scott, look at it. [35:30.780 --> 35:32.260] Scott just called in. [35:32.260 --> 35:34.340] Ted, I'm brain dead. [35:34.340 --> 35:36.660] That's all right. [35:36.660 --> 35:47.140] Randy, I want to remind you that Judge Socrates Peter Mnuchin's wife is Justice Mnuchin in [35:47.140 --> 35:49.940] the Sixth District Court of Appeals. [35:49.940 --> 35:53.060] She is not named as one of the judges. [35:53.060 --> 35:56.060] How about now? [35:56.060 --> 35:58.060] Ted, are you there? [35:58.060 --> 36:00.060] Yeah, I'm here. [36:00.060 --> 36:03.060] It sounds like you got too far from the mic. [36:03.060 --> 36:06.060] Well, hang on a second. [36:06.060 --> 36:08.060] How about now? [36:08.060 --> 36:11.060] Not much better. [36:11.060 --> 36:13.060] Now? [36:13.060 --> 36:16.060] You're kind of soft, but we can hear you. [36:16.060 --> 36:24.060] I want to remind you that Judge Mnuchin's wife is on the Sixth District Court of Appeals. [36:24.060 --> 36:27.060] Okay, you're still fading in and out. [36:27.060 --> 36:32.060] It's like you turn your face. [36:32.060 --> 36:37.060] Okay, well, go ahead. [36:37.060 --> 36:50.060] I'm saying that Judge Mnuchin's wife is Justice Mnuchin and she's on the Sixth District Court of Appeals. [36:50.060 --> 37:03.060] Hmm, did Judge Mnuchin on the Court of Appeals, I don't know if that would disqualify him or not. [37:03.060 --> 37:06.060] Him or either one of them. [37:06.060 --> 37:08.060] That's an interesting question. [37:08.060 --> 37:16.060] No, it's just, it's just that this is part of the problem we have in California. [37:16.060 --> 37:19.060] Is it, it's a club. [37:19.060 --> 37:30.060] Okay, and this is just, use your case and use what they're doing to build an argument that this is a club, [37:30.060 --> 37:37.060] this is a systematic denial of due process on the part of all of them. [37:37.060 --> 37:47.060] In order to deny anyone due process when he brings issues of wrongdoing by public officials. [37:47.060 --> 37:51.060] Yeah, or another way of saying it is we cannot get any relief. [37:51.060 --> 37:59.060] Exactly, and this is exactly why you have access to the federal courts. [37:59.060 --> 38:09.060] And this is building toward a good case to get to the Supreme. [38:09.060 --> 38:19.060] Okay, so the main case, the criminal case, I'm due back in court on May 22nd. [38:19.060 --> 38:26.060] I have a motion that's set for the May 28th. [38:26.060 --> 38:30.060] That's kind of where things are at right now. I just wanted to give you that update. [38:30.060 --> 38:38.060] I, like I said, I've had two other cases or two other filings up there at the court of appeal, [38:38.060 --> 38:42.060] and they did not purge the file, like my habeas. [38:42.060 --> 38:47.060] Okay, they didn't purge the file after they denied it. [38:47.060 --> 38:58.060] And so I want to be, look, I only brought up the email evidence, but I submitted other evidence as well. [38:58.060 --> 39:05.060] I wrote an affidavit and swore it off in front of a notary, and I put it all in there. [39:05.060 --> 39:10.060] And I claimed RICO, and I named them all. [39:10.060 --> 39:13.060] And that's why they're trying to bury this. [39:13.060 --> 39:23.060] Okay. [39:23.060 --> 39:28.060] Did I lose her? [39:28.060 --> 39:32.060] Oh, somehow I got muted on Skype. My apologies. [39:32.060 --> 39:35.060] Okay. [39:35.060 --> 39:38.060] So that's all I had. [39:38.060 --> 39:41.060] Go ahead, Ted. [39:41.060 --> 39:45.060] Did you get that where I, about the affidavit and how much damning? [39:45.060 --> 39:48.060] I had a bunch of testimony in there. [39:48.060 --> 39:59.060] Okay. Before you go too far, check the records of the court of appeals and see if all of your documents are still there. [39:59.060 --> 40:05.060] Or give them a week or so, because if they're going to purge them, that may take them a little bit. [40:05.060 --> 40:12.060] Give them a week or so and then check to see if all these documents are there. [40:12.060 --> 40:27.060] And if they're not there, then even though the courts ordered them to be purged, you file criminally against the courts for purging them anyway. [40:27.060 --> 40:36.060] And that will cause as to why they can hide criminal accusations against public officials. [40:36.060 --> 40:42.060] I've never heard of mandamus case being purged. [40:42.060 --> 40:51.060] And it's probably only because it has criminal accusations in it. They're trying to hide the criminal accusations. [40:51.060 --> 41:00.060] The next step is the, I'm going to back off and say, okay, they denied this. [41:00.060 --> 41:04.060] Now what court do I go to with it next? [41:04.060 --> 41:13.060] Appeal the mandamus to the court of, to the Supreme and include the criminal accusations. [41:13.060 --> 41:25.060] I'll all be in there and at this point it's really easy. The way I see this is I just go ahead and put a caption page on to the California Supreme Court. [41:25.060 --> 41:36.060] And I'll drive it up to the Supreme. They're in San Francisco and I'll package it up and I'm going to drive it up there and file it. [41:36.060 --> 41:53.060] Now you give them the opportunity and make a separate set of complaints against the appellate court judges for shielding all of the other people you filed against from prosecution. [41:53.060 --> 42:00.060] By failing to perform their duty as a magistrate and hold a preliminary hearing. [42:00.060 --> 42:05.060] And put on bank. [42:05.060 --> 42:07.060] To get all of them. [42:07.060 --> 42:20.060] Name each appellate court justice a judge individually in a criminal accusation, verified accusation and filed out with the Supreme. [42:20.060 --> 42:28.060] Because the Supreme Court justices are magistrates themselves. [42:28.060 --> 42:38.060] And when they don't act on it, then you get to go to the SEC FBI with criminal accusations against all of them. [42:38.060 --> 42:40.060] And you don't know. [42:40.060 --> 42:44.060] You don't know what the politics is in the in the FBI right now. [42:44.060 --> 42:48.060] They all work for Trump. [42:48.060 --> 42:54.060] And everybody in California knows they work for Trump. [42:54.060 --> 42:59.060] California is essentially blues. [42:59.060 --> 43:01.060] And blue is after Trump. [43:01.060 --> 43:08.060] Trump may want to shot at some blue boys. [43:08.060 --> 43:11.060] Okay. [43:11.060 --> 43:12.060] So, well, thank you. [43:12.060 --> 43:13.060] Thank you. [43:13.060 --> 43:15.060] That's that's my update. [43:15.060 --> 43:16.060] Okay. [43:16.060 --> 43:18.060] Thank you. [43:18.060 --> 43:19.060] Okay. [43:19.060 --> 43:27.060] Now we're going to go to Dan in Texas, but we'll go to Dan after we come back from break. [43:27.060 --> 43:29.060] Brett's on. [43:29.060 --> 43:33.060] We wanted to talk a little bit about Ted. [43:33.060 --> 43:42.060] Ted and Brett have been through similar situations except Ted is much, much more serious than Brett's. [43:42.060 --> 43:46.060] But they both hung in there and they're still hanging in there. [43:46.060 --> 43:52.060] And it'll be interesting to see where Ted's goes to once he really starts to land it on. [43:52.060 --> 43:53.060] Hang on. [43:53.060 --> 44:01.060] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, we'll be right back. 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[45:28.060 --> 45:34.060] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.060 --> 45:43.060] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.060 --> 45:52.060] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.060 --> 46:02.060] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.060 --> 46:32.060] If you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what your lawyer should be doing. [46:32.060 --> 46:42.060] If you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what your lawyer should be doing. [46:42.060 --> 46:56.060] Welcome to Spongebob. [46:56.060 --> 46:57.060] Okay, we are back. [46:57.060 --> 47:03.060] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio here with our special guest, Brett Fountain. [47:03.060 --> 47:05.060] Hello there. [47:05.060 --> 47:06.060] Hello there. [47:06.060 --> 47:08.060] Now we're going to Dan in... [47:08.060 --> 47:09.060] Oh, wait a minute. [47:09.060 --> 47:10.060] Hold on, Dan. [47:10.060 --> 47:18.060] Brett, did you have anything you wanted to address before we go back to all the college? [47:18.060 --> 47:23.060] Well, I thought it was great that, as you mentioned, that Ted was sticking it out. [47:23.060 --> 47:34.060] So many people give up and without being able to speak to the particulars of his case and California and all that, but he is showing tenacity. [47:34.060 --> 47:37.060] And I think that's something a lot of people are missing. [47:37.060 --> 47:40.060] And a lot of people don't... [47:40.060 --> 47:42.060] And we have other things that are happening. [47:42.060 --> 47:50.060] Ted was put in a position to where he either gave up or go to jail. [47:50.060 --> 47:53.060] And I guess he didn't have anything to do either. [47:53.060 --> 48:06.060] And I hate for the idea that everybody listening would get the idea that if you're not doing what Ted and Brett are doing, then you're somehow failing. [48:06.060 --> 48:08.060] I guess that's not the case. [48:08.060 --> 48:11.060] Not everybody's in a position to where they can do this. [48:11.060 --> 48:17.060] Actually, Brett was certainly not in a position where he could do this easily. [48:17.060 --> 48:20.060] This was very difficult for him. [48:20.060 --> 48:22.060] Very extreme cost. [48:22.060 --> 48:26.060] But he had to because they were trying to put him in jail. [48:26.060 --> 48:28.060] And Ted is similar. [48:28.060 --> 48:30.060] They were trying to put him in jail. [48:30.060 --> 48:33.060] And most people run in there and make a deal. [48:33.060 --> 48:41.060] But every once in a while you come across somebody who's willing to fight, who's willing to take the risk and do whatever it takes. [48:41.060 --> 48:48.060] And this is what I do this show for, is looking for those people who actually can do this. [48:48.060 --> 48:50.060] Because not everybody can. [48:50.060 --> 48:59.060] If you've got three kids, two car payments, and all sorts of responsibilities that you just can't get around. [48:59.060 --> 49:07.060] And you don't have the fight in you to do this. [49:07.060 --> 49:11.060] Don't feel like you've let anyone down because you have not. [49:11.060 --> 49:18.060] The fact that this is a Thursday evening you could be watching TV right now instead of listening to the show. [49:18.060 --> 49:20.060] This means you're potentially one of us. [49:20.060 --> 49:28.060] And we appreciate all of you and don't expect everybody to take on this kind of fight. [49:28.060 --> 49:32.060] And if we can get 2%, we can change everything. [49:32.060 --> 49:34.060] That's all it'll take. [49:34.060 --> 49:37.060] Okay, let's go to Dan in Texas. [49:37.060 --> 49:44.060] Okay Dan, what do you have for us today? [49:44.060 --> 49:49.060] Well, oh, I guess we can hear you better if I unmute you. [49:49.060 --> 49:50.060] Oh, there we go. [49:50.060 --> 49:53.060] Okay Dan, now I can hear you better. [49:53.060 --> 50:02.060] Yeah, I was calling about my ticket that I found that paperwork on and we've been having heck together. [50:02.060 --> 50:08.060] Yeah, I've been traveling out in West Texas and half the time I don't have phone out there. [50:08.060 --> 50:10.060] You know, they got rednecks out there. [50:10.060 --> 50:13.060] No, I've seen some of them. I'm from out there. [50:13.060 --> 50:17.060] Oh, you know, rednecks and rattlesnakes. [50:17.060 --> 50:18.060] Yes, sir. [50:18.060 --> 50:25.060] Yeah, well, our friend, the lawn boy, a friend of ours, he told me you were very busy. [50:25.060 --> 50:27.060] He saw it firsthand. [50:27.060 --> 50:37.060] But anyway, the one I was wondering, Randy, number one, you said I needed to file one of those documents against that cop. [50:37.060 --> 50:40.060] And I need to know which one and where to file it. [50:40.060 --> 50:43.060] Oh, T-close complaint. [50:43.060 --> 50:50.060] There's one in the traffic ticket site downloads one. [50:50.060 --> 50:52.060] Yeah. [50:52.060 --> 50:58.060] So take that one and file it with the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. [50:58.060 --> 51:00.060] We read that down. [51:00.060 --> 51:03.060] It has the address on the document. [51:03.060 --> 51:08.060] Okay. And what's it called again? [51:08.060 --> 51:11.060] It's called a T-close complaint. [51:11.060 --> 51:21.060] I don't remember what the, I think the title of it, it has T-close, Texas Commission on Law Enforcement on the top of the heading. [51:21.060 --> 51:25.060] Okay, I'll look through and find it. [51:25.060 --> 51:28.060] I'll do that. [51:28.060 --> 51:33.060] You know, I was telling you about it the other day, they sent four pages. [51:33.060 --> 51:41.060] I don't have it. I thought I'd have it overnight, but it hadn't come in the mail because I'm moving my address change, but they sent it to me. [51:41.060 --> 51:48.060] They sent four pages back, you know, that they didn't like the spacing on it and they didn't like the form of it and all that stuff. [51:48.060 --> 51:52.060] And I was just wondering what your thoughts were on that, what to do next on that. [51:52.060 --> 52:00.060] I'd have to see, was it, if it wasn't single spaced, was it double or one and a half? [52:00.060 --> 52:02.060] Oh, wait a minute. Were these my documents? [52:02.060 --> 52:04.060] They were your documents, yeah. [52:04.060 --> 52:07.060] Oh, file complaint against them. [52:07.060 --> 52:12.060] That should get mandamus. [52:12.060 --> 52:17.060] Okay. Well, I'll have to get it and I will get it to you so you can read it. [52:17.060 --> 52:20.060] Hold on. Let me take a step back. [52:20.060 --> 52:32.060] First thing you need to do, if they send it back with a complaint, then they will have to specify what they're not happy with. [52:32.060 --> 52:34.060] Okay. [52:34.060 --> 52:40.060] And then you ask for the court rules that support that claim. [52:40.060 --> 52:42.060] Yeah. [52:42.060 --> 52:53.060] So what, what they might be complaining about is that the quotations are in single space. [52:53.060 --> 53:02.060] And that's done so that the court can easily tell the difference between the narrative and the quotations. [53:02.060 --> 53:03.060] Yeah. [53:03.060 --> 53:10.060] And you notice the court that every court in the state has accepted documents in this format. [53:10.060 --> 53:15.060] Yeah. All the way up to the Supreme. So what is your problem? [53:15.060 --> 53:23.060] You claim, oh, how do we do this? What do we claim against them? [53:23.060 --> 53:28.060] Well, for denying proper documents. [53:28.060 --> 53:35.060] It sounds like that could, that could go into shielding from prosecution because they know that's where this is going. [53:35.060 --> 53:40.060] You can't do that unless you actually have the accusation in there. [53:40.060 --> 53:58.060] But if I'm trying to adjudicate my case and they deny me access to the court for a reason that is frivolous, Dan, this should certainly get a judicial conduct complaint. [53:58.060 --> 54:02.060] A little bit about the judicial conduct complaints. [54:02.060 --> 54:14.060] The municipal and justice of the peace judges believe that the state commission on judicial conduct only punishes them. [54:14.060 --> 54:27.060] That they don't punish county and district court judges, but they use inferior court judges, JPs and municipal court judges as sacrificial lambs. [54:27.060 --> 54:28.060] Yeah. [54:28.060 --> 54:31.060] And I think they're, I think they're right. They do. [54:31.060 --> 54:35.060] These lower courts are especially concerned about that. [54:35.060 --> 54:36.060] Yeah. [54:36.060 --> 54:53.060] So accusing the judge of denying you access to the court, you might charge the judge with criminally for denying you due process, official oppression. [54:53.060 --> 54:55.060] Okay. [54:55.060 --> 55:05.060] You know, maybe he can support his position. Well, let him give him an opportunity to support in front of grand jury, your peers. [55:05.060 --> 55:06.060] Mm hmm. [55:06.060 --> 55:11.060] And, but we can't say much until we've seen what their complaint is. [55:11.060 --> 55:12.060] Yeah. [55:12.060 --> 55:17.060] I hope I get that tomorrow and I will get it to you one way or another so you can look at it. [55:17.060 --> 55:22.060] But I think their biggest problem is, you know, I went in there the first time I went. [55:22.060 --> 55:30.060] I told them I couldn't plead. So they said, well, because you can't please let you see the judge and he'll set up a pretrial hearing. [55:30.060 --> 55:34.060] Well, they said, we will let you know when that's going to be. [55:34.060 --> 55:38.060] Well, then they send this out. They still haven't said a pretrial hearing. [55:38.060 --> 55:46.060] I think their biggest problem is, is that 119 pages they don't want to enter. [55:46.060 --> 55:50.060] That was, that is exactly the idea. [55:50.060 --> 55:54.060] I noticed Brett Chuckles on that. You got to comment, Brett. [55:54.060 --> 55:57.060] You've been there yourself. [55:57.060 --> 56:01.060] Yeah, I've seen where they don't, I don't have anything to say. That's for sure. [56:01.060 --> 56:07.060] They can't rebut any of it and they can't bring up any, any law of their own. [56:07.060 --> 56:11.060] So what are they going to do? Let's postpone this. Let's put this off to them. [56:11.060 --> 56:14.060] Let's have this other judge deal with it. [56:14.060 --> 56:22.060] Kick and yell and scream like a cage full of monkeys, I think. That's what they do. [56:22.060 --> 56:31.060] Well, when you start pushing the criminal charges against them, and the whole purpose of that initial filing from the traffic ticket website, [56:31.060 --> 56:36.060] is to get them to do the kind of, pull the kind of shenanigans they're pulling with you. [56:36.060 --> 56:42.060] They're raising objections that are not substantive. [56:42.060 --> 56:46.060] They're objections to form rather than to substance. [56:46.060 --> 56:55.060] And they probably did that as a dodge so that they had more time to answer. [56:55.060 --> 57:02.060] It's not only they got 30 days and you should, after the 30 days from the time you filed this, [57:02.060 --> 57:09.060] you should file a motion to dismiss or a motion for summary judgment. [57:09.060 --> 57:17.060] Well, I had to go to court when they said they would set up a pre-trial hearing on the 11th of April. [57:17.060 --> 57:21.060] And it's coming up on 30 days right now. [57:21.060 --> 57:24.060] Okay, you filed them on the 11th of April. [57:24.060 --> 57:29.060] Yeah, 11th of May is my birthday and that's 30 days. [57:29.060 --> 57:35.060] Okay, then on the 31st day, file a motion for summary judgment. [57:35.060 --> 57:48.060] Send me an email and ask me for the case law concerning failure to answer assertions in the live pleadings. [57:48.060 --> 57:49.060] Okay. [57:49.060 --> 57:58.060] That's a failure to deny allegations in the live pleadings is judicial admission. [57:58.060 --> 58:05.060] And it's got another set of case law that says once something is judicially admitted, it cannot be argued in court. [58:05.060 --> 58:08.060] So their failure to answer goes to judicial admission. [58:08.060 --> 58:15.060] You also, did you also file the discovery? [58:15.060 --> 58:18.060] I filed everything that was your favorite one. [58:18.060 --> 58:21.060] Okay, you have a brave emotion in there. [58:21.060 --> 58:27.060] And under 39 points. [58:27.060 --> 58:30.060] One, two, Brett. [58:30.060 --> 58:32.060] Michael Morton. [58:32.060 --> 58:35.060] Michael Morton at 39.14. [58:35.060 --> 58:37.060] Yeah, 39.14. [58:37.060 --> 58:48.060] Tell them about the section in there of how long the prosecutor has to get that discovery. [58:48.060 --> 58:50.060] How long he has. [58:50.060 --> 58:58.060] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.060 --> 59:06.060] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:06.060 --> 59:09.060] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.060 --> 59:18.060] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.060 --> 59:28.060] 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. [59:28.060 --> 59:33.060] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.060 --> 59:44.060] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.060 --> 59:48.060] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.060 --> 59:53.060] That's freestudybible.com. [59:53.060 --> 01:00:01.060] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:01.060 --> 01:00:09.060] The following newsflash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing the deli bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:09.060 --> 01:00:21.060] History, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:21.060 --> 01:00:32.060] Markets for Wednesday, the 6th of February, 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, [01:00:32.060 --> 01:00:40.060] oil Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, [01:00:40.060 --> 01:00:54.060] Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum $103.10, and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:54.060 --> 01:01:02.060] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications get the right to vote when the [01:01:02.060 --> 01:01:06.060] Representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament. [01:01:06.060 --> 01:01:14.060] Today in History, and recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court [01:01:14.060 --> 01:01:20.060] stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. [01:01:20.060 --> 01:01:26.060] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State and the Texas Department of [01:01:26.060 --> 01:01:33.060] Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining age arbitrage license. [01:01:33.060 --> 01:01:37.060] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:01:37.060 --> 01:01:43.060] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not, in fact, belonging to those who were [01:01:43.060 --> 01:01:50.060] non-citizens and registered. Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.060 --> 01:01:56.060] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. [01:01:56.060 --> 01:02:03.060] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment regarding this list [01:02:03.060 --> 01:02:06.060] and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:06.060 --> 01:02:16.060] 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. [01:02:16.060 --> 01:02:20.060] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:20.060 --> 01:02:28.060] 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. [01:02:28.060 --> 01:02:37.060] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, South Texas, [01:02:37.060 --> 01:02:44.060] concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel [01:02:44.060 --> 01:02:51.060] from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [01:02:51.060 --> 01:02:58.060] This is Ruth Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:22.060 --> 01:03:31.060] We are now at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel, which is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:03:31.060 --> 01:03:41.060] The Corpus Christi Omni Hotel is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:03:41.060 --> 01:03:51.060] The Corpus Christi Omni Hotel is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:03:51.060 --> 01:04:01.060] The Corpus Christi Omni Hotel is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:04:01.060 --> 01:04:11.060] The Corpus Christi Omni Hotel is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:04:11.060 --> 01:04:21.060] The Corpus Christi Omni Hotel is located in the heart of the Texas Organic Farmers Association. [01:04:21.060 --> 01:04:31.060] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens here with our special guest, Brett Fountain, and we're talking to Dan in Texas. [01:04:31.060 --> 01:04:37.060] Okay, Dan of 20 days. [01:04:37.060 --> 01:04:42.060] You got a brain emotion in there and it asks for all kind of stuff. [01:04:42.060 --> 01:04:47.060] And you never give fair warning. [01:04:47.060 --> 01:04:57.060] But according to Michael Morton Act, the prosecutor has to produce this discovery 20 days before trial. [01:04:57.060 --> 01:05:09.060] So if they set up a trial date and it gets to the 19th day before trial, you file criminally against the prosecutor for failing to provide discovery. [01:05:09.060 --> 01:05:15.060] You should have seen the look on the prosecutor's face in Highland Park. [01:05:15.060 --> 01:05:21.060] When I told the judge I wanted him to arrest the prosecutor for not producing discovery. [01:05:21.060 --> 01:05:26.060] Oh, that was so good. [01:05:26.060 --> 01:05:30.060] We got Scott down here. [01:05:30.060 --> 01:05:35.060] You were there when I did that. [01:05:35.060 --> 01:05:37.060] Excuse me. [01:05:37.060 --> 01:05:41.060] Scott, are you there? [01:05:41.060 --> 01:05:43.060] I guess Scott went to sleep. [01:05:43.060 --> 01:05:55.060] I think the first thing that should have been some indication of what they were up to when they didn't immediately set a pre-trial hearing. [01:05:55.060 --> 01:05:59.060] They knew when they could set it when I was standing there. [01:05:59.060 --> 01:06:08.060] When they set the first hearing date, they said they're going to set an arraignment. [01:06:08.060 --> 01:06:13.060] Well, 26, 26.01. [01:06:13.060 --> 01:06:18.060] Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:06:18.060 --> 01:06:20.060] 26.01. [01:06:20.060 --> 01:06:24.060] Oh, two says an arraignment. [01:06:24.060 --> 01:06:34.060] An arraignment is held for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking a plea. [01:06:34.060 --> 01:06:36.060] That's 26.02. [01:06:36.060 --> 01:06:39.060] 26.01. [01:06:39.060 --> 01:06:50.060] An arraignment may be held in the matter of a felony or misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [01:06:50.060 --> 01:06:55.060] What part of that is hard to understand? [01:06:55.060 --> 01:06:57.060] Right. [01:06:57.060 --> 01:07:10.060] So why on earth, Brett, would they go to that link to exclude a classy mystery? [01:07:10.060 --> 01:07:12.060] It's pretty clear, isn't it? [01:07:12.060 --> 01:07:22.060] And we also see in 26.03, we see that the arraignment can't take place until two days after the indictment is served. [01:07:22.060 --> 01:07:23.060] Wait a second. [01:07:23.060 --> 01:07:26.060] The indictment, that comes from a grand jury. [01:07:26.060 --> 01:07:27.060] Exactly. [01:07:27.060 --> 01:07:34.060] And, well, the Constitution requires indictment on everything. [01:07:34.060 --> 01:07:42.060] And they just statutorily eliminated it for misdemeanors. [01:07:42.060 --> 01:07:52.060] And I have a research set, but it sounds like that provision, that legislative provision, is unconstitutional. [01:07:52.060 --> 01:07:53.060] It is. [01:07:53.060 --> 01:08:01.060] And it used to be, as a part of the Code of Criminal Procedure, it used to be in 4501. [01:08:01.060 --> 01:08:03.060] And it got repealed. [01:08:03.060 --> 01:08:05.060] It was unconstitutional. [01:08:05.060 --> 01:08:09.060] And in 1999, our legislature fixed that problem for us. [01:08:09.060 --> 01:08:14.060] It was a little loophole that was set up for parking tickets. [01:08:14.060 --> 01:08:19.060] And the legislature just saw that and they took care of that. [01:08:19.060 --> 01:08:22.060] They repealed the whole thing. [01:08:22.060 --> 01:08:23.060] The whole thing. [01:08:23.060 --> 01:08:25.060] What did it say? [01:08:25.060 --> 01:08:44.060] It said that you could have a, if it were a misdemeanor, and if it were, if it were a misdemeanor, and if it were fine only, and if it were in a municipal court, and I'm not sure if it said justice court. [01:08:44.060 --> 01:08:48.060] No, it said corporation court in the repealed text, corporation court. [01:08:48.060 --> 01:08:49.060] Okay. [01:08:49.060 --> 01:08:54.060] And that the complaint can be the charging instrument. [01:08:54.060 --> 01:09:03.060] So then that would tend to disagree with all the rest of the law that says that you need an indictment or an information. [01:09:03.060 --> 01:09:06.060] And you're saying they repealed that? [01:09:06.060 --> 01:09:07.060] Yes. [01:09:07.060 --> 01:09:14.060] Two decades ago. [01:09:14.060 --> 01:09:17.060] Yeah, this is good. [01:09:17.060 --> 01:09:19.060] Two decades ago. [01:09:19.060 --> 01:09:25.060] Sounds like I just need to get you that paperwork so we can see what they're doing and go from there, I guess. [01:09:25.060 --> 01:09:26.060] Yeah. [01:09:26.060 --> 01:09:27.060] Give me that. [01:09:27.060 --> 01:09:30.060] I need to see that before we can really know what's going on. [01:09:30.060 --> 01:09:31.060] But this sounds good. [01:09:31.060 --> 01:09:39.060] It sounds like they're, they're trying to do some kind of maneuver to avoid having to respond to these documents. [01:09:39.060 --> 01:09:54.060] And the way you do it is whenever they do something that you believe is improper, you're essentially, as far as due process is concerned, you ignore it. [01:09:54.060 --> 01:09:57.060] They have 30 days to respond. [01:09:57.060 --> 01:10:07.060] And this objection to the form of the document, you consider it non responsive. [01:10:07.060 --> 01:10:22.060] And just go ahead and make your file a summary judgment because you have assertions in there that they don't have authority to enforce the code and whether they do or not, if they don't respond becomes irrelevant. [01:10:22.060 --> 01:10:29.060] Because if they don't respond, they give judicial admission that what you said was true. [01:10:29.060 --> 01:10:36.060] And even if it's a bull face lie, the court is now bound to treat it as if it is true. [01:10:36.060 --> 01:10:41.060] And they are stopped from arguing that it's not true. [01:10:41.060 --> 01:10:42.060] That's cool. [01:10:42.060 --> 01:10:44.060] That goes to collateral estoppel. [01:10:44.060 --> 01:10:47.060] So that case that I've got is perfect. [01:10:47.060 --> 01:10:52.060] It doesn't mention collateral estoppel directly, as I recall. [01:10:52.060 --> 01:11:03.060] But collateral estoppel goes to when you take a position in court, whether you take it actively or you take it by default. [01:11:03.060 --> 01:11:10.060] Then you are collateral estopped from taking a different position later on. [01:11:10.060 --> 01:11:16.060] So when they fail to respond to a document, we have had prosecutors say that, well, I'm not required to respond. [01:11:16.060 --> 01:11:17.060] That's right. [01:11:17.060 --> 01:11:19.060] You don't have to. [01:11:19.060 --> 01:11:23.060] You can shoot yourself in the foot if you want to. [01:11:23.060 --> 01:11:26.060] Perfectly OK with me, Bubba. [01:11:26.060 --> 01:11:28.060] Whatever you do, there's consequences. [01:11:28.060 --> 01:11:32.060] So here you move for summary judgment. [01:11:32.060 --> 01:11:36.060] The primary reason for following these documents is to get them not to respond. [01:11:36.060 --> 01:11:37.060] Yeah. [01:11:37.060 --> 01:11:40.060] Yeah. [01:11:40.060 --> 01:11:43.060] I got one other question I was going to ask. [01:11:43.060 --> 01:11:45.060] The police report. [01:11:45.060 --> 01:11:47.060] I'll send that to you, too. [01:11:47.060 --> 01:11:50.060] And anyway, they lied on there. [01:11:50.060 --> 01:11:52.060] They said that I called. [01:11:52.060 --> 01:11:55.060] They're trying to say I called the wreck before I went too close. [01:11:55.060 --> 01:11:56.060] Well, that wasn't true. [01:11:56.060 --> 01:12:03.060] And they said I run into somebody that came out of a certain street or was turning into a certain street to the left. [01:12:03.060 --> 01:12:06.060] And the one in fact, they came out of that same street. [01:12:06.060 --> 01:12:07.060] They weren't turning into it. [01:12:07.060 --> 01:12:09.060] They come out of it and pulled in front of me. [01:12:09.060 --> 01:12:12.060] And then somebody came across the line and hit me. [01:12:12.060 --> 01:12:15.060] Of course, I got no driver's license, no insurance. [01:12:15.060 --> 01:12:17.060] My insurance had ran out the day before. [01:12:17.060 --> 01:12:18.060] OK. [01:12:18.060 --> 01:12:23.060] There is another complaint that's not in that group. [01:12:23.060 --> 01:12:33.060] The officer wrote a citation for an offense he did not personally see or hear committed. [01:12:33.060 --> 01:12:37.060] I was in court on a ticket in Lake Worth. [01:12:37.060 --> 01:12:44.060] Two of us were pulled up to the street from parking lots on the opposite side. [01:12:44.060 --> 01:12:47.060] Well, we're both to one another's left. [01:12:47.060 --> 01:12:51.060] This guy was off to about 100 feet to my left. [01:12:51.060 --> 01:12:52.060] Never saw him. [01:12:52.060 --> 01:12:54.060] Apparently, he never saw me. [01:12:54.060 --> 01:12:56.060] Four lane road, busy road. [01:12:56.060 --> 01:13:01.060] So I'm looking at traffic coming at me. [01:13:01.060 --> 01:13:07.060] And when I get a clear space, I look down the road at traffic coming on the other side. [01:13:07.060 --> 01:13:12.060] So I know I've got plenty of room from the left side. [01:13:12.060 --> 01:13:13.060] So I'm watching to the right. [01:13:13.060 --> 01:13:15.060] When I get enough room, I pull out. [01:13:15.060 --> 01:13:16.060] Well, he did the same thing. [01:13:16.060 --> 01:13:18.060] We turned into each other. [01:13:18.060 --> 01:13:27.060] And the sheriff's deputy come along and told us since nobody was hurt, there was no real [01:13:27.060 --> 01:13:31.060] major damage to pull him out of the street into this parking lot. [01:13:31.060 --> 01:13:35.060] So a cop comes and he didn't know anything. [01:13:35.060 --> 01:13:45.060] He wrote me a ticket and we get to court and I ask him if he, you know, how he knew that [01:13:45.060 --> 01:13:50.060] what did you actually see when the accident occurred? [01:13:50.060 --> 01:13:51.060] Well, I didn't see anything. [01:13:51.060 --> 01:13:53.060] You mean you didn't see the accident occur? [01:13:53.060 --> 01:13:54.060] No, I didn't. [01:13:54.060 --> 01:13:56.060] Well, where were you when it occurred? [01:13:56.060 --> 01:13:57.060] Oh, I was on another call. [01:13:57.060 --> 01:13:59.060] Oh, so you were called down here. [01:13:59.060 --> 01:14:00.060] Okay. [01:14:00.060 --> 01:14:02.060] How were the cars positioned in the street when you got there? [01:14:02.060 --> 01:14:04.060] Oh, well, they weren't positioned in the street. [01:14:04.060 --> 01:14:05.060] Oh, they weren't? [01:14:05.060 --> 01:14:07.060] Oh, they were in a parking lot. [01:14:07.060 --> 01:14:08.060] Oh, okay. [01:14:08.060 --> 01:14:14.060] Did you measure the breaking skid marks in the street? [01:14:14.060 --> 01:14:16.060] Well, there weren't any. [01:14:16.060 --> 01:14:19.060] Well, did you look at the glass patterns in the street? [01:14:19.060 --> 01:14:21.060] Well, there weren't any glass patterns. [01:14:21.060 --> 01:14:24.060] And how'd you know what an exact accident occurred? [01:14:24.060 --> 01:14:29.060] Well, I talked to you and I talked to the other party involved in the accident. [01:14:29.060 --> 01:14:31.060] Oh, okay. [01:14:31.060 --> 01:14:36.060] So tell me, when did you commit aggravated perjury? [01:14:36.060 --> 01:14:40.060] When you wrote out this citation stating that you had reason to believe and do believe that [01:14:40.060 --> 01:14:50.060] the crime has been committed and essentially arrested me for a misdemeanor offense, or just [01:14:50.060 --> 01:14:55.060] now, when you testified that you did not personally hear the offense being committed. [01:14:55.060 --> 01:15:01.060] And this prosecutor had a brand new prosecutor, this young girl, the older prosecutor, shorting [01:15:01.060 --> 01:15:04.060] around the courtroom and explaining everything to her. [01:15:04.060 --> 01:15:06.060] And she jumps up, I object, I object. [01:15:06.060 --> 01:15:08.060] I said, I do too, your honor. [01:15:08.060 --> 01:15:09.060] This is awful. [01:15:09.060 --> 01:15:12.060] He ought to be ashamed of himself. [01:15:12.060 --> 01:15:17.060] The judge found me guilty and charged me $10. [01:15:17.060 --> 01:15:18.060] $10. [01:15:18.060 --> 01:15:26.060] And he gave me this look that said, Mr. Kelton, I am not going to make this young prosecutor [01:15:26.060 --> 01:15:29.060] loser first case. [01:15:29.060 --> 01:15:35.060] And I looked at the prosecutor and she is so afraid she's shaking. [01:15:35.060 --> 01:15:40.060] So I thought, okay, we'll let this one go. [01:15:40.060 --> 01:15:44.060] But that's the position you got the policeman in. [01:15:44.060 --> 01:15:54.060] He arrested you when he held out that ticket for you to sign, you were under arrest. [01:15:54.060 --> 01:16:03.060] And under 14.03, no, 14.01, he can't do that. [01:16:03.060 --> 01:16:05.060] So file criminally for him for that. [01:16:05.060 --> 01:16:09.060] And that gets the first degree phone aggravated assault charge. [01:16:09.060 --> 01:16:14.060] Well, everything about the police report is just the opposite of what happened. [01:16:14.060 --> 01:16:19.060] They had me in the wrong lanes and had every other people that I supposedly hit turning [01:16:19.060 --> 01:16:21.060] and going the opposite direction they were going. [01:16:21.060 --> 01:16:27.060] And then they said, I told them that I dropped my phone and grabbed it. [01:16:27.060 --> 01:16:29.060] I didn't say anything about a phone. [01:16:29.060 --> 01:16:31.060] That's just the total laid up lie there. [01:16:31.060 --> 01:16:36.060] Did they, okay, surely they recorded what you were saying? [01:16:36.060 --> 01:16:38.060] Well, they should have, I would think. [01:16:38.060 --> 01:16:39.060] Demanded. [01:16:39.060 --> 01:16:43.060] I certainly didn't say anything about that. [01:16:43.060 --> 01:16:45.060] And that's aggravated perjury. [01:16:45.060 --> 01:16:48.060] Are we fixed to go to a break? [01:16:48.060 --> 01:16:49.060] Yes, we are. [01:16:49.060 --> 01:16:51.060] And I was actually watching the clock this time. [01:16:51.060 --> 01:16:52.060] Okay, hang on. [01:16:52.060 --> 01:16:53.060] We'll be right back. [01:16:53.060 --> 01:16:54.060] Randy Kelton. [01:16:54.060 --> 01:16:56.060] David Stevens, Ruval Radio. [01:16:56.060 --> 01:17:00.060] Oh, got that out of sequence. [01:17:00.060 --> 01:17:05.060] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[01:17:41.060 --> 01:17:47.060] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner, [01:17:47.060 --> 01:17:49.060] or email michaelmaris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.060 --> 01:17:57.060] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.060 --> 01:18:00.060] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.060 --> 01:18:01.060] Saying cookie. [01:18:01.060 --> 01:18:02.060] Cookie? [01:18:02.060 --> 01:18:03.060] Me love cookies. [01:18:03.060 --> 01:18:05.060] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher. [01:18:05.060 --> 01:18:06.060] No, these are yucky cookies. [01:18:06.060 --> 01:18:07.060] Cookie? [01:18:07.060 --> 01:18:08.060] Yucky? [01:18:08.060 --> 01:18:09.060] No, no bad cookies. [01:18:09.060 --> 01:18:11.060] You can't even eat these cookies. [01:18:11.060 --> 01:18:12.060] These are cyber cookies. [01:18:12.060 --> 01:18:13.060] No candy? [01:18:13.060 --> 01:18:17.060] No, they are cyber cookies, and they clog up your computer. [01:18:17.060 --> 01:18:18.060] They have apples. [01:18:18.060 --> 01:18:19.060] Really? [01:18:19.060 --> 01:18:21.060] Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:18:21.060 --> 01:18:22.060] Yummy apple. [01:18:22.060 --> 01:18:27.060] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:18:27.060 --> 01:18:33.060] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:18:33.060 --> 01:18:35.060] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:18:35.060 --> 01:18:41.060] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:18:41.060 --> 01:18:47.060] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [01:18:47.060 --> 01:18:48.060] No cookies? [01:18:48.060 --> 01:18:49.060] Or me? [01:18:49.060 --> 01:18:54.060] Consider it an early Christmas present, and every time I order on Amazon, I go through [01:18:54.060 --> 01:18:57.060] this link, and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:18:57.060 --> 01:18:58.060] Cheers for Cookie. [01:18:58.060 --> 01:18:59.060] Cheers for Classified. [01:18:59.060 --> 01:19:11.060] This is the logos, the logos, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio, the radio. [01:19:11.060 --> 01:19:20.060] It ain't gonna blind me. [01:19:20.060 --> 01:19:27.060] Don't bore me. [01:19:27.060 --> 01:19:36.060] Well, it ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.060 --> 01:19:41.060] I was blindsided, but now I can see your eyes. [01:19:41.060 --> 01:19:45.060] You put the fear in my pockets. [01:19:45.060 --> 01:19:47.060] Okay, we are back. [01:19:47.060 --> 01:19:51.060] Brandy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Dan in Texas. [01:19:51.060 --> 01:19:53.060] Okay, Dan, you had another question. [01:19:53.060 --> 01:20:00.060] Well, yeah, I got, uh, should I do an affidavit and correct that police report? [01:20:00.060 --> 01:20:02.060] Absolutely not. [01:20:02.060 --> 01:20:04.060] Not okay. [01:20:04.060 --> 01:20:10.060] Not, not, we ain't got, we don't, we didn't get to that part yet. [01:20:10.060 --> 01:20:22.060] We don't, you don't want to go to the merits until you've exhausted the jurisdiction and all the other issues. [01:20:22.060 --> 01:20:23.060] Yeah. [01:20:23.060 --> 01:20:27.060] You don't know for sure because you don't have the discovery. [01:20:27.060 --> 01:20:28.060] Yeah. [01:20:28.060 --> 01:20:32.060] They had to have written a police report, and you need that police report. [01:20:32.060 --> 01:20:37.060] Once you have the police report, then you have aggravated perjury because it's in writing. [01:20:37.060 --> 01:20:43.060] And when the policeman writes the report, it's construed to be under oath. [01:20:43.060 --> 01:20:52.060] I've got, I've got the police report, but I got it from a, my insurance company that I had the day before. [01:20:52.060 --> 01:21:02.060] Good, good, then, uh, but rule is don't ever go to the merits until they get past jurisdiction. [01:21:02.060 --> 01:21:06.060] And I, this is a municipal police officer. [01:21:06.060 --> 01:21:08.060] Let's see if he can find your stitching. [01:21:08.060 --> 01:21:11.060] Did you file the criminal complaint against the officer? [01:21:11.060 --> 01:21:13.060] No, that's what I've got to do. [01:21:13.060 --> 01:21:16.060] That thing you told me to send in to? [01:21:16.060 --> 01:21:19.060] No, that's a T-close complaint. [01:21:19.060 --> 01:21:23.060] There's also a first degree felony aggravated assault complaint in there. [01:21:23.060 --> 01:21:26.060] Oh, and I need to do that too. [01:21:26.060 --> 01:21:27.060] Where do I file that at? [01:21:27.060 --> 01:21:31.060] Just give it to the judges next time you go into court. [01:21:31.060 --> 01:21:34.060] Okay, to that, that, the municipal court? [01:21:34.060 --> 01:21:37.060] Yeah, you don't actually give it to the judge. [01:21:37.060 --> 01:21:43.060] You give it to the same human being, but you give it to the magistrate. [01:21:43.060 --> 01:21:51.060] You effectively take off his judge's hat and put his magistrate's hat on for him and give it to the magistrate. [01:21:51.060 --> 01:21:53.060] Yeah, okay. [01:21:53.060 --> 01:21:56.060] He may not know you did that. [01:21:56.060 --> 01:21:59.060] And you have no duty to tell him. [01:21:59.060 --> 01:22:01.060] Yeah. [01:22:01.060 --> 01:22:08.060] So there's nothing you'll like better when they realize that you're setting them up. [01:22:08.060 --> 01:22:11.060] Then you watch how things change. [01:22:11.060 --> 01:22:16.060] When I pulled that hearing aid gambit on Judge Hayes in Mansfield, [01:22:16.060 --> 01:22:23.060] boy, after that, the way they treated me when I walked into one of these courts was way different. [01:22:23.060 --> 01:22:28.060] Because the word was, that counten comes into your office. [01:22:28.060 --> 01:22:32.060] Watch out, he is trying to set you up. [01:22:32.060 --> 01:22:35.060] Yeah, get him out as quick as he can. [01:22:35.060 --> 01:22:37.060] Just be careful. [01:22:37.060 --> 01:22:40.060] And I like it when they're careful with me. [01:22:40.060 --> 01:22:43.060] I'm taking him on here in Tennessee. [01:22:43.060 --> 01:22:46.060] If they obviously like this supposed to. [01:22:46.060 --> 01:22:53.060] Randy, I don't want to keep you any, let's get somebody else home, but I've got a couple other things. [01:22:53.060 --> 01:23:01.060] I've had an insurance company call me from the other people, and should I contact them or not? [01:23:01.060 --> 01:23:03.060] Yes. [01:23:03.060 --> 01:23:13.060] You contact them and claim you are not liable in any way, shape, or form, and you will absolutely not have this damage your insurance. [01:23:13.060 --> 01:23:20.060] You certainly will not allow you, not agree to take liability. [01:23:20.060 --> 01:23:23.060] And then you get to sue the officer. [01:23:23.060 --> 01:23:25.060] Yeah. [01:23:25.060 --> 01:23:35.060] I guess in writing, I don't know, or I can call them, but find out where to send it, I guess. [01:23:35.060 --> 01:23:42.060] One other thing, is Brett the one you told me that might could help me some? [01:23:42.060 --> 01:23:44.060] Brett? [01:23:44.060 --> 01:23:51.060] Yeah, you said you might get me to contact with him on this thing too, a little bit. [01:23:51.060 --> 01:23:55.060] If he's the one you told me about? [01:23:55.060 --> 01:24:02.060] I don't think so, I haven't talked to Brett about sending people to him, and that's not a dime I want to put him on right now. [01:24:02.060 --> 01:24:10.060] Because Brett's really busy, he has a full-time day job, and that'll be up to him if he wants to do this. [01:24:10.060 --> 01:24:16.060] Alright, we were talking something about, that might not even be who you were talking about. [01:24:16.060 --> 01:24:24.060] I'll get off here as far as that, but a friend of ours, Mike, worked with Alex. [01:24:24.060 --> 01:24:30.060] He wanted me to ask you something for him, see if he could maybe get in touch with you or something. [01:24:30.060 --> 01:24:38.060] But he's had this case going on, like credit card thing with American Express, claiming all this stuff. [01:24:38.060 --> 01:24:43.060] Okay, okay, hold on, we've only got a couple segments left, can you call in tomorrow night on that? [01:24:43.060 --> 01:24:45.060] I certainly can. [01:24:45.060 --> 01:24:49.060] That will take a bit longer. [01:24:49.060 --> 01:24:51.060] Alright. [01:24:51.060 --> 01:24:54.060] Better if you can get him available. [01:24:54.060 --> 01:24:56.060] Yeah, Randy? [01:24:56.060 --> 01:24:58.060] Yes. [01:24:58.060 --> 01:25:02.060] Anyway, alright Randy, I'll try to get the work on this. [01:25:02.060 --> 01:25:04.060] Hang on, Brett had a comment. [01:25:04.060 --> 01:25:12.060] Yeah, I was just wondering, on this, with Dan, before you go, let me just pitch an idea out there. [01:25:12.060 --> 01:25:20.060] Maybe if this is, you correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like one thing that he might be able to do here is, [01:25:20.060 --> 01:25:33.060] not only hold the police officer responsible for his misconduct with the complaint there, but also hold the police chief responsible. [01:25:33.060 --> 01:25:44.060] Look up and see who's the police chief and file a complaint against him too, because he's responsible to see that all of his underlings are supposed to be doing the right thing. [01:25:44.060 --> 01:25:49.060] And that's called respondee at superior. [01:25:49.060 --> 01:25:54.060] And he should get a T-close complaint as well. [01:25:54.060 --> 01:26:04.060] So redo the ticket as if the chief of police is the one that arrested you, that gave you the ticket. [01:26:04.060 --> 01:26:08.060] And it will spit you out a T-close complaint for him. [01:26:08.060 --> 01:26:12.060] Okay. [01:26:12.060 --> 01:26:15.060] I'll get the work done and all this stuff and try to get it done. [01:26:15.060 --> 01:26:19.060] I'll probably have a few more questions, but anyway. [01:26:19.060 --> 01:26:22.060] Well, let's do that tomorrow night. We'll have four hours. [01:26:22.060 --> 01:26:26.060] Okay. That'll work. I'll get off here. Thank y'all. [01:26:26.060 --> 01:26:28.060] Okay. Thank you, Dan. [01:26:28.060 --> 01:26:33.060] Okay. Now we're going to Scott in Texas. [01:26:33.060 --> 01:26:36.060] Scott, did you fall asleep on us? [01:26:36.060 --> 01:26:39.060] No. Hello. You couldn't hear me. [01:26:39.060 --> 01:26:42.060] I guess he was coughing or something when I said something. [01:26:42.060 --> 01:26:46.060] So anyway, can you hear me now? [01:26:46.060 --> 01:26:48.060] No. [01:26:48.060 --> 01:26:49.060] Good. [01:26:49.060 --> 01:26:53.060] Yeah, I can hear you. [01:26:53.060 --> 01:27:00.060] I just want to say congratulations, Brett, and a good job for going out there and stomping a hole in Rockwall. [01:27:00.060 --> 01:27:08.060] I know I was out there. It was a slugfest too, but I had the judge, the municipal judge, throw me in jail. [01:27:08.060 --> 01:27:14.060] And the big county judge went up there to go talk about something because they had a worn out from our arrest. [01:27:14.060 --> 01:27:20.060] And he threw my butt in jail right there in court. So yeah, I went through jail swiping Rockwall. [01:27:20.060 --> 01:27:23.060] I know all about Rockwall real well. [01:27:23.060 --> 01:27:25.060] Oh, wow. [01:27:25.060 --> 01:27:30.060] Oh, yeah. And so, can't nobody tell me about Rockwall? [01:27:30.060 --> 01:27:34.060] Wait a minute. I want to tell you about Rockwall. [01:27:34.060 --> 01:27:47.060] Okay, go ahead. You had a case you could have filed in because you actually gave that judge permission to record and it was denied. [01:27:47.060 --> 01:27:52.060] And so I was like, oh, you know, I'm going to fall on down. I was like, yeah, okay, whatever you never did. [01:27:52.060 --> 01:27:57.060] You know, that's the thing, you know, I filed lawsuits and, you know, you're absolutely right. [01:27:57.060 --> 01:28:05.060] I got that ticket in Rockwall. The cop there wrote me that ticket the very same day I wrote a key post against him and the chief of police. [01:28:05.060 --> 01:28:09.060] And then filed lawsuits the next day on both of them. [01:28:09.060 --> 01:28:11.060] So. [01:28:11.060 --> 01:28:14.060] Bravo. [01:28:14.060 --> 01:28:20.060] Yeah, but they all get summarily dismissed, you know, and it's like whatever. [01:28:20.060 --> 01:28:28.060] And Scott, he hung in there and then he crumbled like a stale cookie. [01:28:28.060 --> 01:28:33.060] What do you mean crumbled? [01:28:33.060 --> 01:28:37.060] You just got tired of it and didn't follow through. [01:28:37.060 --> 01:28:43.060] When you follow through all the stupid lawsuits I asked you for help is like, oh, I don't see what you do. [01:28:43.060 --> 01:28:45.060] We got we got tools. [01:28:45.060 --> 01:28:47.060] It's like, yeah, okay, whatever. [01:28:47.060 --> 01:28:54.060] Well, yeah, I get these guys that they want somebody else to take care of their problems for them. [01:28:54.060 --> 01:28:57.060] You see guys like this all the time. [01:28:57.060 --> 01:28:58.060] Oh, okay. [01:28:58.060 --> 01:29:03.060] Don't ask for any slack here. Tell me I didn't follow through. [01:29:03.060 --> 01:29:09.060] I was busy doing important stuff. [01:29:09.060 --> 01:29:22.060] Of course, you know, we're, you know, I mean, because you can't get any remedy, even you know, the judge here in Garland said, you know, there's got to take four people like you to buy this stuff. [01:29:22.060 --> 01:29:28.060] And, you know, even though, you know, it was still it was a losing battle on that deal. [01:29:28.060 --> 01:29:41.060] But, you know, we need to like do the governor or something, you know, and go after the big heads and just start making real. [01:29:41.060 --> 01:29:45.060] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break Randy Kelton. [01:29:45.060 --> 01:29:53.060] Okay, I'm actually going to do everything right on the break this time and not getting trouble from a certain somebody who's back there listening. [01:29:53.060 --> 01:30:02.060] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens rule of law radio will be right back. [01:30:02.060 --> 01:30:08.060] Thousands of Florida motorists convicted of DUI may very well have been driving under the blood alcohol limit. [01:30:08.060 --> 01:30:15.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back with a tale of bad breathalysers and a government cover up in a moment. [01:30:15.060 --> 01:30:17.060] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.060 --> 01:30:20.060] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.060 --> 01:30:25.060] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.060 --> 01:30:27.060] So protect your rights. [01:30:27.060 --> 01:30:30.060] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.060 --> 01:30:33.060] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.060 --> 01:30:40.060] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:40.060 --> 01:30:44.060] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.060 --> 01:30:46.060] Ever hear the term fine farming? [01:30:46.060 --> 01:30:53.060] It's when cops find innocent people to bring in revenue and it's apparently big business in the Sunshine State of Florida. [01:30:53.060 --> 01:30:59.060] This case involves breathalysers used to convict thousands of Florida motorists for DUI violations. [01:30:59.060 --> 01:31:04.060] Recently, reporters discovered that the devices were improperly calibrated. [01:31:04.060 --> 01:31:08.060] State officials knew about it for two and a half years but did nothing. [01:31:08.060 --> 01:31:14.060] In fact, the head of Florida's breath testing program ordered inspectors not to document the problem. [01:31:14.060 --> 01:31:22.060] A DUI conviction can ruin somebody's life but now that the cover-up has been exposed, perhaps Florida drivers can breathe a bit easier. [01:31:22.060 --> 01:31:30.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.060 --> 01:31:36.060] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.060 --> 01:31:38.060] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.060 --> 01:31:44.060] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.060 --> 01:31:49.060] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.060 --> 01:31:51.060] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.060 --> 01:31:52.060] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.060 --> 01:31:53.060] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.060 --> 01:31:54.060] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.060 --> 01:31:56.060] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:56.060 --> 01:31:58.060] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.060 --> 01:32:02.060] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.060 --> 01:32:08.060] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.060 --> 01:32:13.060] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.060 --> 01:32:20.060] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.060 --> 01:32:26.060] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.060 --> 01:32:35.060] First, Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law. [01:32:35.060 --> 01:32:41.060] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.060 --> 01:32:48.060] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.060 --> 01:32:51.060] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.060 --> 01:33:01.060] You can apply for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.060 --> 01:33:12.060] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:12.060 --> 01:33:21.060] Yeah, and who you want to check? Will you sign me for free, darling? Who you want to check? Me, no free, darling. You can't check me. [01:33:21.060 --> 01:33:26.060] Don't let them check you in the morning, check you in the evening, put that check in on your buddy. [01:33:26.060 --> 01:33:30.060] And anyway, you go computer reading, you can't hide me if I'm nobody. [01:33:30.060 --> 01:33:51.060] Let me say, check in on your mom, check in on your daddy, check in on your grandpa, and the granny, check in on me, check in on your baby, check in on your family, whole family, check in on your dad, and they check around me, check in on the beef, and you still got EP, check in on the fish, them piling the sea, check in on the shark, and they wheel around me. [01:33:51.060 --> 01:34:09.060] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens on this the second day of May 2019 with our special guest Brett Fountain, and we're talking to our very special local redneck, Scott. [01:34:09.060 --> 01:34:35.060] Well, first thing I want to, before we talk about the law, stew and the governor and all that good stuff, when anybody wants to take on all this stuff, you want to start fighting your tickets, get very familiar with T-clothes, bar grieves, and judicial conduct, and you file as many as you can, as often as you can, and you don't let up, you just go after them full bare. [01:34:35.060 --> 01:34:54.060] Tell them what happened when you filed T-clothes. Oh, shoot, man. When you file T-clothes, you can have the officers insurance go up after you file like three or four of them, and they become so high that the department can't keep them around. [01:34:54.060 --> 01:35:15.060] And this is another thing I was actually thinking about, too, is just filing lawsuits on the actual insurance company that, you know, goes to ensure the municipality can go straight after the insurance companies, how that might be the actual way to really start waking these things up a little bit better. [01:35:15.060 --> 01:35:37.060] Glad you mentioned that. I'm here in Tennessee, and I did some checking. Every peace officer has to have a $75,000 bond, and that bond is provided by the county. Here they've got a county mayor here. [01:35:37.060 --> 01:35:53.060] They don't have a commissioner's court like they do in Texas. So I've got one, two, three, four, five, six, seven peace officers, and one judge and a prosecutor so far. [01:35:53.060 --> 01:36:15.060] So I got nine and 75 bucks a pop, and I'm 75k a pop. So now that I was out in Texas for the last week or two, so I'm back here, I will go back, go to the county mayor and ask him for the insurance carrier for their bonds because I have claims against a bunch of bonds. [01:36:15.060 --> 01:36:32.060] What I want them to think is that everything I'm doing is to get them to do something so I can get a claim against a bond, and that was one of the things I wanted to test out here to see how it worked. [01:36:32.060 --> 01:36:53.060] So far, what is going on here, I could not have choreographed it better. I had a bailiff who was absolutely a consummate professional who wouldn't let me in the courtroom and wouldn't let me record the courtroom. [01:36:53.060 --> 01:37:06.060] But he was extra polite. He understood, he agreed that, you know, the law said he was supposed to, but he had to follow what the judge said. He was all apologetic. [01:37:06.060 --> 01:37:09.060] I couldn't have asked you more from an officer. [01:37:09.060 --> 01:37:26.060] And then I come in a couple of weeks later and a captain, a captain, Jack Boote, I forget his name, his first name. I got Jack Boote McDade stuck in my brain. That's all I can think of. [01:37:26.060 --> 01:37:43.060] But he was a captain and I come back and he's going to show his guys how to handle me. And I started stepping toward the bailiff at the door of the courtroom and the captain, this is after I told him he was a Jack Boote Doug, [01:37:43.060 --> 01:37:52.060] grabbed me by both arms and turned me around. Well, he didn't grab me real hard. He grabbed me soft enough that I could have pulled away. [01:37:52.060 --> 01:37:58.060] And I think that's what he wanted. They turned me around and pushed me in the other direction. [01:37:58.060 --> 01:38:06.060] And I turned around and looked at him and I said, you touched me. Yes, I touched you. You're not going to that courtroom. [01:38:06.060 --> 01:38:11.060] But, but, but you touched me. [01:38:11.060 --> 01:38:20.060] I called 911 and wanted them to arrest him for aggravated assault while they sent out the high sheriff of the county. [01:38:20.060 --> 01:38:27.060] And he was really good. I really liked the sheriff. He handled me very well. [01:38:27.060 --> 01:38:38.060] And then they were having a hearings at the jail. I went to the jail and got in front of a judge there and asked the judge to hold a preliminary hearing. [01:38:38.060 --> 01:38:56.060] And he explained to me that they don't do that here. I said, well, I'm, you know, said we have our policy is, is that they go through booking and stuff and then they come to this hearing and they go before a [01:38:56.060 --> 01:39:10.060] court, not a court appointed council here, a public prosecutor, and they make a deal. And I told him, well, I understand you have a policy, but when your policy conflicts with law, well, as far as I'm concerned, you can use the policy for toy paper. [01:39:10.060 --> 01:39:20.060] I expect you do with law commands. And he was when I listened to him in court, he was exactly what I would like to see as a judge. [01:39:20.060 --> 01:39:29.060] He treated everybody with dignity and respect. A whole bunch of them had a favor to appear and he just threw all those out. [01:39:29.060 --> 01:39:39.060] He had one woman that said, Miss Fauston, we've been trying to collect one traffic ticket for you for seven years. You've been in our jail three or four times. [01:39:39.060 --> 01:39:53.060] It is clear we're not going to collect that money from you. And I don't want you in my jail. So I'm going to convert this to a civil debt. You don't have to ever worry about being arrested for it again. [01:39:53.060 --> 01:39:55.060] I was astounded. [01:39:55.060 --> 01:40:09.060] But anyway, really nice guy, really professionally treated me with utmost dignity. And when I was finished, I told him, you know, that I appreciated the professional treatment here. [01:40:09.060 --> 01:40:16.060] And while I may be filing some criminal complaints against you, I hope you don't take it personal. [01:40:16.060 --> 01:40:29.060] Well, it's good, hard not to take it personal. But I'll be filing against him and I'll file on his bond. So this is what your, you know, you're the insurance guy. [01:40:29.060 --> 01:40:35.060] Can you research this out? See how the best way to go after the bond is? [01:40:35.060 --> 01:40:47.060] The only thing is after doing research around here is just find the bond, you know, the insurance carrier company. And, you know, you can find that you can actually call them up. [01:40:47.060 --> 01:40:58.060] In fact, when I called Lake Dallas, I beat that case over there because it caught even what even a credible witness. It was horrible. That guy was that bad. [01:40:58.060 --> 01:41:09.060] And it automatically got dismissed. But anyhow, when I started talking, you can call the city and ask for their insurance carrier. [01:41:09.060 --> 01:41:17.060] And Lake Dallas, they were getting all nervous and crap on the phone because they know exactly what you want the insurance carrier for. [01:41:17.060 --> 01:41:23.060] You can't call them or make any claims against them without talking to his person. We have to do any type of paperwork. [01:41:23.060 --> 01:41:40.060] And so they were already nervous. I mean, once you get the carrier, then you go find the carrier and sue them in Culver and say, hey, you know, you're the one that's supposed to be a watchdog over this, you know, municipality that's got this policy [01:41:40.060 --> 01:41:56.060] run of woes and opposing law. And that's what it really boils down to. And then, you know, the governor and the AG, especially the AG is, you know, in charge of all the judges and everything. [01:41:56.060 --> 01:42:03.060] And the governor's in charge of the AG. So they're all acting in concert and collusion, you know. [01:42:03.060 --> 01:42:05.060] Okay, wait a minute. We're ahead of comment. [01:42:05.060 --> 01:42:06.060] Go ahead. [01:42:06.060 --> 01:42:20.060] Okay. Well, Rick, Scott, did you just say that when you made a request for public records, such as their insurance company, they asked you why you wanted it? [01:42:20.060 --> 01:42:22.060] You caught that. Ah, good. [01:42:22.060 --> 01:42:30.060] Yeah, but that was just that was just over the phone. So, you know, they could say whatever they want over the phone, but you can put it in writing and get it. [01:42:30.060 --> 01:42:33.060] They'll have to, you know, give you that answer. [01:42:33.060 --> 01:42:44.060] Yeah, and I did. I got that from another city. It wasn't with this rock wall one, but I did. I sent it was an email. I said, I'm looking for the insurance company liability insurance and surety bonds. [01:42:44.060 --> 01:42:55.060] And I want to know the agency name. I want to know the cost and the premium paid by the city. I want to know the policy number. I want to know the coverage level. [01:42:55.060 --> 01:43:04.060] And I want to know if there's anything separately for that officer. And I gave his name in case he has any separate liability insurance or a surety bond. [01:43:04.060 --> 01:43:07.060] They turned it all over. They gave it all to me. [01:43:07.060 --> 01:43:08.060] Yeah. [01:43:08.060 --> 01:43:11.060] Can you send me a copy of that? [01:43:11.060 --> 01:43:12.060] Sure. [01:43:12.060 --> 01:43:15.060] Oh, wonderful. [01:43:15.060 --> 01:43:24.060] And Texas is a lot of them are with the Texas municipality or municipal. I forget what it was, but Texas, Texas Municipal League. [01:43:24.060 --> 01:43:28.060] That's it. [01:43:28.060 --> 01:43:30.060] Okay, so. [01:43:30.060 --> 01:43:33.060] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break. [01:43:33.060 --> 01:43:48.060] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, we have a lot of radio here with our special guest, the Brett Fountain, the conqueror, and Scott from Texas, who's did a little conquering of his own. [01:43:48.060 --> 01:43:49.060] Hang on. [01:43:49.060 --> 01:44:00.060] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.060 --> 01:44:09.060] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.060 --> 01:44:25.060] And it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.060 --> 01:44:40.060] Logo Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come to trust Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:40.060 --> 01:45:01.060] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:01.060 --> 01:45:15.060] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? 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. [01:45:15.060 --> 01:45:34.060] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.060 --> 01:45:52.060] 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. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.060 --> 01:46:08.060] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:08.060 --> 01:46:23.060] Hello. Oh, man, you're jailed. You got busted, man. Oh, man, I'm broke, man. [01:46:23.060 --> 01:46:45.060] Some things in this world I will never understand. Some things I realize foolish. Somebody's on a police, I police, man. Somebody's on a police, I police. There's always room at the top of the head. [01:46:45.060 --> 01:46:59.060] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, ruleoflawradio here with our special guest, Brett Fountain, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. Scott, do you have anything else for us? [01:46:59.060 --> 01:47:02.060] No, I guess sometimes. [01:47:02.060 --> 01:47:29.060] Okay, but I am interested in, let's see if we can put together a really effective request on insurance. If you can come across any nuances that only an insurance professional would know of, get those to us and we'll add those into the request so that they'll think this was done by a poor old. [01:47:29.060 --> 01:47:43.060] We won't tell them it was done by a Texas redneck. We'll let them think it was a pro. But I think that may give them, may give this more political effect than anything else we could do. [01:47:43.060 --> 01:47:56.060] Well, like I say, anybody can get the insurance carrier, the municipality, you just call it the municipality and request it. So that's not the issue. And right in the legal place, I'm broke. [01:47:56.060 --> 01:48:07.060] What I'm looking for is what all the different things to request. Brett, will you address those pieces again? [01:48:07.060 --> 01:48:23.060] Sure. Let's see here. I addressed the request to the city manager and I said, I understand you're the best person to contact regarding liability insurance and surety bonds and the cost to the city. [01:48:23.060 --> 01:48:38.060] So I was asking for the insuring agency name, underwriting agency name, the premium being paid by the city. I wanted the policy number. I wanted the coverage level. [01:48:38.060 --> 01:48:56.060] And I asked for both the city and the police department if they're maintained separately in that city. And I asked additionally for any on the officer and I gave the officer's name in case any separate liability insurance or a surety bond was being maintained for him. [01:48:56.060 --> 01:49:14.060] Oh, that is so good. I've got nine so far. So I'm thinking politically. When you send the city manager or like in this case is it would be the county mayor. [01:49:14.060 --> 01:49:24.060] I send him this request and I have nine names in there. Everybody I've talked to a couple of them are unknown because I couldn't get their names. [01:49:24.060 --> 01:49:36.060] And I want the bond for each one of them. He's going to go tell everybody this guy's racking up bonds on you. He's just getting you set up so he can sue you for your bond money. [01:49:36.060 --> 01:49:41.060] That ought to tense them up good. [01:49:41.060 --> 01:50:04.060] Hey, Brad, so they did they answer you specifically on each item. Yes, they did. And they even I also in that same request I was asking for the cost to the city capital expense and operating expense of the fleet vehicles that this officer drove. [01:50:04.060 --> 01:50:12.060] And they put that in there along with that and they put they gave all of that information back to me pretty quickly. [01:50:12.060 --> 01:50:22.060] It wasn't direct. I could see that it had been forwarded around from from city manager to senior this person or that person. Would you please handle this. [01:50:22.060 --> 01:50:35.060] I could see in my response that they didn't even remove their email signatures and everything else handy to see all the different people's names in there and who's responsible for what. [01:50:35.060 --> 01:50:39.060] Well, these are government emails. I don't think they are allowed to. [01:50:39.060 --> 01:50:40.060] They can't. [01:50:40.060 --> 01:50:44.060] I don't think they can't redact them. [01:50:44.060 --> 01:50:46.060] I think they're stuck that way. [01:50:46.060 --> 01:50:55.060] Well, but each one is original. I would think that if they something gets forwarded to them, they could start a fresh email to me. [01:50:55.060 --> 01:51:00.060] They don't have to forward all of that stuff from previous. But anyway, they did. [01:51:00.060 --> 01:51:01.060] That's true. [01:51:01.060 --> 01:51:04.060] And they gave me the information pretty quickly. [01:51:04.060 --> 01:51:18.060] I know, but see now what we're doing is creating a forensic audit. And that's what I've been stating a while back is we're putting all these pieces together to do an actual forensic audit and by having the actual documentation. [01:51:18.060 --> 01:51:35.060] And, you know, the legal breeze to support the argument that, you know, it can't be denied. It has to be ignored. And then they're, you know, failing on their own duty, you know, to uphold justice and the law because they cannot answer. [01:51:35.060 --> 01:51:46.060] And without answering they are guilty by omission. And here we go right back to the whole thing of finding the judge that would actually uphold the law to start with. [01:51:46.060 --> 01:52:03.060] Well, I'm thinking that once we run run them through the ringer, especially, especially over things that they consider to be relatively minor stuff where they don't see a problem coming. [01:52:03.060 --> 01:52:08.060] And they pull their standard shenanigans and all of a sudden the sky falls in on them. [01:52:08.060 --> 01:52:19.060] And the thing I like about this insurance request is it's like kind of giving them fair warning. [01:52:19.060 --> 01:52:29.060] Although we never give fair warning. It's a subtle way of saying everything we're doing is for the purpose of setting you up. [01:52:29.060 --> 01:52:43.060] How vulnerable are you? Exactly. How hard do you want me to hit you? So how much is it worth to you to screw with me? [01:52:43.060 --> 01:52:52.060] You know, and that from that hearing aid gambit I pulled on Mansfield really taught me a valuable lesson. [01:52:52.060 --> 01:53:01.060] The fact that I went in and set up a judge and I did it essentially with impunity, they were just astounded. They couldn't believe it. [01:53:01.060 --> 01:53:21.060] And that's when everybody got worried. And so the insurance and that's I'm using this in Tennessee to demonstrate to indicate to them that everything I'm doing, I'm doing for the purpose of getting a claim against your insurance policy. [01:53:21.060 --> 01:53:29.060] So how do you deal with that? I think this will increase the political pressure dramatically. [01:53:29.060 --> 01:53:41.060] Okay, thank you a lot, Scott. We've got one more caller in five minutes left. We're going to go to Charles in Georgia. Hello Charles, what do you have for us today? [01:53:41.060 --> 01:53:43.060] How are you doing today, Randy? [01:53:43.060 --> 01:53:46.060] Doing good. I don't care what everybody says. [01:53:46.060 --> 01:53:52.060] All right, all right. I'm going to make a real brief. [01:53:52.060 --> 01:54:06.060] There was a case that arrived out of Michigan that had to do with officers chalking people's tires to try to see how long they've been sitting in one spot in order to give them a ticket or tow their vehicles. [01:54:06.060 --> 01:54:09.060] Are you the one that sent that to me? [01:54:09.060 --> 01:54:14.060] I should have sent it to you. I don't remember if I did. I don't think I did. [01:54:14.060 --> 01:54:16.060] Someone did. [01:54:16.060 --> 01:54:30.060] Okay, okay. So now I was thinking, you know, they like to do this thing when police pull you over. They like to put their fingerprint on the chair light of your car. [01:54:30.060 --> 01:54:35.060] And I want to see if you relate it to that. [01:54:35.060 --> 01:54:51.060] Oh, that is funny. When they pull me over, when they get done, I get up with my Windex and Squirt Squirt and wipe them off. [01:54:51.060 --> 01:54:55.060] Well, you got to dust it first so you can preserve it. [01:54:55.060 --> 01:55:02.060] Tell them I'm just going to run this down through the NCIC real quick. [01:55:02.060 --> 01:55:13.060] That is, that's even better. Get out with some tape and stick tape on it. [01:55:13.060 --> 01:55:21.060] Well, the Supreme Court in the chalking incident labeled that as a trespass. [01:55:21.060 --> 01:55:30.060] Now, I wanted to know if them leaving that fingerprint, you touching your car like that, would that be a trespass as well? [01:55:30.060 --> 01:55:34.060] What made it a trespass? [01:55:34.060 --> 01:55:38.060] Let me explain what I'm getting at. [01:55:38.060 --> 01:55:57.060] If he simply touching my vehicle would not necessarily have any effect, but making marks on my tire, I'm likely have to scrub that off of there. [01:55:57.060 --> 01:56:04.060] So, would a fingerprint that nobody can see, could that be considered a trespass? [01:56:04.060 --> 01:56:07.060] I don't know. That's what I was calling the... [01:56:07.060 --> 01:56:14.060] So, he could put a fingerprint on there and you couldn't tell. I could look at the car and I couldn't tell. [01:56:14.060 --> 01:56:19.060] So, how would you be harmed by it? [01:56:19.060 --> 01:56:22.060] But then again, how are you really harmed by a chalk mark on your tire? [01:56:22.060 --> 01:56:26.060] Exactly. That's what I'm getting at. [01:56:26.060 --> 01:56:36.060] So, there must be an interesting issue there. I didn't have time to read that, but I do have it saved for future reference. [01:56:36.060 --> 01:56:39.060] Did you read the case? [01:56:39.060 --> 01:56:48.060] I read... I didn't read the entire case. I read just the... [01:56:48.060 --> 01:56:52.060] Just the argument on this issue is all we really need. [01:56:52.060 --> 01:57:07.060] Yes. But since it came up and I figured I'd ask you about it, what I'll do is I'll go ahead and read it tomorrow and maybe I'll call back tomorrow when we have more time to shoot. [01:57:07.060 --> 01:57:18.060] Yeah. I like to... And I suspect Brett's going to like these kind of arguments too, these kind of issues where we look really close because Brett's found out. [01:57:18.060 --> 01:57:23.060] If you get to get the right answer, you've got to ask the right question. [01:57:23.060 --> 01:57:29.060] So, you look real close at how the courts formulate their opinions. [01:57:29.060 --> 01:57:39.060] After a while, you begin to see a pattern and it helps you better understand how to look at these things. [01:57:39.060 --> 01:57:49.060] And this is one that it seems trivial. So, it makes me wonder, why did the court even pick this up? [01:57:49.060 --> 01:57:55.060] There must have been some issue they wanted to address and I'm very much like to see what that issue is. [01:57:55.060 --> 01:58:15.060] I have one more thing. Is there anybody that you know of who is ready to take this thing of registering your car to the Supreme Court or ready to do anything with this so we can fight this battle of not having to register your car? [01:58:15.060 --> 01:58:22.060] That's not a fight I've taken on. This is probably a better question for Eddie Clegg on Monday. [01:58:22.060 --> 01:58:26.060] Okay. He's specifically the traffic guy. [01:58:26.060 --> 01:58:28.060] Okay. [01:58:28.060 --> 01:58:29.060] Awesome. [01:58:29.060 --> 01:58:35.060] Okay, thank you Charles. Your timing was perfect. We're almost out of time. [01:58:35.060 --> 01:58:40.060] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue de la Radio and thank you Brett for being here. [01:58:40.060 --> 01:58:42.060] My pleasure. [01:58:42.060 --> 01:58:46.060] We'll be back tomorrow night at eight o'clock. Good night. [01:58:46.060 --> 01:58:58.060] Bible for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.060 --> 01:59:08.060] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.060 --> 01:59:20.060] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.060 --> 01:59:30.060] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.060 --> 01:59:41.060] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.060 --> 01:59:52.060] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:52.060 --> 02:00:00.060] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com.