[00:00.000 --> 00:06.000] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing your deli [00:06.000 --> 00:13.640] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates and the inside scoop [00:13.640 --> 00:21.400] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.400 --> 00:27.960] Markets for Waze the 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 in ounce, silver [00:27.960 --> 00:35.280] at $15.77 in ounce, copper at $2.83 in ounce, oil at Texas Crude at $3.66 of barrel, Brent [00:35.280 --> 00:40.480] Crude at $61.98 of barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin at [00:40.480 --> 00:54.320] $3,401.64, Ripple at XRP at $0.29, Ethereum at $10.10, and Eos at $2.32 of crypto coin. [00:54.320 --> 00:59.760] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.760 --> 01:04.680] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.680 --> 01:09.680] was passed by Parliament. [01:09.680 --> 01:14.320] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal [01:14.320 --> 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 --> 01:25.480] This was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State [01:25.480 --> 01:30.120] and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.120 --> 01:33.480] who were registered to vote when obtaining age arbitrage 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 --> 01:45.520] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.520 --> 01:51.000] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:51.000 --> 01:55.400] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.400 --> 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 --> 02:16.960] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.960 --> 02:20.800] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.800 --> 02:24.400] An x-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.400 --> 02:30.600] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.600 --> 02:35.360] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.360 --> 02:40.320] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.320 --> 02:44.720] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.720 --> 02:47.600] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.600 --> 02:51.600] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.600 --> 03:15.600] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:15.600 --> 03:22.840] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Root of Law Radio, and we're talking to Leslie and [03:22.840 --> 03:23.840] not Pennsylvania. [03:23.840 --> 03:24.840] Leslie in Arizona. [03:24.840 --> 03:33.320] Okay, Leslie, I wasn't trying to rush you, I was just, Denver's chewing me out for not [03:33.320 --> 03:37.720] clearing the collar before the break, so I was just checking. [03:37.720 --> 03:38.720] Okay. [03:38.720 --> 03:46.200] Now, the thing to remember with this is that they do respond and answer, that's wonderful [03:46.200 --> 03:51.360] because what they're doing is they're admitting to all of the frauds that the dice have been [03:51.360 --> 03:52.360] doing. [03:52.360 --> 03:57.240] If they respond and they say, we don't want to have anything to do with your contract, [03:57.240 --> 04:04.240] that means that you don't owe them any money because it's all tied together. [04:04.240 --> 04:05.880] You follow what I'm saying? [04:05.880 --> 04:09.760] So what they're doing is repudiating the contract. [04:09.760 --> 04:10.760] Yes. [04:10.760 --> 04:18.640] So if they don't want to abide by the covenants that apply to them, then they repudiate the [04:18.640 --> 04:24.560] contract and you're not bound to the covenants that reply to you. [04:24.560 --> 04:25.560] Right. [04:25.560 --> 04:26.560] Right. [04:26.560 --> 04:31.440] So that, you know, if they don't want to have anything to do with the contract and [04:31.440 --> 04:35.960] you have a mortgage with them, that means they don't want money for the mortgage. [04:35.960 --> 04:41.320] That means that your mortgage is okay, that they repudiated that mortgage. [04:41.320 --> 04:42.320] Okay. [04:42.320 --> 04:51.240] This is contractual, so it's not in court, so it doesn't go to collateral stop-off. [04:51.240 --> 04:58.640] But once they've taken this position, are they bound to the position? [04:58.640 --> 05:07.720] Yes, because the thing is, when you want what the arbitrator says, when the arbitrator gives [05:07.720 --> 05:11.840] their ruling, that's final. [05:11.840 --> 05:17.160] The judge cannot change that in the federal court system. [05:17.160 --> 05:19.400] There is no appeal. [05:19.400 --> 05:25.480] How is arbitration different than mediation, or is it the same thing? [05:25.480 --> 05:28.880] Mediation, you can walk away from. [05:28.880 --> 05:30.880] Arbitration, you're bound by. [05:30.880 --> 05:31.880] Oh, okay. [05:31.880 --> 05:37.320] So if they go to the federal court and they say, I want you to vacate this, they have [05:37.320 --> 05:43.760] to prove corruption on the part of the arbitrators. [05:43.760 --> 05:45.680] That's the only way. [05:45.680 --> 05:57.840] Otherwise, they're bound to what the arbitrator says, but okay, so you need a clause in your [05:57.840 --> 06:01.480] contract that requires arbitration. [06:01.480 --> 06:09.800] And if you have older contracts, they may be in there because they used to own the arbitrators. [06:09.800 --> 06:14.960] Then they got hammered and don't own the arbitrators anymore, so now I don't hear much [06:14.960 --> 06:21.680] about credit card companies want you to go to arbitration because now they don't own [06:21.680 --> 06:22.680] them. [06:22.680 --> 06:23.680] I like this idea. [06:23.680 --> 06:34.440] It can go to credit cards, it can present bankruptcy, it could go to homeownership to [06:34.440 --> 06:41.440] get rid of your mortgage because if they don't answer it, then they owe you the money that [06:41.440 --> 06:49.200] they were asking for because they're admitting they wrongly asked for it, for the repayments [06:49.200 --> 06:52.880] because they never gave you any money. [06:52.880 --> 07:02.880] Yeah, but I've heard that argument and that argument doesn't stand up very well because [07:02.880 --> 07:09.240] there's no making a difference that gave you any money that gave you a warranty deed. [07:09.240 --> 07:15.040] Yeah, well, they don't ever give you a warranty deed. [07:15.040 --> 07:16.040] That comes from the seller. [07:16.040 --> 07:18.040] That's not the happen to do. [07:18.040 --> 07:27.760] Yeah, but see, the lender purchases the warranty deed from the seller and then files it in [07:27.760 --> 07:37.040] your name in the record, so you receive something of value that being accessed to the property, [07:37.040 --> 07:42.400] so money's irrelevant here. [07:42.400 --> 07:46.520] They used to go around with this argument that the banks didn't give you any money and [07:46.520 --> 07:47.520] it was an irrelevant argument. [07:47.520 --> 07:51.720] Well, that's part of it, but the thing is, is that they use your signature and they [07:51.720 --> 07:55.240] monetize it and they make 100 times that. [07:55.240 --> 07:59.400] Separate issue has nothing to do with this contract. [07:59.400 --> 08:07.240] But anyway, to make a long story short, you have those three major documents and then [08:07.240 --> 08:12.560] you have to have a document that requests from the arbitration board. [08:12.560 --> 08:16.600] You have to set it out like a motion for a judgment. [08:16.600 --> 08:24.400] You know, it has to specify the history of the contract and what they did, especially [08:24.400 --> 08:28.920] if they're in default, that they did not respond, that you sent out a default notice, they did [08:28.920 --> 08:31.880] not respond, you know. [08:31.880 --> 08:38.040] You have to make all your accusations and assertions and file it with the other party [08:38.040 --> 08:44.960] and then ask them to make you whole, so this is something like a tort letter. [08:44.960 --> 08:50.160] Yeah, but you send it the same time, you send it to the arbitration board. [08:50.160 --> 08:56.800] Yeah, so you send the arbitrator and say, they've harmed me this way and you ask them [08:56.800 --> 09:00.080] to make you whole by this method. [09:00.080 --> 09:05.160] You send it to the opposing party saying I've been harmed this way and ask them to make [09:05.160 --> 09:09.600] you whole and then when they don't respond and you go back to the arbitrator and ask [09:09.600 --> 09:17.520] the arbitrator to give you a summary ruling because opposing party, the other side did [09:17.520 --> 09:24.680] not oppose your accusations and by not opposing them, they judicially admit them. [09:24.680 --> 09:35.280] Right, and then you file, you wait 90, you wait 10 days from the date you get the order [09:35.280 --> 09:38.960] from the arbitration board unless they hold it for 10 days. [09:38.960 --> 09:42.960] I know there's something about a 10-day cure. [09:42.960 --> 09:51.920] After 10 days, you send them an invoice for the amount of the money damages plus a copy [09:51.920 --> 09:59.280] of the order from the arbitration board and 90 days from that day that they receive them. [09:59.280 --> 10:06.240] You have to send them like a priority mail with the numbers on it and 90 days from the [10:06.240 --> 10:15.200] day that you send the first invoice, you file in the federal court a motion for what's the [10:15.200 --> 10:22.920] word and then confirmation, a decision or application for confirmation of the thing. [10:22.920 --> 10:30.680] In that, all you have to do is say, I attempted to collect this from the person and they would [10:30.680 --> 10:31.680] not respond. [10:31.680 --> 10:38.480] They did not tell me whether or not they intended to pay this money and therefore I need the [10:38.480 --> 10:43.520] assistance of the court, that kind of thing. [10:43.520 --> 10:49.840] That does sound interesting, I'll have to read those documents. [10:49.840 --> 10:57.040] Does the document that you sent me have the underlying law that supports these? [10:57.040 --> 11:06.560] Actually, the underlying law is Title IX of the United States Code, it's very short. [11:06.560 --> 11:08.560] Very short. [11:08.560 --> 11:18.560] U.S.C. 9 U.S.C. Yes, specifically 9, 10, 11, and 12. [11:18.560 --> 11:21.560] 9 through 12 U.S.C. [11:21.560 --> 11:27.920] Okay, I will have to get that and look at it because this sounds like an interesting [11:27.920 --> 11:28.920] method. [11:28.920 --> 11:35.920] Yeah, I mean you can throw it in with a lot of different other twists and turns, I guess. [11:35.920 --> 11:43.600] What we used, and when I say we, there's a group of us that are doing this together, [11:43.600 --> 11:52.720] about five of us, and we're doing this with the idea that we'll see if it works, we're [11:52.720 --> 11:56.920] from all over the country and see what happens. [11:56.920 --> 12:00.520] I mean, what's the worst that can happen? [12:00.520 --> 12:09.920] We cost us $700, roughly, for an arbitrator so that, you know, we do $700, but we have [12:09.920 --> 12:14.640] the opportunity to get our house paid and money left over because they're going to [12:14.640 --> 12:19.640] pay us twice what our houses were. [12:19.640 --> 12:25.240] That would be a nice maneuver if we could get that to completion. [12:25.240 --> 12:33.240] I hate to say something works because that always sounds kind of gimmicky. [12:33.240 --> 12:38.600] Even if the law supports it, if the law doesn't, but if we can find the law to support it, [12:38.600 --> 12:40.480] then that would be great. [12:40.480 --> 12:49.960] Yeah, because they have 90 days to attack the ruling, but like I said, they're very limited [12:49.960 --> 12:52.040] into what they can attack. [12:52.040 --> 12:58.000] They can only attack the arbitrator, whereas they felt that we were unfair in the way we [12:58.000 --> 13:03.880] feel unfair in the contract or whatever, but if they never responded, it's by default. [13:03.880 --> 13:07.360] There is no argument. [13:07.360 --> 13:14.760] So have you found that opposing parties tend not to respond to arbitration? [13:14.760 --> 13:16.240] They do not. [13:16.240 --> 13:19.240] They do not. [13:19.240 --> 13:25.160] Do you have any idea why could it be that for the most part people don't know how to [13:25.160 --> 13:27.160] adjudicate it? [13:27.160 --> 13:32.800] Well, there's a couple of things. [13:32.800 --> 13:39.120] I was thinking that they don't understand what they're looking at when they see a conditional [13:39.120 --> 13:40.280] acceptance for value. [13:40.280 --> 13:44.960] They don't know what to do, and they just throw it in a file. [13:44.960 --> 13:47.840] That's what I think. [13:47.840 --> 13:50.120] That sounds like some lawyers. [13:50.120 --> 13:51.120] Lawyers I know. [13:51.120 --> 13:57.440] Well, not just lawyers, because they're going to, not lawyers, these are going to the mortgage [13:57.440 --> 14:02.400] company to the QWR department, and they're saying, well, this isn't a QWR, and that's [14:02.400 --> 14:03.400] throw it away. [14:03.400 --> 14:08.600] They're throwing it in the file. [14:08.600 --> 14:12.320] In that case, I need to look much more closely. [14:12.320 --> 14:22.720] Someone in West Texas who has the 80-something properties that the bank is trying to swallow. [14:22.720 --> 14:26.600] We just sent him over a hundred QWRs. [14:26.600 --> 14:27.600] Yes. [14:27.600 --> 14:28.600] Try this on, guys. [14:28.600 --> 14:29.600] Well, that's fun. [14:29.600 --> 14:30.600] Try it. [14:30.600 --> 14:41.240] And if you do it multiple times, you know what I mean. [14:41.240 --> 14:47.120] But for every judgment, it's going to cost you $700 to get an award. [14:47.120 --> 14:51.720] So if you could put in damages for pain and suffering and aggravation, you could throw [14:51.720 --> 14:52.720] that in. [14:52.720 --> 14:53.720] So you know. [14:53.720 --> 15:02.320] Well, the banker has made an error here in that he has grouped all of the properties [15:02.320 --> 15:10.800] into one deed of trust, and he's got loans that name all of the properties as collateral. [15:10.800 --> 15:13.760] It's a horrendous mess. [15:13.760 --> 15:21.760] The guy has $20 million worth of property that is being bound up to collateralize $2 [15:21.760 --> 15:29.440] million in debt, and the banker's been grossly overcharging him in interest. [15:29.440 --> 15:35.480] So we're going to sting him pretty good, but the default arbitration would really be [15:35.480 --> 15:39.520] a nice way to sneak up on him on the banker. [15:39.520 --> 15:40.520] Yeah. [15:40.520 --> 15:51.440] I mean, they can always argue if they respond at all and argue anything in their response, [15:51.440 --> 15:59.120] you know, they lose in a way because if they argue anything, everything they're admitting [15:59.120 --> 16:05.520] to that's in the...or answering to that you'll see when you read the contract, it more like [16:05.520 --> 16:07.520] makes them trip all over themselves. [16:07.520 --> 16:08.520] Good. [16:08.520 --> 16:10.440] I want to see that. [16:10.440 --> 16:16.920] This particular issue, I looked in the public record, and this bank has only been sued one [16:16.920 --> 16:21.000] time over foreclosures, as far as I can tell. [16:21.000 --> 16:25.480] So they don't have a lot of experience being beat up by... [16:25.480 --> 16:26.480] Do they have? [16:26.480 --> 16:28.000] ...procades like us. [16:28.000 --> 16:29.000] So... [16:29.000 --> 16:33.880] Do they have a lot of property themselves? [16:33.880 --> 16:35.880] You talking about the bank? [16:35.880 --> 16:36.880] Yeah. [16:36.880 --> 16:38.600] I don't know. [16:38.600 --> 16:44.640] The reason I asked is because wouldn't it be nice to get a default arbitration agreement? [16:44.640 --> 16:49.320] 90 days down the line, you get a...or 120 days down the line, you get a... [16:49.320 --> 16:50.320] Okay, wait, wait, hang on. [16:50.320 --> 16:51.320] About to go to break. [16:51.320 --> 16:55.320] Randy Kelton, Rula Law Radio, we'll be right back. [16:55.320 --> 17:04.440] Rula Law Radio is proud to offer the Rula Law Traffic Center. [17:04.440 --> 17:08.200] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [17:08.200 --> 17:12.360] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.360 --> 17:15.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [17:15.400 --> 17:19.400] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [17:19.400 --> 17:23.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.280 --> 17:25.160] our rights through due process. 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[17:54.120 --> 18:00.760] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:00.760 --> 18:06.080] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:06.080 --> 18:09.520] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [18:09.520 --> 18:13.920] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.920 --> 18:14.920] can win two. [18:14.920 --> 18:19.680] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.680 --> 18:20.680] civil rights statute. [18:20.680 --> 18:25.000] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons? [18:25.000 --> 18:27.040] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:27.040 --> 18:29.640] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:29.640 --> 18:34.320] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:34.320 --> 18:39.440] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.440 --> 18:41.560] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.560 --> 18:47.120] For more information, please visit RulaLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner [18:47.120 --> 18:50.040] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [18:50.040 --> 18:57.800] That's RulaLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com. [18:57.800 --> 19:04.800] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:04.800 --> 19:17.200] Okay, we are back. [19:17.200 --> 19:20.840] Randy Kelton with Rula Radio and Danny in Tennessee. [19:20.840 --> 19:24.800] Danny, did we finish with you or did I just jump right over you? [19:24.800 --> 19:29.360] No, when you were trying to get back with me, you couldn't hear me a while ago. [19:29.360 --> 19:30.960] Oh, okay, okay, cool. [19:30.960 --> 19:33.960] Then hang on, then let me finish up with listening and I'll come back to you. [19:33.960 --> 19:38.240] I had forgotten what happened to you and you were still on the board and I thought maybe [19:38.240 --> 19:40.240] I was just getting confused. [19:40.240 --> 19:42.680] Okay, that happens sometimes. [19:42.680 --> 19:44.680] I'm old. [19:44.680 --> 19:51.800] You know you're getting old when you forget when you put your hearing aid batteries. [19:51.800 --> 19:58.800] Okay, you know I have to speak up because I can't hear good. [19:58.800 --> 20:04.800] Just kidding, just kidding. [20:04.800 --> 20:09.800] Okay, now the thing is is when you send these, you send them to the QWR department because [20:09.800 --> 20:12.800] that's where they ask you to send all correspondence. [20:12.800 --> 20:17.800] So that's, you don't send them to the headquarters during this. [20:17.800 --> 20:23.800] Okay, one of the things I'm trying to get this guy to do is send us all of the contracts [20:23.800 --> 20:26.800] because the client doesn't have all of the contracts. [20:26.800 --> 20:32.800] I suspect they're all going to be the same, but I want to get a few of them so I can read [20:32.800 --> 20:37.800] through the contracts and I'll look for an arbitration clause in there. [20:37.800 --> 20:39.800] Yeah. [20:39.800 --> 20:42.800] That'll be a good thing to throw at them. [20:42.800 --> 20:48.800] They don't seem too experienced with being taken on. [20:48.800 --> 20:57.800] They had threatened to, the client had a serious medical issue a couple years ago. [20:57.800 --> 21:00.800] They thought he was going to die. [21:00.800 --> 21:06.800] And soon as that occurred, the banker started pulling shenanigans in what looked like an [21:06.800 --> 21:09.800] effort to foreclose. [21:09.800 --> 21:19.800] And I've been looking at this, trying to figure out how the banker would profit by these maneuvers. [21:19.800 --> 21:27.800] Now, they thought that the banker, he's also a mayor, that he wanted to foreclose over on [21:27.800 --> 21:35.800] these so that the city could purchase them and then rent them out at such an aid housing. [21:35.800 --> 21:44.800] They researched the city and found zero evidence of that and that's unlikely because the banker [21:44.800 --> 21:46.800] is the mayor. [21:46.800 --> 21:55.800] And being the mayor, that would mean that the city absolutely could not bid on any of these [21:55.800 --> 21:59.800] properties so the city could not purchase them, period. [21:59.800 --> 22:04.800] Because the mayor is the one that would be doing the foreclosure. [22:04.800 --> 22:07.800] So that doesn't look like the case. [22:07.800 --> 22:17.800] But what is emerging that may be happening is that this banker has a group of investors [22:17.800 --> 22:23.800] that he may be involved with under the table. [22:23.800 --> 22:34.800] So they buy out banks and then they look for people with loans that they can foreclose on. [22:34.800 --> 22:40.800] And it may be that they have an investor group that they're working with on the side who then [22:40.800 --> 22:43.800] comes in and buys these properties. [22:43.800 --> 22:46.800] It's beginning to look like that's what the case is. [22:46.800 --> 22:52.800] Because when a bank forecloses, they're not allowed to make a profit on the foreclosure. [22:52.800 --> 22:56.800] They sell the property and they only get what's owed to them. [22:56.800 --> 23:04.800] And everything else is supposed to go back to the purchase, to the lender. [23:04.800 --> 23:07.800] I'm sorry, to the borrower. [23:07.800 --> 23:08.800] Right. [23:08.800 --> 23:21.800] So if the banker is pulling some shenanigans to force somebody to default on a whole bunch of loans, [23:21.800 --> 23:25.800] you know, getting paid interest on loans is how they make their money. [23:25.800 --> 23:29.800] And this guy's getting six to six and a half percent interest on all of these loans. [23:29.800 --> 23:31.800] That's way high. [23:31.800 --> 23:41.800] So the question becomes, why on earth would he want to disrupt these 80-something contracts [23:41.800 --> 23:46.800] that are getting between six and six and a half percent interest? [23:46.800 --> 23:55.800] If he refinances something, now the interest is going to be four and a half to five. [23:55.800 --> 24:03.800] So he has to have some other reason for wanting to force all of these properties into foreclosure. [24:03.800 --> 24:10.800] The guy's collecting $27,000 a month in payments right now. [24:10.800 --> 24:16.800] So on the surface, it doesn't make sense why he would want to force this guy into foreclosure. [24:16.800 --> 24:19.800] Take a look at what I sent you. [24:19.800 --> 24:24.800] Take a look at what I sent you and then compare him with some of the contracts that he has [24:24.800 --> 24:29.800] and see if you can throw something together for him. [24:29.800 --> 24:32.800] I would definitely do that. [24:32.800 --> 24:33.800] Okay. [24:33.800 --> 24:36.800] Do you have anything else for us, Ms. Leslie? [24:36.800 --> 24:38.800] No, that's it. [24:38.800 --> 24:46.800] Like I said, it will take six months to get an award that you get from an arbitrator [24:46.800 --> 24:49.800] confirmed by a federal court. [24:49.800 --> 24:51.800] It does take that long. [24:51.800 --> 24:52.800] Okay. [24:52.800 --> 24:54.800] And I definitely won't look at this. [24:54.800 --> 24:58.800] This may be an interesting option. [24:58.800 --> 24:59.800] Okay. [24:59.800 --> 25:00.800] Catch you later. [25:00.800 --> 25:01.800] Okay. [25:01.800 --> 25:02.800] Thank you, Ms. Leslie. [25:02.800 --> 25:06.800] Now we're going to go back to Danny in Tennessee. [25:06.800 --> 25:17.800] Danny, where were we when I lost you? [25:17.800 --> 25:20.800] Looks like we can't hear you again, Danny. [25:20.800 --> 25:23.800] Are you there? [25:23.800 --> 25:27.800] You're just not having a good day, Danny. [25:27.800 --> 25:30.800] Try hanging up and calling back in. [25:30.800 --> 25:32.800] And I'm going to go to John. [25:32.800 --> 25:36.800] When you call back in, I'll interrupt John, I know he won't mind. [25:36.800 --> 25:37.800] Okay. [25:37.800 --> 25:39.800] John from New York. [25:39.800 --> 25:40.800] Hello, John. [25:40.800 --> 25:43.800] What do you have for us today? [25:43.800 --> 25:47.800] Well, will I enter and sign in, please? [25:47.800 --> 25:48.800] Okay. [25:48.800 --> 25:49.800] Hi, Randy. [25:49.800 --> 25:50.800] Hi. [25:50.800 --> 25:54.800] I just sent you a link to a video. [25:54.800 --> 25:58.800] And that link to the video discusses the following. [25:58.800 --> 26:03.800] On social security cards, you probably already know what I'm going to say. [26:03.800 --> 26:09.800] But on social security cards, there's a number in red in the back of the social security card. [26:09.800 --> 26:16.800] If you have a bill, I just ran across a video where I was taking your advice, by the way, [26:16.800 --> 26:19.800] and looking up the UCC and so on and so forth. [26:19.800 --> 26:22.800] And this video happened to come up. [26:22.800 --> 26:30.800] And the guy says, if you have a bill that has to be paid, we'll say your car insurance bill that needs payment. [26:30.800 --> 26:35.800] You call the car insurance company that you owe the money to, and you tell them that you want an AC... [26:35.800 --> 26:40.800] You want to do an ACH, an automated... [26:40.800 --> 26:44.800] An automatic or automated clearinghouse payment. [26:44.800 --> 26:48.800] You want to do an ACH, an automated clearinghouse payment. [26:48.800 --> 26:54.800] And that number in red on the back of your social security card has a letter at the beginning [26:54.800 --> 27:01.800] that tells you which one of the 12 federal reserve banks that that social security account is with. [27:01.800 --> 27:04.800] In other words, your social security account. [27:04.800 --> 27:13.800] And what you do is you call the bank, he claims, and you get the routing number of the federal reserve bank [27:13.800 --> 27:17.800] that your social security number is attached to. [27:17.800 --> 27:21.800] And you want to use the funds available routing number. [27:21.800 --> 27:28.800] The company you owe the bill to, you just give them the account number on the back of your social security card. [27:28.800 --> 27:33.800] And the routing number of the federal reserve bank, and you say, well, that's my bank, [27:33.800 --> 27:36.800] and I'm making a payment on my bank from my bank. [27:36.800 --> 27:40.800] And they're supposed to end up saying, great, the payment just went through. [27:40.800 --> 27:43.800] Thank you for your payment. [27:43.800 --> 27:45.800] What do you think of that? [27:45.800 --> 27:54.800] It reminds me of the 10 of these 1040 OID. [27:54.800 --> 27:56.800] Say again, the 1040 what? [27:56.800 --> 27:57.800] OID. [27:57.800 --> 28:01.800] Yeah, there was a big deal about 1040 OID. [28:01.800 --> 28:07.800] And that was something you could use to pay off all your debts with. [28:07.800 --> 28:16.800] And they brought it to me and wanted me to do it, and I looked at it and said, this doesn't seem right. [28:16.800 --> 28:19.800] And so I wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole. [28:19.800 --> 28:28.800] And it turned out that the OID issue was an internal process meant for something else. [28:28.800 --> 28:35.800] And when guys in the Patriot community started using it to extinguish debts with, [28:35.800 --> 28:42.800] it was something the internal computers couldn't. [28:42.800 --> 28:55.800] They weren't programmed to be able to recognize that this was an improper transaction. [28:55.800 --> 29:01.800] Almost everybody who did that got hammered big time by the IRS. [29:01.800 --> 29:03.800] This sounds like something similar. [29:03.800 --> 29:14.800] I would certainly want to see all of the law supporting what they're suggesting here. [29:14.800 --> 29:24.800] I've heard these claims that we have these monstrous accounts in our names with incredible amounts of money in it, [29:24.800 --> 29:28.800] and it's never made any sense. [29:28.800 --> 29:32.800] If something doesn't sound right, it's generally not. [29:32.800 --> 29:41.800] And until I can get back in law, I wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole because it's likely to come back and sting you. [29:41.800 --> 29:46.800] Hang on. Back to go to break. Randy Kelton moves on radio. [29:46.800 --> 29:50.800] Our call in number 512-646-1984. [29:50.800 --> 29:55.800] We've got some empty spots on the board, so if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [29:55.800 --> 30:01.800] We'll be right back. [30:01.800 --> 30:04.800] Let's get physical, physical. [30:04.800 --> 30:10.800] Hey, if you exercise even a tent as much as you should, you can extend your life by years. [30:10.800 --> 30:14.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll hike right back with the good news in just a moment. [30:14.800 --> 30:22.800] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:22.800 --> 30:25.800] That's creepy, but it doesn't have to be that way. [30:25.800 --> 30:31.800] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. StartPage doesn't store your IP address, [30:31.800 --> 30:35.800] make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies, and their third party certified. [30:35.800 --> 30:39.800] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with StartPage. [30:39.800 --> 30:45.800] Great search results and total privacy. StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:45.800 --> 30:50.800] Exercise. We all know we need it, but we don't always take the time to do it. [30:50.800 --> 30:57.800] That's what evidence says. Just 15 measly minutes of physical activity a day can extend your life a lot. [30:57.800 --> 31:03.800] Researchers in Taiwan found that an hour and a half of exercise a week extended people's lives by three whole years. [31:03.800 --> 31:05.800] That's just 13 minutes a day. [31:05.800 --> 31:11.800] The study found that small amounts of daily exercise made people 10% less likely to die of cancer [31:11.800 --> 31:14.800] and 14% less likely to die for any reason. [31:14.800 --> 31:20.800] Welcome on Couch Potatoes. Dig out those Olivia Newton-John CDs and let me hear your body talk. [31:20.800 --> 31:46.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:46.800 --> 31:52.800] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.800 --> 31:57.800] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.800 --> 32:00.800] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.800 --> 32:05.800] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:05.800 --> 32:10.800] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting them to pay for it. [32:10.800 --> 32:14.800] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.800 --> 32:20.800] While you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense, [32:20.800 --> 32:26.800] and we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [32:26.800 --> 32:31.800] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [32:31.800 --> 32:38.800] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:38.800 --> 32:45.800] Get the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.800 --> 32:50.800] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.800 --> 32:56.800] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:56.800 --> 32:58.800] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.800 --> 33:08.800] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:28.800 --> 33:32.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Rufa Radio. [33:32.800 --> 33:37.800] Hang on, John. Let me try Danny again to see if he's got his sound back up. [33:37.800 --> 33:39.800] Danny, are you there? [33:39.800 --> 33:41.800] Yeah, you hear me? [33:41.800 --> 33:46.800] I can hear you this time. Okay. Where were we? [33:46.800 --> 33:53.800] Well, almost forgotten now, but sometime before when we were talking, [33:53.800 --> 34:01.800] I was trying to bring in some criminal complaints in the county here and the clerk wouldn't take it. [34:01.800 --> 34:14.800] Okay, look up Tennessee Rules of Court, Rule 3, 4, and 5. [34:14.800 --> 34:28.800] These rules go to preliminary examinations, and 5 and 5.1 is the one that authorizes the clerk to hold a preliminary hearing. [34:28.800 --> 34:32.800] Well, Jerka Knottner shorts. [34:32.800 --> 34:37.800] You should have seen the clerk when I asked the bailiff to arrest her. [34:37.800 --> 34:38.800] Yeah. [34:38.800 --> 34:42.800] She certainly didn't see that coming. [34:42.800 --> 34:47.800] Well, something else. [34:47.800 --> 34:59.800] I know we were also talking about how they end up taking people off the jail rather than taking them to the magistrate first and some way to take care of that. [34:59.800 --> 35:12.800] I've got something perhaps at least if we were to do this, it would get some communication going with them with back channel communications or something. [35:12.800 --> 35:22.800] But I've observed in at least two different courts, and I'm pretty sure it's the same way in the others that they have in the morning, [35:22.800 --> 35:33.800] in the prisoners from the jail and have them there first, you know, talk about their rights and the setting bail and everything. [35:33.800 --> 35:43.800] And so it's obvious that they haven't been to the magistrate before they were put in jail because they're dressed in prison garb and chains and shackles. [35:43.800 --> 35:52.800] And so somewhere in the code is talking about a magistrate having notice of some offense and, you know, that's right there in front of him. [35:52.800 --> 35:55.800] So that's actual notice, you know, it's not a written notice. [35:55.800 --> 36:04.800] He has noticed that they've been put in jail without having had the hearing, some kind of hearing first. [36:04.800 --> 36:21.800] And so, you know, they're involved in a violation and my contention is the whole thing is just for their personal convenience and comfort. [36:21.800 --> 36:24.800] That's exactly what it is. [36:24.800 --> 36:34.800] When I talked to this judge, he said that they used to bring people, I wanted to file complaints and he sent me the prosecutor. [36:34.800 --> 36:44.800] And they said they used to take complaints, but they got so many frivolous complaints that they stopped doing that and sent them to prosecutors. [36:44.800 --> 36:48.800] And I don't know if I believe that or not. [36:48.800 --> 36:51.800] But even if that was the case. [36:51.800 --> 37:08.800] Okay, let me explain why I said I don't believe that because when I first came to Texas, Fort Worth in Fort Worth, the grand jury set one day a month to hear complaints from private citizens. [37:08.800 --> 37:11.800] But they stopped doing that. [37:11.800 --> 37:15.800] Because nobody showed up. [37:15.800 --> 37:26.800] So now to say that people are filing all kinds of criminal frivolous complaints, the city of Fort Worth was set up to take citizens complaints and weren't getting any. [37:26.800 --> 37:36.800] And the city of Fort Worth is about 50 times larger than the whole county, a weekly county. [37:36.800 --> 37:39.800] And they're not getting any. [37:39.800 --> 37:44.800] So that wasn't the issue. [37:44.800 --> 37:52.800] What if somebody started filing criminal charges against these guys? [37:52.800 --> 37:55.800] Third party gadfly. [37:55.800 --> 38:08.800] I'm not going to do that here, because I may actually have a county that will try and look at the law and try to do it in accordance with the law. [38:08.800 --> 38:24.800] But if I can get this county to do it and demonstrate that it doesn't cost cause issues with adjudication to cases, it doesn't interfere with anybody's jurisdiction. [38:24.800 --> 38:36.800] And it actually essentially lowers the amount of claims and severity of the claims against the people being arrested. [38:36.800 --> 38:39.800] That's the thing I need. [38:39.800 --> 38:43.800] But what we may also need is a counterpoint. [38:43.800 --> 38:49.800] This is what you're subject to if you don't follow these codes. [38:49.800 --> 38:59.800] And in the way I dealt with weekly county, you know, I came in there and started this fight. [38:59.800 --> 39:03.800] You know, that's just what I say, the best fight to have someone you picked. [39:03.800 --> 39:06.800] So I didn't have any issues, legal issues with the county. [39:06.800 --> 39:09.800] I just come in there and picked the fight. [39:09.800 --> 39:16.800] And everything they did made things worse for them. [39:16.800 --> 39:32.800] And until I even went to the county mayor in Tennessee, they don't have commissioners courts to have county mayors and asked to see the insurance or bonding for all of the. [39:32.800 --> 39:36.800] County employees. [39:36.800 --> 39:53.800] Because I told the mayor's assistant that I understand that there's a $70,000 $75,000 bond for each employee and I've already got about eight or nine allegations I can bring against these bonds. [39:53.800 --> 39:57.800] So I want to see who else has bonds and who has the biggest ones. [39:57.800 --> 40:03.800] So essentially what I'm telling them is, is I'm coming in here sharp shooting you guys. [40:03.800 --> 40:08.800] So I can make claims against your bonds. [40:08.800 --> 40:12.800] And there's not anything you can do about it. [40:12.800 --> 40:19.800] Because you're not following policy, you're not following statute for following policy policy. [40:19.800 --> 40:25.800] And when you follow a policy, it doesn't mean statutes, I get the stingy for it. [40:25.800 --> 40:31.800] So they think they got somebody in here who's just setting them up so he can do this to them. [40:31.800 --> 40:35.800] And now they're looking at what can we do about this. [40:35.800 --> 40:37.800] Nothing. [40:37.800 --> 40:39.800] The only thing they can do is follow policy. [40:39.800 --> 40:44.800] And then if I can get somebody in another county hammering them big time. [40:44.800 --> 40:50.800] Then that tells this county, this is what happens to you when you don't do it right. [40:50.800 --> 40:54.800] And then we'll be able to take this to the legislature. [40:54.800 --> 40:57.800] So what do you think, Danny? [40:57.800 --> 41:13.800] Yeah, well, I could maybe be the other county, but, you know, my idea was one of the complaints I wrote up was not against a specific individual, but against, well, the way I've seen it, [41:13.800 --> 41:15.800] all the resting officers were there. [41:15.800 --> 41:20.800] I mean, arresting officers take custodial arrest and take someone to jail. [41:20.800 --> 41:33.800] Another one against all intake jailers, that is the one to do the paperwork, someone in and they take them in without a magistrates order or commitment order. [41:33.800 --> 41:45.800] And then all the magistrates because they see people being brought from the jail in the prisoner garb and the chains and shackles. [41:45.800 --> 41:54.800] So they've got actual notice that this has been done these people without having had a magistrates hearing ahead of time. [41:54.800 --> 42:00.800] And so everybody's kind of disqualified in the county here. [42:00.800 --> 42:03.800] That's perfect. [42:03.800 --> 42:20.800] Okay. And the way to pick this fight is go down when they're having this morning cattle call thing and request to observe the proceedings. [42:20.800 --> 42:22.800] That's fine. [42:22.800 --> 42:25.800] He's going to court room and it's going on. [42:25.800 --> 42:33.800] Yeah, okay, so you okay, I didn't you know, sometimes, you know, they have it on video and have different ways. [42:33.800 --> 42:36.800] But if they're actually having it in a courtroom, that's perfect. [42:36.800 --> 42:45.800] You go in and ask the bailiff to ask the clerk for an appearance docket. [42:45.800 --> 42:51.800] You want a list of everybody who's to be brought before the court. [42:51.800 --> 43:00.800] Now you've got everybody and then you sit in there and you act like you're really paying attention and you're taking notes and make sure you got on a nice suit. [43:00.800 --> 43:03.800] So they think you're a lawyer. [43:03.800 --> 43:08.800] And when they come over, start asking you questions, shoot them away. [43:08.800 --> 43:15.800] They'll tell you about what I did in Williamson County, the most corrupt county in Texas. [43:15.800 --> 43:23.800] And when they asked me if I had, you know, I was sitting in the court taking notes and a prosecutor came on and said, sir, sir. [43:23.800 --> 43:25.800] I said, yes. [43:25.800 --> 43:27.800] Do you have a case here today? [43:27.800 --> 43:29.800] Oh, no, no, nothing like that. [43:29.800 --> 43:31.800] And I went back to writing. [43:31.800 --> 43:33.800] He stood there a minute as sir, sir. [43:33.800 --> 43:34.800] I said, yes. [43:34.800 --> 43:36.800] Do you have a civil case in this court? [43:36.800 --> 43:37.800] Oh, no, nothing like that. [43:37.800 --> 43:38.800] I went back to writing. [43:38.800 --> 43:45.800] He stood there a minute and he said, sir, sir. And I looked up at him, held up both hands with my palms out. No more questions. [43:45.800 --> 43:47.800] They didn't know what to do with that. [43:47.800 --> 43:50.800] So they're wondering who the heck is this guy? [43:50.800 --> 43:55.800] So when we come back, we'll talk about how you can make them ask that same question. [43:55.800 --> 44:19.800] We'll be right back. [44:26.800 --> 44:31.800] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Pollen Burst. [44:31.800 --> 44:38.800] We also offer one-world-way, Mountain House storeable foods, Berkey water products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [44:38.800 --> 44:42.800] We broker metals IRA accounts, and we also accept bitcoins as payment. [44:42.800 --> 44:45.800] Call us at 512-646-6440. [44:45.800 --> 44:50.800] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:50.800 --> 45:00.800] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com, or call 512-646-6440. [45:00.800 --> 45:03.800] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.800 --> 45:06.800] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:06.800 --> 45:14.800] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.800 --> 45:18.800] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.800 --> 45:22.800] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.800 --> 45:27.800] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.800 --> 45:33.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.800 --> 45:42.800] 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. [45:42.800 --> 45:51.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.800 --> 45:55.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.800 --> 46:13.800] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:13.800 --> 46:30.800] Whoa, whoa, whoa! Oh, whoa, whoa! Yes. Always. I must be careful what I'm wishing for when I'm hungry. [46:30.800 --> 46:37.800] Okay, We are back! Randy Kelton on the 300 dollar radio and we are talking to Danny in Tennessee! [46:37.800 --> 46:42.800] Okay, Have you ever done any acting Danny? [46:42.800 --> 46:45.800] Well, not much of anything. [46:45.800 --> 46:49.800] This is a good opportunity. [46:49.800 --> 46:58.800] Put on a suit and tie, and imagine that you are an FBI agent. [46:58.800 --> 47:09.800] Going into Podunk, Tennessee, two-bit local yokel court. [47:09.800 --> 47:15.800] How would you conduct yourself? [47:15.800 --> 47:23.800] That's what I did in Williamson County, and made them crazy. [47:23.800 --> 47:25.800] They can't ask you why. [47:25.800 --> 47:27.800] Why do you want to do something? [47:27.800 --> 47:29.800] When they tried to ask me why, I always said, [47:29.800 --> 47:31.800] no, no, no, no, no, no. [47:31.800 --> 47:33.800] Don't ask me that. [47:33.800 --> 47:38.800] If they insist, then now they stepped in it. [47:38.800 --> 47:42.800] And depending on how you want to handle this, [47:42.800 --> 47:47.800] like if I've got a lower level flunky, [47:47.800 --> 47:52.800] and they insist on knowing why I want something, [47:52.800 --> 47:54.800] then I generally ask for their supervisor, [47:54.800 --> 47:57.800] and ask the supervisor to arrest them. [47:57.800 --> 48:00.800] But if you weren't going to set them up, [48:00.800 --> 48:05.800] they need to know they're being set up. [48:05.800 --> 48:11.800] They need to know they can't do anything about it. [48:11.800 --> 48:13.800] But, well, I said they need to know. [48:13.800 --> 48:17.800] They need to know they need to have somebody in there [48:17.800 --> 48:19.800] that they can't control. [48:19.800 --> 48:22.800] The best way to keep it from controlling you is when they don't [48:22.800 --> 48:27.800] have a clue as to what you're there for, what you're doing. [48:27.800 --> 48:29.800] And you don't let them engage you. [48:29.800 --> 48:33.800] If you pretend you're an FBI agent, you won't let them question you. [48:33.800 --> 48:35.800] You're the one that questions them. [48:35.800 --> 48:38.800] They don't question you. [48:38.800 --> 48:44.800] And if we could get you in one county hammering them a lot crazy, [48:44.800 --> 48:50.800] and then me in another county tried to get them to do something [48:50.800 --> 48:58.800] in a way that would make them immune to what you're doing, [48:58.800 --> 49:02.800] we may actually get these guys to do something. [49:02.800 --> 49:09.800] And this particular judge is a treasurer of a judges organization [49:09.800 --> 49:12.800] in Tennessee. [49:12.800 --> 49:16.800] So we could get this in front of all the judges. [49:16.800 --> 49:20.800] What would happen if these judges start getting hammered [49:20.800 --> 49:27.800] by some hillbilly for not following the laws it's written? [49:27.800 --> 49:31.800] What are they going to do? [49:31.800 --> 49:38.800] How would they deal with you? [49:38.800 --> 49:40.800] And all the standard stuff, you know, they'll beat me up, [49:40.800 --> 49:42.800] they'll arrest me, nah, nah. [49:42.800 --> 49:46.800] When you pick the fight, no, they don't do that kind of stuff. [49:46.800 --> 49:52.800] You guys back up, especially when you don't explain yourself. [49:52.800 --> 50:00.800] That's the most powerful thing I ever did, was refuse to explain myself. [50:00.800 --> 50:04.800] When the judge asked me what I'm doing in his courtroom and did that in fourth, [50:04.800 --> 50:06.800] he asked me why I was in it, [50:06.800 --> 50:10.800] who actually the bailiff wanted to know why I was there. [50:10.800 --> 50:13.800] And I told him to beat it. [50:13.800 --> 50:16.800] And the second time he asked me, I stood up in the courtroom [50:16.800 --> 50:19.800] and hollered out to the judge, your honor, [50:19.800 --> 50:22.800] and he's having a hearing, and he stopped you. [50:22.800 --> 50:23.800] What's going on here? [50:23.800 --> 50:27.800] I said, your honor, will you pull this bulldog off of me? [50:27.800 --> 50:30.800] And the judge wanted to know what's going on. [50:30.800 --> 50:33.800] And the bailiff told him, well, he won't tell me what he's doing here. [50:33.800 --> 50:36.800] Well, first he said he wouldn't, I wouldn't tell him his name. [50:36.800 --> 50:40.800] And he said, sir, do you mind if I ask who you are? [50:40.800 --> 50:42.800] I said, no, I don't mind. [50:42.800 --> 50:43.800] Well, who are you? [50:43.800 --> 50:45.800] I said, I'm Randy Kelton. [50:45.800 --> 50:50.800] Do you mind if I ask what you're doing in my courtroom? [50:50.800 --> 50:52.800] See, he asked me if he could ask. [50:52.800 --> 50:54.800] The bailiff demanded to know. [50:54.800 --> 50:56.800] I said, no, I don't mind at all. [50:56.800 --> 51:00.800] Well, then Mr. Kelton, what are you doing in my courtroom? [51:00.800 --> 51:04.800] I'm here for entertainment. [51:04.800 --> 51:05.800] You're here for entertainment. [51:05.800 --> 51:08.800] Yes, your honor, I'm here for entertainment. [51:08.800 --> 51:09.800] And the judge is smart. [51:09.800 --> 51:10.800] He got it. [51:10.800 --> 51:14.800] He turned to the bailiff and he said, well, leave him alone. [51:14.800 --> 51:16.800] So they never knew why I was there. [51:16.800 --> 51:17.800] And that's the important part. [51:17.800 --> 51:19.800] If they don't know what you're doing there, [51:19.800 --> 51:23.800] they're going to assume something horrible. [51:23.800 --> 51:25.800] So I guess I kind of ran away with this. [51:25.800 --> 51:28.800] What do you want to do, Danny? [51:28.800 --> 51:33.800] Oh, well, I guess you haven't read the email I sent you about a week or more ago. [51:33.800 --> 51:37.800] I might have, but I get a hundred a day. [51:37.800 --> 51:41.800] Yeah, but I don't remember getting one from you. [51:41.800 --> 51:43.800] Well, it's been a while. [51:43.800 --> 51:46.800] So it might be pretty far down the list. [51:46.800 --> 51:51.800] But yeah, you may not know this about Tennessee yet. [51:51.800 --> 51:58.800] And I've only kind of found out not too long ago, but the appellate courts, [51:58.800 --> 52:02.800] they meet around the state. [52:02.800 --> 52:09.800] And one of the main places is here in Jackson and in Nashville and in Knoxville. [52:09.800 --> 52:15.800] So I've got a building here for the Supreme Court where also the Court of Appeals [52:15.800 --> 52:19.800] and the Court of Criminal Appeals meet. [52:19.800 --> 52:21.800] And they've got... [52:21.800 --> 52:23.800] Oh, wait, stop, stop. [52:23.800 --> 52:25.800] You have two... [52:25.800 --> 52:29.800] You have a Court of Appeals and a Court of Criminal Appeals? [52:29.800 --> 52:31.800] Yes. [52:31.800 --> 52:35.800] That's interesting. I thought Texas was the only state that did that. [52:35.800 --> 52:39.800] So you have two high courts? [52:39.800 --> 52:40.800] No, no. [52:40.800 --> 52:43.800] Court of Criminal Appeals is below the Supreme Court [52:43.800 --> 52:46.800] and you appeal from the Court of Criminal Appeals to the Supreme Court. [52:46.800 --> 52:49.800] Okay, that's the way it is in Texas. [52:49.800 --> 52:51.800] Oh, I'm sorry. Oh, okay. [52:51.800 --> 52:53.800] The Court of Criminal Appeals is top, isn't it? [52:53.800 --> 52:58.800] Okay, so the Court of Appeals and the Court of Criminal Appeals, [52:58.800 --> 53:02.800] they're just your appellate courts. [53:02.800 --> 53:03.800] Yeah, you first have... [53:03.800 --> 53:06.800] And then both of those appeal to the Supreme. [53:06.800 --> 53:08.800] Okay, that's kind of standard. [53:08.800 --> 53:13.800] In Texas, it's different because we have a civil... [53:13.800 --> 53:18.800] We have an appellate court and they handle both civil and criminal. [53:18.800 --> 53:21.800] But anything appealed out of the appellate court, [53:21.800 --> 53:24.800] if it's civil, it goes to the Supreme. [53:24.800 --> 53:27.800] If it's criminal, it goes to the Court of Criminal Appeals. [53:27.800 --> 53:33.800] So, okay, now I understand you have a criminal and civil appellate court. [53:33.800 --> 53:35.800] Okay. [53:35.800 --> 53:36.800] All right. [53:36.800 --> 53:40.800] But also, well, another weird thing I come across, [53:40.800 --> 53:46.800] there was a listing of the magistrates. [53:46.800 --> 53:54.800] And all the judges from City Judge to Supreme Court were listed there, [53:54.800 --> 53:57.800] but not the Court of Appeals or the Court of Criminal Appeals. [53:57.800 --> 53:58.800] They were left out. [53:58.800 --> 54:03.800] And I don't know if that's saying that they're not magistrates [54:03.800 --> 54:06.800] or they just got left out somehow. [54:06.800 --> 54:12.800] It's unreasonable to think they got left out by accident. [54:12.800 --> 54:17.800] But that is odd if they're left out of it. [54:17.800 --> 54:23.800] But anyway, my idea was that the way... [54:23.800 --> 54:24.800] If I'm bringing... [54:24.800 --> 54:29.800] Accusing all the magistrates and all the arresting officers [54:29.800 --> 54:33.800] and all the intake jailers of this violation, [54:33.800 --> 54:37.800] there's nobody here to hear it. [54:37.800 --> 54:44.800] And there's at least one Supreme Court justice in Memphis [54:44.800 --> 54:46.800] that has office space there. [54:46.800 --> 54:49.800] I've seen the address and things. [54:49.800 --> 54:52.800] And so, I was wondering about going there to get it there. [54:52.800 --> 54:54.800] So, it's out of the area. [54:54.800 --> 54:56.800] They don't have these personal connections, [54:56.800 --> 55:00.800] like whether there's one Supreme Court justice here, [55:00.800 --> 55:05.800] but he lives here, he used to be a judge among the other judges here. [55:05.800 --> 55:09.800] So, he has all those connections, which would be a problem. [55:09.800 --> 55:15.800] And so, I'm trying to take this office in Memphis. [55:15.800 --> 55:18.800] It's probably a good idea. [55:18.800 --> 55:20.800] About what happened. [55:20.800 --> 55:28.800] So, you want to go through the routine in Jackson [55:28.800 --> 55:31.800] and then take over your complaints to Memphis. [55:31.800 --> 55:34.800] That's probably a really good idea. [55:34.800 --> 55:39.800] If the law is similar to the way it is in Texas, [55:39.800 --> 55:42.800] and I'm relatively sure it will be, [55:42.800 --> 55:44.800] we have an attorney general's opinion, [55:44.800 --> 55:46.800] an attorney general opinion at age 500. [55:46.800 --> 55:51.800] And an attorney general opinion is just a legal brief. [55:51.800 --> 55:54.800] And the question was, [55:54.800 --> 55:58.800] why is accused of committing a crime in one county [55:58.800 --> 56:02.800] and he's brought before a magistrate in another county? [56:02.800 --> 56:04.800] And the question was, [56:04.800 --> 56:09.800] can the magistrate in the second county hold an examining trial? [56:09.800 --> 56:13.800] And the answer was, absolutely. [56:13.800 --> 56:17.800] That any magistrate anywhere in the state [56:17.800 --> 56:23.800] could take any complaint, felony or misdemeanor, state or federal. [56:23.800 --> 56:27.800] But the magistrates were there to hear complaints. [56:27.800 --> 56:30.800] It didn't matter where it was at. [56:30.800 --> 56:34.800] We couldn't hear a Tennessee magistrate, [56:34.800 --> 56:36.800] couldn't hear a Kentucky complaint, [56:36.800 --> 56:38.800] but he could hear a state or federal complaint, [56:38.800 --> 56:40.800] no matter where he was at. [56:40.800 --> 56:45.800] So, if you have complaints in Jackson and you take them to Memphis, [56:45.800 --> 56:48.800] then almost certainly the magistrate [56:48.800 --> 56:52.800] is going to be a statewide magistrate. [56:52.800 --> 56:57.800] See, he would be bound. [56:57.800 --> 57:02.800] That's my story, I'm sticking to it. [57:02.800 --> 57:06.800] You still there, Danny? [57:06.800 --> 57:12.800] Looks like we might have lost sound on Danny again. [57:12.800 --> 57:16.800] Danny, you're having a little problem with sound. [57:16.800 --> 57:21.800] You want to try to hang up and call back again? [57:21.800 --> 57:28.800] You there, Danny? [57:28.800 --> 57:31.800] I don't know, you hear me? [57:31.800 --> 57:32.800] Now I can. [57:32.800 --> 57:33.800] Hello. [57:33.800 --> 57:36.800] Okay, you're back, you're back. [57:36.800 --> 57:39.800] I don't know what happened. [57:39.800 --> 57:47.800] Well, do you think through this with just any magistrate that's not in the county here? [57:47.800 --> 57:57.800] I would think so, but I like the idea of a Supreme Court justice. [57:57.800 --> 58:01.800] You might as well, if you're going to take complaints against the whole county, [58:01.800 --> 58:04.800] against their practices and procedures, [58:04.800 --> 58:09.800] the good place to go would be the Supreme Court justice. [58:09.800 --> 58:19.800] You'd want to take a good, well-documented brief along with you as your complaint, [58:19.800 --> 58:27.800] make your complaint a brief so you have all the statute chapter and verse and case law and support. [58:27.800 --> 58:34.800] So it would be hard for the Supreme Court justice to wiggle out from under it. [58:34.800 --> 58:37.800] Hang on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton. [58:37.800 --> 58:43.800] We have our radio, I call it number 512-646-1984. [58:43.800 --> 58:49.800] We'll be right back. [58:49.800 --> 58:53.800] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.800 --> 59:00.800] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.800 --> 59:05.800] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.800 --> 59:12.800] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.800 --> 59:17.800] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.800 --> 59:26.800] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:26.800 --> 59:32.800] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:32.800 --> 59:39.800] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:39.800 --> 59:44.800] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.800 --> 59:51.800] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:51.800 --> 59:59.800] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.800 --> 01:00:04.800] The following is flashes brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, [01:00:04.800 --> 01:00:11.800] providing the daily bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates, [01:00:11.800 --> 01:00:20.800] and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.800 --> 01:00:31.800] 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, [01:00:31.800 --> 01:00:39.800] oil, Texas crude $53.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, [01:00:39.800 --> 01:00:53.800] Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum $103.10, and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:53.800 --> 01:01:00.800] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications [01:01:00.800 --> 01:01:06.800] get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament. [01:01:06.800 --> 01:01:13.800] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court [01:01:13.800 --> 01:01:18.800] stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. [01:01:18.800 --> 01:01:24.800] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State [01:01:24.800 --> 01:01:30.800] and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote [01:01:30.800 --> 01:01:36.800] when obtaining age arbitrage license. Over half of the 95,000 didn't indeed vote, it seems. [01:01:36.800 --> 01:01:41.800] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not, in fact, [01:01:41.800 --> 01:01:44.800] belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:44.800 --> 01:01:49.800] Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:49.800 --> 01:01:55.800] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. [01:01:55.800 --> 01:02:01.800] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment [01:02:01.800 --> 01:02:05.800] regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:08.800 --> 01:02:14.800] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded [01:02:14.800 --> 01:02:19.800] while he was using it. It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:19.800 --> 01:02:23.800] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [01:02:23.800 --> 01:02:27.800] The vape store's smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [01:02:29.800 --> 01:02:35.800] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, [01:02:35.800 --> 01:02:40.800] South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Conference, [01:02:40.800 --> 01:02:46.800] which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:46.800 --> 01:02:50.800] You can find the interview at kiitv.com. [01:02:50.800 --> 01:02:57.800] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:02:57.800 --> 01:03:02.800] Music [01:03:16.800 --> 01:03:23.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, move on radio, and we're talking to Danny in Tennessee. [01:03:23.800 --> 01:03:28.800] Okay, Danny, do you have a plan? [01:03:28.800 --> 01:03:31.800] What again? [01:03:31.800 --> 01:03:34.800] Do you have a plan? [01:03:34.800 --> 01:03:38.800] Well, I've got some things written up already. I'm kind of thinking things over. [01:03:38.800 --> 01:03:44.800] Another idea I've had also to maybe give them some problems, [01:03:44.800 --> 01:03:48.800] and it kind of goes back to something that was in the news not long ago. [01:03:48.800 --> 01:03:55.800] We announced that there was a class action lawsuit being filed against the city [01:03:55.800 --> 01:04:02.800] because there had been warrants coming out of the city court that weren't properly sworn. [01:04:02.800 --> 01:04:10.800] Now, this was announced by the district attorney, and so, you know, it's pretty easy to turn around and go after that, [01:04:10.800 --> 01:04:16.800] but I've got to thinking, well, maybe I go with this guy that did that class action lawsuit. [01:04:16.800 --> 01:04:21.800] He wants to do one on this other issues. [01:04:21.800 --> 01:04:31.800] Okay, where were the warrants out of? Were they city warrants, or you mentioned the district attorney? [01:04:31.800 --> 01:04:38.800] Well, I'm not sure just what level warrants, but they were coming out of the city court, yeah. [01:04:38.800 --> 01:04:46.800] So, have you looked at, you might look at them, and, you know, if they're improperly prepared, [01:04:46.800 --> 01:04:52.800] that's tampering with the government document. [01:04:52.800 --> 01:04:58.800] Well, that was my point right now. They're probably fixed now because it's been announced. [01:04:58.800 --> 01:05:00.800] It doesn't matter. [01:05:00.800 --> 01:05:11.800] If they, if you go back in the records and there are some in there that are faulty, that's criminal. [01:05:11.800 --> 01:05:16.800] That's tampering with the government document, even, you know, even though they may have fixed it when they, you know, [01:05:16.800 --> 01:05:21.800] once they prepared it improperly, that bill had been wrong. [01:05:21.800 --> 01:05:29.800] And frankly, this, from my perspective, is the best kind of fights to pick with them. [01:05:29.800 --> 01:05:36.800] You pick them apart on nitpicking stuff. You didn't bother to do your job the way you were supposed to. [01:05:36.800 --> 01:05:44.800] You know, you guys are public officials and you like to order us two-bit citizens around. [01:05:44.800 --> 01:05:55.800] Well, the other side of that coin is you step across one of our legal lines and you can wind up in jail for it. [01:05:55.800 --> 01:05:59.800] This, this is, I love this kind of stuff. [01:05:59.800 --> 01:06:05.800] You know, I really like the one against the clerk for not holding a preliminary hearing. [01:06:05.800 --> 01:06:13.800] You know, they don't see this kind of thing coming and you got lawyers doing a class action suit. [01:06:13.800 --> 01:06:24.800] If they've been illegally preparing warrants, they should go to jail for it or at least face that prospect. [01:06:24.800 --> 01:06:28.800] Okay, well, talk about doing that, but that is something. [01:06:28.800 --> 01:06:41.800] But my idea was to bring up this class action lawyer, these other things they could bring a class action about. [01:06:41.800 --> 01:06:57.800] I'm thinking, how could we use this lawyer to help us leverage into getting the state to follow state law and do a proper examining trial? [01:06:57.800 --> 01:07:02.800] At the end of the day, everything's political. [01:07:02.800 --> 01:07:11.800] So I have a judge and possibly a sheriff who may actually look at the code and be willing to follow it. [01:07:11.800 --> 01:07:21.800] How can we use that to leverage against the county who's not? [01:07:21.800 --> 01:07:26.800] You know, we've got a county here trying to do it right. They don't get any trouble at all. [01:07:26.800 --> 01:07:35.800] We've got a county over here not trying to do it right and we just hammer them. [01:07:35.800 --> 01:07:50.800] And this is something I'd be willing to come to Jackson for, just to eat for yucks. [01:07:50.800 --> 01:07:53.800] What do you think? [01:07:53.800 --> 01:07:56.800] Did I lose you again, Danny? [01:07:56.800 --> 01:07:59.800] Yeah, I think you're having trouble with your phone. [01:07:59.800 --> 01:08:03.800] Okay, Danny, try calling back in and see if you can get a new connection. [01:08:03.800 --> 01:08:06.800] Okay, we're going to go to John in New York. [01:08:06.800 --> 01:08:10.800] Okay, John, back to you. [01:08:10.800 --> 01:08:12.800] You've got two minutes. [01:08:12.800 --> 01:08:14.800] Okay, well, a couple of minutes. [01:08:14.800 --> 01:08:16.800] Yeah, maybe more, maybe more. [01:08:16.800 --> 01:08:19.800] Okay. [01:08:19.800 --> 01:08:27.800] Now, I don't necessarily think that most people know this because I didn't know it. [01:08:27.800 --> 01:08:30.800] Oh, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:08:30.800 --> 01:08:37.800] Are you saying that because you didn't know it, you're assuming most people everywhere else don't know it? [01:08:37.800 --> 01:08:42.800] Well, only because of the same, we all wouldn't know it for the same reason. [01:08:42.800 --> 01:08:47.800] The history books are messed up. [01:08:47.800 --> 01:08:52.800] Anyway, oh, I'm just being annoying today. [01:08:52.800 --> 01:08:55.800] No, I know, I know. [01:08:55.800 --> 01:09:01.800] Accepted for value is the same idea then as what I was describing before. [01:09:01.800 --> 01:09:09.800] And would you watch that video and see what you think I said it to you when you have, when you have time, ha, ha, ha. [01:09:09.800 --> 01:09:10.800] Watch the video. [01:09:10.800 --> 01:09:14.800] It's like 10 minutes long and it might not even be that much. [01:09:14.800 --> 01:09:21.800] And the guy explains it. Now, maybe you have a better understanding of that stuff than I do and I'm sure you do. [01:09:21.800 --> 01:09:25.800] And so you're saying that accepted for value is also a fraud? [01:09:25.800 --> 01:09:37.800] No, no, no, no, I'm saying accepted for value is a, it's just a term of art used in contract law. [01:09:37.800 --> 01:09:41.800] Well, that's how they could claim that you will, you can pay off your debts. [01:09:41.800 --> 01:09:44.800] I forget how they say you do it. [01:09:44.800 --> 01:09:54.800] This goes back to Winston Shrout and the US bankruptcy and you can't pay off a debt. [01:09:54.800 --> 01:09:57.800] You can only discharge a debt. [01:09:57.800 --> 01:10:05.800] You know, that's got a lot of people in a lot of trouble and it's got Winston Shrout in prison right now. [01:10:05.800 --> 01:10:09.800] Yeah, but just because a person's in prison doesn't mean he gets something wrong. [01:10:09.800 --> 01:10:17.800] Well, he's using these processes and he's going to prison for a very long time. [01:10:17.800 --> 01:10:23.800] Yeah, but that doesn't tell me it's illegal. That tells me that they don't like it. [01:10:23.800 --> 01:10:26.800] It doesn't tell me that. [01:10:26.800 --> 01:10:44.800] I've heard this stuff about bills of exchange and that 1040 ID Leslie from Pennsylvania sent me a email while we were talking or Skype and said she knows four people who went to prison over there. [01:10:44.800 --> 01:10:50.800] Yeah, and it wasn't because they didn't like it. It was because they were doing it wrong. [01:10:50.800 --> 01:11:07.800] And when you say that you can magically pay off all your debts with some supposed account that exists for that purpose, but nobody knows about it. [01:11:07.800 --> 01:11:14.800] I say when somebody tells you that be very, very careful. [01:11:14.800 --> 01:11:18.800] And this whole area is very complex. [01:11:18.800 --> 01:11:23.800] And the OID thing, it was complex. [01:11:23.800 --> 01:11:32.800] And the guys who studied it apparently didn't understand what it was designed for. [01:11:32.800 --> 01:11:43.800] They found that they used it this other way that the IRS didn't know how to catch this as a problem. [01:11:43.800 --> 01:11:52.800] And it took them a while to figure it out. And when they did, everybody who had used it got clobbered. [01:11:52.800 --> 01:12:01.800] So somebody, you know, I've had all these people come along with these great ideas and they keep saying, oh, this works, this works, this works. [01:12:01.800 --> 01:12:11.800] And that's exactly the reason I hate to use that term. I hate to even think in those terms of what works and what doesn't. [01:12:11.800 --> 01:12:15.800] I don't know. It's what the law is and what the law is not. [01:12:15.800 --> 01:12:20.800] What works implies a magic bullet of some kind. [01:12:20.800 --> 01:12:23.800] And it almost always comes back and haunts you. [01:12:23.800 --> 01:12:32.800] And it's almost always because it's complex to the point that the people who are proposing it don't understand part of it. [01:12:32.800 --> 01:12:43.800] I had a guy call in and he was bragging about how he went to court and asked for a verification of commencement. [01:12:43.800 --> 01:12:49.800] And they were running around like chickens in the heads cut off. They didn't know what to do. [01:12:49.800 --> 01:12:52.800] And they released him on his own reconnaissance. [01:12:52.800 --> 01:12:56.800] Well, I looked up verification of commencement. [01:12:56.800 --> 01:13:06.800] Nice sounding term, but all it is is the prosecuting, the prosecutor verifying that he filed the criminal complaints. [01:13:06.800 --> 01:13:08.800] It was nothing. [01:13:08.800 --> 01:13:14.800] And I told this guy, you keep going this way. You're going to go to prison. [01:13:14.800 --> 01:13:17.800] He's in prison right now. [01:13:17.800 --> 01:13:21.800] He was working on machine guns. [01:13:21.800 --> 01:13:29.800] And he thought he could do some gimmicky legal maneuvers and he would be fine. Well, he's in prison now. [01:13:29.800 --> 01:13:35.800] Right. Well, I have a question. You just crossed the line something in my town. [01:13:35.800 --> 01:13:45.800] There was an incident where a neighbor across the street, across the street and where another neighbor was sitting on her porch, minding your own business. [01:13:45.800 --> 01:13:54.800] The neighbor that crossed the street started to pick a fight with the girl sitting at her porch, minding her business, punched her in the eye. [01:13:54.800 --> 01:14:00.800] So the girl that got punched in the eye called the police and the police took all the information down. [01:14:00.800 --> 01:14:07.800] And later in the day after they punched her in the eye, her daughters went over to their house to find out what happened. [01:14:07.800 --> 01:14:11.800] And they pulled a military grade knife on the two daughters. [01:14:11.800 --> 01:14:15.800] So they got out of there very quickly and then all went in the police report. [01:14:15.800 --> 01:14:32.800] Well, of course, the people that did all the bad stuff insisted that the neighbor who minded their own business and got punched in the eye aggravated them and did everything to them. [01:14:32.800 --> 01:14:42.800] And the neighbor with a victim that got hit in the eye asked the cop, are you going to file a report? He said, yes. [01:14:42.800 --> 01:14:58.800] So come to find out, went to get a copy of the report two-thirds of a year later and there was no report. The cop never filed one. [01:14:58.800 --> 01:15:02.800] Your comments. [01:15:02.800 --> 01:15:06.800] Okay. What is the problem? [01:15:06.800 --> 01:15:13.800] Well, we'd like to nail the cops because we have a problem in this town. [01:15:13.800 --> 01:15:28.800] Okay. The policeman had no duty if the policeman believed that this was just a squabble between neighbors and that the one neighbor may have actually provoked this. [01:15:28.800 --> 01:15:40.800] On the one hand, one gets punched in the eye. On the other hand, the other two commit criminal trespass. [01:15:40.800 --> 01:15:51.800] The policeman may have felt that this wasn't something they could effectively get adjudicated. The policeman did not have a duty here. [01:15:51.800 --> 01:16:00.800] If the person punched in the eye wanted a prosecution, the person punched in the eye should have filed a complaint. [01:16:00.800 --> 01:16:11.800] And the cop never reported. Did the person file a verified criminal affidavit or a voluntary statement? [01:16:11.800 --> 01:16:15.800] Went to the police station or had the cops come to the house. [01:16:15.800 --> 01:16:19.800] Yeah, they just filed a, that was a voluntary statement. [01:16:19.800 --> 01:16:30.800] This is what this show is about. Try to teach people the difference between complaining and filing a complaint. [01:16:30.800 --> 01:16:32.800] Okay. Tell us what we should have done. [01:16:32.800 --> 01:16:44.800] When I go to the police, they want me to fill out a voluntary report, a voluntary statement. [01:16:44.800 --> 01:16:51.800] Well, I don't mind filling out a voluntary statement. I'm just telling the police what happened. [01:16:51.800 --> 01:16:59.800] But if I want criminal complaints filed, I file them. So I take with me a verified criminal affidavit. [01:16:59.800 --> 01:17:04.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.800 --> 01:17:14.800] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:17:14.800 --> 01:17:20.800] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [01:17:20.800 --> 01:17:26.800] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons. How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:17:26.800 --> 01:17:28.800] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:28.800 --> 01:17:33.800] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.800 --> 01:17:40.800] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.800 --> 01:17:48.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [01:17:48.800 --> 01:17:59.800] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.800 --> 01:18:04.800] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.800 --> 01:18:09.800] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:09.800 --> 01:18:12.800] And I really want to help keep this network coming here. [01:18:12.800 --> 01:18:19.800] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplement. [01:18:19.800 --> 01:18:21.800] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.800 --> 01:18:26.800] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.800 --> 01:18:31.800] But ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.800 --> 01:18:37.800] Now, go to logosradio network.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.800 --> 01:18:43.800] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.800 --> 01:18:44.800] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.800 --> 01:18:45.800] No. [01:18:45.800 --> 01:18:47.800] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.800 --> 01:18:48.800] No. [01:18:48.800 --> 01:18:49.800] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.800 --> 01:18:50.800] No. [01:18:50.800 --> 01:18:51.800] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.800 --> 01:18:55.800] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [01:18:55.800 --> 01:18:56.800] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.800 --> 01:18:57.800] We are logos. [01:18:57.800 --> 01:18:59.800] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:17.800 --> 01:19:24.800] Okay, we are back. Wendy Kelton with our radio and John, that was all your fault. [01:19:24.800 --> 01:19:28.800] First time all night and ran off the cliff. [01:19:28.800 --> 01:19:32.800] Oh no, I spoiled your record tonight. [01:19:32.800 --> 01:19:35.800] You ought to be ashamed of yourself. [01:19:35.800 --> 01:19:36.800] Okay. [01:19:36.800 --> 01:19:37.800] Okay. [01:19:37.800 --> 01:19:42.800] Difference between complaining and filing a complaint. [01:19:42.800 --> 01:19:43.800] Okay. [01:19:43.800 --> 01:19:47.800] A criminal complaint must be in affidavit form. [01:19:47.800 --> 01:19:51.800] It must be verified before a notary. [01:19:51.800 --> 01:19:59.800] Otherwise, you're asking a police officer to look into a situation to make a determination [01:19:59.800 --> 01:20:07.800] as to whether or not he believes or she believes that a crime has been committed. [01:20:07.800 --> 01:20:16.800] When you file a criminal affidavit, then you're acting in the same capacity as a police officer. [01:20:16.800 --> 01:20:23.800] A police officer, when he files a criminal affidavit, does not do so in his capacity as a police officer. [01:20:23.800 --> 01:20:29.800] He does so in his capacity as a credible person. [01:20:29.800 --> 01:20:30.800] Right. [01:20:30.800 --> 01:20:31.800] Right. [01:20:31.800 --> 01:20:37.800] And if you are over the age of 18, never been convicted of a felony, you are a credible [01:20:37.800 --> 01:20:38.800] person. [01:20:38.800 --> 01:20:46.800] I spoke earlier about talking to this judge in Tennessee and I addressed that issue. [01:20:46.800 --> 01:20:52.800] You know, that when an officer, when the bailiff here files a criminal complaint, he doesn't [01:20:52.800 --> 01:20:54.800] do it in his official capacity. [01:20:54.800 --> 01:20:56.800] He doesn't in his capacity as a credible person. [01:20:56.800 --> 01:21:03.800] And the judge said, well, Ms. Kelton, I consider this bailiff more credible than you. [01:21:03.800 --> 01:21:06.800] I said, well, that's fair enough. [01:21:06.800 --> 01:21:14.800] However, I am over the age of 18 and have never been convicted of a felony, so therefore, [01:21:14.800 --> 01:21:19.800] I scoot under the edge of the requirements. [01:21:19.800 --> 01:21:23.800] In other words, he can't determine. [01:21:23.800 --> 01:21:27.800] He can't decide that I'm not credible. [01:21:27.800 --> 01:21:33.800] I'm not, I am credible because I'm over 18, never convicted of a felony. [01:21:33.800 --> 01:21:36.800] Same, same as that police officer. [01:21:36.800 --> 01:21:45.800] And in Texas, we have a statute that says that when a peace officer is made known that [01:21:45.800 --> 01:21:51.800] a crime has been committed, he is to present a complaint to some magistrate. [01:21:51.800 --> 01:22:00.800] So when you go to a police officer and give him notice that a crime has been committed, [01:22:00.800 --> 01:22:04.800] a voluntary statement is not noticed that a crime has been committed. [01:22:04.800 --> 01:22:10.800] You're asking him to decide if he believes that a crime has been committed. [01:22:10.800 --> 01:22:15.800] When you give him a verified criminal affidavit, you're giving him notice that a crime has [01:22:15.800 --> 01:22:22.800] been committed and you invoke his duty under Article 2.13, Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:22:22.800 --> 01:22:25.800] Okay, how do you get one of those affidavits? [01:22:25.800 --> 01:22:26.800] What do you do? [01:22:26.800 --> 01:22:28.800] You write it. [01:22:28.800 --> 01:22:30.800] Oh, and then you present it. [01:22:30.800 --> 01:22:35.800] It's a statement of facts signed before a notary. [01:22:35.800 --> 01:22:37.800] That's an affidavit. [01:22:37.800 --> 01:22:44.800] Is there any special wording that you have to give it in order to make it legal or will [01:22:44.800 --> 01:22:46.800] the notary make it legal? [01:22:46.800 --> 01:22:49.800] No, notary won't make it legal. [01:22:49.800 --> 01:22:57.800] In taxes, a criminal complaint, it's the only state that has a special form for criminal [01:22:57.800 --> 01:22:59.800] complaint that I know of. [01:22:59.800 --> 01:23:09.800] Most every state has a criminal complaint that's put together on a motion type form. [01:23:09.800 --> 01:23:13.800] But taxes specifies two things. [01:23:13.800 --> 01:23:19.800] It specifies the heading and the introductory paragraph. [01:23:19.800 --> 01:23:27.800] The code says, Complaints shall run in the name and by the authority of the state of Texas. [01:23:27.800 --> 01:23:36.800] So if you go on JurisandPrudence.Website and go to the documents and research and there's [01:23:36.800 --> 01:23:38.800] some blank criminal complaints in there. [01:23:38.800 --> 01:23:46.800] They will start out in the name of and under the authority of the state of Texas. [01:23:46.800 --> 01:23:47.800] That's the heading. [01:23:47.800 --> 01:23:51.800] That's a prescribed heading for criminal complaints in Texas. [01:23:51.800 --> 01:24:01.800] Then the first paragraph must state, I, and then you put your name, have reason to believe [01:24:01.800 --> 01:24:12.800] and do believe so and so that this person committed this crime based on the following. [01:24:12.800 --> 01:24:18.800] So it must state that you have reason to believe and do believe. [01:24:18.800 --> 01:24:20.800] That's required. [01:24:20.800 --> 01:24:22.800] Okay. [01:24:22.800 --> 01:24:28.800] But only Texas has that specificity in the requirements that I know of. [01:24:28.800 --> 01:24:34.800] Otherwise, you must state that you have reason to believe based on these facts that this person [01:24:34.800 --> 01:24:36.800] committed this crime. [01:24:36.800 --> 01:24:43.800] In your facts, you must all of the elements of the crime. [01:24:43.800 --> 01:24:47.800] If someone only have one element, God punched me. [01:24:47.800 --> 01:24:49.800] You don't have a lot of elements there. [01:24:49.800 --> 01:24:53.800] The guy committed aggravated assault. [01:24:53.800 --> 01:24:56.800] Aggravated assault has a number of elements. [01:24:56.800 --> 01:24:57.800] Right. [01:24:57.800 --> 01:25:02.800] They must have committed assault and they must have committed assault that involved body [01:25:02.800 --> 01:25:07.800] injury or involved a weapon, you know, there are a number of elements that must be there. [01:25:07.800 --> 01:25:10.800] So you have to all of the elements. [01:25:10.800 --> 01:25:13.800] And then you swear to it before a notary. [01:25:13.800 --> 01:25:15.800] That's a criminal complaint. [01:25:15.800 --> 01:25:23.800] And it should have equal standing to the complaint filed by a police officer. [01:25:23.800 --> 01:25:24.800] Okay. [01:25:24.800 --> 01:25:31.800] Now, did you say that there is a form that I can go by that will give me an idea how it should be written? [01:25:31.800 --> 01:25:32.800] Yes. [01:25:32.800 --> 01:25:35.800] Yes, there is. [01:25:35.800 --> 01:25:40.800] In every state I've ever looked at and I haven't looked at all 50, but everyone I've ever looked [01:25:40.800 --> 01:25:49.800] at requires that when a prosecuting attorney receives a criminal complaint that he reduce [01:25:49.800 --> 01:25:56.800] the complaint to an information and filed in both of the courts. [01:25:56.800 --> 01:26:03.800] The reason for that is that a private citizen, complaints are intended to be filed by private [01:26:03.800 --> 01:26:08.800] citizens and private citizens are not learned in council. [01:26:08.800 --> 01:26:09.800] Right. [01:26:09.800 --> 01:26:16.800] So they don't expect the complaint from the private citizen to be in perfect form. [01:26:16.800 --> 01:26:22.800] So they require that the prosecuting attorney, once he receives a complaint, reduce the complaint [01:26:22.800 --> 01:26:24.800] to an information. [01:26:24.800 --> 01:26:28.800] An information is a complaint in proper form. [01:26:28.800 --> 01:26:29.800] Right. [01:26:29.800 --> 01:26:35.800] So just go in the record and look at any information in the record and you will see the proper [01:26:35.800 --> 01:26:38.800] form for the particular state. [01:26:38.800 --> 01:26:39.800] Okay. [01:26:39.800 --> 01:26:40.800] All right. [01:26:40.800 --> 01:26:41.800] That's fantastic. [01:26:41.800 --> 01:26:43.800] Thank you. [01:26:43.800 --> 01:26:44.800] Okay. [01:26:44.800 --> 01:26:46.800] Anything else for us? [01:26:46.800 --> 01:26:49.800] Well, would you like to hear a quick piece of history? [01:26:49.800 --> 01:26:50.800] Yes. [01:26:50.800 --> 01:26:53.800] Tell me if you knew this. [01:26:53.800 --> 01:26:58.800] You know that the history books are not accurate. [01:26:58.800 --> 01:27:00.800] You have probably figured that out by now. [01:27:00.800 --> 01:27:03.800] History is written by the winner. [01:27:03.800 --> 01:27:04.800] I'm sorry. [01:27:04.800 --> 01:27:06.800] History is written by the winner. [01:27:06.800 --> 01:27:08.800] It's always written by the winners. [01:27:08.800 --> 01:27:09.800] Oh, yeah. [01:27:09.800 --> 01:27:10.800] The victors. [01:27:10.800 --> 01:27:11.800] Yeah. [01:27:11.800 --> 01:27:12.800] All right. [01:27:12.800 --> 01:27:13.800] The real reason for the American Revolution. [01:27:13.800 --> 01:27:15.800] Have you ever heard this? [01:27:15.800 --> 01:27:20.800] The real reason for the American Revolution. [01:27:20.800 --> 01:27:26.800] The history books teach us that the colonists were tired of taxation without representation. [01:27:26.800 --> 01:27:28.800] And that's true. [01:27:28.800 --> 01:27:33.800] And the colonists were tired of housing British troops in the colonist homes without permission. [01:27:33.800 --> 01:27:35.800] And that's true. [01:27:35.800 --> 01:27:40.800] And they also were sick and tired of too much tax, like the tax on tea. [01:27:40.800 --> 01:27:46.800] And then Paul Revere and the Raiders, not the musical group, but Paul Revere and the Raiders [01:27:46.800 --> 01:27:49.800] dressed up like Indians and dumped the tea in Boston Harbor. [01:27:49.800 --> 01:27:52.800] And that's also a true reason for the American Revolution. [01:27:52.800 --> 01:27:53.800] Too much tax. [01:27:53.800 --> 01:27:57.800] Another one was expo facto laws. [01:27:57.800 --> 01:27:59.800] Ah, OK. [01:27:59.800 --> 01:28:02.800] That was a big one. [01:28:02.800 --> 01:28:10.800] The king, through his governor, would decide that he didn't like something someone was doing and pass a law against it, [01:28:10.800 --> 01:28:18.800] and then enforce the law against the individual's expo facto after the fact. [01:28:18.800 --> 01:28:20.800] You mean retroactively, yeah. [01:28:20.800 --> 01:28:22.800] Yes. [01:28:22.800 --> 01:28:23.800] OK. [01:28:23.800 --> 01:28:24.800] Well, that's also it. [01:28:24.800 --> 01:28:26.800] Those were all reasons for the American Revolution. [01:28:26.800 --> 01:28:33.800] But the history books kind of sort of, kind of, sort of forgot the real reason for the American Revolution. [01:28:33.800 --> 01:28:36.800] And it was what Ben Franklin said. [01:28:36.800 --> 01:28:42.800] And that kind of slipped the history books' writer's mind conveniently and for a reason. [01:28:42.800 --> 01:28:49.800] Then Franklin said it wasn't so much the taxes that caused the colonists to lose their patience with Mother England. [01:28:49.800 --> 01:28:54.800] They would have paid the tax, says Benjamin Franklin. [01:28:54.800 --> 01:29:07.800] But what really got the colonists all hacked off, the real reason was the fact that Mother England kept forcing the English bank notes on the Americans [01:29:07.800 --> 01:29:10.800] because every time they did, the colonists lost their shirts. [01:29:10.800 --> 01:29:13.800] So the colonists started printing their own currency. [01:29:13.800 --> 01:29:16.800] This is exactly what got Abe Lincoln killed. [01:29:16.800 --> 01:29:20.800] This is exactly what got one of the big reasons why JFK was killed. [01:29:20.800 --> 01:29:25.800] So the colonists, that wasn't the only reason for JFK, but it was a good one. [01:29:25.800 --> 01:29:29.800] So the colonists started printing their own currency. [01:29:29.800 --> 01:29:33.800] And every time they did that, there was prosperity for all in the colony. [01:29:33.800 --> 01:29:40.800] Then England would force the colonists back onto the English bank note, and then everybody lost their shirt. [01:29:40.800 --> 01:29:44.800] So they forced the colonists a total of three times that I'm aware of. [01:29:44.800 --> 01:29:48.800] The English bank notes sent to the currency, then back to the English bank notes. [01:29:48.800 --> 01:29:54.800] By the third time the colonists got forced back onto the English bank notes, everybody lost their shirt. [01:29:54.800 --> 01:29:59.800] And the colonists said, enough is enough, and that's when the shooting started. [01:29:59.800 --> 01:30:08.800] Cover up that tattoo. The FBI is building a database that analyzes body art as a way of identifying people. [01:30:08.800 --> 01:30:15.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll have details on the weird new program the feds call tattoo recognition in a moment. [01:30:15.800 --> 01:30:21.800] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.800 --> 01:30:26.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.800 --> 01:30:31.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.800 --> 01:30:37.800] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.800 --> 01:30:44.800] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.800 --> 01:30:51.800] Iris patterns, email records, cell phone coordinates, the FBI is collecting data on us all. [01:30:51.800 --> 01:30:56.800] Now the feds want images of tattoos as a way of knowing who we are and what we might do. [01:30:56.800 --> 01:31:05.800] Tattoo recognition is part of the next generational identification program that identifies Americans beyond fingerprints and mug shots. [01:31:05.800 --> 01:31:10.800] Tattoo symbols are collected by the FBI's Biometric Center of Excellence, [01:31:10.800 --> 01:31:16.800] a one-stop shop of biometric data from voice patterns to footprints to hand geometry. [01:31:16.800 --> 01:31:21.800] Needless to say, this is one more step towards the establishment of a total surveillance state. [01:31:21.800 --> 01:31:30.800] What's next, microchips for us all? I'm Dr. Kaepernal Brack for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.800 --> 01:31:36.800] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.800 --> 01:31:43.800] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.800 --> 01:31:49.800] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives and thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.800 --> 01:31:53.800] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:53.800 --> 01:31:58.800] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We are Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.800 --> 01:32:13.800] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.800 --> 01:32:32.800] This video with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.800 --> 01:32:36.800] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.800 --> 01:32:40.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:40.800 --> 01:32:45.800] and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:45.800 --> 01:32:48.800] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of your original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.800 --> 01:32:51.800] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.800 --> 01:32:55.800] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.800 --> 01:33:02.800] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.800 --> 01:33:28.800] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:28.800 --> 01:33:34.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio and John, you did it again. [01:33:34.800 --> 01:33:37.800] I know. [01:33:37.800 --> 01:33:44.800] Okay, I can't comment on that because frankly I've never heard that particular issue before [01:33:44.800 --> 01:33:51.800] and it would take some explaining to explain how by going to the English banknotes everybody lost their shirt. [01:33:51.800 --> 01:33:59.800] It doesn't follow directly so there's probably a lot of information we don't have. [01:33:59.800 --> 01:34:03.800] Well no, it makes sense. I'll get to the crux right now. [01:34:03.800 --> 01:34:08.800] The third time they went to the English banknotes everybody lost their shirts for the third time [01:34:08.800 --> 01:34:11.800] and the colonists said enough is enough. [01:34:11.800 --> 01:34:16.800] No, how did they lose their shirts? What was the problem with the banknotes? [01:34:16.800 --> 01:34:21.800] Well, the same way that we're losing our shirts now with the Federal Reserve, the same basic principle. [01:34:21.800 --> 01:34:26.800] The debts, we don't have money in circulation. If you read the Constitution, you'll... [01:34:26.800 --> 01:34:34.800] No, no, let's not go to that argument. This was 200 years ago. What was the difference? [01:34:34.800 --> 01:34:43.800] Was it an exchange rate? Did the British force an unreasonable exchange rate? It doesn't make sense. [01:34:43.800 --> 01:34:51.800] If you're moving from one currency to another, if there's a fair exchange value, then it doesn't hurt anybody. [01:34:51.800 --> 01:34:59.800] So how does this... There's got to be something going on here that causes this to be such a problem. [01:34:59.800 --> 01:35:04.800] Yeah, it's the same thing that's going on now. Let me explain. [01:35:04.800 --> 01:35:13.800] What happened when Thomas Jefferson said it? Now, the history books didn't... We didn't learn this in grammar at school either. [01:35:13.800 --> 01:35:24.800] She, gosh, golly gee, I wonder why. Thomas Jefferson said, I can't come up with the exact quote, but I'll paraphrase it. [01:35:24.800 --> 01:35:38.800] He said, just like Benjamin Franklin, they kind of hide that too. He said, Thomas Jefferson said, I would fear whoever controls the money controls the world. [01:35:38.800 --> 01:35:46.800] And I would fear those who control the money more than standing armies. Now, that's what I'm paraphrasing. [01:35:46.800 --> 01:35:54.800] Okay, he said that a central bank was more dangerous to the people than a standing army. [01:35:54.800 --> 01:36:06.800] Who controls the currency controls the world. And he was right. Now, what happens when you have, when a country prints its own money, [01:36:06.800 --> 01:36:15.800] like we were starting to do in the colony, and Benjamin Franklin kind of outlined that and summarized it. [01:36:15.800 --> 01:36:20.800] The real reason, one of the biggest reasons why Abe Lincoln was killed was because... [01:36:20.800 --> 01:36:28.800] Okay, no, let's not do that. This gets you jumping from place to place and not connecting things together. [01:36:28.800 --> 01:36:39.800] Oh, no, no, I'm connecting things together. It was the same exact thing when George III got whispered in his ear from Lord Rothschild. [01:36:39.800 --> 01:36:45.800] You'd better get him back on the bank notes of England if you know what's good for you. [01:36:45.800 --> 01:36:53.800] Okay, okay, what's good for them? You're talking around the subject and you're not answering any questions. You're just dancing around the edge. [01:36:53.800 --> 01:36:56.800] What are you talking about? [01:36:56.800 --> 01:37:11.800] Well, I'm trying to. I'm trying to if you just let me. What happens when you print your own money, when a country prints its own money, and it doesn't go with... [01:37:11.800 --> 01:37:18.800] It's the same situation, Randy, as we had 200 years ago as we have now. [01:37:18.800 --> 01:37:30.800] Look, you're stopping. You're doing sentence fragments and you're not connecting. I know where you're going. You're talking about a fiat currency that doesn't have value backing the currency. [01:37:30.800 --> 01:37:33.800] Is that where you're trying to get to? [01:37:33.800 --> 01:37:39.800] And there's more to it. There was the banking crash. [01:37:39.800 --> 01:37:56.800] Okay, wait a minute. We've only got a couple more segments and this is an issue I need Dr. Vethon for. He's my resident fiat currency expert. [01:37:56.800 --> 01:38:00.800] Clearly we're speaking to fiat currency here. [01:38:00.800 --> 01:38:02.800] That's the problem. Fiat currency. [01:38:02.800 --> 01:38:11.800] Yeah, okay. If it wasn't a fiat currency, exchange would make no difference. You would be exchanging value for value. [01:38:11.800 --> 01:38:17.800] It's what you're allowed to do with that money. Let me finish. Here we go. [01:38:17.800 --> 01:38:25.800] When you have a series of inflation and a series of depression, that's another part of it. [01:38:25.800 --> 01:38:35.800] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You can't explain something like that. You're throwing these terms of art in there. [01:38:35.800 --> 01:38:45.800] Assuming that something is taking place and this is taking place and that's taking place and this over here is taking place and nobody makes sense of this stuff. [01:38:45.800 --> 01:38:51.800] Start from one point and go to another. You're not making any sense. [01:38:51.800 --> 01:38:59.800] You've got JFK. You've got Abe Lincoln. You've got Jefferson. You've got Franklin. [01:38:59.800 --> 01:39:05.800] You've got the King of England. None of these pieces are even coming close to fitting together. [01:39:05.800 --> 01:39:07.800] Oh, they come there. [01:39:07.800 --> 01:39:11.800] Well, they would if we don't have two days to dance around the subject. [01:39:11.800 --> 01:39:22.800] Is this about the King forcing a fiat currency where he's taking value and giving worthless paper in return? [01:39:22.800 --> 01:39:24.800] Is that what you're talking about? [01:39:24.800 --> 01:39:27.800] That's part of it too. [01:39:27.800 --> 01:39:33.800] Okay. Everything's part of it too and nothing makes sense. We're not going to do this all day, John. [01:39:33.800 --> 01:39:37.800] All right. That's fine. That's fine. I'll hang up. That's all right. [01:39:37.800 --> 01:39:46.800] Think about this and try to figure out a way to explain it so that you're not laying down these little pieces. [01:39:46.800 --> 01:39:58.800] You lay this breadcrumb down, this breadcrumb down, this breadcrumb down, this breadcrumb down and you expect us to be able to hold all those breadcrumbs and it sometimes starts stitching them back together. [01:39:58.800 --> 01:40:08.800] Humans essentially can only hold seven plus or minus two pieces of information at a time in their conscious awareness. [01:40:08.800 --> 01:40:15.800] You've already exceeded that. We can't hold that much information unless you give us a reference or index. [01:40:15.800 --> 01:40:19.800] See, you're not letting me finish. That's the end of the story. [01:40:19.800 --> 01:40:29.800] Well, we don't have all day. You've been throwing out little pieces that this has to do with this and that has to do with that and this has to do with that. [01:40:29.800 --> 01:40:31.800] I have no idea what you're talking about. [01:40:31.800 --> 01:40:36.800] I hate to bring this up. I hate to bring this up, but when you interrupt me, that's what screws it up. [01:40:36.800 --> 01:40:37.800] No, no, I can't. [01:40:37.800 --> 01:40:40.800] Okay, that's enough, John. I can't do the whole show. [01:40:40.800 --> 01:40:41.800] Okay. [01:40:41.800 --> 01:40:45.800] Sitting here waiting for you to get to a place where you stitch something together. [01:40:45.800 --> 01:40:46.800] Okay. [01:40:46.800 --> 01:40:49.800] This is radio. We don't have that kind of time. [01:40:49.800 --> 01:40:50.800] Okay. [01:40:50.800 --> 01:40:52.800] That's some other time we'll do this. Never mind. [01:40:52.800 --> 01:40:53.800] Okay. [01:40:53.800 --> 01:40:54.800] Okay. [01:40:54.800 --> 01:40:55.800] Another time. [01:40:55.800 --> 01:40:56.800] Okay. [01:40:56.800 --> 01:40:58.800] Thank you, John. [01:40:58.800 --> 01:41:05.800] Now let's go to Shane in New York. Hello, Shane. [01:41:05.800 --> 01:41:07.800] Hello, Randy. How are you doing? [01:41:07.800 --> 01:41:09.800] Doing good. [01:41:09.800 --> 01:41:12.800] What do you have for us today? [01:41:12.800 --> 01:41:19.800] Well, we don't have a lot of time, but I just want to focus on some questions that could help everybody out there. [01:41:19.800 --> 01:41:26.800] I'm in New York, statute of limitations for mortgages. [01:41:26.800 --> 01:41:35.800] If you're being foreclosed on, I don't want to really focus on myself, but for everybody out there that has a mortgage, this could benefit everybody. [01:41:35.800 --> 01:41:38.800] I'm not sure every state's different. I believe Randy, I'm not sure what it is. [01:41:38.800 --> 01:41:45.800] I think in New York City, four or five years, because I addressed that issue with a guy in New York once. [01:41:45.800 --> 01:41:49.800] We held a bank off until he ran out of time. [01:41:49.800 --> 01:41:56.800] I was just going to ask you that question. That's what we're, that's exactly what we got going on here. [01:41:56.800 --> 01:42:01.800] And the question is, New York, by the way, six years, I looked it up. [01:42:01.800 --> 01:42:09.800] The question is, when does the time, the ticker start? When is that, when does it kick off? Does it start when the last, the first thing you miss? [01:42:09.800 --> 01:42:12.800] Notice of acceleration. [01:42:12.800 --> 01:42:16.800] What if you don't get a notice of acceleration? [01:42:16.800 --> 01:42:20.800] Then there is no foreclosure. [01:42:20.800 --> 01:42:27.800] Okay, so they never, they never, they never ever did one. You know what, maybe they didn't know, I don't know about it. [01:42:27.800 --> 01:42:32.800] From case law that I reviewed. Wait a minute, wait a minute. Okay, you're in New York. [01:42:32.800 --> 01:42:48.800] Did they, did they file a, New York, New York's a, is it a judicial state? They had to file a foreclosure action in the court. [01:42:48.800 --> 01:42:50.800] Yes, sir. [01:42:50.800 --> 01:42:59.800] The clock starts when it starts, but so long as the action is in court, the clock's not running. [01:42:59.800 --> 01:43:02.800] As long as it's in court. Okay. [01:43:02.800 --> 01:43:03.800] Yeah. [01:43:03.800 --> 01:43:18.800] Because they, when they, I'm sorry, when they get an adjudication from the court, authorizing them to foreclose, that's when the clock starts. [01:43:18.800 --> 01:43:24.800] Okay, well that already, that's already taken place. Okay, so that, it's six years, but the, [01:43:24.800 --> 01:43:31.800] It's six years from that day. When did they get a ruling from the court in their favor? [01:43:31.800 --> 01:43:34.800] Um, they would have taken place. [01:43:34.800 --> 01:43:41.800] Hold on, let me re, let me re-ask that question. When did they get a final ruling? [01:43:41.800 --> 01:43:45.800] And that's after exhaustion of appeals. [01:43:45.800 --> 01:43:48.800] Okay, that has not, has not taken place, Randy. [01:43:48.800 --> 01:43:55.800] Okay, then you don't have a statute of limitations issue. [01:43:55.800 --> 01:44:00.800] This counts more in a deed of trust state. [01:44:00.800 --> 01:44:06.800] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.800 --> 01:44:11.800] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.800 --> 01:44:17.800] The primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.800 --> 01:44:25.800] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.800 --> 01:44:31.800] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. 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[01:45:24.800 --> 01:45:29.800] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.800 --> 01:45:36.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:36.800 --> 01:45:45.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.800 --> 01:45:54.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.800 --> 01:46:03.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:03.800 --> 01:46:29.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and I screwed up in the last hour, ran off the cliff every time. [01:46:29.800 --> 01:46:35.800] I was doing so good. Okay, go ahead, Shady. [01:46:35.800 --> 01:46:39.800] Okay, Randy. [01:46:39.800 --> 01:46:45.800] So, getting back to the bankruptcy case we still have going on. We had a, just another issue too. [01:46:45.800 --> 01:46:52.800] A lot of people get hung up on me, but to stay and they can let me under pursue the foreclosure. [01:46:52.800 --> 01:47:04.800] In our instance case, they filed a motion. We had a great argument because there was no order from the bankruptcy judge for us to make another payment to the mortgager, [01:47:04.800 --> 01:47:10.800] you know, which was another lender, which was a second mean holder. How much could he land a credit? [01:47:10.800 --> 01:47:22.800] We never issued an order, but he was still the one that hadn't listed the stay. Meanwhile, we're still making payments to the trustee that's been going on for eight, maybe nine months now. [01:47:22.800 --> 01:47:34.800] So, out of the clear blue, they filed this motion to lift the stay under Chapter 13 because we weren't making payments, but there was no order issued by the bankruptcy judge. [01:47:34.800 --> 01:47:42.800] So, obviously, we're on appeal right now in the district court from the bankruptcy court here in New York, but I just want to maybe have a little discussion on that. [01:47:42.800 --> 01:47:54.800] We're in the world and they go ahead and make two payments in a bankruptcy case without any notices and let's just stay at the same time. [01:47:54.800 --> 01:48:09.800] This is a bit complex to do this way. I don't know enough about mortgage mortgage issues in bankruptcy to know how the payments are determined. [01:48:09.800 --> 01:48:23.800] When you file bankruptcy and you have a mortgage, does the bankruptcy filing automatically stop your requirement to pay the mortgages? [01:48:23.800 --> 01:48:33.800] And I want to say, yes, everything gets sent to the trustee. That's what bankruptcy is all about. [01:48:33.800 --> 01:48:42.800] Okay, well, are you sure? This is the exact issue. [01:48:42.800 --> 01:48:55.800] If you have credit cards and you don't claim a credit card in the bankruptcy, do you stop paying that credit card when you file bankruptcy? [01:48:55.800 --> 01:49:01.800] My answer would be you keep on making payments and it's not part of the payment plan. [01:49:01.800 --> 01:49:21.800] Okay, I need law on this and I don't understand bankruptcy well enough to know how to speak to it. I can speak to what sounds right and reasonable, but I don't have any specific knowledge in bankruptcy areas to know how to address that. [01:49:21.800 --> 01:49:34.800] Right. Well, chapter 13 is basically a reorganization of payments and the trustee would disperse those payments to the alleged creditors and then you have your opportunity for advisory proceedings and objections and all that. [01:49:34.800 --> 01:49:54.800] Yeah, so if you file a 13 and you're not trying to liquidate your debt, you're trying to restructure it. Does the debtor have a right to be paid his ordinary payment amounts while you're restructuring the loan? [01:49:54.800 --> 01:50:09.800] I would think no, but this is something that would have to come from the bankruptcy law and unfortunately that's not my area. I wouldn't know how to address that. [01:50:09.800 --> 01:50:20.800] Well, everything I've read and researched over the last year is everything gets sent to the trustee. You don't send anything else to the trustee unless it's been court ordered from what I've read and researched. [01:50:20.800 --> 01:50:29.800] Does the trustee distribute any funds like monthly payments? [01:50:29.800 --> 01:50:39.800] Yes. Yes, we do get a statement from him as we're making our monthly payments. I'm sorry, we quarterly statements from him stating it's been distributed to X, Y, and Z. [01:50:39.800 --> 01:50:49.800] Okay, so if payments weren't made, then that would be an issue with the trustee and not with you. [01:50:49.800 --> 01:51:01.800] Well, that's another discussion which we're running out of time, but that's where the adversary proceedings come in and you can file an adversary proceeding against the trustee for his breach in his contract. [01:51:01.800 --> 01:51:06.800] A breach in his fiduciary responsibility to pay these creditors. [01:51:06.800 --> 01:51:13.800] It is the trustee immune from civil litigation. [01:51:13.800 --> 01:51:27.800] Another great question. From what I've read, Randy, if they don't fulfill their obligations, they're not immune. [01:51:27.800 --> 01:51:40.800] Okay, just like anybody else. We all have a responsibility in life and if you breach that, then yeah, you should be liable, but from what I've read. [01:51:40.800 --> 01:52:09.800] Okay, if the trustee should have been distributing the money and he failed to distribute the money and subsequently you were harmed by it, then a tort letter to the trustee and a copy to the court might be sufficient to get the court to take a closer look. [01:52:09.800 --> 01:52:16.800] Right. I was going to bring that up. [01:52:16.800 --> 01:52:27.800] Sometimes it's not always about letter of law. It's about what's expedient for the parties and you know that the judge and the trustee, they deal with each other all the time. [01:52:27.800 --> 01:52:36.800] So, you know, they're kind of got their snouts in the same trough, so to speak. [01:52:36.800 --> 01:52:53.800] And if you indicate that you're considering suing the trustee, because of this issue, the judge is more likely to look for some type of remedial remedy. [01:52:53.800 --> 01:53:01.800] We did make a record of it at our last hearing that we asked the judge to remove the trustee from this proceeding. [01:53:01.800 --> 01:53:06.800] Yeah, that's a good way to do it. [01:53:06.800 --> 01:53:24.800] We did a verbal motion, but we did make a record of it already. And one thing I want to tell you really quick is our court reporter, which is outside of the Buffalo area, way out in Rochester, she's been a real nasty witch trying to get the transcripts for our hearing. [01:53:24.800 --> 01:53:33.800] And we generally send those money orders and fill out the request for transcripts that very first, that very day when we have the hearing. [01:53:33.800 --> 01:53:42.800] And every time we send the money order out, we keep on emailing her every two or three days because only for males in Buffalo, Rochester takes like maybe two days at the most. [01:53:42.800 --> 01:53:55.800] Okay, she's probably pretty vulnerable. Just finally complaint with the whatever commission it is that oversees court reporters. [01:53:55.800 --> 01:54:02.800] They did. We did that in a case here in Texas. And oh boy, they got excited. [01:54:02.800 --> 01:54:14.800] The court reporter was supposed to be there on a certain day and didn't show up. And it had been twice the court reporter didn't show up. So we filed a complaint against the court reporter. [01:54:14.800 --> 01:54:23.800] And the court reporter immediately through the prosecution attorney under the bus accused the prosecution attorney of telling the court reporters you didn't need to show up. [01:54:23.800 --> 01:54:44.800] And the prosecutors said they didn't say that. But it got really exciting. The court reporter had to either accept the findings of the commission, which ruled against her or go to Austin and stand trial criminally. [01:54:44.800 --> 01:54:56.800] It was a big deal. Now, State Bar and the State Commission on Judicial Conduct, they're just there to protect the lawyers and the judges. [01:54:56.800 --> 01:55:02.800] These other commissions, they're a whole different animal. [01:55:02.800 --> 01:55:17.800] You start seeking the oversight council, whatever it is for court reporters on them. They get real excited real fast. You'll probably find that court reporter to get real easy to get along with. [01:55:17.800 --> 01:55:26.800] Yeah, she sent the email back to us stating that we did make the record that she's lying about when she gets the money order, which she is. [01:55:26.800 --> 01:55:37.800] She's not getting the money order, she's claiming she's not getting the money order for like 10 days. We'll mail it out and she's claiming it takes 10 days to get from Buffalo to Rochester. [01:55:37.800 --> 01:55:40.800] Rochester is about an hour drive from Buffalo. [01:55:40.800 --> 01:55:44.800] Just file a complaint with the commission against her. [01:55:44.800 --> 01:55:52.800] Okay, but what I wanted to ask you is would it be a good idea to send a letter to the Chief Judge of that district? [01:55:52.800 --> 01:56:02.800] I don't think the judge doesn't have much to say about that. The court reporter is a contractor. [01:56:02.800 --> 01:56:03.800] Right. [01:56:03.800 --> 01:56:19.800] And it's really a little past the judge. He can order the court reporter to do something if it's necessary, but I wouldn't use the judge until, you know, until nothing else worked. [01:56:19.800 --> 01:56:26.800] Also, because the judge in the court reporter, you know, they work together all the time and he's not going to want to stinger. [01:56:26.800 --> 01:56:31.800] The oversight board, that's a different animal. [01:56:31.800 --> 01:56:35.800] Brandy, you were right from two weeks ago or maybe it was three weeks ago now. [01:56:35.800 --> 01:56:49.800] When they'd left to stay and you appeal that in bankruptcy court, you're right. They did not move forward. They put the house temporarily on the list to be sold, but then as soon as we did the appeals file, it was deleted. [01:56:49.800 --> 01:56:51.800] Yeah, that's what they do. [01:56:51.800 --> 01:56:54.800] Well, you consider the bank's position. [01:56:54.800 --> 01:56:58.800] What if we lose this at the end of the day? [01:56:58.800 --> 01:57:06.800] If we've found these people out, our liability goes up astronomically. [01:57:06.800 --> 01:57:15.800] So just to avoid an outrageous claim against them, they tend to stop. [01:57:15.800 --> 01:57:18.800] Right. Our brief is due Tuesday, by the way. [01:57:18.800 --> 01:57:31.800] And it's, we've got some great arguments. The biggest argument is that they lifted this day with no notice, no court order for us to make another payment to another lender or another creditor. [01:57:31.800 --> 01:57:46.800] And from what I've reviewed and everything I've looked over, Randy, there's no way that you're liable to pay two different payments because we're making these payments to the trustee, which is fairly substantial amount of money every month. [01:57:46.800 --> 01:57:50.800] So they're asking you to pay the trustee and them. [01:57:50.800 --> 01:57:56.800] And this, if you've already paid the trustee, then it was a trustee's duty to pay them. [01:57:56.800 --> 01:58:04.800] That's reasonable and very likely that's the kind of thing an appeals court will fix for you. [01:58:04.800 --> 01:58:10.800] Right. Okay, we are just about out of time. [01:58:10.800 --> 01:58:14.800] Do you have anything else about about 30 seconds? [01:58:14.800 --> 01:58:22.800] Randy, no, I just want to let you know you were right from three weeks ago that everything comes to complete stop once you appeal the lift of the state. [01:58:22.800 --> 01:58:28.800] So everybody out there that's doing bankruptcy and they let this day appeal immediately. [01:58:28.800 --> 01:58:31.800] Good. Okay. Thank you very much, Shane. [01:58:31.800 --> 01:58:36.800] This is Randy Kelton. We'll be back next week. [01:58:36.800 --> 01:58:41.800] I won't be traveling next week, so I'll be able to do both the Thursday and the Friday night shows. [01:58:41.800 --> 01:58:45.800] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:59:11.800 --> 01:59:20.800] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.800 --> 01:59:29.800] 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. [01:59:29.800 --> 01:59:32.800] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.800 --> 01:59:40.800] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.800 --> 01:59:49.800] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.