[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The falling of these flashes brought to you by the Low Star Lowdown, providing the Delhi [00:05.840 --> 00:13.520] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.520 --> 00:21.320] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.320 --> 00:27.720] Markets for Waze the 6th of February, 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver [00:27.720 --> 00:35.160] at $15.77 an ounce, copper at $2.83 an ounce, oil at Texas Crude at $3.66 a barrel, Brent [00:35.160 --> 00:40.800] Crude at $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin at [00:40.800 --> 00:54.200] $3,401.64, Ripple at XRP at $0.29, Ethereum at $10.10, and Eos at $2.32 a crypto coin. [00:54.200 --> 00:59.680] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.680 --> 01:04.600] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.600 --> 01:09.600] was passed by Parliament. [01:09.600 --> 01:14.280] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today, requesting that a federal [01:14.280 --> 01:19.000] court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered [01:19.000 --> 01:20.000] to vote. [01:20.000 --> 01:25.320] This was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State [01:25.320 --> 01:30.120] and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.120 --> 01:33.400] who were registered to vote when obtaining age-arvest license. [01:33.400 --> 01:37.080] Over half of the 95,000 didn't devote, it seems. [01:37.080 --> 01:41.120] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.120 --> 01:45.280] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.280 --> 01:50.880] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.880 --> 01:55.280] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.280 --> 01:57.120] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.120 --> 02:01.280] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.280 --> 02:09.040] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.040 --> 02:14.440] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.440 --> 02:16.960] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.960 --> 02:20.680] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.680 --> 02:24.280] An x-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.280 --> 02:30.480] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.480 --> 02:35.240] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.240 --> 02:40.200] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.200 --> 02:44.720] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.720 --> 02:47.520] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.520 --> 02:51.520] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.520 --> 03:11.520] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:11.520 --> 03:33.320] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Root of Law Radio on this Friday, the 7th [03:33.320 --> 03:40.920] day of June, 2019, and we're talking to Dale in New York, we do need to move along, Dale. [03:40.920 --> 03:47.800] We've got two hours and two callers, and I've got something I want to address, okay. [03:47.800 --> 03:59.080] Well, I need to bring up, I did advise them that they broke CPL 125, CPL 100-40, and I [03:59.080 --> 04:04.720] also told them that they screwed up my 6th amendment. [04:04.720 --> 04:06.960] Okay, day. [04:06.960 --> 04:13.600] I'm interspersing things here as much for everybody else's for you. [04:13.600 --> 04:19.760] One of our rules is, avoid pronouns like the plague. [04:19.760 --> 04:27.600] Anytime you're dealing in legal issues, it is the job of the lawyer on the other side [04:27.600 --> 04:32.120] to misconstrue anything he can. [04:32.120 --> 04:41.280] So when you say they, are you talking about the transcriber that you paid or court personnel? [04:41.280 --> 04:43.200] I'm talking about the court personnel. [04:43.200 --> 04:44.920] I brought it up in court. [04:44.920 --> 04:52.560] I also brought it up in my appeal that they violated my 6th amendment and that they broke [04:52.560 --> 05:00.400] CPL 100-25 and CPL 100-40. [05:00.400 --> 05:01.640] I told them what was. [05:01.640 --> 05:02.640] Okay. [05:02.640 --> 05:03.640] Wait a minute. [05:03.640 --> 05:05.640] What are those, what did they go to? [05:05.640 --> 05:11.520] Well, obviously, let me explain why I'm asking that question. [05:11.520 --> 05:19.760] I'm looking to see if a violation of this code has the effect of denying you in a right. [05:19.760 --> 05:24.240] If that's the case, then their actions are criminal. [05:24.240 --> 05:26.240] Okay. [05:26.240 --> 05:38.720] If I remember correctly, CPL 100-25 has to do with a penal code. [05:38.720 --> 05:48.120] I think, I think it was in relation to the discrepancies with the foreign affidavits. [05:48.120 --> 05:58.120] Well, when I look at CPL 100-25, I see that CPL is New York's criminal procedure law, [05:58.120 --> 06:04.120] and its title is simplified information, form and content, defendants' right to supporting [06:04.120 --> 06:08.120] depositions, notice requirement. [06:08.120 --> 06:16.280] And it's a pretty long four paragraphs about the information, the form and content, the [06:16.280 --> 06:22.280] defendants' right to deposition and that you should have notice. [06:22.280 --> 06:24.280] Okay. [06:24.280 --> 06:31.600] Well, I brought that up in my appeal, and they totally overlooked that and the other [06:31.600 --> 06:36.240] CPL 100-40. [06:36.240 --> 06:42.520] I wonder, did you leave it really at that level of specificity? [06:42.520 --> 06:50.760] Did you specify it was in this paragraph number three or subsection three and give some facts [06:50.760 --> 06:55.880] that allege why they broke it or how they broke it, or was it just kind of vaguely [06:55.880 --> 06:57.880] the whole thing? [06:57.880 --> 07:06.520] The CPL states specifically that I am to be served upon with a copy of a supporting [07:06.520 --> 07:13.360] deposition, and this officer, all he did was he said he mailed it. [07:13.360 --> 07:16.760] Without a return receipt, just mailed it. [07:16.760 --> 07:17.760] Okay. [07:17.760 --> 07:24.800] I'm going to ask the question that the judge will always ask himself. [07:24.800 --> 07:32.920] Whenever somebody makes an assertion of fact, I'm going to say so as. [07:32.920 --> 07:36.720] Another deal, why is that important? [07:36.720 --> 07:40.440] How did that harm you? [07:40.440 --> 07:42.240] How did that what? [07:42.240 --> 07:45.400] How did that harm you? [07:45.400 --> 07:46.400] How did it harm me? [07:46.400 --> 07:53.400] And I also mentioned this, that without having that supporting deposition that they violated [07:53.400 --> 08:00.120] the law, it didn't give me proper time to prepare my defense. [08:00.120 --> 08:01.120] Exactly. [08:01.120 --> 08:07.080] That's when you lack these documents, you can't assume that they will come to that [08:07.080 --> 08:08.080] conclusion. [08:08.080 --> 08:11.920] Well, I meant in my argument. [08:11.920 --> 08:12.920] Okay. [08:12.920 --> 08:16.680] We haven't seen your documents, so we can't be sure. [08:16.680 --> 08:21.240] The way you're saying it to us, if that's how you said it to the judge, it's not enough [08:21.240 --> 08:23.920] to move the court. [08:23.920 --> 08:29.320] So the conclusions that you draw have to be in your documentation. [08:29.320 --> 08:30.320] It was. [08:30.320 --> 08:31.320] Okay. [08:31.320 --> 08:41.560] You understand that I'm taking your verbal presentations, and we have other people listening, [08:41.560 --> 08:48.120] and most of almost all of what we do is instructional. [08:48.120 --> 08:53.520] Little points like this are points that if we're an ordinary person and we're not familiar [08:53.520 --> 09:01.520] with law, we don't really realize that the judge is not going to figure this out. [09:01.520 --> 09:03.520] So this is obvious. [09:03.520 --> 09:06.920] If he does this and he does that, the problem is obvious. [09:06.920 --> 09:08.920] No, no, not in law. [09:08.920 --> 09:12.560] In law, it can't be just obvious. [09:12.560 --> 09:20.160] You have to specifically state it in order for it to be before the court. [09:20.160 --> 09:23.800] I got a suit once over a credit card issue. [09:23.800 --> 09:25.920] The guy brought it to me and he said, what do you think? [09:25.920 --> 09:29.720] I read through it and I said, they don't have a prayer. [09:29.720 --> 09:30.720] He said, well, why not? [09:30.720 --> 09:32.440] I said, I don't know. [09:32.440 --> 09:34.840] They don't have a prayer. [09:34.840 --> 09:38.560] The prayer is where you ask the court to do something. [09:38.560 --> 09:44.320] They spent 10 pages telling the court what a no-good rotten deadbeat this guy was, but [09:44.320 --> 09:49.160] did not move the court to do something in particular. [09:49.160 --> 09:51.960] And that's generally in the prayer. [09:51.960 --> 09:53.840] Somebody screwed up. [09:53.840 --> 09:59.560] Now the court cannot rule anything in their favor. [09:59.560 --> 10:07.960] Even if the court absolutely agrees with them, they had to explicitly ask the court to do [10:07.960 --> 10:11.560] a certain thing before it can do it. [10:11.560 --> 10:20.120] So in pleadings, you have to be always explicit and tell them exactly what you want. [10:20.120 --> 10:27.480] You read these pleadings and it sounds like they're too much detail and pedantic, but [10:27.480 --> 10:30.480] that's the reason you can't assume anything. [10:30.480 --> 10:32.880] You have to specify everything. [10:32.880 --> 10:33.880] Okay. [10:33.880 --> 10:34.880] Not from my talk on that part. [10:34.880 --> 10:35.880] Okay. [10:35.880 --> 10:36.880] Go ahead, Dale. [10:36.880 --> 10:40.920] So it sounds like you put in a pretty decent appeal. [10:40.920 --> 10:45.160] You may not have a problem because you've got three issues in there. [10:45.160 --> 10:46.160] I'm sorry. [10:46.160 --> 10:49.680] I'm going back to the seat belt ticket. [10:49.680 --> 11:02.560] In this one, if you have a contract and he gave you funds, did you hold the property for [11:02.560 --> 11:03.560] him? [11:03.560 --> 11:09.280] I allowed him to leave furniture in the apartment. [11:09.280 --> 11:14.000] Okay, then he had use of the property. [11:14.000 --> 11:18.200] He doesn't have a right to his money back. [11:18.200 --> 11:21.800] You could have at least rented that to someone else. [11:21.800 --> 11:27.760] The court wrote back to me already, now the judge, not the DA this time, moved back. [11:27.760 --> 11:37.520] And he's upholding that I need to return the security deposit and he, in addition to what [11:37.520 --> 11:45.640] the lower court ruled with the screwy case laws that they came up with, this other judge [11:45.640 --> 11:52.200] in the county court level, on the appeal, added his own case laws. [11:52.200 --> 11:59.880] And he said, because we were looking for a fine contract, which I signed the contract [11:59.880 --> 12:05.360] so that this guy could bring it to social services and get it approved. [12:05.360 --> 12:07.040] He didn't sign it in my presence. [12:07.040 --> 12:08.960] He just paid me. [12:08.960 --> 12:15.160] And there was consideration exchange plus I allowed him to leave his things in the apartment. [12:15.160 --> 12:19.360] Okay, well, he doesn't have to sign it. [12:19.360 --> 12:27.400] If you sign the agreement and he gives you payment, that creates the contract. [12:27.400 --> 12:29.200] So he didn't have to sign it. [12:29.200 --> 12:33.720] He would still be bound to it. [12:33.720 --> 12:43.400] But if it was given as security and not as a rent or at least a lease payment, an advanced [12:43.400 --> 12:50.240] lease payment, depending on what the contract said, if it was given as security and he did [12:50.240 --> 12:59.400] not damage the property, then he would have a right to his security back unless the contract [12:59.400 --> 13:08.520] stipulated that it's for security relative to damage and security relative to payment [13:08.520 --> 13:13.400] of rent for the time he's using the apartment. [13:13.400 --> 13:15.400] How was the contract written? [13:15.400 --> 13:23.720] Okay, let me take a quick look at the only thing I've got is the receipt. [13:23.720 --> 13:32.240] And I'm looking at the receipt now to see how it was signed because I know I had made [13:32.240 --> 13:41.600] a quite good clause in there that said if he didn't move in, he didn't get his money [13:41.600 --> 13:42.600] back. [13:42.600 --> 13:52.280] Okay, this is not straightforward and this is contract law. [13:52.280 --> 14:01.480] What the court may say is if you didn't stipulate that this money would apply to rental for [14:01.480 --> 14:13.280] the time he had control of the space, then the person who gave you this money as security, [14:13.280 --> 14:19.200] if it was to secure, say, the property from damage, then he had a reasonable expectation [14:19.200 --> 14:26.280] that if he didn't damage the property, he would get those funds back and you can't arbitrarily [14:26.280 --> 14:30.560] convert them to another purpose. [14:30.560 --> 14:38.440] So you would have had to have said this will apply to rent for the time I'm holding the [14:38.440 --> 14:39.440] property. [14:39.440 --> 14:43.480] If that's not in there, then you may have a problem. [14:43.480 --> 14:48.360] Well, my receipt says security deposit. [14:48.360 --> 14:50.880] That's a problem. [14:50.880 --> 14:59.280] What does security deposit mean? [14:59.280 --> 15:08.320] To secure the property from damage or secure you from loss of rental, the rent on the property? [15:08.320 --> 15:18.120] I'm a licensed legal estate broker here in the state and the word damage in my business [15:18.120 --> 15:25.000] also means if you don't pay me rent, then that's damage. [15:25.000 --> 15:31.200] But that was, okay, is that in the contract that damage, that the security secures the [15:31.200 --> 15:36.360] property against damage and secures me against loss? [15:36.360 --> 15:40.440] Yes, it's in the lease. [15:40.440 --> 15:46.200] You should have a pretty good, you should have a pretty strong case there. [15:46.200 --> 15:56.760] I hadn't thought about including the front page of my lease along with my appeal. [15:56.760 --> 15:59.760] Oh, absolutely. [15:59.760 --> 16:04.200] If you haven't, then send it to the clerk. [16:04.200 --> 16:08.320] A file in amended appeal. [16:08.320 --> 16:15.240] In order to include that, you have to reference it in the appeal. [16:15.240 --> 16:21.080] You make a reference to that document and say see attachment so-and-so and then attach [16:21.080 --> 16:22.720] it as that document. [16:22.720 --> 16:28.880] If it's not referenced inside the appeal, then it's irrelevant to the case. [16:28.880 --> 16:33.680] So you may want to file an amended appeal for that purpose. [16:33.680 --> 16:35.360] I do need to move along. [16:35.360 --> 16:36.360] We are. [16:36.360 --> 16:37.360] Thank you. [16:37.360 --> 16:38.360] Okay. [16:38.360 --> 16:44.240] And if you have any questions, talk to John. [16:44.240 --> 16:46.920] I'm sure he'll have answers for you. [16:46.920 --> 16:49.920] They may not be right, but he's going to have them. [16:49.920 --> 16:50.920] Okay. [16:50.920 --> 17:01.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Law Radio, we'll be right back. [17:01.120 --> 17:04.120] Rural Law Radio is proud to offer the Rural Law Traffic Seminar. [17:04.120 --> 17:06.600] In today's America, we live in an us against them society. [17:06.600 --> 17:09.840] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [17:09.840 --> 17:11.640] stand and defend our own rights. [17:11.640 --> 17:15.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [17:15.000 --> 17:19.240] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. 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[19:00.520 --> 19:28.760] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Wet Fountain Rural Law Radio and we're going to Ted in [19:28.760 --> 19:29.760] Utah. [19:29.760 --> 19:33.120] Ted, are you actually in Utah? [19:33.120 --> 19:34.760] Sometimes my database is not correct. [19:34.760 --> 19:36.760] Yeah, I'm in Utah. [19:36.760 --> 19:37.760] Okay. [19:37.760 --> 19:40.760] I won't hold that against you. [19:40.760 --> 19:41.760] That's good. [19:41.760 --> 19:42.760] That's good. [19:42.760 --> 19:49.040] I got a unique situation that you might have the answer to. [19:49.040 --> 19:55.120] I've been having great fun passing out bar grievances to people I know that have lawyer [19:55.120 --> 19:56.120] problems. [19:56.120 --> 20:00.640] Oh, you're a man after my own heart. [20:00.640 --> 20:01.640] Wonderful. [20:01.640 --> 20:09.000] This has been great fun, but nobody's getting a response back. [20:09.000 --> 20:11.000] Understand. [20:11.000 --> 20:13.000] That's okay. [20:13.000 --> 20:22.840] You know, I tell people that you never expect to win your case in the trial court. [20:22.840 --> 20:30.280] You expect the judge to rule against you out of hand at every turn and you don't care because [20:30.280 --> 20:32.680] you use that to beat them up with. [20:32.680 --> 20:35.800] You file these bar grievances. [20:35.800 --> 20:37.960] It depends on what you want to do. [20:37.960 --> 20:44.720] You can know that the insurance carrier is kicking these guys behind, but did you listen [20:44.720 --> 20:49.160] to the show last night? [20:49.160 --> 20:50.640] That's what I'm hoping for. [20:50.640 --> 20:51.640] No, no. [20:51.640 --> 20:54.360] I'm saying, did you listen to the show last night? [20:54.360 --> 20:55.360] Yeah. [20:55.360 --> 20:57.640] Yeah, I listened to every chance we had. [20:57.640 --> 21:00.040] Did you hear about what Tina did? [21:00.040 --> 21:01.240] Yeah. [21:01.240 --> 21:07.240] She went to the Supreme Court with it. [21:07.240 --> 21:08.240] Yes. [21:08.240 --> 21:20.640] That's, you know, if a public official or a agency screws it up, oh, wonderful. [21:20.640 --> 21:28.200] Now you get to get all these people to file their complaints with the Supreme Court because [21:28.200 --> 21:39.760] the agency who's collecting state funds to administer discipline to lawyers is misappropriating [21:39.760 --> 21:46.640] those funds and ask the Supreme Court to beat up the bar. [21:46.640 --> 21:48.640] Yeah. [21:48.640 --> 21:54.080] Well, I was half wondering if they weren't throwing them in the garbage can before they [21:54.080 --> 21:59.920] read them because they weren't getting the letter back stating that this does not meet [21:59.920 --> 22:04.040] our criteria for a complaint. [22:04.040 --> 22:09.360] We examined into your accusation and find it does not rise to the level of misconduct. [22:09.360 --> 22:11.360] You didn't get that letter back? [22:11.360 --> 22:12.360] No. [22:12.360 --> 22:14.400] That's what I'm talking about. [22:14.400 --> 22:15.400] Yeah. [22:15.400 --> 22:16.400] Okay. [22:16.400 --> 22:17.400] So anything. [22:17.400 --> 22:27.080] If you have someone send the letter to the director of the agency, the grievance, send [22:27.080 --> 22:33.640] it to the director, return receipt, restrict it. [22:33.640 --> 22:37.560] That means he is required to sign for it. [22:37.560 --> 22:42.520] Now what's going to happen is that's going to go to the mailroom and the minimum wage [22:42.520 --> 22:46.640] guy in the mailroom is going to sign for it. [22:46.640 --> 22:48.240] But we don't care. [22:48.240 --> 22:55.360] When you don't hear anything back, then charge is the director with the tampering with the [22:55.360 --> 22:57.360] government document. [22:57.360 --> 23:06.760] Well, I was wondering that or insuring it and asking for the insurance money from the [23:06.760 --> 23:10.640] post office. [23:10.640 --> 23:12.840] That is a really good idea. [23:12.840 --> 23:16.560] We had someone else do that. [23:16.560 --> 23:17.560] Yeah. [23:17.560 --> 23:18.560] When you come. [23:18.560 --> 23:19.560] I like that. [23:19.560 --> 23:23.280] Oh, that is, this is, that's devious. [23:23.280 --> 23:26.440] That is rotten and low down. [23:26.440 --> 23:28.440] I like it. [23:28.440 --> 23:37.040] And I don't like these things that you bring out of the blue. [23:37.040 --> 23:42.000] Always like it when they say, I didn't see that one coming. [23:42.000 --> 23:50.000] When you sue the post office for loosing your letter, these guys are going to have posts [23:50.000 --> 23:53.000] of inspectors all over them. [23:53.000 --> 24:00.480] Yeah, you know, I think it's great, you know, it's, yeah, it's somewhere they're getting [24:00.480 --> 24:01.480] lost. [24:01.480 --> 24:11.600] You know, it's all like my neighbor across the street, but he was married for a year. [24:11.600 --> 24:16.880] The divorce thing, I just, well, just barred her attorney. [24:16.880 --> 24:20.840] I said, he'll barred him twice. [24:20.840 --> 24:23.800] He won't be there. [24:23.800 --> 24:33.720] He was, you know, and I had him do it, you know, plenty of time in advance. [24:33.720 --> 24:35.400] And I know of three more. [24:35.400 --> 24:44.480] He's, you know, gotten complaints or answers back from the bar association, but they're [24:44.480 --> 24:48.000] getting wet and wailing somewhere. [24:48.000 --> 24:57.000] So the one thing is to go to the Supreme and I like this idea of insuring the document [24:57.000 --> 25:06.200] because if they claim they didn't get it, you have a claim against the post office. [25:06.200 --> 25:10.200] And now the post office is not going to be happy. [25:10.200 --> 25:16.400] They don't like being sued and that's all right. [25:16.400 --> 25:21.800] Who cares if the post office is happy. [25:21.800 --> 25:31.240] I had a friend who used to be a mail order business and he said, you think the FBI is [25:31.240 --> 25:32.800] bad. [25:32.800 --> 25:38.680] You have not lived until you've had the postal inspectors after you. [25:38.680 --> 25:42.080] That's a whole other experience. [25:42.080 --> 25:50.480] So let's see if we can give the director of the state bar association a whole other experience. [25:50.480 --> 25:55.640] So we should send it to the, you don't even need the name, just the director of the bar [25:55.640 --> 25:56.640] association. [25:56.640 --> 26:10.440] Yes, everybody, you effectively through your legislators or the courts hired this director. [26:10.440 --> 26:14.760] You had your elected officials appoint this director. [26:14.760 --> 26:18.560] The director hired everybody else. [26:18.560 --> 26:26.560] Everybody else works for him, therefore he is responding at superior. [26:26.560 --> 26:32.160] Everybody does what he says, whether he said it or not. [26:32.160 --> 26:37.960] So he's the one that answers. [26:37.960 --> 26:40.800] I own my own business. [26:40.800 --> 26:45.960] If someone working for me screws something up, they don't go to that person. [26:45.960 --> 26:47.480] They come to me. [26:47.480 --> 26:49.160] I'm the one responsible. [26:49.160 --> 26:52.280] We do the same thing with the director. [26:52.280 --> 26:59.160] And you got to know when the director starts hammering him, he's going to throw some lawyers [26:59.160 --> 27:01.200] under the bus. [27:01.200 --> 27:11.360] It looks like with Utah, they call this the office of professional conduct and it looks [27:11.360 --> 27:21.600] like the executive director of the Utah state bar is named John Baldwin. [27:21.600 --> 27:29.360] And his email is director at utahbar.org, perfect place. [27:29.360 --> 27:36.360] He's got a fax number here too, if you'd like to send him something, it's 801-531-0660. [27:36.360 --> 27:40.320] Okay, I'll tell you what I've got. [27:40.320 --> 27:47.440] It's a request from Morris for assistance, Utah state bar gives the address and phone [27:47.440 --> 27:51.640] number and just says, you know, does this lawyer represent you? [27:51.640 --> 27:52.920] If not, what did he do? [27:52.920 --> 27:54.080] What did you explain? [27:54.080 --> 27:58.160] Okay, hold on, hold on. [27:58.160 --> 28:03.680] There's a perspective that we need to develop. [28:03.680 --> 28:09.720] The state bar association, everybody that works for the state bar association, they're [28:09.720 --> 28:20.040] all public servants, they're the servants, you are the master of those servants. [28:20.040 --> 28:26.120] And as the master, master never goes to the guy at the bottom. [28:26.120 --> 28:31.240] They don't answer to him, they answer to the director. [28:31.240 --> 28:35.600] Only the director answers to you. [28:35.600 --> 28:45.440] You know, when I was in the military, Ted, you know how that works. [28:45.440 --> 28:51.520] You walk on to a military base and a general shows up, everybody's terrified of the general. [28:51.520 --> 28:58.440] There's only one person they're more afraid of than the general, and that's the civilian. [28:58.440 --> 29:04.240] Because the civilian is the one that could walk into the general's office and crawl down [29:04.240 --> 29:09.080] his throat. [29:09.080 --> 29:15.440] We are that civilian, and I have had so much fun. [29:15.440 --> 29:20.600] Department of Public Safety, they sent me Leo Gossett. [29:20.600 --> 29:26.680] I said, Leo Gossett, number two man in the DPS, yes, can I help you? [29:26.680 --> 29:28.160] No, you cannot help me. [29:28.160 --> 29:30.520] I don't want to talk to any subordinates. [29:30.520 --> 29:35.120] You get me the colonel like I asked for. [29:35.120 --> 29:38.040] You could hear him. [29:38.040 --> 29:39.040] One moment. [29:39.040 --> 29:43.280] Oh, that was so much fun. [29:43.280 --> 29:44.280] Hang on. [29:44.280 --> 29:45.280] That's good. [29:45.280 --> 29:46.280] Great. [29:46.280 --> 29:47.280] Randy Kelton. [29:47.280 --> 29:48.280] Brett Fountain. [29:48.280 --> 29:49.280] We have a radio. [29:49.280 --> 29:53.480] I call in number five, one, two, six, four, six, nineteen, eighty-four. [29:53.480 --> 29:57.080] We've got Tito on the line, I'll bring her in when we come back. [29:57.080 --> 30:01.880] We'll be right back. [30:01.880 --> 30:03.880] Let's get physical, physical. [30:03.880 --> 30:09.640] Hey, if you exercise even a tenth as much as you should, you can extend your life by [30:09.640 --> 30:10.640] years. [30:10.640 --> 30:15.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll hike right back with the good news in just a moment. [30:15.480 --> 30:20.800] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [30:20.800 --> 30:22.840] of your personal information. [30:22.840 --> 30:23.840] That's creepy. [30:23.840 --> 30:25.880] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:25.880 --> 30:29.000] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:29.000 --> 30:33.640] StartPage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies [30:33.640 --> 30:35.400] and their third party certified. [30:35.400 --> 30:39.880] If you don't like big brothers spying on you, start over with StartPage. [30:39.880 --> 30:42.440] Great search results and total privacy. [30:42.440 --> 30:45.880] StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:45.880 --> 30:46.880] Exercise. [30:46.880 --> 30:50.280] We all know we need it, but we don't always take the time to do it. [30:50.280 --> 30:55.200] Now new evidence says just 15 measly minutes of physical activity a day can extend your [30:55.200 --> 30:56.920] life a lot. [30:56.920 --> 31:01.320] Researchers in Taiwan found that an hour and a half of exercise a week extended people's [31:01.320 --> 31:03.120] lives by three whole years. [31:03.120 --> 31:05.520] That's just 13 minutes a day. [31:05.520 --> 31:10.200] The study found that small amounts of daily exercise made people 10% less likely to die [31:10.200 --> 31:14.120] of cancer and 14% less likely to die for any reason. [31:14.120 --> 31:19.360] So come on, couch potatoes, dig out those Olivia Newton-John CDs and let me hear your [31:19.360 --> 31:20.360] body talk. [31:20.360 --> 31:30.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.600 --> 31:31.600] I lost my son. [31:31.600 --> 31:32.600] My uncle. [31:32.600 --> 31:33.600] My uncle. [31:33.600 --> 31:34.600] My son. [31:34.600 --> 31:35.600] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.600 --> 31:38.800] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.800 --> 31:42.960] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.960 --> 31:48.800] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:48.800 --> 31:52.560] and engineers has looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.560 --> 31:54.040] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.040 --> 31:55.040] My uncle. [31:55.040 --> 31:56.040] My nephew. [31:56.040 --> 31:57.040] My son. [31:57.040 --> 31:58.040] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:58.040 --> 32:00.560] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.560 --> 32:03.200] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.200 --> 32:06.200] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.200 --> 32:09.840] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [32:09.840 --> 32:10.840] them to pay for it. [32:10.840 --> 32:14.440] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.440 --> 32:18.280] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:18.280 --> 32:21.000] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.000 --> 32:25.280] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [32:25.280 --> 32:26.600] zero complaints. [32:26.600 --> 32:30.800] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [32:30.800 --> 32:32.040] the first time. [32:32.040 --> 32:38.560] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:38.560 --> 32:42.760] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos [32:42.760 --> 32:45.320] Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.320 --> 32:50.440] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.440 --> 32:56.480] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:56.480 --> 32:58.480] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.480 --> 33:02.360] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:02.360 --> 33:18.400] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [33:18.400 --> 33:40.640] Okay, we are back. [33:40.640 --> 33:47.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we have a lot of radio, we're talking to Ted in Utah. [33:47.000 --> 33:53.640] And since Tina's on the call-in bridge, I couldn't talk to her on the break, so Tina, [33:53.640 --> 33:58.840] did you call in to address the bar issue? [33:58.840 --> 34:02.440] Yes, I did. [34:02.440 --> 34:06.800] Good, do you want to talk to Ted? [34:06.800 --> 34:19.720] Yeah, well, I liked what he was thinking about on the insurance part, and I just wanted to [34:19.720 --> 34:27.200] remind him and others, I sent my request, the one they did not get or they claim they didn't, [34:27.200 --> 34:29.240] by priority mail. [34:29.240 --> 34:35.040] Now the priority mail is automatically insured for $50, and that's free. [34:35.040 --> 34:38.360] And you can insure it for any amount you want. [34:38.360 --> 34:44.320] Now it may or may not be worth it, time-wise, to sue the Post Office because they claim they [34:44.320 --> 34:47.800] didn't get it at the Supreme Court for $50. [34:47.800 --> 34:56.160] But the exercise for me might be good, but in the future, I think I will add the insurance. [34:56.160 --> 35:04.280] But if Ted wants to look at what I filed with them and how I answered it, just have them [35:04.280 --> 35:08.480] email me and I'll share what I did. [35:08.480 --> 35:14.480] Okay, the document you insured, did they claim they didn't get it? [35:14.480 --> 35:20.960] Yes, they did claim the Supreme Court said they never received it. [35:20.960 --> 35:21.960] What did the... [35:21.960 --> 35:24.680] It was only insured for $50. [35:24.680 --> 35:26.680] Say that again? [35:26.680 --> 35:30.040] It was only insured for the automatic $50. [35:30.040 --> 35:34.640] Did the Post Office pay you that $50? [35:34.640 --> 35:39.360] No, I never asked them for it because they never thought about it until just now. [35:39.360 --> 35:45.000] Oh, you've got to go ask them for it because when they run down to the Supreme, they get [35:45.000 --> 35:52.560] these postal inspectors down there, they're going to get real excited. [35:52.560 --> 35:56.280] I need to do that. [35:56.280 --> 36:01.920] I like doing it, the priority mail is really good, A, because you can have the envelopes [36:01.920 --> 36:08.480] at home, you can go online and you can do everything online and you can actually put [36:08.480 --> 36:12.840] in there that you want every step of it tracked. [36:12.840 --> 36:18.760] So when it goes from one, leave the Post Office, you know, you get an email, then when it gets [36:18.760 --> 36:22.440] the next one, you get an email, then it's here. [36:22.440 --> 36:28.480] So you have to ask that when you put it in, but it's all free, but you can track the package [36:28.480 --> 36:32.680] any time it tells you the exact time it was delivered. [36:32.680 --> 36:40.640] And if you go online and do it, you get, you know, a few cents, you know, discount, then [36:40.640 --> 36:45.280] going into the Post Office, but it saves you the time and the haskell and the parking and [36:45.280 --> 36:50.240] the driving and you've got the address in the address book, you can just plug it in [36:50.240 --> 36:53.400] any time you want. [36:53.400 --> 36:57.520] And you can restrict the signature. [36:57.520 --> 36:59.520] Go ahead, Ted. [36:59.520 --> 37:00.520] Yeah. [37:00.520 --> 37:04.480] I'll get this, go and look up this name. [37:04.480 --> 37:10.600] I got several people doing this and having great support with it and I thought it was [37:10.600 --> 37:17.320] just automatic and I got thinking and then I get a response letter that we threw at the [37:17.320 --> 37:22.320] garbage can, they're not getting them. [37:22.320 --> 37:32.880] Well, I would suggest that you send an inquiry to the director and then if they claim they're [37:32.880 --> 37:41.360] not getting them, then charge the director as respond yet superior for his mail room [37:41.360 --> 37:50.840] staff for tampering with the government document. [37:50.840 --> 37:57.200] This becomes a government document when you file it and generally tampering with the government [37:57.200 --> 38:05.080] documents felony certainly is in Texas and every state I've looked at. [38:05.080 --> 38:06.640] Yeah. [38:06.640 --> 38:07.640] Okay. [38:07.640 --> 38:09.000] I'll do all that on that. [38:09.000 --> 38:24.280] I got one more thing, Utah doesn't allow you to file post complaints via a letter, a form. [38:24.280 --> 38:27.280] They want everything done by email regardless. [38:27.280 --> 38:32.680] Oh, that's, I like that, that's better. [38:32.680 --> 38:41.000] The email leaves, leave immutable tracks. [38:41.000 --> 38:47.920] They can't say, we just had a guy in Georgia, they're trying to, to condemn his property [38:47.920 --> 38:53.320] and take it for an expansion project in this in Cornelia, Georgia. [38:53.320 --> 39:01.040] So they came in and they shut down two buildings because one building had a sprinkler issue. [39:01.040 --> 39:03.840] The other building, the sprinkler worked, there's just low pressure. [39:03.840 --> 39:11.880] So he got them, got the, the building he used, the, the second building wasn't being used. [39:11.880 --> 39:16.720] The building he used, he got sprinkler fixed within a week and this is back in September [39:16.720 --> 39:21.800] and asked him to come, send him an email to come and inspect it. [39:21.800 --> 39:31.520] He went into court the day before yesterday and the fire marshal and the building inspector [39:31.520 --> 39:35.920] lied to the court and said they would never notice. [39:35.920 --> 39:43.600] Well, that email is immutable, it's there and they can't do anything about it. [39:43.600 --> 39:51.400] So we'll go in and ask for all of the emails that the, both these officials have received [39:51.400 --> 39:56.800] because we have a copy of the email that was sent. [39:56.800 --> 40:05.320] Email is better than letter, it, they can't say they didn't get it, but, but then again [40:05.320 --> 40:09.320] sickening the postal inspectors on, it's pretty good too. [40:09.320 --> 40:18.520] Yeah, we're dealing with people that don't have, a lot of them don't have computers and [40:18.520 --> 40:25.480] driver's license to look at, run down to the post office, which is not very far. [40:25.480 --> 40:30.200] Everything is in the walking distance here. [40:30.200 --> 40:42.360] Well, okay, the, the laws are requiring that lawyers file by email, but they do not require [40:42.360 --> 40:48.680] that pro say individuals file by email. [40:48.680 --> 40:57.400] Okay, because I'm trying to figure out how to file multiple complaints on post complaints, [40:57.400 --> 41:04.280] you know, I'm sure every, every jurisdiction in the nation says they got the most corrupt [41:04.280 --> 41:08.600] cops, but I think Nephi is the head of them. [41:08.600 --> 41:13.880] Okay, I, you know, that's what I've heard every county I went to, everybody says that [41:13.880 --> 41:16.760] they, their county is the most corrupt county in the nation. [41:16.760 --> 41:26.520] I am in weekly County, Tennessee, this is the county I was born in and I'm amazed. [41:26.520 --> 41:29.480] This one's not corrupt. [41:29.480 --> 41:39.880] I went and watched preliminary hearings and I want to videotape those hearings because [41:39.880 --> 41:45.800] nobody walked out of one of those hearings feeling like they had been mistreated by the [41:45.800 --> 41:46.960] court. [41:46.960 --> 41:54.120] I walked into the hearing and the judge was talking to, had someone up there and as I [41:54.120 --> 41:59.080] walked in, the guy said something real sharp and kind of raised his voice and the judge [41:59.080 --> 42:01.400] said, hey, hey, don't raise your voice to me. [42:01.400 --> 42:07.560] I'm just trying to figure out what's going on here and when he finished, the guy apologized [42:07.560 --> 42:08.560] to the judge. [42:08.560 --> 42:11.560] He said, I appreciate your patience with me. [42:11.560 --> 42:17.720] And the judge said, well, I appreciate that you appreciate my patience and someone in [42:17.720 --> 42:22.200] the courtroom stood up and said, your honor, I want to express my appreciation that you [42:22.200 --> 42:25.840] appreciate that he appreciates your patience. [42:25.840 --> 42:31.160] The judge looked at him and said, I appreciate that. [42:31.160 --> 42:37.400] That was essentially the tone of the whole hearing. [42:37.400 --> 42:40.400] Nobody felt bullied or mistreated. [42:40.400 --> 42:47.480] One woman, he said, I forget her name, Miss Clossy, I think, he said, how many times have [42:47.480 --> 42:48.480] you been here? [42:48.480 --> 42:57.080] And this five or six said, we've been trying to collect a $700 fine from you for five years [42:57.080 --> 43:03.000] or seven years, outrageous times, she'd been in jail four or five times. [43:03.000 --> 43:08.080] And he said, it is obvious that we're not going to collect any money from you. [43:08.080 --> 43:11.040] So I figured he's about to lower the boom on her. [43:11.040 --> 43:17.240] He said, Miss Clossy, I'm going to convert this fine into a civil debt so you never have [43:17.240 --> 43:22.200] to worry about being arrested for it again. [43:22.200 --> 43:29.880] After the court, I talked to the judge and I mentioned that he said, I cannot bring myself [43:29.880 --> 43:34.840] to be a debt collector for the state. [43:34.840 --> 43:43.280] Holy mackerel, actually, got a court where the sheriff and the judge, both of them, I [43:43.280 --> 43:48.280] landed right in the middle of that sheriff, and he handled me like a pro. [43:48.280 --> 43:49.280] Hang on. [43:49.280 --> 43:50.280] Be right back. [43:50.280 --> 43:51.280] Ready, Kelton? [43:51.280 --> 43:52.280] Real low radio. [43:52.280 --> 43:53.280] We'll be right back. [43:53.280 --> 44:04.680] At Capital Coin and Boolean, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.680 --> 44:09.080] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.080 --> 44:13.360] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high-quality [44:13.360 --> 44:14.560] coins and precious metals. [44:14.560 --> 44:18.360] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. 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[44:54.520 --> 45:01.120] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBoolean.com or call 512-646-640. [45:01.120 --> 45:04.320] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.320 --> 45:11.080] In your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.080 --> 45:15.080] that will show you how, in 24 hours, you step-by-step. [45:15.080 --> 45:18.880] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.880 --> 45:22.920] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.920 --> 45:27.920] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.920 --> 45:33.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.800 --> 45:38.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.800 --> 45:42.800] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.800 --> 45:49.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.800 --> 45:51.800] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:51.800 --> 45:55.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.800 --> 46:03.800] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:25.800 --> 46:27.800] Okay, we are back. [46:27.800 --> 46:33.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Wheel of Law Radio, and we're talking to Ted in Utah. [46:33.800 --> 46:44.800] And this county I live in, I talk to the judge, and I asked the sheriff to arrest one of his deputies [46:44.800 --> 46:47.800] because his deputy touched me. [46:47.800 --> 46:52.800] To keep me from going into a courtroom. [46:52.800 --> 47:00.800] I did kind of allude to the fact that he was a jackbooted thug, but too bad. [47:00.800 --> 47:05.800] So the judge handled me well. [47:05.800 --> 47:11.800] And the one person I hadn't talked to, everybody directed my complaints to the prosecutor's attorney. [47:11.800 --> 47:19.800] So I filed two complaints with the prosecutor's investigator, and the guy should have known. [47:19.800 --> 47:25.800] But with the officer I filed against, he asked me, you know, what was my problem with the officer, [47:25.800 --> 47:27.800] and I said, I had no problem at all. [47:27.800 --> 47:28.800] He was great. [47:28.800 --> 47:30.800] This guy was a consummate professional. [47:30.800 --> 47:32.800] He said, well, why are you filing against him? [47:32.800 --> 47:35.800] Well, he wouldn't let me record the courtroom. [47:35.800 --> 47:37.800] He said, well, we have the rules against it. [47:37.800 --> 47:39.800] I said, I know that. [47:39.800 --> 47:48.800] I want to change those rules because they're not in compliance with the federal circuit for the state of Fort Tennessee. [47:48.800 --> 47:51.800] And he also blocked me access to the court. [47:51.800 --> 47:53.800] He said, well, that was the judge who did that. [47:53.800 --> 47:55.800] No, it wasn't. [47:55.800 --> 47:56.800] I never saw the judge. [47:56.800 --> 47:58.800] He was disfailing. [47:58.800 --> 48:03.800] Well, he was acting on the judge's order, so I don't care what he was doing. [48:03.800 --> 48:05.800] I don't know that. [48:05.800 --> 48:10.800] All I know is that he blocked me from the court. [48:10.800 --> 48:15.800] So he said, well, then why are you filing against him if you don't have a problem with him? [48:15.800 --> 48:18.800] I said, well, I'm really just here. [48:18.800 --> 48:28.800] I use these complaints so I could use your prosecutor as a crash dummy so I could check out the criminal justice system here in Tennessee. [48:28.800 --> 48:31.800] Well, they should have understood from that. [48:31.800 --> 48:39.800] So the first time I ever actually spoke to the prosecutor, I went into his office to find out what happened to these complaints, and he's sitting there by the door. [48:39.800 --> 48:42.800] And I asked him about the complaints, and he said he hadn't seen them. [48:42.800 --> 48:44.800] He didn't know anything about them. [48:44.800 --> 48:51.800] And he mentioned the captain that I'd filed criminal charges against. [48:51.800 --> 48:57.800] He said, are you the one that filed felony charges against the Captain McDade? [48:57.800 --> 48:58.800] Yeah, I am. [48:58.800 --> 48:59.800] But what did he do? [48:59.800 --> 49:01.800] He touched me. [49:01.800 --> 49:02.800] He touched you? [49:02.800 --> 49:06.800] Yeah, he touched me to stop me from going into a courthouse. [49:06.800 --> 49:09.800] Well, that's not aggravated assault. [49:09.800 --> 49:12.800] He was wearing a loaded pistol. [49:12.800 --> 49:16.800] Well, I don't consider that aggravated assault. [49:16.800 --> 49:18.800] I don't care what you consider it. [49:18.800 --> 49:20.800] I care what the law considers it. [49:20.800 --> 49:23.800] The statute says that's aggravated assault. [49:23.800 --> 49:27.800] You can get simple assault while prominently displaying a dead weapon. [49:27.800 --> 49:29.800] That's aggravated assault. [49:29.800 --> 49:37.800] If he hadn't been wearing it, I said, well, the prosecutor said, well, I don't see that that's a problem. [49:37.800 --> 49:42.800] I said, well, you should, if you had have done that to me, I'd have worked your behind. [49:42.800 --> 49:43.800] Oh, you would. [49:43.800 --> 49:44.800] Yes, I would have. [49:44.800 --> 49:48.800] But I won't do it to the officer McDade because he had that loaded pistol. [49:48.800 --> 49:50.800] He can commit that act against me. [49:50.800 --> 49:53.800] He said, well, he didn't use the pistol to me. [49:53.800 --> 49:55.800] He didn't have to. [49:55.800 --> 49:57.800] He had it. [49:57.800 --> 50:00.800] I'm a combat veteran. [50:00.800 --> 50:05.800] And I'm over 65. [50:05.800 --> 50:09.800] And he would take my rights away from me. [50:09.800 --> 50:17.800] The rights I paid heavy for just because he has an attitude. [50:17.800 --> 50:19.800] Not acceptable. [50:19.800 --> 50:23.800] And if you condone it, you were the real problem. [50:23.800 --> 50:27.800] He said, I will get you those complaints since you haven't seen them. [50:27.800 --> 50:30.800] He said, well, if you give them to me, I won't do anything with them. [50:30.800 --> 50:36.800] Well, then I will give you that opportunity. [50:36.800 --> 50:45.800] The next day I went to the judge and asked him to give him those complaints to the prosecutor attorney. [50:45.800 --> 50:49.800] And the judge said, I thought you said you weren't going to move ahead on those. [50:49.800 --> 50:53.800] I said, I wasn't except I had one base to touch and that was the prosecutor. [50:53.800 --> 50:59.800] And after I talked to the prosecutor, I need to move ahead on this. [50:59.800 --> 51:01.800] That's the problem. [51:01.800 --> 51:04.800] But then again, I'm not really upset at the prosecutor. [51:04.800 --> 51:07.800] He was very accommodating. [51:07.800 --> 51:14.800] What I really want to do is get to the federal court and check out the federal judges here in Tennessee. [51:14.800 --> 51:16.800] You want to check out the federal judges? [51:16.800 --> 51:17.800] Yeah. [51:17.800 --> 51:22.800] And I get to use prosecutors as a crash dummy to get to the federal judges. [51:22.800 --> 51:28.800] I thought the judge was going to vomit. [51:28.800 --> 51:33.800] The prosecutor run his mouth when he showed a Kelpie's mouth shut. [51:33.800 --> 51:45.800] He was young and impetuous and everybody in the room recognized that I was playing him except him. [51:45.800 --> 51:50.800] Now I get to see him good. [51:50.800 --> 51:54.800] Just like you would do, Ted. [51:54.800 --> 51:57.800] Okay, I interrupted. [51:57.800 --> 52:00.800] Yeah, unless you don't get the tenacus. [52:00.800 --> 52:03.800] You've got important stuff. [52:03.800 --> 52:06.800] Okay, Ted, don't be a stranger. [52:06.800 --> 52:10.800] Keep us up to date on how this works out. [52:10.800 --> 52:14.800] It's guys like you. [52:14.800 --> 52:17.800] The reason I do this show. [52:17.800 --> 52:21.800] Yeah, but I'm horrible with a computer. [52:21.800 --> 52:34.800] Okay, all you got to do is walk out into the street, flag down the first 10 year old you see and have him explain to you that this is the 21st century. [52:34.800 --> 52:39.800] You old buzzard. [52:39.800 --> 52:44.800] I told that to Robert Fox and he said that's cold. [52:44.800 --> 52:49.800] True, but cold. [52:49.800 --> 52:53.800] And I can say that because I'm one of these old buzzards. [52:53.800 --> 52:55.800] Okay, thank you, Ted. [52:55.800 --> 52:57.800] And don't be a stranger. [52:57.800 --> 53:01.800] Yeah, you have a wonderful life, Randy. [53:01.800 --> 53:03.800] Okay, thank you. [53:03.800 --> 53:07.800] Now we're going to go to Steve in Texas. [53:07.800 --> 53:08.800] Hello, Steve. [53:08.800 --> 53:11.800] Oh, I hope you can hear me all right. [53:11.800 --> 53:13.800] I can hear you just fine. [53:13.800 --> 53:15.800] What do you have for us today? [53:15.800 --> 53:21.800] I'm the one who sent you the email about the bond form. [53:21.800 --> 53:25.800] Wait, email about the bond form. [53:25.800 --> 53:27.800] Yes, right. [53:27.800 --> 53:36.800] And I asked you to call in because bond, you don't have a right to bond. [53:36.800 --> 53:39.800] You have a right to bail. [53:39.800 --> 53:45.800] And this judge is judging Tennessee. [53:45.800 --> 53:51.800] I had to explain the difference to him because he didn't realize there was a difference. [53:51.800 --> 53:59.800] The Texas penal code used to have the bail form in the code. [53:59.800 --> 54:08.800] The last rendition of it, the last publication of it, the form was taken out. [54:08.800 --> 54:10.800] It's constitutional bail. [54:10.800 --> 54:13.800] That's what you have a right to. [54:13.800 --> 54:18.800] Bail does not involve any money. [54:18.800 --> 54:27.800] Bail involves an agreement between you or your surety and the state. [54:27.800 --> 54:36.800] You see, when a bondsman gets you out of jail, he does not post bond. [54:36.800 --> 54:40.800] He posts bail in order for him to be a bondsman. [54:40.800 --> 54:52.800] He has to put up property and he can only bail people out for the amount of collateral that he has up. [54:52.800 --> 54:57.800] Actually, for half the amount of the collateral he has up. [54:57.800 --> 55:11.800] Bail involves you putting up collateral that is worth twice the amount of the fines exclusive of cost. [55:11.800 --> 55:17.800] Twice the amount of the bail setting exclusive of any encumbrances. [55:17.800 --> 55:23.800] So like if you have a house or land or something, you can put up as collateral. [55:23.800 --> 55:26.800] It does not involve money. [55:26.800 --> 55:33.800] Bond is something you can file as an option to bail. [55:33.800 --> 55:41.800] If you can't post bail, then you can post a cash bond to get out. [55:41.800 --> 55:47.800] So these guys, you had to go how many times to get this? [55:47.800 --> 55:56.800] Six times, I finally got them to tell me that I needed form and tell me something when I told them I talked to the appeals court. [55:56.800 --> 55:58.800] I guess that got them over. [55:58.800 --> 56:00.800] She said, well, then you need a bond form. [56:00.800 --> 56:03.800] I said, well, where do I get that? [56:03.800 --> 56:05.800] Well, I can't tell you that unless you don't even have to find it. [56:05.800 --> 56:06.800] What does it look like? [56:06.800 --> 56:08.800] I can't give you legal advice. [56:08.800 --> 56:10.800] And I said, this is not legal advice. [56:10.800 --> 56:12.800] This is procedural advice. [56:12.800 --> 56:17.800] Okay, you take the bond amount, you put it down on the counter. [56:17.800 --> 56:19.800] Here it is. [56:19.800 --> 56:21.800] Handle it. [56:21.800 --> 56:27.800] And if they say you have to have some form, anything, absolutely not. [56:27.800 --> 56:29.800] I have to post the bond. [56:29.800 --> 56:30.800] Here's the bond. [56:30.800 --> 56:35.800] If you want to fill out a form, knock yourself out. [56:35.800 --> 56:37.800] But you're meeting the requirements. [56:37.800 --> 56:43.800] Have you come back six times, you should bill them for your time. [56:43.800 --> 56:44.800] Well, I'm billed out. [56:44.800 --> 56:48.800] Well, now this is over with what they're going to be on the proceeding in for change. [56:48.800 --> 56:53.800] But I've been there so many times, the last time I was with the metal detector went off and I turned around and started to go back. [56:53.800 --> 56:55.800] And the guy just said, no, I don't. [56:55.800 --> 56:56.800] It made me don't prove anyway. [56:56.800 --> 56:59.800] So. [56:59.800 --> 57:04.800] Once you've taken them on, they get to know you. [57:04.800 --> 57:08.800] Their attitudes change quickly. [57:08.800 --> 57:14.800] Well, I would like to say that they called their uniforms as Marshall on there and they are. [57:14.800 --> 57:17.800] They've been nothing but the last professional the whole time. [57:17.800 --> 57:18.800] I don't have any complaints. [57:18.800 --> 57:21.800] You can see them all speak at all. [57:21.800 --> 57:30.800] I turned in a request for finding the facts and conclusions of all and got a letter saying he didn't have to do that to try the case. [57:30.800 --> 57:31.800] Wait a minute. [57:31.800 --> 57:33.800] What court was this in? [57:33.800 --> 57:35.800] Mesquite Municipal Court. [57:35.800 --> 57:37.800] Oh, he's right. [57:37.800 --> 57:39.800] He doesn't have to. [57:39.800 --> 57:41.800] But. [57:41.800 --> 57:44.800] If he did not give you reason. [57:44.800 --> 57:46.800] Okay. [57:46.800 --> 57:52.800] In Texas, we have, I think it's Packer V Walker. [57:52.800 --> 58:03.800] It says a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts of failure to do so. [58:03.800 --> 58:09.800] Is it is a an abuse of discretion in Texas? [58:09.800 --> 58:17.800] If a public official abuses his discretion and in the process denies the citizen and form free access to and join the right. [58:17.800 --> 58:19.800] That's class a misdemeanor in Texas. [58:19.800 --> 58:21.800] Yeah, that's right, Bubba. [58:21.800 --> 58:26.800] You don't have to give me finding the facts and conclusions at law. [58:26.800 --> 58:29.800] Maybe you'll give it to a grand jury. [58:29.800 --> 58:35.800] Because I'll charge you with official misconduct, official oppression, 39.03 penal code. [58:35.800 --> 58:38.800] See how that works out for you. [58:38.800 --> 58:39.800] Hang on. [58:39.800 --> 58:40.800] Going to break. [58:40.800 --> 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 --> 59:39.800] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:39.800 --> 59:49.800] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.800 --> 59:59.800] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.800 --> 01:00:19.800] The following newsflash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing the deli bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:19.800 --> 01:00:48.800] Markets for Wednesday the 6th of February, 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70, silver $15.77, copper $2.83, oil, Texas crude $3.66, brand crude $61.98, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple, XRP $0.29, Ethereum $103, and Eos is at $2.32. [01:00:48.800 --> 01:00:53.800] A crypto coin. [01:00:53.800 --> 01:01:08.800] Tign History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament, today in history. [01:01:08.800 --> 01:01:18.800] And recent news. Several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today, requesting that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. [01:01:18.800 --> 01:01:32.800] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining major arbitrage license. [01:01:32.800 --> 01:01:44.800] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not, in fact, belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:44.800 --> 01:01:49.800] Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:49.800 --> 01:02:08.800] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:08.800 --> 01:02:19.800] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:19.800 --> 01:02:29.800] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. The vape store's smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [01:02:29.800 --> 01:02:46.800] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:46.800 --> 01:03:00.800] You can find the interview at kiitv.com. This is Rick Brody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:16.800 --> 01:03:31.800] Okay, we are back. [01:03:31.800 --> 01:03:51.800] Well, thank you very much. [01:03:51.800 --> 01:04:06.800] If you believe that the judge failed to properly apply the law to the facts, file a criminal complaint against him with the grand jury. [01:04:06.800 --> 01:04:26.800] Well, everything that I turned in, I use your private ticket website. It includes the subject matter jurisdiction that he treated as a motion that denies it. And the day of trial I turned in four judicial notices, one of which the fact that the police officer was not on the rise, and the transportation code enforced that code. [01:04:26.800 --> 01:04:29.800] He treated those as motions, as denies those. [01:04:29.800 --> 01:04:38.800] Good, good. That's the whole purpose of those motions is to get him to deny him. [01:04:38.800 --> 01:04:49.800] Yeah, that's what I was saying what you said. When he denied the subject matter jurisdiction motion, I kind of grinned because the thought that went through my head was, well, but you just flushed your judicial community down the toilet. [01:04:49.800 --> 01:04:52.800] Exactly. [01:04:52.800 --> 01:05:00.800] Who was the officer was a municipal county or DPS. [01:05:00.800 --> 01:05:03.800] Oh, good. [01:05:03.800 --> 01:05:10.800] I cannot find a way that a municipal police officer can get there. [01:05:10.800 --> 01:05:20.800] Just no way. I can find where a sheriff's deputy can be appointed by the county commissioners court. [01:05:20.800 --> 01:05:32.800] The county under two million they can appoint up to six in a county over two million they can appoint as many as they want to. But the county commissioners court has to pay him. [01:05:32.800 --> 01:05:42.800] The way this come about is they came out with a transportation code to control these trucks that were damaging all the highways. [01:05:42.800 --> 01:05:52.800] And they said, we got this new code and they gave it to the sheriff. We want you to enforce it. He said, well, if you want me to enforce it, you have to give me budget. [01:05:52.800 --> 01:05:55.800] And they didn't want to give him budget. [01:05:55.800 --> 01:06:05.800] So they set up this deal where the county commissioners court could appoint deputies to enforce this new code. [01:06:05.800 --> 01:06:11.800] But the county commissioners court had to pay him. It didn't come out sheriff's budget. [01:06:11.800 --> 01:06:16.800] That's how this came about. It's still in place. [01:06:16.800 --> 01:06:26.800] But nobody's doing it. They're ignoring what's in law and now we're bringing it back to them. [01:06:26.800 --> 01:06:30.800] And when the judge fails properly apply the law to the facts. [01:06:30.800 --> 01:06:37.800] We hammer and then we file criminal against the judge and we file the appeal. [01:06:37.800 --> 01:06:43.800] In this case, it's a municipal appeal that will appeal to the county court. [01:06:43.800 --> 01:06:52.800] And it should go to the county court with criminal charges against the judge for denial of due process. [01:06:52.800 --> 01:07:01.800] So Randy, when when he wants to take this when Steve wants to take this to the appeals court. [01:07:01.800 --> 01:07:19.800] We need to make a make a point of this abuse of discretion that happened with Walker v Packer and say that it was an abuse of discretion and supply his own conclusions of. [01:07:19.800 --> 01:07:23.800] Okay, I'm glad you mentioned that. [01:07:23.800 --> 01:07:29.800] When you file for findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:07:29.800 --> 01:07:34.800] Always produce your own findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:07:34.800 --> 01:07:42.800] Say this is what you should have came up with. This is how you should have ruled. [01:07:42.800 --> 01:07:48.800] Provide findings of fact and conclusions at law or accept mine. [01:07:48.800 --> 01:07:53.800] And what that does for you is it sets you up for appeal. [01:07:53.800 --> 01:07:57.800] This is your appellate brief. This is your first step in the appellate brief. [01:07:57.800 --> 01:08:08.800] And then when he doesn't, then you take that same brief, couple it to criminal charges against the judge and file that with a grand jury. [01:08:08.800 --> 01:08:15.800] And then now you're going to go to the county court and they call it trial de novo. [01:08:15.800 --> 01:08:23.800] But it is only trial de novo for the purpose of effect of perfecting appeal. [01:08:23.800 --> 01:08:33.800] Not for the purpose of denying you your watch. You had a right to adjust and fair hearing in the first instance. [01:08:33.800 --> 01:08:44.800] Their failure to properly apply the law to the facts was an abusive discretion and a crime against you and at the dial of due process. [01:08:44.800 --> 01:08:49.800] So based on that, you have a right to dismissal. [01:08:49.800 --> 01:08:57.800] Based on the fact that there is no 16.17 order in the court, you're familiar with that to Steve. [01:08:57.800 --> 01:09:02.800] You're right. Yeah, that's the magistrate's finding. [01:09:02.800 --> 01:09:09.800] Exactly. If there's no order in the court, you have a right to discharge. [01:09:09.800 --> 01:09:12.800] Okay. [01:09:12.800 --> 01:09:21.800] And the judge has no immunity and you file a notice of tort against the judge. [01:09:21.800 --> 01:09:25.800] That ought to get them hopping up and down. [01:09:25.800 --> 01:09:28.800] I found another support with the judge, right? [01:09:28.800 --> 01:09:30.800] Yes. [01:09:30.800 --> 01:09:37.800] The judge himself because he acted in his personal capacity. [01:09:37.800 --> 01:09:46.800] It doesn't matter if he actually would have had jurisdiction or not. [01:09:46.800 --> 01:09:52.800] When you challenged it, jurisdiction was lost. [01:09:52.800 --> 01:10:00.800] Once it is challenged, when a case is filed in a court, jurisdiction is presumed. [01:10:00.800 --> 01:10:02.800] It's presumed until challenged. [01:10:02.800 --> 01:10:05.800] Once it's challenged, it must be proven. [01:10:05.800 --> 01:10:07.800] The judge doesn't have to prove it. [01:10:07.800 --> 01:10:09.800] The prosecutor doesn't have to prove it. [01:10:09.800 --> 01:10:11.800] The judge has to prove it. [01:10:11.800 --> 01:10:13.800] He's the one making the decisions. [01:10:13.800 --> 01:10:16.800] He's the one taking authority. [01:10:16.800 --> 01:10:21.800] He's the one that must prove up his power to do so. [01:10:21.800 --> 01:10:30.800] When he fails to do so, he acts outside his authority, whether he would have had it or not. [01:10:30.800 --> 01:10:35.800] The judge is stepping into it big time. [01:10:35.800 --> 01:10:40.800] You see why I haven't fully launched my traffic site? [01:10:40.800 --> 01:10:42.800] Yes. [01:10:42.800 --> 01:10:47.800] We will shut down traffic in Texas. [01:10:47.800 --> 01:10:51.800] It's better we do it a little bit at a time this way. [01:10:51.800 --> 01:10:56.800] It gives them opportunity to start making adjustments. [01:10:56.800 --> 01:11:00.800] But almost everybody in the state knows about these documents already. [01:11:00.800 --> 01:11:05.800] They labeled them sovereign citizen documents. [01:11:05.800 --> 01:11:10.800] Well, the trial before mine was an assault trial. [01:11:10.800 --> 01:11:12.800] There was one bailiff in there for the assault trial. [01:11:12.800 --> 01:11:14.800] When that one was over, they started mine. [01:11:14.800 --> 01:11:19.800] They put two bailiffs in there. [01:11:19.800 --> 01:11:23.800] Have you asked the bailiff to arrest the judge yet? [01:11:23.800 --> 01:11:25.800] No, I haven't. [01:11:25.800 --> 01:11:28.800] Oh, that is so much fun. [01:11:28.800 --> 01:11:32.800] You will get a revelation. [01:11:32.800 --> 01:11:40.800] Montgomery County District Judge, I was warned that he was the meanest judge in the district. [01:11:40.800 --> 01:11:45.800] I filed a habeas for a kid in the Republican Texas group. [01:11:45.800 --> 01:11:49.800] The president and attorney general come to me and asked me if I could do so. [01:11:49.800 --> 01:11:51.800] So I prepared this habeas for him. [01:11:51.800 --> 01:11:56.800] It's on my website. [01:11:56.800 --> 01:11:57.800] I go down there. [01:11:57.800 --> 01:11:58.800] I give it to the clerk. [01:11:58.800 --> 01:12:02.800] I said, are you going to give this to the judge or do I need to do it? [01:12:02.800 --> 01:12:04.800] That's letting her know that it goes right away. [01:12:04.800 --> 01:12:06.800] She said, well, I'll give it to the judge. [01:12:06.800 --> 01:12:08.800] So I went to the courtroom. [01:12:08.800 --> 01:12:16.800] They finished interviewing a witness in this murder trial, sent a jury out, and the judge said, [01:12:16.800 --> 01:12:22.800] are you the one that filed this habeas corpus? [01:12:22.800 --> 01:12:23.800] Yes, I am. [01:12:23.800 --> 01:12:25.800] He said, are you an attorney? [01:12:25.800 --> 01:12:26.800] Oh, no judge. [01:12:26.800 --> 01:12:29.800] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. [01:12:29.800 --> 01:12:31.800] Thank you very much. [01:12:31.800 --> 01:12:36.800] He said, well, since you're not an attorney, I'm not going to accept this habeas. [01:12:36.800 --> 01:12:39.800] I couldn't believe he said that. [01:12:39.800 --> 01:12:41.800] That was so outrageous. [01:12:41.800 --> 01:12:43.800] So I turned to the bailiff. [01:12:43.800 --> 01:12:44.800] Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [01:12:44.800 --> 01:12:45.800] Yes, I did. [01:12:45.800 --> 01:12:48.800] Arrest that judge. [01:12:48.800 --> 01:12:52.800] The judge sat there and kept his mouth shut. [01:12:52.800 --> 01:12:53.800] Well, I can't arrest the judge. [01:12:53.800 --> 01:12:54.800] He sure can. [01:12:54.800 --> 01:12:57.800] Just throw the cups on him and drag him off to jail. [01:12:57.800 --> 01:12:58.800] You don't have far to go. [01:12:58.800 --> 01:13:00.800] It's right down there in the basement. [01:13:00.800 --> 01:13:02.800] Well, why would I arrest the judge? [01:13:02.800 --> 01:13:07.800] Class A, Mr. Mead of Frisian Propression, criminal violation 39.03 Penal Code, [01:13:07.800 --> 01:13:09.800] in that he failed to perform a duty. [01:13:09.800 --> 01:13:11.800] He is required to perform it in the process. [01:13:11.800 --> 01:13:12.800] And I didn't mean to fool free access to her. [01:13:12.800 --> 01:13:14.800] Enjoying that we're right. [01:13:14.800 --> 01:13:16.800] Well, what right did he deny you? [01:13:16.800 --> 01:13:22.800] And he denied me in my right under 11.41, I believe. [01:13:22.800 --> 01:13:33.800] 11.14 or something that says a habeas corpus may be filed by the accused, [01:13:33.800 --> 01:13:39.800] the accused counsel, or any other person. [01:13:39.800 --> 01:13:44.800] Does not even say credible, and I am that other person. [01:13:44.800 --> 01:13:47.800] He denied me in my right to file that habeas. [01:13:47.800 --> 01:13:53.800] And he did so while acting under his official capacity in violation 39.03 Penal Code. [01:13:53.800 --> 01:13:54.800] Arrest him. [01:13:54.800 --> 01:13:56.800] I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:13:56.800 --> 01:14:00.800] I said, Mr. Begolf, you need to take your chicken suit off. [01:14:00.800 --> 01:14:02.800] I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:14:02.800 --> 01:14:04.800] I said, well, life is filled with little decisions. [01:14:04.800 --> 01:14:06.800] We all get to make some. [01:14:06.800 --> 01:14:08.800] Your turn. [01:14:08.800 --> 01:14:13.800] Are you going to perform your duty and keep peace in the courtroom, no matter who breached it? [01:14:13.800 --> 01:14:20.800] Or are you going to shield that judge from prosecution in violation of 38.05 Penal Code? [01:14:20.800 --> 01:14:22.800] Decide. [01:14:22.800 --> 01:14:24.800] I wound up arrest the judge. [01:14:24.800 --> 01:14:30.800] Now, where he absolutely refused, the judge picked up the gavel and said, Mr. Begolf, [01:14:30.800 --> 01:14:34.800] if Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my courtroom, you're to arrest him. [01:14:34.800 --> 01:14:38.800] I said, with all due respect, Your Honor, that's cheating. [01:14:38.800 --> 01:14:43.800] He held up the gavel and said, maybe, but I got the gavel. [01:14:43.800 --> 01:14:45.800] Good point. [01:14:45.800 --> 01:14:46.800] I turned to the bailiff. [01:14:46.800 --> 01:14:50.800] You come with me and stormed out of the courtroom. [01:14:50.800 --> 01:14:55.800] You just have not lived until you've done that. [01:14:55.800 --> 01:15:01.800] Would you ask that bailiff to arrest the judge if that judge opens his mouth? [01:15:01.800 --> 01:15:05.800] Retaliation, witness tampering. [01:15:05.800 --> 01:15:10.800] Every time I've done that in front of a judge, the judge can't be smell shut. [01:15:10.800 --> 01:15:12.800] They knew immediately. [01:15:12.800 --> 01:15:14.800] This just got deep. [01:15:14.800 --> 01:15:23.800] So you've got to try that once, but always ask the bailiff to take his chicken suit off. [01:15:23.800 --> 01:15:26.800] That's not a joke. [01:15:26.800 --> 01:15:35.800] What that is is protection against them accusing you of being agitated. [01:15:35.800 --> 01:15:43.800] Mansfield, where I pulled the hearing aid gambit on the judge and asked the bailiff to arrest him. [01:15:43.800 --> 01:15:46.800] He refused, sent me to the municipal police. [01:15:46.800 --> 01:15:56.800] The municipal police officer, I called the chief and had him dispatched an officer and I asked him to arrest the judge. [01:15:56.800 --> 01:15:57.800] He refused. [01:15:57.800 --> 01:16:02.800] One of these tight-skinned, red-faced thinks he's bad. [01:16:02.800 --> 01:16:08.800] When I told him to take his chicken suit off, he was so furious he was shaking. [01:16:08.800 --> 01:16:10.800] I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:16:10.800 --> 01:16:12.800] I said, well, in that case, you're dismissed. [01:16:12.800 --> 01:16:13.800] I flicked my fingers at him. [01:16:13.800 --> 01:16:15.800] You can go. [01:16:15.800 --> 01:16:17.800] They backed away. [01:16:17.800 --> 01:16:20.800] They would weapon his daughter. [01:16:20.800 --> 01:16:22.800] I get a call from Ken Magnuson. [01:16:22.800 --> 01:16:26.800] Ken Magnuson's brother is the city attorney for Mansfield. [01:16:26.800 --> 01:16:29.800] What were you doing in Mansfield yesterday? [01:16:29.800 --> 01:16:31.800] Minding my business, Ken. [01:16:31.800 --> 01:16:35.800] Well, that officer told my brother that you were agitated. [01:16:35.800 --> 01:16:45.800] Ken asked Craig to ask that officer if I got agitated before I told him to take his chicken suit off or after. [01:16:45.800 --> 01:16:47.800] See what it does. [01:16:47.800 --> 01:16:50.800] Randy Kelton grew the radio. [01:16:50.800 --> 01:16:52.800] We'll be right back. [01:16:59.800 --> 01:17:04.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? 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[01:17:40.800 --> 01:17:48.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michael Mirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:48.800 --> 01:17:56.800] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.800 --> 01:17:59.800] 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 --> 01:18:08.800] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fit. [01:18:08.800 --> 01:18:12.800] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [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 spend it all on supplements. [01:18:19.800 --> 01:18:21.800] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.800 --> 01:18:23.800] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.800 --> 01:18:26.800] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.800 --> 01:18:29.800] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.800 --> 01:18:31.800] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.800 --> 01:18:34.800] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:34.800 --> 01:18:37.800] 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. [01:18:59.800 --> 01:19:10.800] This is the Logos Logos RadioNet RadioNet Logos. [01:19:10.800 --> 01:19:35.800] Oh, come on. [01:19:35.800 --> 01:19:45.800] Okay, we are back. [01:19:45.800 --> 01:19:52.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Radio, and we're talking to Steve in Texas. [01:19:52.800 --> 01:20:02.800] Okay, Steve, I know it sounds kind of radical, but I've done this probably half a dozen times. [01:20:02.800 --> 01:20:10.800] And every time the judge stands there and keeps his mouth shut, that's when they know it's getting deep. [01:20:10.800 --> 01:20:16.800] I'm not really suggesting you try that unless you're comfortable with it. [01:20:16.800 --> 01:20:21.800] But it was the most fun I ever had in court. [01:20:21.800 --> 01:20:23.800] Well, I know I made some mistakes in trial. [01:20:23.800 --> 01:20:30.800] I kept trying to remember everything he said to do and get as much on the record as I could. [01:20:30.800 --> 01:20:37.800] When you start setting the record, they recognize it. [01:20:37.800 --> 01:20:44.800] That's when they start getting more serious, when they recognize that you don't care what they rule. [01:20:44.800 --> 01:20:46.800] Knock yourself out, Judge. [01:20:46.800 --> 01:20:48.800] I think they recognize it in your tone, too. [01:20:48.800 --> 01:20:55.800] If your tone of voice, you don't get irritated and they know that they're violating your rights. [01:20:55.800 --> 01:20:57.800] Everybody knows it in their gut. [01:20:57.800 --> 01:21:08.800] But then when they see that you're not getting all excited about it and not taking offense, you raise the objection. [01:21:08.800 --> 01:21:10.800] They do their thing wrong. [01:21:10.800 --> 01:21:16.800] You raise exceptions and you move right along with a calm voice. [01:21:16.800 --> 01:21:19.800] I think it really gets under their skin. [01:21:19.800 --> 01:21:22.800] Oh, I know it does. [01:21:22.800 --> 01:21:30.800] In Tennessee, they authorized the Supreme Court authorized clerks to hold a preliminary hearing. [01:21:30.800 --> 01:21:32.800] And I thought that was just wrong. [01:21:32.800 --> 01:21:35.800] So I went into the clerk's office and I'm holding the dime. [01:21:35.800 --> 01:21:37.800] The bailiff was walking out when I came in. [01:21:37.800 --> 01:21:40.800] I said, Mr. Bailiff, I'm going to need you in here. [01:21:40.800 --> 01:21:42.800] He said, well, I'll be right back. [01:21:42.800 --> 01:21:45.800] And by the time the clerk got off the phone, the bailiff was back. [01:21:45.800 --> 01:21:47.800] And he's standing behind her. [01:21:47.800 --> 01:21:49.800] And I held up this dime. [01:21:49.800 --> 01:21:54.800] You see, this time I did not put you on this dime. [01:21:54.800 --> 01:21:56.800] The Supreme Court put you on this dime. [01:21:56.800 --> 01:21:58.800] And I set it down on her counter. [01:21:58.800 --> 01:22:00.800] I'm just calling you to it. [01:22:00.800 --> 01:22:02.800] She had no idea what I was talking about. [01:22:02.800 --> 01:22:05.800] So I handed her six criminal complaints. [01:22:05.800 --> 01:22:08.800] I need you to hold a preliminary hearing on these. [01:22:08.800 --> 01:22:11.800] Oh, well, we don't do that. [01:22:11.800 --> 01:22:13.800] Well, I don't care what you normally do. [01:22:13.800 --> 01:22:19.800] The law authorizes you to hold a preliminary hearing and I'm here to call you to that duty. [01:22:19.800 --> 01:22:23.800] Well, I'm not going to hold a preliminary hearing. [01:22:23.800 --> 01:22:25.800] Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [01:22:25.800 --> 01:22:27.800] Yes, Mr. Kalkin, I did. [01:22:27.800 --> 01:22:29.800] But where's that woman? [01:22:29.800 --> 01:22:31.800] Why can't you arrest the clerk? [01:22:31.800 --> 01:22:32.800] Of course you can. [01:22:32.800 --> 01:22:35.800] Just throw the cuffs on her and drag her off to jail. [01:22:35.800 --> 01:22:41.800] I do these things this way because I'm always thinking, [01:22:41.800 --> 01:22:46.800] how is this going to look in front of a grand jury of my peers? [01:22:46.800 --> 01:22:50.800] Well, he tells the grand jury that I told him to arrest her. [01:22:50.800 --> 01:22:53.800] And when he said he wouldn't, that he couldn't, [01:22:53.800 --> 01:22:54.800] I said, sure you can. [01:22:54.800 --> 01:22:57.800] Just throw the cuffs on her and drag her off to jail. [01:22:57.800 --> 01:23:03.800] They're not going to consider me to be agitated. [01:23:03.800 --> 01:23:05.800] They want to call you agitated. [01:23:05.800 --> 01:23:08.800] And then they pretty well nullify anything you do. [01:23:08.800 --> 01:23:12.800] So he said, no, Mr. Kalkin, I am not going to arrest the judge. [01:23:12.800 --> 01:23:14.800] I mean, David the clerk. [01:23:14.800 --> 01:23:16.800] I said, well, that's okay. [01:23:16.800 --> 01:23:20.800] I had to ask, you had to refuse. [01:23:20.800 --> 01:23:22.800] And then they referred me to the judge. [01:23:22.800 --> 01:23:27.800] That worked perfectly. [01:23:27.800 --> 01:23:33.800] Nobody got, everybody was tense, but nobody got out of line. [01:23:33.800 --> 01:23:39.800] And everybody said, that's son of a gun come in here and set us up. [01:23:39.800 --> 01:23:42.800] Go ahead, Steve. [01:23:42.800 --> 01:23:44.800] I said, that's, yeah, that's a good deal. [01:23:44.800 --> 01:23:47.800] That's okay. [01:23:47.800 --> 01:23:48.800] Wait, I couldn't understand that. [01:23:48.800 --> 01:23:50.800] Say that again. [01:23:50.800 --> 01:23:52.800] I said, I need to learn how to write an appeal brief. [01:23:52.800 --> 01:23:54.800] And I'll be pretty much set. [01:23:54.800 --> 01:23:55.800] Okay. [01:23:55.800 --> 01:23:58.800] Don't write an appeal brief. [01:23:58.800 --> 01:24:06.800] Research, find a case similar to yours and cut and paste. [01:24:06.800 --> 01:24:10.800] If you're writing very much, you haven't done enough homework. [01:24:10.800 --> 01:24:15.800] I am an accomplished plagiarist. [01:24:15.800 --> 01:24:22.800] I have risen, I have elevated plagiarism to an art form. [01:24:22.800 --> 01:24:30.800] If you, if you can find cases that address your issue, it's not that hard these days. [01:24:30.800 --> 01:24:34.800] Just, you know, put your issue on the, on the internet. [01:24:34.800 --> 01:24:36.800] I don't even use Google scholar. [01:24:36.800 --> 01:24:49.800] I just use the internet and I get better results because you got all these lawyers out there that are trying to get other lawyers to refer them to their cases. [01:24:49.800 --> 01:24:52.800] What this lawyer is good at, he puts on his website. [01:24:52.800 --> 01:24:57.800] So if another lawyer needs that expertise or hire him, well, we can find that stuff. [01:24:57.800 --> 01:25:02.800] So we find all their best motions and pleadings and arguments. [01:25:02.800 --> 01:25:05.800] And then I take theirs. [01:25:05.800 --> 01:25:18.800] If you can find case law that addresses your issue that makes the argument I cut that out and drop it in my document and write a lead in and an outro. [01:25:18.800 --> 01:25:28.800] When the judge reads it, he, he will recognize the style and know exactly what I did. [01:25:28.800 --> 01:25:31.800] He knows I plagiarized this. [01:25:31.800 --> 01:25:35.800] That, that means he also knows these are not my words. [01:25:35.800 --> 01:25:38.800] These are the words to court. [01:25:38.800 --> 01:25:41.800] So it's not as difficult as you think. [01:25:41.800 --> 01:25:48.800] The hardest part, Steve is organizing this in your mind. [01:25:48.800 --> 01:25:51.800] And I have a set of procedures. [01:25:51.800 --> 01:25:56.800] I've got it in the legal 101. [01:25:56.800 --> 01:25:59.800] How to write legal pleading. [01:25:59.800 --> 01:26:10.800] When you're writing a brief, use Microsoft Word and go get that 10 year old to show you how to use styles in Microsoft Word. [01:26:10.800 --> 01:26:18.800] The head, all your headings, they're set in a style section. [01:26:18.800 --> 01:26:28.800] And if you put a heading on a paragraph using the style section, Microsoft Word will create a table of contents from that. [01:26:28.800 --> 01:26:35.800] When I'm writing a legal document, I put a heading on every paragraph. [01:26:35.800 --> 01:26:46.800] And when I format it with the style sheet, and then I can open up a navigation pane and it'll show me a table of contents. [01:26:46.800 --> 01:26:59.800] And I go down that table of contents and see if I see more than one title to these are heading to the paragraph. [01:26:59.800 --> 01:27:02.800] That's essentially the same. [01:27:02.800 --> 01:27:13.800] One of the most difficult things in writing a brief, if it's complex, is you wind up arguing the same things in different places. [01:27:13.800 --> 01:27:23.800] And that's really dangerous because you may argue it one way in one context, another in another context, and the lawyers who lead you are live for that. [01:27:23.800 --> 01:27:32.800] So as you're writing your brief, put a heading on every paragraph. If you have to do it by hand, do it by hand. [01:27:32.800 --> 01:27:42.800] When you put a heading on a paragraph, it confines you to the intended purpose of that singular paragraph. [01:27:42.800 --> 01:27:50.800] You have so much stuff running around in your mind while you're doing this that you tend to drift off all over the place. [01:27:50.800 --> 01:27:55.800] Lawyers do this all the time. They're cleaning through a mess. [01:27:55.800 --> 01:28:02.800] When you put a heading on every paragraph, every paragraph will stay within a set of mental boundaries. [01:28:02.800 --> 01:28:11.800] Sometimes you might have to go to a second paragraph under one heading, but almost never more than two. [01:28:11.800 --> 01:28:15.800] When you finish the document, you can take all those headings out if you want to. [01:28:15.800 --> 01:28:19.800] I don't. I leave them in. [01:28:19.800 --> 01:28:27.800] It's part of framing the mind of my reader. I tell the reader what I'm going to tell them in the heading. [01:28:27.800 --> 01:28:36.800] And then when they read the paragraph, the heading has framed the content in the context of the paragraph. [01:28:36.800 --> 01:28:39.800] So it helps it make more sense. [01:28:39.800 --> 01:28:46.800] Someone can scan down the document and see how my different arguments follow one another. [01:28:46.800 --> 01:28:48.800] Does that make sense, Steve? [01:28:48.800 --> 01:28:51.800] Yes, it does. [01:28:51.800 --> 01:28:59.800] So that's the quickest thing, but mainly you want to cut and paste. [01:28:59.800 --> 01:29:03.800] If you're writing the arguments yourself, you haven't done enough homework. [01:29:03.800 --> 01:29:09.800] I suggest a couple of case laws that seems like it could fit the... [01:29:09.800 --> 01:29:15.800] We're just about to go to a break, but let me mention a couple of case laws here that seem like it could fit about the jurisdiction. [01:29:15.800 --> 01:29:19.800] One is called the town of Lantana, Florida. [01:29:19.800 --> 01:29:28.800] That's L-A-N-T-A-N-A. Lantana, Florida versus Hopper. H-O-P-P-E-R. [01:29:28.800 --> 01:29:30.800] That's a Supreme Court case about the jurisdiction. [01:29:30.800 --> 01:29:35.800] And the other one would be Mellow in E-L-O-V-U-S. [01:29:35.800 --> 01:29:45.800] Mellow is a major case. Send me an e-mail, ask for my jurisdiction folder. I've got a huge folder. [01:29:45.800 --> 01:29:47.800] Save you a lot of time. [01:29:47.800 --> 01:29:49.800] Okay, hang on. Go on to break. [01:29:49.800 --> 01:29:55.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton with my radio. We'll be right back. [01:29:55.800 --> 01:30:04.800] Cover up that tattoo. The FBI is building a database that analyzes body art as a way of identifying people. [01:30:04.800 --> 01:30:11.800] I'm Dr. Cameron Albright, and I'll have details on the weird new program the feds call tattoo recognition in a moment. [01:30:11.800 --> 01:30:17.800] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:17.800 --> 01:30:22.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish. [01:30:22.800 --> 01:30:30.800] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:30.800 --> 01:30:38.800] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:38.800 --> 01:30:43.800] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:43.800 --> 01:30:55.800] Iris patterns, email records, cell phone coordinates, the FBI is collecting data on us all. Now the feds want images of tattoos as a way of knowing who we are and what we might do. [01:30:55.800 --> 01:31:04.800] Tattoo recognition is part of the next generational identification program that identifies Americans beyond fingerprints and mug shots. [01:31:04.800 --> 01:31:15.800] Tattoo symbols are collected by the FBI's Biometric Center of Excellence, a one-stop shop of biometric data from voice patterns to footprints to hand geometry. [01:31:15.800 --> 01:31:23.800] Needless to say, this is one more step towards the establishment of a total surveillance state. What's next, microchips for us all? [01:31:23.800 --> 01:31:30.800] I'm Dr. Cameron Albright 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 have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.800 --> 01:31:46.800] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.800 --> 01:31:48.800] Thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:48.800 --> 01:31:50.800] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.800 --> 01:31:51.800] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.800 --> 01:31:52.800] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.800 --> 01:31:53.800] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.800 --> 01:31:55.800] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.800 --> 01:31:57.800] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.800 --> 01:32:00.800] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.800 --> 01:32:35.800] In conjunction with Rule Law Radio, we have put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule law. [01:32:35.800 --> 01:32:41.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.800 --> 01:32:48.800] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, the Texas Transportation Code, the Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.800 --> 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 RuleLawRadio.com. [01:32:55.800 --> 01:33:02.800] You can get your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.800 --> 01:33:30.800] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:32.800 --> 01:33:44.800] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton. [01:33:44.800 --> 01:33:51.800] My brain got shifted out of gear. Randy Kelton, RuleLawRadio. [01:33:51.800 --> 01:34:01.800] On this Friday, the 7th day of June 2019, Brett, I think I'm losing it. [01:34:01.800 --> 01:34:06.800] I've been up since about two this morning, so I'm getting brain dead. [01:34:06.800 --> 01:34:09.800] Okay, Steve. [01:34:09.800 --> 01:34:14.800] Yes, sir. I know the reason. [01:34:14.800 --> 01:34:17.800] I have to remember what you were doing or what you went in there for. [01:34:17.800 --> 01:34:28.800] Well, you know, I talked to my mom. She has a memory problem and I told her that I figured out what it is in the family that causes this memory loss issue. [01:34:28.800 --> 01:34:35.800] And she said, what was that? I don't remember. [01:34:35.800 --> 01:34:41.800] She didn't find me as funny as I did. [01:34:41.800 --> 01:34:46.800] Okay, on that vein, I was talking to Pastor Massad. [01:34:46.800 --> 01:34:53.800] I did a show with him on Thursday mornings. We record for playing Monday. [01:34:53.800 --> 01:35:06.800] And he said he was greeting people coming into the church and Martha came in and he said, Martha, why do you have a suppository in your ear? [01:35:06.800 --> 01:35:10.800] And he said she pulled it out and looked at it and said, oh my goodness. [01:35:10.800 --> 01:35:15.800] Now I know where my hearing aid is. [01:35:15.800 --> 01:35:20.800] A preacher told me that. [01:35:20.800 --> 01:35:23.800] What else do you have for us, Steve? [01:35:23.800 --> 01:35:28.800] That's all I've got. Thank you very much. I'll send you an email after your jurisdictional over. [01:35:28.800 --> 01:35:40.800] Okay, good. I'll say it's a big folder and did you get the... Brett, do you have those two cases you referenced? [01:35:40.800 --> 01:35:42.800] Do I have them? [01:35:42.800 --> 01:35:44.800] Yeah. [01:35:44.800 --> 01:35:46.800] Yeah, it's the town of Lantana. [01:35:46.800 --> 01:35:50.800] Shane, do you have copies of them? Can you send them to me and I'll drop them in this folder? [01:35:50.800 --> 01:35:52.800] Sure. [01:35:52.800 --> 01:35:56.800] I keep the folder. I'll just send you a copy. We will have it all together. [01:35:56.800 --> 01:35:59.800] Okay, good. We'll get you all of that. [01:35:59.800 --> 01:36:05.800] Thank you, Steve. Now we're going to go to Shane in New York. [01:36:05.800 --> 01:36:07.800] Hello, Shane. [01:36:07.800 --> 01:36:10.800] Hello, Randy. How are you doing? [01:36:10.800 --> 01:36:13.800] Oh, you sound horrible. [01:36:13.800 --> 01:36:14.800] Okay. [01:36:14.800 --> 01:36:17.800] That's better. [01:36:17.800 --> 01:36:19.800] I will fix that, Randy. [01:36:19.800 --> 01:36:22.800] No, that's not better. You sound terrible. [01:36:22.800 --> 01:36:25.800] Are you on a hands-free or Bluetooth? [01:36:25.800 --> 01:36:28.800] No, let somebody just fix my phone here. Hang on. [01:36:28.800 --> 01:36:32.800] Sorry, I didn't realize you were going to... [01:36:32.800 --> 01:36:37.800] Just take a second here and I think I got it fixed right now. [01:36:37.800 --> 01:36:40.800] That's better. [01:36:40.800 --> 01:36:42.800] Are you there? Randy? [01:36:42.800 --> 01:36:46.800] I'm here much better. What do you have for us today? [01:36:46.800 --> 01:36:50.800] Sorry about that. I had to take you off the nice speaker phone here. [01:36:50.800 --> 01:36:53.800] I just plugged it back using a straight old phone here. [01:36:53.800 --> 01:37:02.800] Okay, we got the brief file for the reinstate to stay so they don't sell the property that was filed two days ago. [01:37:02.800 --> 01:37:09.800] And the only question I have for you today is we just found some new information which I don't want to release over the phone. [01:37:09.800 --> 01:37:13.800] We just found some pretty amazing information and we want to amend it. [01:37:13.800 --> 01:37:22.800] And I was going to ask you, I've been researching the rules this evening, can we amend the appeal? [01:37:22.800 --> 01:37:26.800] It officially was filed on Wednesday. Today is Friday. [01:37:26.800 --> 01:37:28.800] Okay, wouldn't it be... [01:37:28.800 --> 01:37:29.800] Amen. [01:37:29.800 --> 01:37:33.800] Okay, say that again. Can you amend the appeal? [01:37:33.800 --> 01:37:34.800] Yes. [01:37:34.800 --> 01:37:38.800] Is this the first filing? [01:37:38.800 --> 01:37:41.800] This appeal is only based on the bank... [01:37:41.800 --> 01:37:46.800] No, no. Is this the first filing of the appellate document? [01:37:46.800 --> 01:37:48.800] Yes, sir. Yep. [01:37:48.800 --> 01:37:52.800] Has opposing counsel answered? [01:37:52.800 --> 01:37:55.800] No, because it was just filed. They have 30 days to answer. [01:37:55.800 --> 01:37:58.800] Okay, you can amend it. [01:37:58.800 --> 01:37:59.800] Okay. [01:37:59.800 --> 01:38:10.800] One thing is you have not filed an appeal and the other side has had to take the time and expense of responding to that appeal. [01:38:10.800 --> 01:38:14.800] And then you come back and file an amended which throws out the first one. [01:38:14.800 --> 01:38:17.800] It causes undue burden on the opposing party. [01:38:17.800 --> 01:38:26.800] But if you have just recently filed it, are you filing it because you missed something? [01:38:26.800 --> 01:38:32.800] Are you filing it because there's an error? [01:38:32.800 --> 01:38:34.800] No, there is some... [01:38:34.800 --> 01:38:36.800] Well, I'll tell you one of them we can talk about. [01:38:36.800 --> 01:38:42.800] One is just something we found out about the loan which is benefiting us because it's a huge mess. [01:38:42.800 --> 01:38:45.800] Oh, okay. So it's new information. [01:38:45.800 --> 01:38:46.800] Yeah, new information. [01:38:46.800 --> 01:38:47.800] Absolutely. [01:38:47.800 --> 01:38:54.800] The reason I ask about an error, because an error would be a nun's pro-tank filing. [01:38:54.800 --> 01:39:02.800] A nun's pro-tank means it's got a facial error that does not go to the substance. [01:39:02.800 --> 01:39:06.800] And you can almost always file a nun's pro-tank. [01:39:06.800 --> 01:39:15.800] I've got two words juxtaposed and they change the entire meaning of a paragraph that's important. [01:39:15.800 --> 01:39:24.800] And you can file a nun's pro-tank where you make a facial correction that doesn't go to the substance. [01:39:24.800 --> 01:39:26.800] Okay, do that almost anytime. [01:39:26.800 --> 01:39:27.800] Okay. [01:39:27.800 --> 01:39:35.800] But if you file a change in the substance, you can file the amended before the other party has responded [01:39:35.800 --> 01:39:42.800] and they haven't been out that cost and so no harm, no foul. [01:39:42.800 --> 01:39:44.800] Right, it's 30 days a week. [01:39:44.800 --> 01:39:46.800] Actually, our appeals do Monday. [01:39:46.800 --> 01:39:48.800] We file this on Wednesday. [01:39:48.800 --> 01:39:50.800] We file it way ahead of time. [01:39:50.800 --> 01:39:51.800] Okay. [01:39:51.800 --> 01:39:57.800] Just for everybody else who's listening, if you're preparing a document and the date's coming up, [01:39:57.800 --> 01:40:00.800] you're running out of time, file it. [01:40:00.800 --> 01:40:07.800] And file it a few days early because we've had problems with the courts manipulating the mailbox rule. [01:40:07.800 --> 01:40:13.800] File it, even if it's wrong, even if it's incomplete, file it. [01:40:13.800 --> 01:40:15.800] That covers the deadline. [01:40:15.800 --> 01:40:18.800] You can always amend it. [01:40:18.800 --> 01:40:23.800] We called, we amended one once, I sent in trash. [01:40:23.800 --> 01:40:32.800] And we amended, we asked the court for a leave to amend because nun's pro-tank, we sent the wrong document. [01:40:32.800 --> 01:40:36.800] We sent a working document instead of the completed document. [01:40:36.800 --> 01:40:44.800] I'm sure we didn't have a completed document, but the judge's court said reasonable argument, no problem. [01:40:44.800 --> 01:40:45.800] Okay. [01:40:45.800 --> 01:40:47.800] I'll shut up now. [01:40:47.800 --> 01:40:48.800] Okay. [01:40:48.800 --> 01:40:49.800] No, I love one. [01:40:49.800 --> 01:40:55.800] Yeah, that's, one thing I want to tell you is this big argument, we could spend a whole show on this, [01:40:55.800 --> 01:40:59.800] this res judicata thing is just a nightmare. [01:40:59.800 --> 01:41:05.800] And that is one of the issues we're going to add one more issue because I know the judge will say, [01:41:05.800 --> 01:41:07.800] we can do this, this is res judicata. [01:41:07.800 --> 01:41:09.800] We can't do anything here in bankruptcy. [01:41:09.800 --> 01:41:11.800] I'm sorry, you have to go back to the state court. [01:41:11.800 --> 01:41:18.800] Well, we found some pretty amazing information that we already knew from months ago about the loan and fraud and all that. [01:41:18.800 --> 01:41:24.800] Randy, can you, I know there's an ExxonMobil Supreme Court case talking about all this stuff, [01:41:24.800 --> 01:41:28.800] but if you caught them in fraud, now you have proof. [01:41:28.800 --> 01:41:34.800] It's kind of like, you know, who stole the cookie, but now you got them on camera and you have eyewitnesses testify on the road. [01:41:34.800 --> 01:41:35.800] Okay. [01:41:35.800 --> 01:41:41.800] Wouldn't it, wouldn't that wipe out and can completely void out res judicata? [01:41:41.800 --> 01:41:43.800] Yes. [01:41:43.800 --> 01:41:46.800] Based, this is an appeal. [01:41:46.800 --> 01:41:47.800] Oh, okay. [01:41:47.800 --> 01:41:50.800] No, no, no, no, no, no, no, it won't. [01:41:50.800 --> 01:42:02.800] You would have to go back to that court and petition to reopen the court based on new information. [01:42:02.800 --> 01:42:12.800] But if it's in a court that has a final judgment in it, another court cannot disturb that judgment. [01:42:12.800 --> 01:42:27.800] So you'd have to go back to the original court with newly discovered information and petition to reopen the original court. [01:42:27.800 --> 01:42:29.800] Okay. [01:42:29.800 --> 01:42:37.800] And especially with fraud, you can absolutely do that. [01:42:37.800 --> 01:42:38.800] Okay. [01:42:38.800 --> 01:42:39.800] All right. [01:42:39.800 --> 01:42:42.800] So basically the, well, we're still filing the appeal. [01:42:42.800 --> 01:42:47.800] I didn't know if you, you know, if, if you, if you saw our brief, we did file it. [01:42:47.800 --> 01:42:49.800] I thought I sent you a courtesy copy. [01:42:49.800 --> 01:42:50.800] Okay. [01:42:50.800 --> 01:42:52.800] Let's, let's get the appeal in context. [01:42:52.800 --> 01:42:55.800] The appeal is in a federal venue. [01:42:55.800 --> 01:43:01.800] And the residue to Connie, you're speaking to, is that in a state court? [01:43:01.800 --> 01:43:02.800] County court. [01:43:02.800 --> 01:43:03.800] Okay. [01:43:03.800 --> 01:43:05.800] That's a state court. [01:43:05.800 --> 01:43:08.800] That goes through a fulfillment doctrine preemption. [01:43:08.800 --> 01:43:13.800] The federal court's not going to come into the state and overrule the state. [01:43:13.800 --> 01:43:24.800] If a, if a municipal court judge or a justice of the peace judge renders a ruling in their court and it's final, the Supreme Court can't touch that ruling. [01:43:24.800 --> 01:43:35.800] So what I was going to ask you, and you wouldn't happen to know the rule on the mending the appeal. [01:43:35.800 --> 01:43:38.800] Yeah, that, that's pretty, you know, in the background, hold on. [01:43:38.800 --> 01:43:42.800] We're about to go to break Randy Helton rule of law radio. [01:43:42.800 --> 01:43:44.800] I'm not going to give up the call number. [01:43:44.800 --> 01:43:49.800] We're going to the last segment and we still have two callers left. [01:43:49.800 --> 01:43:51.800] Jeff, I don't think we'll get to you. [01:43:51.800 --> 01:43:54.800] We're going to go to John in New York. [01:43:54.800 --> 01:43:56.800] We're going to run out of time. [01:43:56.800 --> 01:43:57.800] Hang on. [01:43:57.800 --> 01:44:00.800] We'll be right back. 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[01:45:53.800 --> 01:46:02.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:23.800 --> 01:46:49.800] The people come down from the hill. [01:46:49.800 --> 01:46:57.800] The people come down from the hill. [01:46:57.800 --> 01:47:03.800] Into the city they will shuffle. [01:47:03.800 --> 01:47:08.800] Okay, we are back Randy Kelton. [01:47:08.800 --> 01:47:10.800] My brain's shifting out of gear. [01:47:10.800 --> 01:47:13.800] Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:47:13.800 --> 01:47:19.800] And we're going to, we're talking to Shane in New York. [01:47:19.800 --> 01:47:20.800] Okay, Shane. [01:47:20.800 --> 01:47:21.800] Hey, Randy. [01:47:21.800 --> 01:47:22.800] Yes. [01:47:22.800 --> 01:47:29.800] Hey, so I just want to let you know our, the arguments that we brought into the appellate court regarding the bankruptcy, looking at the stay. [01:47:29.800 --> 01:47:31.800] And we have five arguments. [01:47:31.800 --> 01:47:32.800] We're going to add two more. [01:47:32.800 --> 01:47:42.800] And I was just going to ask you, getting back to the original question is, I'm going to try to find it tonight, but I was just wondering if, if you knew the rule for many in appeal and bankruptcy court. [01:47:42.800 --> 01:47:50.800] Now this is going from bankruptcy court to the U.S. district court, the second circuit court of appeals does not have a bankruptcy panel here. [01:47:50.800 --> 01:47:57.800] Those rules, the bankruptcy court will use the rules of civil procedure. [01:47:57.800 --> 01:48:03.800] And the rules of civil procedure, I can't quote them, but they're pretty liberal. [01:48:03.800 --> 01:48:09.800] As long as you, you can, you have one free appeal. [01:48:09.800 --> 01:48:10.800] Right. [01:48:10.800 --> 01:48:24.800] And if you, if you file like where you filed the appeal and then within a few days you file an amended, that won't use up your free amended. [01:48:24.800 --> 01:48:37.800] If you file your amended and the other side answers, and you look at what their answer and say, you know, oppositions, arguments are well taken. [01:48:37.800 --> 01:48:44.800] If you respond to their answer, that's your first, your one free appeal. [01:48:44.800 --> 01:48:49.800] After that, you can appeal with the judge's permission. [01:48:49.800 --> 01:48:55.800] I'm sorry, you can, you can amend with the judge's permission. [01:48:55.800 --> 01:48:56.800] Right. [01:48:56.800 --> 01:48:58.800] That's right. [01:48:58.800 --> 01:49:13.800] So basically we go back to the federal rules of civil procedure, so they, the bankruptcy courts, the federal bankruptcy courts, they do use the federal rules of civil procedure, which I knew that, but you just verified it. [01:49:13.800 --> 01:49:15.800] So I'll check that out. [01:49:15.800 --> 01:49:24.800] Yes, there are certain rules that are specific to bankruptcy type proceedings, but that's pretty focused. [01:49:24.800 --> 01:49:32.800] Filing motions, getting motions put on, filing appeals, all of this is standard stuff. [01:49:32.800 --> 01:49:35.800] So I'll just finish up here in two minutes so you can get to your next caller. [01:49:35.800 --> 01:49:43.800] But the arguments we're raising right now is that the order removing automatic stays void for being issued in denial due process. [01:49:43.800 --> 01:49:44.800] And that was like three pages long. [01:49:44.800 --> 01:49:47.800] I just emailed you the brief. [01:49:47.800 --> 01:49:49.800] I think it looks fantastic. [01:49:49.800 --> 01:49:56.800] And then our second argument was that the bankruptcy abuse discretion by issuing an order in denial due process, which is void. [01:49:56.800 --> 01:50:00.800] And we get into the reasons why with exhibits and attachments. [01:50:00.800 --> 01:50:19.800] And then our third issue was the issue of the key make motion for relief to not satisfy either the requirements of 11 USC section three, 62 D one and section two, which is quite nicely laid out in the brief with exhibits and attachments. [01:50:19.800 --> 01:50:25.800] And with the attachments come directly from the transcripts from the hearing, which I thought was absolutely awesome. [01:50:25.800 --> 01:50:27.800] Some of the things that were said. [01:50:27.800 --> 01:50:36.800] And then the relief first, the relief was based on fraud because they use a fraudulent BPO, which is a broker price opinion. [01:50:36.800 --> 01:50:43.800] They had a broker from the real estate company completely lie about the property. [01:50:43.800 --> 01:50:53.800] You know, for example, the three three car garage, he said there was a one car crash patch and and there's many other other things that they miss about six things that they lied about. [01:50:53.800 --> 01:51:01.800] And so I think we just drove to the drive by and they reduced the value of the house by 150,000. [01:51:01.800 --> 01:51:05.800] And so they found a fraudulent BPO. [01:51:05.800 --> 01:51:07.800] I'm not sure if you are familiar with the BPO. [01:51:07.800 --> 01:51:12.800] Were you able to secure another BPO? [01:51:12.800 --> 01:51:23.800] We had we have two other opinions from two realtors that blew away the BPO, but they're basically not as detailed as theirs. [01:51:23.800 --> 01:51:31.800] But basically got a paragraph from the realtors coming in saying it's impossible for this to be the price of other properties around it. [01:51:31.800 --> 01:51:34.800] No one has a price that low on this road. [01:51:34.800 --> 01:51:42.800] And the last one I want to tell you really quick is the Bankruptcy Code abuses discretion by issuing an order that I'll do process, which is void. [01:51:42.800 --> 01:51:44.800] And it gets right into all the details with attachments. [01:51:44.800 --> 01:51:51.800] Because everything we made an argument, we attached the transcripts from the hearing, which made the record. [01:51:51.800 --> 01:51:55.800] So we're going to amend it this week. [01:51:55.800 --> 01:51:58.800] And I was just looking for a role and you told me where to find it. [01:51:58.800 --> 01:52:00.800] So I'm looking at the federal rules of subject procedure. [01:52:00.800 --> 01:52:03.800] I think it's rule 15. [01:52:03.800 --> 01:52:06.800] I don't remember that. [01:52:06.800 --> 01:52:09.800] I study mostly Texas state law. [01:52:09.800 --> 01:52:14.800] I have done a bunch of work in federal, but it's been a long time. [01:52:14.800 --> 01:52:15.800] Right. [01:52:15.800 --> 01:52:20.800] And the one thing I want to tell you before I leave is that going back to the county court. [01:52:20.800 --> 01:52:27.800] But residue to cotton everything county court granted the motion for summary judgment in favor of this. [01:52:27.800 --> 01:52:33.800] Key bank, the key lock, it's called with no motion filed by the bank. [01:52:33.800 --> 01:52:35.800] They never filed a motion for summary judgment. [01:52:35.800 --> 01:52:41.800] We went in for a hearing to dismiss the case based on numerous issues about two years ago. [01:52:41.800 --> 01:52:45.800] And they go, oh, by the way, your motion is hereby denied summary judgment is hereby granted. [01:52:45.800 --> 01:52:47.800] And that totally wipes out here in New York. [01:52:47.800 --> 01:52:51.800] There's a rule called CPLR 30 to 12. [01:52:51.800 --> 01:52:57.800] It's laid out where you had to follow summary judgment to get the judgment. [01:52:57.800 --> 01:53:04.800] You just can't judge one ahead and probably got paid underneath the table and summary judgment with no motion. [01:53:04.800 --> 01:53:06.800] I was like, oh my God, did you just see that? [01:53:06.800 --> 01:53:08.800] So we had to order the transcripts. [01:53:08.800 --> 01:53:09.800] We got the transcripts. [01:53:09.800 --> 01:53:13.800] Have you filed criminally against the judge? [01:53:13.800 --> 01:53:15.800] No. [01:53:15.800 --> 01:53:18.800] You should. [01:53:18.800 --> 01:53:22.800] We've got people doing that and that is effective. [01:53:22.800 --> 01:53:26.800] Now they're bad behaviors coming back at them. [01:53:26.800 --> 01:53:29.800] I got one judge that got livid with me. [01:53:29.800 --> 01:53:31.800] He was in the courtroom. [01:53:31.800 --> 01:53:41.800] He was having a, he was saying, I can't believe you filed criminally against me. [01:53:41.800 --> 01:53:49.800] He started telling me I needed to be careful and watch out because bad things can happen when you go after a judge. [01:53:49.800 --> 01:53:52.800] That's when I walk out of the courtroom. [01:53:52.800 --> 01:53:56.800] That's retaliation. [01:53:56.800 --> 01:53:57.800] That's bad. [01:53:57.800 --> 01:53:59.800] He should have known better than that. [01:53:59.800 --> 01:54:01.800] Holy mackerel. [01:54:01.800 --> 01:54:04.800] Mr. Bayliff, rest that judge. [01:54:04.800 --> 01:54:06.800] No, he did it very carefully. [01:54:06.800 --> 01:54:10.800] That was when the bailiff had stepped out of the room. [01:54:10.800 --> 01:54:20.800] The judge was giving me that side of him when nobody else was in the room to arrest him. [01:54:20.800 --> 01:54:22.800] Hmm. [01:54:22.800 --> 01:54:24.800] That's dangerous. [01:54:24.800 --> 01:54:28.800] I've never had a judge open his mouth once I went straight for him. [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:32.800] This, this judge is treading deep water. [01:54:32.800 --> 01:54:34.800] Okay, go ahead, Shane. [01:54:34.800 --> 01:54:44.800] Okay, I guess that would qualify for a judicial complaint, I would imagine, just based on that issue alone, right? [01:54:44.800 --> 01:54:46.800] Yes. [01:54:46.800 --> 01:54:47.800] Okay. [01:54:47.800 --> 01:54:49.800] I haven't done that. [01:54:49.800 --> 01:54:57.800] And during the winter storm back in January of 2019, I actually ran into her just walking on the sidewalk. [01:54:57.800 --> 01:54:59.800] And I didn't know who she was. [01:54:59.800 --> 01:55:00.800] She looked familiar. [01:55:00.800 --> 01:55:03.800] She told me who she was because, oh, yes, I remember you. [01:55:03.800 --> 01:55:06.800] And she was your Shane, because you should have been an attorney. [01:55:06.800 --> 01:55:07.800] You're a smart guy. [01:55:07.800 --> 01:55:11.800] And we chatted for a good, maybe good minute or so. [01:55:11.800 --> 01:55:13.800] And he was very, very friendly. [01:55:13.800 --> 01:55:17.800] And, and I looked at her and said, you know, I'm right about all the issues. [01:55:17.800 --> 01:55:19.800] I'm just not a bar card attorney. [01:55:19.800 --> 01:55:22.800] And she goes, well, like I said, you should have been an attorney. [01:55:22.800 --> 01:55:23.800] That's all she said. [01:55:23.800 --> 01:55:28.800] And she kind of verified that since you guys are not attorneys, I don't care what you bring to me. [01:55:28.800 --> 01:55:29.800] It's going to be denied. [01:55:29.800 --> 01:55:31.800] So there you go. [01:55:31.800 --> 01:55:36.800] Yeah, but that's, but then again, very nice, not rude, huh? [01:55:36.800 --> 01:55:38.800] Then again, we don't care. [01:55:38.800 --> 01:55:41.800] We're setting a record for appeal. [01:55:41.800 --> 01:55:43.800] Right. [01:55:43.800 --> 01:55:49.800] I would love to file a criminal complaint, but it's got to be done right. [01:55:49.800 --> 01:55:51.800] And I guess that a lot of people are scared of doing it. [01:55:51.800 --> 01:55:52.800] That's what the problem is. [01:55:52.800 --> 01:55:54.800] Yeah, that's the easiest, but that's the easiest part. [01:55:54.800 --> 01:55:55.800] You file a criminal complaint. [01:55:55.800 --> 01:55:59.800] You are absolutely protected. [01:55:59.800 --> 01:56:01.800] Where do you take that to? [01:56:01.800 --> 01:56:02.800] Where do you go? [01:56:02.800 --> 01:56:05.800] Take it to a magistrate. [01:56:05.800 --> 01:56:07.800] Take it to a judge. [01:56:07.800 --> 01:56:10.800] Higher level, the better. [01:56:10.800 --> 01:56:15.800] And when the judge refuses to act on it, you file against the judge. [01:56:15.800 --> 01:56:17.800] A state judge or a federal judge? [01:56:17.800 --> 01:56:20.800] This is all about politics. [01:56:20.800 --> 01:56:25.800] I filed, oh, if it's a federal judge, then you file with the SAC. [01:56:25.800 --> 01:56:30.800] The special agent in charge of local FBI office. [01:56:30.800 --> 01:56:33.800] I filed a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:56:33.800 --> 01:56:40.800] The other side moved to dismiss under rule 12 B six for failure to state of claim. [01:56:40.800 --> 01:56:45.800] The judge dismissed the case with prejudice for failure state of claim. [01:56:45.800 --> 01:56:47.800] It's a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:56:47.800 --> 01:56:50.800] They don't have claims. [01:56:50.800 --> 01:56:57.800] They went to the FBI and filed criminal charges against the judge. [01:56:57.800 --> 01:57:03.800] I've had four people file that same, essentially the same declaratory judgment. [01:57:03.800 --> 01:57:06.800] So after that, not one of them was denied. [01:57:06.800 --> 01:57:09.800] It was dismissed. [01:57:09.800 --> 01:57:12.800] Now, if I could ask you one more quick question, because we're running out of time, [01:57:12.800 --> 01:57:16.800] is that do you think based on her granting summary judgment in favor of the lender, [01:57:16.800 --> 01:57:23.800] the pretend lender with no motion, would that good cause to have her recused from the case? [01:57:23.800 --> 01:57:25.800] Emotion or refusal? [01:57:25.800 --> 01:57:33.800] There are circumstances where a judge can do a suesponte dismissal this way. [01:57:33.800 --> 01:57:42.800] But if she did a summary judgment dismissal, this iffy, it depends on the facts of the case. [01:57:42.800 --> 01:57:50.800] If the judge looked at it and could reasonably make the determination that there was no, [01:57:50.800 --> 01:57:58.800] that you have no claims adjudicatable claims against opposing party. [01:57:58.800 --> 01:58:01.800] She can dismiss the case. [01:58:01.800 --> 01:58:03.800] Okay. [01:58:03.800 --> 01:58:08.800] But you'd have to be able to show that if you had adjudicatable claims. [01:58:08.800 --> 01:58:09.800] She can't do that. [01:58:09.800 --> 01:58:11.800] You can go after her. [01:58:11.800 --> 01:58:12.800] Okay. [01:58:12.800 --> 01:58:13.800] Right. [01:58:13.800 --> 01:58:14.800] We are out of time. [01:58:14.800 --> 01:58:15.800] Out of time. [01:58:15.800 --> 01:58:22.800] John, we didn't get to you so next week instead of two minutes, we'll give you three minutes. [01:58:22.800 --> 01:58:27.800] That's the kind of guys we are here. [01:58:27.800 --> 01:58:29.800] John gets no slack from us. [01:58:29.800 --> 01:58:31.800] Yeah, I'm sorry I didn't get to you, John. [01:58:31.800 --> 01:58:32.800] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:32.800 --> 01:58:35.800] We'll be back next week. [01:58:35.800 --> 01:58:45.800] We'll be right back. [01:58:45.800 --> 01:58:52.800] We'll be right back. [01:58:52.800 --> 01:59:19.800] We'll be right back. [01:59:19.800 --> 01:59:48.800] We'll be right back. [01:59:50.800 --> 01:59:52.800] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.800 --> 01:59:53.800] You found it. [01:59:53.800 --> 02:00:22.800] LogosRadioNetwork.com.