[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The Falling News Flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star of Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:15.480] Markets for Monday 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver $16.45.00, [00:15.480 --> 00:24.560] Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crew $55.63.00, Brent Crew $62.47.00, and Cryptos and Order [00:24.560 --> 00:34.120] of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, [00:34.120 --> 00:41.400] Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [00:41.400 --> 00:52.360] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a tying suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.360 --> 00:57.800] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing [00:57.800 --> 01:04.800] 10 and entering 40 today in history. [01:04.800 --> 01:09.520] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, legalizing Hemp, into [01:09.520 --> 01:14.320] Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:14.320 --> 01:18.880] San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges, and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.880 --> 01:22.760] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.760 --> 01:24.840] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.840 --> 01:28.480] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.480 --> 01:33.040] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.040 --> 01:34.040] law. [01:34.040 --> 01:37.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.640 --> 01:42.160] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.160 --> 01:48.320] in Texas, and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.320 --> 01:54.560] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.560 --> 01:59.040] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.040 --> 02:01.840] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.840 --> 02:06.840] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.840 --> 02:10.840] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.840 --> 02:13.560] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.560 --> 02:17.440] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.440 --> 02:22.640] charged with. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.280] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.280 --> 02:32.440] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.440 --> 02:38.080] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.080 --> 02:39.560] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.560 --> 02:43.840] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.840 --> 02:50.120] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.120 --> 03:19.040] flow. [03:20.120 --> 03:28.120] It came in a box just like the safe I accepted it for value right away [03:28.120 --> 03:34.120] It's not sooner, not later, we are originators [03:34.120 --> 03:39.120] And the pathway seems to get straighter every day [03:39.120 --> 03:43.120] And I can take anything that belongs to me [03:43.120 --> 03:46.120] And put it to good use [03:46.120 --> 03:53.120] Okay, we are back, rule of law radio on this Friday the 9th of August 2019 [03:53.120 --> 03:57.120] It was Randy Kelton and I'm Brett Fountain [03:57.120 --> 04:00.120] And we're speaking with Ken in New York [04:00.120 --> 04:01.120] Ken? [04:01.120 --> 04:04.120] Hold on a second, I didn't... [04:04.120 --> 04:06.120] There we go, okay [04:06.120 --> 04:07.120] I'm here [04:07.120 --> 04:09.120] Alright [04:09.120 --> 04:17.120] So I guess basically what I'm saying is I understand what Randy, I understand what you said about [04:17.120 --> 04:21.120] The estate can make you have a license to make sure that you're capable of operating this vehicle [04:21.120 --> 04:23.120] I'd go along with that [04:23.120 --> 04:29.120] Because I, you know, as far as commerce goes [04:29.120 --> 04:34.120] If the license should be separate from commerce [04:34.120 --> 04:45.120] I don't see how they should be able to tax you or charge you for registration or any, why you should be subject to any of the other fees [04:45.120 --> 04:48.120] That is a good point [04:48.120 --> 04:56.120] While the state can require me to get a license like a gun license [04:56.120 --> 04:59.120] It's only for the purpose of showing confidence [04:59.120 --> 05:02.120] And knowledge about the weapon [05:02.120 --> 05:06.120] Drivers license the same way [05:06.120 --> 05:09.120] Competence and knowledge about the laws [05:09.120 --> 05:19.120] But a concealed carry license does not imply any commercial application [05:19.120 --> 05:23.120] And in this case a driver's license should not either [05:23.120 --> 05:26.120] And that was the point I was making [05:26.120 --> 05:30.120] That just because I have a license [05:30.120 --> 05:34.120] Does not automatically infer that I'm [05:34.120 --> 05:36.120] Let me state that differently [05:36.120 --> 05:43.120] Just because I am licensed and authorized to operate in commerce [05:43.120 --> 05:52.120] That does not give an officer reasonable probable cause to believe that I am in commerce [05:52.120 --> 06:05.120] Now just because I can drink enough to get drunk does not give the officer cause to believe that I have drunk enough to get drunk [06:05.120 --> 06:11.120] And the courts have held that just because I come out of a beer joint [06:11.120 --> 06:17.120] Does not give probable cause to believe that I've been drinking beer [06:17.120 --> 06:19.120] You have to have something else [06:19.120 --> 06:25.120] And this is the point where we've always made about transportation [06:25.120 --> 06:28.120] And when I get to court here in Tennessee [06:28.120 --> 06:33.120] My first claim is that I'm not in contractual privity [06:33.120 --> 06:40.120] My second claim is that the complaint is insufficient on its face [06:40.120 --> 06:47.120] As it failed to allege all the elements of the offense [06:47.120 --> 06:54.120] Specifically trying to have commerce [06:54.120 --> 07:01.120] What do you think? [07:01.120 --> 07:05.120] Well I have a bill of sale [07:05.120 --> 07:09.120] Not only do you have the bill of sale but you do have a form that you have to fill out [07:09.120 --> 07:11.120] And I had to fill it out [07:11.120 --> 07:15.120] And basically on a $1,700 used car [07:15.120 --> 07:23.120] The title fee was $50 and the rest of it was something like $200 altogether [07:23.120 --> 07:27.120] Between the title fee and the transfer fee for the title [07:27.120 --> 07:31.120] New York is like a tax [07:31.120 --> 07:34.120] If it moves we put a tax on it [07:34.120 --> 07:46.120] The problem is that there are exemptions, there is a form to fill out [07:46.120 --> 07:49.120] But the thing that makes me nervous about engaging in that [07:49.120 --> 07:52.120] Not just answering and saying you can turn me up and shake the money out of me [07:52.120 --> 07:56.120] Just certifying on the perjury [07:56.120 --> 08:01.120] So if you make a claim and they decide they don't want you to come after you [08:01.120 --> 08:04.120] That's the picture that I get anyway [08:04.120 --> 08:08.120] Perhaps I can send you a form with PDF [08:08.120 --> 08:11.120] I might want to take a look at it or something [08:11.120 --> 08:13.120] Or post it up [08:13.120 --> 08:17.120] There are only certain conditions where you can exempt yourself from the tax [08:17.120 --> 08:24.120] But it could be that there is a condition where we don't recognize what it is [08:24.120 --> 08:26.120] You know what I'm saying? [08:26.120 --> 08:28.120] Maybe there is a way to get out of it [08:28.120 --> 08:35.120] I don't recognize which one of the claims available that I could make on it [08:35.120 --> 08:38.120] It's just, you know, private sale [08:38.120 --> 08:42.120] I don't see how you collect the tax again and again on the same vehicle [08:42.120 --> 08:45.120] Yeah, it goes against common sense [08:45.120 --> 08:51.120] A used car could be sold through a three times in its lifetime [08:51.120 --> 08:53.120] Why should we... [08:53.120 --> 08:56.120] I thought there were laws against those sort of things [08:56.120 --> 08:59.120] You know, double jeopardy, I know that applies from earlier [08:59.120 --> 09:01.120] You know, court, but... [09:01.120 --> 09:05.120] Why would, you know, they'd be able to have to pay the same tax over and over again [09:05.120 --> 09:09.120] on the same object when you're not in commerce [09:09.120 --> 09:11.120] You know, it's clearly, it's the private sale [09:11.120 --> 09:16.120] You have the title, got a person's name on it, I buy it, there's no deal involved [09:16.120 --> 09:23.120] Okay, that's kind of a contradiction of terms, private and sale [09:23.120 --> 09:29.120] Sale is commerce, whether it's in the public or in the private [09:29.120 --> 09:31.120] Barter is not [09:31.120 --> 09:41.120] If you traded the vehicle for a monkey wrench, that would be different [09:41.120 --> 09:48.120] If you asserted that there was no, that this was strictly a trade [09:48.120 --> 09:54.120] And there was no transfer of funds [09:54.120 --> 09:56.120] Then you wouldn't be taxable [09:56.120 --> 09:59.120] However, what I'm hearing from you is [09:59.120 --> 10:03.120] This is not a sales tax on the vehicle [10:03.120 --> 10:09.120] But rather a cost of transferring the title [10:09.120 --> 10:12.120] No, that's a separate, that just happens to be a separate cost [10:12.120 --> 10:14.120] There is a sales tax [10:14.120 --> 10:19.120] But when I asked, I said, you know, the thing is, I got a sales tax on it [10:19.120 --> 10:21.120] I said, it's a private sale [10:21.120 --> 10:24.120] And the woman smiled, I know it's New York [10:24.120 --> 10:29.120] You know, my response was, I hate this state [10:29.120 --> 10:37.120] You know, Pastor Massey lives up in Middleville, New York [10:37.120 --> 10:41.120] Up near Ithaca [10:41.120 --> 10:47.120] I drove up to that area from Albany [10:47.120 --> 10:50.120] And drove about 100 miles along the Urie Canal [10:50.120 --> 10:55.120] And saw factory after factory shutdown [10:55.120 --> 10:59.120] Never saw that first barge on the Urie Canal [10:59.120 --> 11:01.120] Oh, you noticed [11:01.120 --> 11:09.120] New York and the Northeast states taxed their business out of business [11:09.120 --> 11:11.120] And they flushed out to other states [11:11.120 --> 11:14.120] Now, go to these other states and in 25 years [11:14.120 --> 11:19.120] These other states, once they get all that business in [11:19.120 --> 11:24.120] Then they'll start adding taxes to the businesses [11:24.120 --> 11:30.120] Texas in 1985 had a pretty major economic crash [11:30.120 --> 11:35.120] I was in the Dallas, Fort Worth area [11:35.120 --> 11:37.120] And they were building everywhere [11:37.120 --> 11:43.120] And I was looking at this and saying that this is crazy [11:43.120 --> 11:49.120] This area is booming, but it's growing on its growth [11:49.120 --> 11:52.120] The biggest industry was construction [11:52.120 --> 11:55.120] And they're building high-rise after high-rise [11:55.120 --> 11:59.120] And warehouse complexes [11:59.120 --> 12:02.120] And there's nobody to fill them [12:02.120 --> 12:05.120] In 1985 everything crashed [12:05.120 --> 12:09.120] So Dallas and Fort Worth got a commission together [12:09.120 --> 12:15.120] And they agreed to give really steep tax breaks to business [12:15.120 --> 12:19.120] To get them to move to the Dallas, Fort Worth area [12:19.120 --> 12:22.120] And they went around the country making all these deals [12:22.120 --> 12:24.120] And they have filled up all of these buildings [12:24.120 --> 12:29.120] Well, a lot of people, especially the Democrats [12:29.120 --> 12:35.120] Railed in righteous indignation about Dallas, Fort Worth area [12:35.120 --> 12:40.120] Giving big business all these tax breaks [12:40.120 --> 12:43.120] And you know, I wasn't a rich guy [12:43.120 --> 12:46.120] I never did have a lot of money [12:46.120 --> 12:52.120] But I understood that only the individual, the consumer, pays taxes [12:52.120 --> 12:57.120] You put taxes on business, you pay that tax [12:57.120 --> 13:00.120] They got the right time [13:00.120 --> 13:02.120] They didn't get that idea [13:02.120 --> 13:04.120] So giving these companies tax breaks [13:04.120 --> 13:06.120] And got them to move in [13:06.120 --> 13:12.120] Dallas, Fort Worth area is one of the boomiest areas in the country right now [13:12.120 --> 13:18.120] We have an unemployment rate of 4.9% [13:18.120 --> 13:24.120] And they used to say unemployment could not get below something like 5.6% [13:24.120 --> 13:28.120] Because 5.6% of the people are just not going to work [13:28.120 --> 13:37.120] Well, eliminating the tax on business allowed business to become more vigorous [13:37.120 --> 13:39.120] Hire more people [13:39.120 --> 13:43.120] They pay as much tax as they would have otherwise [13:43.120 --> 13:48.120] But they do that because they're doing more business [13:48.120 --> 13:53.120] But politicians are what politicians are [13:53.120 --> 13:58.120] And now that we've got all of these places filled up and they're building more [13:58.120 --> 14:02.120] Now our politicians will start increasing the taxes [14:02.120 --> 14:06.120] Until in about 25 years they'll force everybody out of here [14:06.120 --> 14:08.120] And they'll have to go somewhere else [14:08.120 --> 14:12.120] Probably back to the Northeast [14:12.120 --> 14:15.120] It's a cycle [14:15.120 --> 14:18.120] You know, I made a joke [14:18.120 --> 14:20.120] There might have been a little rough around the edges [14:20.120 --> 14:27.120] I do believe that given what you saw from what I know about the state [14:27.120 --> 14:33.120] There's a good chance that Manhattan, Long Island and the borough nearby [14:33.120 --> 14:38.120] Or the suburban areas nearby are probably supporting the entire state [14:38.120 --> 14:42.120] Well, that could be a problem [14:42.120 --> 14:48.120] Because with the way the ice pack in Greenland and Antarctica is reducing [14:48.120 --> 14:51.120] They're receding [14:51.120 --> 14:59.120] Manhattan may have a lot of swimming pools before long [14:59.120 --> 15:05.120] That whole area could go underwater [15:05.120 --> 15:08.120] I think it is, but not in the way that you're talking [15:08.120 --> 15:11.120] Well, they may be under two ways [15:11.120 --> 15:14.120] But physically they may go underwater [15:14.120 --> 15:17.120] All of South Florida is suspect [15:17.120 --> 15:21.120] I don't know how many of you have been to South Florida [15:21.120 --> 15:26.120] But most people don't realize that most everything from Lake Okeechobee [15:26.120 --> 15:31.120] Which is about two-thirds of the way down in the state [15:31.120 --> 15:34.120] Everything below that was a coral reef [15:34.120 --> 15:37.120] It wasn't really land [15:37.120 --> 15:41.120] I know this is a bit off the path of the show [15:41.120 --> 15:46.120] But you've been around technology and I've been around technology [15:46.120 --> 15:51.120] And one of the biggest heartbreakers is to see a company like Xerox [15:51.120 --> 15:54.120] When they moved out, you know what's Xerox? [15:54.120 --> 15:58.120] One of Xerox's big incomes is it's not copying machines [15:58.120 --> 16:01.120] It's red light cameras [16:01.120 --> 16:04.120] I found out that they run the red light cameras up here [16:04.120 --> 16:07.120] Because I asked where the company was found out in Colorado [16:07.120 --> 16:09.120] I traced a little further [16:09.120 --> 16:12.120] And at Xerox they said, well, isn't that interesting [16:12.120 --> 16:17.120] The company that invented the mouse and the graphic interface [16:17.120 --> 16:18.120] And they had... [16:18.120 --> 16:20.120] I know [16:20.120 --> 16:24.120] Well, they kind of invented it and then they trashed it [16:24.120 --> 16:26.120] Yeah, I know, they gave it away [16:26.120 --> 16:29.120] They said it doesn't ever get anywhere [16:29.120 --> 16:31.120] Somebody else picked it up [16:31.120 --> 16:37.120] I talked to the guy once that had worked on the Alto project and the Star [16:37.120 --> 16:42.120] Sometimes it's hard to look ahead [16:42.120 --> 16:44.120] Hang on, we'll be right back [16:44.120 --> 16:47.120] Oh, no, wait, I got 15 seconds [16:47.120 --> 16:50.120] I was looking at their own set of numbers [16:50.120 --> 16:54.120] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rool of Law Radio [16:54.120 --> 16:56.120] We're talking to Ken in New York [16:56.120 --> 16:58.120] We'll be right back [17:01.120 --> 17:04.120] Rool of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rool of Law Traffic Seminar [17:04.120 --> 17:07.120] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [17:07.120 --> 17:09.120] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society [17:09.120 --> 17:12.120] Then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights [17:12.120 --> 17:15.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [17:15.120 --> 17:17.120] The right to act in our own private capacity [17:17.120 --> 17:19.120] And most importantly, the right to due process of law [17:19.120 --> 17:22.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [17:22.120 --> 17:25.120] To learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [17:25.120 --> 17:28.120] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rool of Law Radio [17:28.120 --> 17:30.120] Has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [17:30.120 --> 17:33.120] That will help you understand what due process is [17:33.120 --> 17:35.120] In accordance to the Rool of Law [17:35.120 --> 17:37.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [17:37.120 --> 17:40.120] By going to Rooloflawradio.com and ordering your copy today [17:40.120 --> 17:42.120] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book [17:42.120 --> 17:45.120] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie [17:45.120 --> 17:47.120] Video and audio of your original 2009 seminar [17:47.120 --> 17:50.120] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material [17:50.120 --> 17:52.120] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [17:52.120 --> 17:54.120] From Rooloflawradio.com [17:54.120 --> 17:57.120] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society [17:57.120 --> 17:59.120] We all want and deserve [17:59.120 --> 18:03.120] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls [18:03.120 --> 18:05.120] Letters or even losses? [18:05.120 --> 18:09.120] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method [18:09.120 --> 18:13.120] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [18:13.120 --> 18:15.120] And now you can win two [18:15.120 --> 18:17.120] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [18:17.120 --> 18:21.120] On how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [18:21.120 --> 18:24.120] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons [18:24.120 --> 18:26.120] How to answer letters and phone calls [18:26.120 --> 18:29.120] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports [18:29.120 --> 18:31.120] How to turn the financial tables on them [18:31.120 --> 18:34.120] And make them pay you to go away [18:34.120 --> 18:38.120] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [18:38.120 --> 18:41.120] Personal consultation is available as well [18:41.120 --> 18:44.120] For more information, please visit Rooloflawradio.com [18:44.120 --> 18:46.120] And click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.120 --> 18:49.120] Or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com [18:49.120 --> 18:52.120] That's Rooloflawradio.com [18:52.120 --> 18:57.120] Or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com [18:57.120 --> 19:00.120] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [19:02.120 --> 19:05.120] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:05.120 --> 19:08.120] Logos Radio Network.com [19:12.120 --> 19:14.120] Well don't let nothing get to you [19:14.120 --> 19:17.120] Only the father can't deliver you [19:17.120 --> 19:20.120] Don't let bad mind people hurt you [19:20.120 --> 19:23.120] Until you see something get behind you [19:23.120 --> 19:26.120] Norman, my friend [19:26.120 --> 19:28.120] Okay, we are back [19:28.120 --> 19:31.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rooloflaw Radio [19:31.120 --> 19:33.120] We're talking to Ken in New York [19:33.120 --> 19:37.120] Okay, back to Ken unmuted, there you go [19:37.120 --> 19:39.120] I'm here [19:39.120 --> 19:44.120] Okay, did you have anything else for us today? [19:44.120 --> 19:48.120] No, but I hope that if anybody works on that [19:48.120 --> 19:51.120] If that's a project for the future [19:51.120 --> 19:56.120] About somehow unraveling the commercial aspect [19:56.120 --> 19:59.120] Of private conveyance or traveling [19:59.120 --> 20:03.120] The sales tax, the taxing aspect [20:03.120 --> 20:06.120] For the punishment from the registration [20:06.120 --> 20:09.120] Of all useful stuff [20:09.120 --> 20:13.120] Yeah, the problem with that, even if we fix it [20:13.120 --> 20:16.120] Our politicians will come up with another way [20:16.120 --> 20:20.120] To collect that money, they're going to get their money [20:20.120 --> 20:24.120] And they're very creative in getting their money [20:24.120 --> 20:28.120] At least that's been my experience [20:28.120 --> 20:36.120] I did hear an interesting statistic recently [20:36.120 --> 20:42.120] About how large government has grown [20:42.120 --> 20:46.120] But that with the legislature [20:46.120 --> 20:51.120] Every legislature gets in as their job to pass laws [20:51.120 --> 20:55.120] But the statistic was that the amount of law [20:55.120 --> 21:01.120] Has not increased appreciably over the years [21:01.120 --> 21:08.120] That where they add new law, they take away as many as they add [21:08.120 --> 21:11.120] That was an interesting statistic [21:11.120 --> 21:15.120] Because generally when they pass a law, they keep it [21:15.120 --> 21:20.120] That's what I thought, but apparently that's not the case [21:20.120 --> 21:24.120] I don't see the incentive from that point of view [21:24.120 --> 21:28.120] Yeah, unless the law that's on the books [21:28.120 --> 21:32.120] Keeps them from collecting money in a way they want to collect money [21:32.120 --> 21:36.120] So they have to get rid of that law so they can [21:36.120 --> 21:43.120] Like the Glass-Steagall Act [21:43.120 --> 21:49.120] The 1929 depression was engineered [21:49.120 --> 21:54.120] It was caused by naked short selling [21:54.120 --> 21:56.120] They set it up [21:56.120 --> 21:59.120] And after the... [21:59.120 --> 22:02.120] It was too complex to explain naked short selling on the air [22:02.120 --> 22:06.120] Right now, but they used naked short selling [22:06.120 --> 22:09.120] To bankrupt the banks [22:09.120 --> 22:12.120] And then in 1930 they passed the Glass-Steagall Act [22:12.120 --> 22:15.120] That made it a felony to do that [22:15.120 --> 22:19.120] And then in the year 2000 [22:19.120 --> 22:23.120] The last thing the legislature did [22:23.120 --> 22:28.120] Before the legislature went signed die [22:28.120 --> 22:32.120] Is they removed the restriction on naked short selling [22:32.120 --> 22:35.120] I'm sorry, not naked short selling [22:35.120 --> 22:39.120] On selling derivatives [22:39.120 --> 22:44.120] And then in July of 2007 [22:44.120 --> 22:50.120] They removed the restriction on naked short selling [22:50.120 --> 22:55.120] In August of 2007 they crashed the market [22:55.120 --> 22:58.120] Using naked short selling [22:58.120 --> 23:02.120] To put... [23:03.120 --> 23:06.120] A week after [23:06.120 --> 23:08.120] They removed the restriction [23:08.120 --> 23:14.120] And a week later they crashed the market using the same technique [23:14.120 --> 23:16.120] It's all set up [23:16.120 --> 23:18.120] And it's a cycle [23:18.120 --> 23:23.120] I'm enthusiastic about crypto [23:23.120 --> 23:29.120] Because crypto will effectively change everything [23:29.120 --> 23:32.120] The Templars [23:32.120 --> 23:36.120] A legend has it they went to the Holy Land [23:36.120 --> 23:42.120] And they found a treasure buried under the Temple Mount [23:42.120 --> 23:44.120] Horseman Door [23:44.120 --> 23:47.120] They brought a treasure back from the Holy Land [23:47.120 --> 23:51.120] But they didn't find it buried under the Temple Mount [23:51.120 --> 23:54.120] The treasure they brought back from the Holy Land [23:54.120 --> 23:57.120] Was the Jewish banking system [23:57.120 --> 24:00.120] In the Jewish banking system you couldn't sell property [24:00.120 --> 24:04.120] You could only lease it for 47 years [24:04.120 --> 24:06.120] And then at the Jubilee [24:06.120 --> 24:08.120] Everything went back to the original owners [24:08.120 --> 24:11.120] And it started all over again [24:11.120 --> 24:16.120] So one set of people kept control [24:16.120 --> 24:20.120] The Templars brought that back [24:20.120 --> 24:23.120] For 50 years since we've kept financial records [24:23.120 --> 24:29.120] There has been a major economic upheaval [24:29.120 --> 24:31.120] They loan out money [24:31.120 --> 24:33.120] They mortgage everything [24:33.120 --> 24:36.120] And in every 50 years they crash the market [24:36.120 --> 24:41.120] They repossess everything [24:41.120 --> 24:43.120] And then sell it to the kids [24:43.120 --> 24:47.120] Start the whole thing over again [24:47.120 --> 24:49.120] Except for this last cycle [24:49.120 --> 24:51.120] We've been 70 years [24:51.120 --> 24:56.120] It took 70 years to get to 2007 [24:56.120 --> 24:58.120] And they crash the market [24:58.120 --> 25:00.120] The banks took everything back [25:00.120 --> 25:05.120] And now they're selling it back to the grandchildren [25:05.120 --> 25:10.120] Cryptocurrencies will put an end to that garbage [25:10.120 --> 25:12.120] That'll change [25:12.120 --> 25:14.120] Every... [25:14.120 --> 25:17.120] The whole nature of the economy [25:17.120 --> 25:19.120] Is changing in ways [25:19.120 --> 25:23.120] That are dramatically different [25:23.120 --> 25:25.120] Than everything we've experienced [25:25.120 --> 25:28.120] For the last 2000 years [25:28.120 --> 25:30.120] But something different's been happening [25:30.120 --> 25:33.120] You've heard of the run on Deutsche Bank [25:33.120 --> 25:35.120] They've had a cash run [25:35.120 --> 25:38.120] That's supposed to be down about several billion dollars [25:38.120 --> 25:43.120] And HSBC's supposed to be laying off 10,000 employees [25:43.120 --> 25:46.120] They seem to be having some problems [25:46.120 --> 25:48.120] With cryptocurrencies [25:48.120 --> 25:53.120] This whole move toward the cryptosphere [25:53.120 --> 25:56.120] Is really putting the banks in a problem [25:56.120 --> 26:00.120] Nobody needs them anymore [26:00.120 --> 26:02.120] And that's the problem [26:02.120 --> 26:04.120] They can't find a way around it [26:04.120 --> 26:06.120] And what's actually happening [26:06.120 --> 26:08.120] Is they're moving into the crypto sphere [26:08.120 --> 26:13.120] There are things that are more sophisticated [26:13.120 --> 26:15.120] That I'm able to speak to [26:15.120 --> 26:17.120] They're trying to do [26:17.120 --> 26:19.120] Because they see what's happening [26:19.120 --> 26:23.120] The technology is such that they can't get past it [26:23.120 --> 26:25.120] Something happened [26:25.120 --> 26:29.120] I don't know exactly what year it happened [26:29.120 --> 26:32.120] But it was one of those things [26:32.120 --> 26:36.120] That was a world-changing event [26:36.120 --> 26:40.120] Somebody in the government [26:40.120 --> 26:43.120] Put on a government website [26:43.120 --> 26:49.120] The most super-secret crypto technology in existence [26:49.120 --> 26:53.120] And these two geeks were digging around [26:53.120 --> 26:55.120] In the public records [26:55.120 --> 26:57.120] And they found it [26:57.120 --> 27:00.120] It took them a while to realize what they had found [27:00.120 --> 27:03.120] And once they realized what they had [27:03.120 --> 27:06.120] They immediately blasted it out [27:06.120 --> 27:09.120] To everybody they could get it to [27:09.120 --> 27:11.120] And in the federal government [27:11.120 --> 27:14.120] Found out what they had done and came after them [27:14.120 --> 27:18.120] But it turns out they got it off a public website [27:18.120 --> 27:21.120] So they couldn't prosecute them [27:21.120 --> 27:24.120] I'm not sure if it was a disgruntled employee [27:24.120 --> 27:27.120] Or just a mistake [27:27.120 --> 27:30.120] But in any case, once the cat was out of the bag [27:30.120 --> 27:32.120] They couldn't put it back [27:32.120 --> 27:34.120] And I don't think anybody at the time [27:34.120 --> 27:38.120] Realized the potential ramifications [27:38.120 --> 27:42.120] Now we have cryptocurrencies [27:42.120 --> 27:47.120] We have a method of bookkeeping [27:47.120 --> 27:51.120] That is unbreakable [27:51.120 --> 27:55.120] We have crypto technology that's unbreakable [27:55.120 --> 28:01.120] Now it's not impossible to break this crypto technology [28:01.120 --> 28:05.120] But it would take a quantum computer to do it [28:05.120 --> 28:08.120] And we don't have those yet [28:08.120 --> 28:11.120] Perhaps when they develop quantum computers [28:11.120 --> 28:13.120] If they ever do [28:13.120 --> 28:15.120] Then we'll have to come up with something better [28:15.120 --> 28:18.120] But for right now, it's unbreakable [28:18.120 --> 28:22.120] And we're able to create ledgers [28:22.120 --> 28:26.120] In crypto space that are immutable [28:26.120 --> 28:28.120] That can't be changed [28:28.120 --> 28:31.120] And this gives people a way [28:31.120 --> 28:36.120] Of transferring digital value [28:36.120 --> 28:40.120] So we don't need dollars anymore [28:40.120 --> 28:42.120] We don't need fiat currencies [28:42.120 --> 28:46.120] We don't need government controlled currencies [28:46.120 --> 28:49.120] You can do everything in the crypto space [28:49.120 --> 28:52.120] The banks have seen the writing on the wall for a while [28:52.120 --> 28:57.120] And it may look like the banks are going out of business [28:57.120 --> 28:59.120] But I can assure you [28:59.120 --> 29:04.120] The underlying money [29:04.120 --> 29:07.120] The ones behind the banks [29:07.120 --> 29:09.120] They're not going anywhere [29:09.120 --> 29:12.120] They're just changing how they do business [29:12.120 --> 29:14.120] But I think at the end of the day [29:14.120 --> 29:16.120] They'll have to change how they do business [29:16.120 --> 29:18.120] But it will be [29:18.120 --> 29:21.120] They will have less option for stealing everything [29:21.120 --> 29:23.120] Than they have now [29:23.120 --> 29:27.120] They'll have to find more equitable methodologies [29:27.120 --> 29:31.120] And that's all the preaching I'm going to do tonight [29:31.120 --> 29:34.120] This is Randy Kelton [29:34.120 --> 29:36.120] Brett Fountain with the radio [29:36.120 --> 29:39.120] Ken, do you have anything for us on the other side? [29:39.120 --> 29:41.120] No, no, I mean [29:41.120 --> 29:45.120] I just find it amusing that banks that create [29:45.120 --> 29:48.120] Steal money out of nothing [29:48.120 --> 29:52.120] That's been what they've been doing for 2,000 years [29:52.120 --> 29:55.120] Okay, hang on, go on to break [29:55.120 --> 29:57.120] Right back [30:02.120 --> 30:05.120] Europeans take long stress-free vacations [30:05.120 --> 30:08.120] But Americans have a tough time unplugging from their jobs [30:08.120 --> 30:10.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [30:10.120 --> 30:13.120] Back with a new study that measures how much Americans work [30:13.120 --> 30:16.120] When they should be resting after this [30:16.120 --> 30:18.120] Privacy is under attack [30:18.120 --> 30:20.120] When you give up data about yourself [30:20.120 --> 30:22.120] You'll never get it back again [30:22.120 --> 30:24.120] And once your privacy is gone [30:24.120 --> 30:26.120] Your freedoms will start to vanish too [30:26.120 --> 30:28.120] So protect your rights [30:28.120 --> 30:32.120] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [30:32.120 --> 30:34.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [30:34.120 --> 30:36.120] This message is brought to you by [30:36.120 --> 30:38.120] StartPage.com [30:38.120 --> 30:41.120] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Ben [30:41.120 --> 30:44.120] Start over with StartPage [30:45.120 --> 30:47.120] Do you want to get away from it all? [30:47.120 --> 30:49.120] I mean really get away from it all? [30:49.120 --> 30:51.120] But too often find you can't? [30:51.120 --> 30:52.120] Join the club [30:52.120 --> 30:55.120] The survey finds an increasing number of professionals [30:55.120 --> 30:59.120] And the majority of Americans admit they actually work on vacation [30:59.120 --> 31:01.120] That's bad for a whole host of reasons [31:01.120 --> 31:04.120] Your physical and mental well-being topping the list [31:04.120 --> 31:08.120] Some experts say if you're totally tethered to your mobile devices [31:08.120 --> 31:11.120] At least pick a time of day to respond to work [31:11.120 --> 31:14.120] Answer only those emails that ask for your input [31:14.120 --> 31:16.120] And keep your replies short and sweet [31:16.120 --> 31:20.120] My advice is to unplug, unplug, unplug [31:20.120 --> 31:22.120] And get some much needed rest [31:22.120 --> 31:25.120] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com [31:25.120 --> 31:27.120] The world's most private search engine [31:31.120 --> 31:32.120] I lost my son [31:32.120 --> 31:33.120] My uncle [31:33.120 --> 31:34.120] My uncle [31:34.120 --> 31:35.120] On September 11, 2001 [31:35.120 --> 31:39.120] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11 [31:39.120 --> 31:42.120] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper [31:42.120 --> 31:43.120] Was not hit by a plane [31:43.120 --> 31:47.120] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7 [31:47.120 --> 31:50.120] Over 1,200 architects and engineers [31:50.120 --> 31:51.120] Has looked into the evidence [31:51.120 --> 31:53.120] And believed there is more to the story [31:53.120 --> 31:54.120] Bring justice to my son [31:54.120 --> 31:55.120] My uncle [31:55.120 --> 31:56.120] My nephew [31:56.120 --> 31:57.120] My son [31:57.120 --> 31:58.120] Go to building what.org [31:58.120 --> 32:00.120] Why it fell, why it matters [32:00.120 --> 32:01.120] As what you can do [32:01.120 --> 32:03.120] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements [32:03.120 --> 32:06.120] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.120 --> 32:09.120] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails [32:09.120 --> 32:11.120] But good luck getting them to pay for it [32:11.120 --> 32:13.120] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails [32:13.120 --> 32:15.120] But I'm serious about your roof [32:15.120 --> 32:17.120] That's why you have insurance [32:17.120 --> 32:19.120] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you [32:19.120 --> 32:21.120] With little to no out-of-pocket expense [32:21.120 --> 32:24.120] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member [32:24.120 --> 32:27.120] Of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints [32:27.120 --> 32:29.120] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements [32:29.120 --> 32:32.120] To handle your claim and your roof right the first time [32:32.120 --> 32:36.120] Just call 512-992-8745 [32:36.120 --> 32:39.120] Or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com [32:39.120 --> 32:41.120] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off [32:41.120 --> 32:44.120] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network [32:44.120 --> 32:46.120] To help continue this programming [32:46.120 --> 32:49.120] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking [32:49.120 --> 32:51.120] Your door should be locked in [32:51.120 --> 32:55.120] That's 512-992-8745 [32:55.120 --> 32:57.120] Or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com [32:57.120 --> 32:59.120] Discounts are based on full roof replacement [32:59.120 --> 33:15.120] When I actually be kidding about chemtrails [33:29.120 --> 33:53.120] We are back [33:53.120 --> 33:56.120] Randy Kelton with Fountain Reveal the Radio [33:56.120 --> 34:01.120] And we're going to private somewhere [34:01.120 --> 34:05.120] 7-6-0, that's California, isn't it? [34:05.120 --> 34:07.120] I don't have a name on... [34:07.120 --> 34:08.120] Are you a... [34:08.120 --> 34:09.120] Okay, this is not John... [34:09.120 --> 34:12.120] I've got John from New York and I've got private [34:12.120 --> 34:21.120] If you're in a 7-6-0 area code, speak up [34:21.120 --> 34:24.120] Hmm, hello, hello [34:24.120 --> 34:27.120] Can you hear me? [34:27.120 --> 34:30.120] Oh, now I can, yes [34:30.120 --> 34:34.120] I'm in 7-6-0 area code [34:34.120 --> 34:37.120] That will be the one [34:37.120 --> 34:41.120] Okay, my database doesn't show a name [34:41.120 --> 34:44.120] Are you a first-time caller? [34:44.120 --> 34:47.120] Yes, and I wasn't really calling [34:47.120 --> 34:49.120] Somebody gave me your number [34:49.120 --> 34:52.120] And said I could listen to the radio on the telephone [34:52.120 --> 34:54.120] That's what I dialed [34:54.120 --> 34:57.120] Oh, okay, this is not the listen line [34:57.120 --> 34:59.120] This is our call-in line [34:59.120 --> 35:03.120] So now, since you're on the air with us [35:03.120 --> 35:06.120] Let's give you an opportunity to be a radio talk show host [35:06.120 --> 35:10.120] So say something interesting and insightful [35:10.120 --> 35:13.120] Oh, my gosh [35:13.120 --> 35:16.120] Okay, I'm just kidding [35:16.120 --> 35:19.120] Putting you on the dime [35:19.120 --> 35:23.120] You know, I have this problem with women [35:23.120 --> 35:28.120] But they never find me as funny as I do [35:28.120 --> 35:32.120] Especially the one I'm married to [35:32.120 --> 35:37.120] Okay, so have you listened to the show before? [35:37.120 --> 35:39.120] No, I haven't [35:39.120 --> 35:42.120] This is the first time, and I just dialed it [35:42.120 --> 35:45.120] But I would like to say [35:45.120 --> 35:48.120] We better start standing up for our rights [35:48.120 --> 35:51.120] Because I've seen over the years how many are gone [35:51.120 --> 35:57.120] Oh, you are at the right place [35:57.120 --> 36:00.120] This is what we do [36:00.120 --> 36:03.120] In the beginning of the show we were talking about [36:03.120 --> 36:05.120] There are a bunch of guys out there [36:05.120 --> 36:10.120] Who are doing what they call first-time amendment audits [36:10.120 --> 36:16.120] They're generally angry people who feel like the system is unfair [36:16.120 --> 36:18.120] They feel mistreated by the system [36:18.120 --> 36:26.120] And they go down to police stations and federal buildings [36:26.120 --> 36:29.120] With video cameras to start videotaping [36:29.120 --> 36:35.120] To provoke the security to come out and confront them [36:35.120 --> 36:38.120] And they have great fun at it [36:38.120 --> 36:42.120] And I support that, it's a good idea [36:42.120 --> 36:47.120] These guys are so obnoxious [36:47.120 --> 36:49.120] You wouldn't believe it [36:49.120 --> 36:52.120] But they're not bad guys, they're not criminals [36:52.120 --> 36:58.120] They're just guys who are angry and they're working out their anger [36:58.120 --> 37:03.120] The police get these guys and they know that these are not a bunch of criminals [37:03.120 --> 37:07.120] The police really know what they're doing [37:07.120 --> 37:12.120] But they defy the police [37:12.120 --> 37:14.120] And it makes them nuts [37:14.120 --> 37:17.120] And then the police act ignorant [37:17.120 --> 37:21.120] And then they wind up on YouTube acting ignorant [37:21.120 --> 37:25.120] And we're beginning to see [37:25.120 --> 37:28.120] I watched some today [37:28.120 --> 37:33.120] Where the guy went to a military, to a National Guard installation [37:33.120 --> 37:37.120] And the National Guard guys come out and got all ugly with him [37:37.120 --> 37:39.120] And he told them to scratch [37:39.120 --> 37:41.120] Well, we'll call the sheriff [37:41.120 --> 37:44.120] Knock yourself out, I'll be here, I'm not going to go anywhere [37:44.120 --> 37:47.120] The sheriff shows up and he talks to them [37:47.120 --> 37:50.120] And they want to see his ID and they refuse to give ID [37:50.120 --> 37:54.120] And he tells them, well, what law did I break? [37:54.120 --> 37:57.120] Well, I need to see your ID, no you don't [37:57.120 --> 38:00.120] And these guys got it [38:00.120 --> 38:04.120] And they did not do anything stupid [38:04.120 --> 38:08.120] No matter how much this guy provoked them [38:08.120 --> 38:12.120] They maintained their professionalism [38:12.120 --> 38:15.120] That was wonderful [38:15.120 --> 38:18.120] So, well, we do something a little different [38:18.120 --> 38:23.120] These guys do the first step [38:23.120 --> 38:25.120] As far as we're concerned [38:25.120 --> 38:28.120] That's just the first step [38:28.120 --> 38:31.120] I used to, I haven't done this in years [38:31.120 --> 38:37.120] But I used to give the officials a lot of hard time [38:37.120 --> 38:39.120] And I've got all these stories [38:39.120 --> 38:41.120] Where I go to Arlington, Texas [38:41.120 --> 38:44.120] I go into Arlington, Texas and I want to see some records [38:44.120 --> 38:47.120] Some criminal records for traffic [38:47.120 --> 38:51.120] And I call the clerk over and I said, ma'am, tell her my name [38:51.120 --> 38:54.120] Because in order to request public records [38:54.120 --> 38:58.120] You have to identify yourself and the records sought [38:58.120 --> 39:01.120] That's the only two questions they can ask you [39:01.120 --> 39:03.120] Who are you? What records do you want? [39:03.120 --> 39:06.120] And I always ask for records in a way [39:06.120 --> 39:10.120] That will get them to say, well, gee, Willikers [39:10.120 --> 39:13.120] Why do you want to see those records? [39:13.120 --> 39:15.120] 911 [39:15.120 --> 39:18.120] They're forbidden to ask that question [39:18.120 --> 39:21.120] So if I could con them into doing something [39:21.120 --> 39:25.120] They're forbidden to do, that gets a 911 call [39:25.120 --> 39:28.120] So I'm in Arlington, I ask to see these records [39:28.120 --> 39:31.120] And the clerk said, are you the accused? [39:31.120 --> 39:34.120] Oh, no, she said, are you an attorney? [39:34.120 --> 39:36.120] No, no, no, I'm not an attorney [39:36.120 --> 39:39.120] I sleep well at night and keep my hands mown pockets [39:39.120 --> 39:41.120] Thank you very much [39:41.120 --> 39:44.120] She said, well, if you're not the accused or the lawyer [39:44.120 --> 39:46.120] You can't see those records [39:46.120 --> 39:49.120] I said, you know, these guys, when they do something like that [39:49.120 --> 39:52.120] Oh, yes I can, this law says I can do this [39:52.120 --> 39:55.120] And that law says I can do it, no, no, no, no, no [39:55.120 --> 39:58.120] We got this rule [39:58.120 --> 40:02.120] Never give fair warning [40:02.120 --> 40:07.120] If you try to give fair warning [40:07.120 --> 40:14.120] Officials will always accuse you of being agitated [40:14.120 --> 40:19.120] Besides, Bushwack is so much better [40:19.120 --> 40:22.120] So she said, if you're not the lawyer or the accused [40:22.120 --> 40:24.120] You can't see these records [40:24.120 --> 40:30.120] I said, oh wow, you shouldn't have said that [40:30.120 --> 40:34.120] There's a big old bailiff standing across the room there with his arms crossed [40:34.120 --> 40:38.120] And I pointed at him, hey you, come here [40:38.120 --> 40:40.120] He comes over, what can I do for you? [40:40.120 --> 40:43.120] Arrest that woman [40:43.120 --> 40:45.120] Well, why would I arrest her? [40:45.120 --> 40:49.120] Well, she said that if I wasn't the accused or the lawyer in the case [40:49.120 --> 40:51.120] I couldn't see these criminal files [40:51.120 --> 40:53.120] He said, well, you can't [40:53.120 --> 40:57.120] Oh man, you shouldn't have said that [40:57.120 --> 41:00.120] I took out my phone and started to dial [41:00.120 --> 41:03.120] And he said, you can't hear the telephone in here [41:03.120 --> 41:08.120] I said, are you going to interfere with the 911 call? [41:08.120 --> 41:11.120] In the state of Texas, that's a felony [41:11.120 --> 41:14.120] And the clerk said, oh leave him alone [41:14.120 --> 41:18.120] He's just trying to get you to do something so he can file charges against you [41:18.120 --> 41:22.120] I said to the bailiff, she's smarter than I thought [41:22.120 --> 41:25.120] You should listen to her [41:25.120 --> 41:30.120] I get 911 and I ask the operator to send someone out here to arrest [41:30.120 --> 41:33.120] And I asked the clerk what her name was [41:33.120 --> 41:36.120] And she told me and I asked the bailiff what his name was [41:36.120 --> 41:39.120] And he wouldn't tell me [41:39.120 --> 41:41.120] And I pointed at his name tag [41:41.120 --> 41:44.120] I told him, I'm old, I can't see squat [41:44.120 --> 41:46.120] I can't read that thing, what's your name? [41:46.120 --> 41:47.120] And he wouldn't tell me [41:47.120 --> 41:50.120] So I need you to send someone out here to arrest this clerk [41:50.120 --> 41:52.120] And Mr. No Name Bailiff [41:52.120 --> 41:55.120] You can figure out what his name is when you get here [41:55.120 --> 42:00.120] You would not believe the officer shows up [42:00.120 --> 42:03.120] To answer my 911 call [42:03.120 --> 42:08.120] And then we get to see what we call this little chicken dance [42:08.120 --> 42:12.120] And that's where the officer shifts from one foot to the other [42:12.120 --> 42:18.120] While he's trying to give me reasons why he don't have to arrest his buddies [42:18.120 --> 42:24.120] This is so much fun, you won't believe it [42:24.120 --> 42:29.120] With that said, we never do anything malicious [42:29.120 --> 42:33.120] We never do anything that's designed to harm anyone [42:33.120 --> 42:41.120] It's all done to ensure that our public officials follow our law [42:41.120 --> 42:44.120] And that's what this whole show is about [42:44.120 --> 42:53.120] Is how to find remedy in an unfair system [42:53.120 --> 42:57.120] We have developed a set of rules over the years [42:57.120 --> 42:59.120] One of the rules is [42:59.120 --> 43:07.120] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do [43:07.120 --> 43:17.120] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do [43:17.120 --> 43:22.120] So when he doesn't do it, bang, you get to hammer him [43:22.120 --> 43:25.120] And that's just a start [43:25.120 --> 43:28.120] It gets a whole lot more fun, you won't believe it [43:28.120 --> 43:33.120] Hang on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio [43:33.120 --> 43:38.120] Our call in number 512-646-1984 [43:38.120 --> 43:41.120] Oh, my clock is really messing me up, I don't know what time it is [43:41.120 --> 43:47.120] Oh, there we go, we've got another hour and 45 minutes [43:47.120 --> 43:50.120] So we've got plenty of time [43:50.120 --> 43:53.120] Give us a call, we'll be right back [43:53.120 --> 44:04.120] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.120 --> 44:08.120] By delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price [44:08.120 --> 44:11.120] We provide a wide assortment of our favorite products [44:11.120 --> 44:14.120] Featuring a great selection of high quality coins and precious metals [44:14.120 --> 44:18.120] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors [44:18.120 --> 44:24.120] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metal dealers and journalists [44:24.120 --> 44:27.120] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it [44:27.120 --> 44:32.120] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Pollen Burst [44:32.120 --> 44:36.120] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storeable Foods, Berkey Water Products [44:36.120 --> 44:39.120] Ammunition at 10% above wholesale and more [44:39.120 --> 44:43.120] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept bitcoins as payment [44:43.120 --> 44:46.120] Call us at 512-646-6440 [44:46.120 --> 44:49.120] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A [44:49.120 --> 44:51.120] About a half mile south of Anderson [44:51.120 --> 44:54.120] We're open Monday through Friday, 10-6, Saturdays, 10-2 [44:54.120 --> 45:00.120] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440 [45:00.120 --> 45:04.120] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.120 --> 45:07.120] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary [45:07.120 --> 45:13.120] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours [45:13.120 --> 45:16.120] Step-by-step [45:16.120 --> 45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing [45:19.120 --> 45:22.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [45:22.120 --> 45:26.120] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course [45:26.120 --> 45:28.120] And now you can too [45:28.120 --> 45:34.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience [45:34.120 --> 45:39.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.120 --> 45:43.120] About the principles and practices that control our American courts [45:43.120 --> 45:52.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more [45:52.120 --> 45:56.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.120 --> 46:11.120] or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-V [46:11.120 --> 46:35.120] Music [46:35.120 --> 46:37.120] Okay, we are back. [46:37.120 --> 46:41.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [46:41.120 --> 46:45.120] And on the break, Brett asked me why I didn't ask your name [46:45.120 --> 46:50.120] And I didn't do that. I did that on purpose because you called in to listen [46:50.120 --> 46:56.120] You didn't call in to talk, so I didn't want to be intrusive [46:56.120 --> 46:59.120] Okay, thank you [46:59.120 --> 47:07.120] If you have called in to ask a question or something, then I need a way to address you back [47:07.120 --> 47:13.120] On this show, we only ask for state and first name [47:13.120 --> 47:21.120] We never ask for last name. We're real careful with anybody who comes on our show [47:21.120 --> 47:31.120] There are some shows that like to create a lot of controversy. We create controversy, but not with anyone who comes on our show [47:31.120 --> 47:38.120] We always treat our callers with respect, except for rare occasions [47:38.120 --> 47:45.120] There was Ralph Winnerud. I have a friend in North Carolina, Art Patton [47:45.120 --> 47:56.120] He called me once and he said, I turned your show on the other day and heard my two favorite people on earth, on the radio at the same time [47:56.120 --> 48:03.120] You and Ralph Winnerud. Ralph Winnerud is a researcher out of Alaska [48:03.120 --> 48:10.120] And I said, oh, you heard that heart. Yes, I did. You were crawling down Ralph's throat [48:10.120 --> 48:18.120] Well, yeah, as a matter of fact, I was. Come on my show and said that the laws don't apply [48:18.120 --> 48:26.120] The law doesn't apply, Ralph. What applies, Ralph? Does the Constitution apply? No, no, the Constitution doesn't apply. Well, what applies? [48:26.120 --> 48:30.120] Oh, you gotta go to the national register [48:30.120 --> 48:33.120] Oh, he was right [48:33.120 --> 48:36.120] The statutes are not law [48:36.120 --> 48:41.120] The statutes are a codification of the law [48:41.120 --> 48:48.120] What is law is the public law and it's found in the national register [48:48.120 --> 48:58.120] The statutes are something put together by a publisher that the government hired this publisher and said [48:58.120 --> 49:10.120] Go through all of the public laws and pull out all of the laws that apply to criminal and put them together in one volume so that we can find them [49:10.120 --> 49:14.120] Well, that volume is not the law [49:14.120 --> 49:20.120] It is intended to be an accurate representation of the law [49:20.120 --> 49:24.120] The national register contains the law [49:24.120 --> 49:28.120] So he said, well, you gotta go to the national register [49:28.120 --> 49:36.120] I said, that's really nice, Ralph. The national register is 165,000 pages [49:36.120 --> 49:40.120] You wanna be a little more specific [49:40.120 --> 49:44.120] And then I told him, don't come on my show telling people that the law doesn't apply [49:44.120 --> 49:49.120] It looks like the law applies and it feels like the law applies [49:49.120 --> 49:54.120] And that guy with the pistol grabs you up and throws you behind in jail [49:54.120 --> 49:57.120] It really feels like the law applies [49:57.120 --> 49:59.120] And he hung up on me [49:59.120 --> 50:03.120] Well, Ralph was right in what he said [50:03.120 --> 50:10.120] But the idea he gave is that you don't have to pay attention to the statutes [50:10.120 --> 50:22.120] A statute is law to the decree that it accurately reflects the intent of the public law in the national register [50:22.120 --> 50:28.120] The only time it can be treated as not applicable is when it doesn't match the national register [50:28.120 --> 50:31.120] He didn't explain that part [50:31.120 --> 50:35.120] I have been called all over the country to get people out of jail [50:35.120 --> 50:40.120] They're doing stuff at these what we call patriot mythologists [50:40.120 --> 50:43.120] Tell people to do and then they get in jail [50:43.120 --> 50:49.120] And when they call these guys, oh well, you forgot to cross this to your doctors [50:49.120 --> 50:52.120] We take a different approach [50:52.120 --> 51:00.120] To quote Pastor Massad, we're the most pro-government show on radio [51:00.120 --> 51:09.120] We believe that we have the best body of law ever created on earth [51:09.120 --> 51:15.120] The problems we have are from no lack of law [51:15.120 --> 51:23.120] The problems we have are from a lack of consistent enforcement of those laws [51:23.120 --> 51:25.120] Exactly [51:25.120 --> 51:40.120] The real problem is that you and I, as citizens in a republic, have asked our police to police our us [51:40.120 --> 51:53.120] We've asked our police to protect us from our own distraction, from our own ignorance, and our own personal passions [51:53.120 --> 51:57.120] But we didn't return the favor [51:57.120 --> 52:08.120] And over the years, through a series of seemingly minor adjustments toward adjudicative expediency and administrative convenience [52:08.120 --> 52:20.120] The practice of law has so degenerated from the written law that the two look nothing alike [52:20.120 --> 52:24.120] I once spent the night in jail for driving with a headlight out [52:24.120 --> 52:26.120] That did not seem right [52:26.120 --> 52:33.120] So when I got out, I got out the penal code and the criminal procedure code and I read them [52:33.120 --> 52:41.120] And then I looked at the practice and I thought, have I stepped through the looking glass? [52:41.120 --> 52:47.120] How can the practice be so dramatically different from the code? [52:47.120 --> 52:52.120] And I'm an engineer. I read the codes like a tech manual [52:52.120 --> 52:55.120] If the tech manual says this, you do this [52:55.120 --> 53:00.120] But I read the tech manual and then look at the practice and I know anything you like [53:00.120 --> 53:09.120] And it took 15 years of looking for what I had missed to find out I had missed a thing [53:09.120 --> 53:12.120] They really are doing it wrong [53:12.120 --> 53:20.120] Every step, every step from arrest to trial as practiced in every state I've looked at [53:20.120 --> 53:28.120] It's not only wrong, it is very specifically against particular law [53:28.120 --> 53:31.120] And it's not just against law [53:31.120 --> 53:37.120] It is against law for a very specific purpose [53:37.120 --> 53:46.120] Prosecutors being in public employ and being learned in council [53:46.120 --> 53:55.120] Were requested by our legislators to give legal advice to the police and lower courts [53:55.120 --> 54:01.120] It sounded like an efficient use of resources [54:01.120 --> 54:06.120] But it was an extremely bad idea [54:06.120 --> 54:12.120] Do you really expect prosecutors to advise the police and lower courts [54:12.120 --> 54:18.120] In practices and procedures that will make the prosecutors life a living hell? [54:18.120 --> 54:22.120] They may not have done this purposely [54:22.120 --> 54:28.120] But they advised these officials in practices and procedures that serve the population [54:28.120 --> 54:31.120] To serve the prosecution [54:31.120 --> 54:38.120] The United States contains approximately 3% of the world's population [54:38.120 --> 54:46.120] The last statistic I heard is we house 20% of the world's population of inmates [54:46.120 --> 54:54.120] We live in the worst police state the world has ever seen bar none [54:54.120 --> 54:59.120] The average conviction rate in every state I've looked at [54:59.120 --> 55:03.120] For all crimes across the board [55:03.120 --> 55:08.120] 99.6 [55:08.120 --> 55:11.120] It rounds up to 100 [55:11.120 --> 55:15.120] If you are accused of a crime in these United States [55:15.120 --> 55:18.120] You are going to take a deal [55:18.120 --> 55:22.120] And that's all there is to that [55:24.120 --> 55:26.120] We're here to fix that [55:26.120 --> 55:30.120] We're here to take their law [55:30.120 --> 55:38.120] Exactly the way they use their law and cram it up their behinds [55:38.120 --> 55:41.120] You'll love this one [55:41.120 --> 55:44.120] Texas is the only one that has this particular law [55:44.120 --> 55:47.120] It's in addition to aggravated assault [55:47.120 --> 55:51.120] I had a sheriff's deputy turn his lights on me [55:51.120 --> 55:53.120] I pulled over he came up [55:53.120 --> 55:57.120] He's in the county I live in so he should have knew better [55:57.120 --> 56:01.120] And he said, I gave you my license [56:01.120 --> 56:03.120] That's a fight I don't have [56:03.120 --> 56:05.120] And he said, Mr. Carlton, do you know why I stopped you? [56:05.120 --> 56:08.120] I said, no, but I'm sure you're going to tell me [56:08.120 --> 56:11.120] He said, your registration is expired [56:11.120 --> 56:16.120] I said, only two years, what's the problem? [56:16.120 --> 56:19.120] He went back to write a ticket [56:19.120 --> 56:24.120] I called 911 and asked the dispatcher to send someone out [56:24.120 --> 56:30.120] To arrest the deputy for first degree felony aggravated assault [56:34.120 --> 56:37.120] That was so much fun [56:37.120 --> 56:40.120] You won't believe it [56:40.120 --> 56:43.120] Here's how I got there [56:43.120 --> 56:46.120] The officer when he turned his lights on [56:46.120 --> 56:51.120] The only requirement to pull over and stop in the state of Texas [56:51.120 --> 56:56.120] When lights are turned on you is in the transportation code [56:56.120 --> 57:01.120] But the officer wasn't writing a motorcycle [57:01.120 --> 57:07.120] Transportation code 701.001 says the only sheriff's deputies [57:07.120 --> 57:10.120] Who can enforce the traffic laws [57:10.120 --> 57:15.120] Are traffic control officers appointed by the county commissioner's court [57:15.120 --> 57:19.120] And paid by the county commissioner's court [57:19.120 --> 57:22.120] Well, I already checked with the county commissioner's court [57:22.120 --> 57:27.120] And they hadn't appointed any traffic control officers [57:27.120 --> 57:30.120] They could have had a maximum of five, right? [57:30.120 --> 57:34.120] Unless they have a population of over 2 million [57:34.120 --> 57:36.120] Well, that wasn't going to happen over there [57:36.120 --> 57:40.120] Yeah, over 2 million then they can appoint as many as they want to [57:40.120 --> 57:42.120] But they hadn't appointed any [57:42.120 --> 57:46.120] And 701.003 said he has to be riding a motorcycle [57:46.120 --> 57:50.120] So he wasn't riding a motorcycle [57:50.120 --> 57:55.120] And I knew that no officers, no deputies had been appointed traffic control officers [57:55.120 --> 57:59.120] So I had reason to believe he didn't have authority to turn those lights on [57:59.120 --> 58:03.120] He exerted or reported to exerted authority he did not express to have [58:03.120 --> 58:06.120] That's a classic misdemeanor in the state of Texas [58:06.120 --> 58:11.120] But in turning the lights on he put me under threat [58:11.120 --> 58:15.120] And seized me at my liberty [58:15.120 --> 58:20.120] I considered that an act of simple assault under 22.01 Texas penal code [58:20.120 --> 58:24.120] If you commit simple assault while prominently displaying a deadly weapon [58:24.120 --> 58:27.120] That's felony to second degree [58:27.120 --> 58:30.120] Unless you are a public official [58:30.120 --> 58:34.120] Acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity [58:34.120 --> 58:39.120] In which case it is a felony of the first degree [58:39.120 --> 58:41.120] I had so much fun with that [58:41.120 --> 58:44.120] Hang on, go to break, ready to help me [58:44.120 --> 59:13.120] Brett Fountain, we'll be right back [59:14.120 --> 59:16.120] We'll be right back [59:44.120 --> 59:49.120] Or visit us online at bfa.org [01:00:15.120 --> 01:00:17.120] Copper, $2.75 an ounce [01:00:17.120 --> 01:00:20.120] Oil, Texas crude, $55.63 a barrel [01:00:20.120 --> 01:00:23.120] Brent crude, $62.47 a barrel [01:00:23.120 --> 01:00:25.120] And cryptos in order of market cap [01:00:25.120 --> 01:00:28.120] Bitcoin Core, $10,566.52 [01:00:28.120 --> 01:00:31.120] Ethereum, $227.26 [01:00:31.120 --> 01:00:34.120] XRP, Ripple, $0.33 [01:00:34.120 --> 01:00:36.120] Light coin, $100.31 [01:00:36.120 --> 01:00:45.120] And Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin [01:00:45.120 --> 01:00:48.120] Today in History, the year 1916 [01:00:48.120 --> 01:00:51.120] The Preparedness Day Bombing, a time suitcase bomb [01:00:51.120 --> 01:00:54.120] Was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco [01:00:54.120 --> 01:00:57.120] During the World War I Preparedness Day Parade [01:00:57.120 --> 01:00:59.120] Killing 10 and entering 40 [01:00:59.120 --> 01:01:04.120] Today in History [01:01:04.120 --> 01:01:08.120] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 [01:01:08.120 --> 01:01:11.120] Legalizing heaven attacks his law back in June [01:01:11.120 --> 01:01:15.120] County prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, San Antonio [01:01:15.120 --> 01:01:17.120] Have been dropping marijuana possession charges [01:01:17.120 --> 01:01:19.120] And even refusing to file new ones [01:01:19.120 --> 01:01:21.120] Since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:01:21.120 --> 01:01:24.120] Or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC [01:01:24.120 --> 01:01:27.120] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney [01:01:27.120 --> 01:01:29.120] Announced earlier this month that she was dismissing [01:01:29.120 --> 01:01:32.120] 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:01:32.120 --> 01:01:35.120] Because of the law, Mr. Abbott and other state officials [01:01:35.120 --> 01:01:37.120] Including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.120 --> 01:01:39.120] That county district attorneys back on Thursday [01:01:39.120 --> 01:01:42.120] That marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas [01:01:42.120 --> 01:01:45.120] And that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:01:45.120 --> 01:01:47.120] Of how HB 1325 works [01:01:47.120 --> 01:01:49.120] As well as other cities too [01:01:49.120 --> 01:01:53.120] Like the district attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza [01:01:53.120 --> 01:01:56.120] A Democrat who also stated earlier this month that [01:01:56.120 --> 01:01:58.120] The law quote will not have an effect [01:01:58.120 --> 01:02:01.120] On the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso [01:02:01.120 --> 01:02:04.120] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by [01:02:04.120 --> 01:02:06.120] Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.120 --> 01:02:08.120] In Harris County who stated that quote [01:02:08.120 --> 01:02:11.120] The law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal [01:02:11.120 --> 01:02:13.120] Based on its chemical makeup [01:02:13.120 --> 01:02:15.120] It's important that if someone is charged with something [01:02:15.120 --> 01:02:18.120] The test matches what they're charged with [01:02:22.120 --> 01:02:25.120] A paper by Tulane University identified a 5.5 inch [01:02:25.120 --> 01:02:27.120] American pocket shark [01:02:27.120 --> 01:02:29.120] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico [01:02:29.120 --> 01:02:32.120] The specimen being only the second pocket shark [01:02:32.120 --> 01:02:34.120] Ever captured or recorded [01:02:34.120 --> 01:02:37.120] With the other one being found way back in 1979 [01:02:37.120 --> 01:02:39.120] In the East Pacific Ocean [01:02:39.120 --> 01:02:41.120] According to the university paper [01:02:41.120 --> 01:02:43.120] The shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland [01:02:43.120 --> 01:02:45.120] Near its front fins [01:02:45.120 --> 01:02:48.120] For the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey [01:02:48.120 --> 01:02:50.120] Who may be drawn into the glow [01:02:53.120 --> 01:02:55.120] This was Book Roadie with your lowdown [01:02:55.120 --> 01:02:59.120] For July 22nd, 2019 [01:03:25.120 --> 01:03:27.120] I will ask my father's house [01:03:27.120 --> 01:03:29.120] I will tell you the truth [01:03:29.120 --> 01:03:32.120] I will ask his house [01:03:32.120 --> 01:03:35.120] He has loved me with his face [01:03:35.120 --> 01:03:37.120] And with dark [01:03:37.120 --> 01:03:40.120] I will aim at my concern [01:03:40.120 --> 01:03:42.120] I will ask his house [01:03:44.120 --> 01:03:46.120] I will ask him [01:03:46.120 --> 01:03:49.120] I will tell him [01:03:49.120 --> 01:03:51.120] I will tell him [01:03:51.120 --> 01:03:53.120] I will ask his house [01:03:53.120 --> 01:04:00.120] I will guide these world's effects if you can. [01:04:00.120 --> 01:04:06.360] We are back, Randy Kelton with La Radio, and I hope we had someone call in on the call [01:04:06.360 --> 01:04:08.120] in line that just wanted to listen. [01:04:08.120 --> 01:04:12.300] I kind of trapped her on the air, but she dropped off over the break. [01:04:12.300 --> 01:04:15.380] I hope she's still listening. [01:04:15.380 --> 01:04:18.840] I was going through some of the basics of what we do. [01:04:18.840 --> 01:04:21.760] I need to do that on occasion. [01:04:21.760 --> 01:04:29.160] I actually, we didn't have many callers, so I was going to do some presentations. [01:04:29.160 --> 01:04:38.480] I'm preparing a set of presentations I'm going to do to get on a, so I can post them on the [01:04:38.480 --> 01:04:46.320] websites that give the basic explanation of what we do. [01:04:46.320 --> 01:04:51.240] So we're going to do a crowdfunding sale here pretty soon, and we need that to help. [01:04:51.240 --> 01:04:56.680] I've also been looking at these guys who are doing First Amendment audits. [01:04:56.680 --> 01:05:07.160] They look like excellent recruits for using our tools to dramatically increase the effect [01:05:07.160 --> 01:05:09.640] that they can have. [01:05:09.640 --> 01:05:16.760] So we're going over some of the basics of what we do, and I'm sure if most of my listeners [01:05:16.760 --> 01:05:26.960] have heard this, but you need to hear these basics repeatedly, at least every so often. [01:05:26.960 --> 01:05:30.640] So each time you hear them, they stick a little better. [01:05:30.640 --> 01:05:36.720] Once the basics become automatic, then when you have to deal with public officials, it [01:05:36.720 --> 01:05:40.520] will be a piece of cake. [01:05:40.520 --> 01:05:49.520] So I was, okay, since we lost the one I was talking to, I'll go ahead and go to John in [01:05:49.520 --> 01:05:50.520] New York. [01:05:50.520 --> 01:05:53.040] I'll go back to this if we run out of callers. [01:05:53.040 --> 01:05:54.040] Hello, John. [01:05:54.040 --> 01:05:55.040] Hello. [01:05:55.040 --> 01:05:58.040] What do you have for us today? [01:05:58.040 --> 01:05:59.040] Hi. [01:05:59.040 --> 01:06:06.840] Well, I want to say, first of all, that the seat belt ticket is working pretty smoothly. [01:06:06.840 --> 01:06:08.960] It's been a long time, and I'll explain. [01:06:08.960 --> 01:06:10.600] We're finally getting someplace. [01:06:10.600 --> 01:06:17.560] It's been too long, too little, too late, but we're kind of inching our way. [01:06:17.560 --> 01:06:18.560] We don't do legal. [01:06:18.560 --> 01:06:19.560] I do medical. [01:06:19.560 --> 01:06:24.720] It's been a long time since I've had a judge thrown off the bench, and I did it by complaining [01:06:24.720 --> 01:06:28.240] to the Commission on Judicial Conduct a long time ago. [01:06:28.240 --> 01:06:30.280] Let me catch you. [01:06:30.280 --> 01:06:33.440] Well, we're doing it again. [01:06:33.440 --> 01:06:38.880] We went to the Commission on Judicial Conduct for my relative's seat belt ticket. [01:06:38.880 --> 01:06:39.880] Okay. [01:06:39.880 --> 01:06:40.880] Hold on, John. [01:06:40.880 --> 01:06:43.960] Let me make one comment. [01:06:43.960 --> 01:06:52.360] I believe if there is any state that has an effective Judicial Conduct Commission, it [01:06:52.360 --> 01:06:53.360] is New York. [01:06:53.360 --> 01:06:54.360] Oh, yeah. [01:06:54.360 --> 01:06:58.800] I found that out in 1982 when I had the judge thrown off the bench. [01:06:58.800 --> 01:07:03.800] What happened was, just three sentences, he violated my rights. [01:07:03.800 --> 01:07:08.560] He stopped me in the middle of my testimony and said, I don't want to hear anymore. [01:07:08.560 --> 01:07:16.680] And he got mad, his face got red, and these are all factors that the Commission asked [01:07:16.680 --> 01:07:17.680] me about. [01:07:17.680 --> 01:07:22.880] His face got red, he lost his temper, he yelled at me, he stopped me from my testimony, then [01:07:22.880 --> 01:07:28.880] he walks into the Assistant District Attorney's Office with three employees in full listening [01:07:28.880 --> 01:07:36.600] range and said about my case with the paper, with my name on it, requesting a trial. [01:07:36.600 --> 01:07:41.440] I don't know why these people bother asking for a trial when they know they're guilty. [01:07:41.440 --> 01:07:42.440] Oh, really? [01:07:42.440 --> 01:07:46.080] Is that what a judge says before a trial? [01:07:46.080 --> 01:07:50.480] And he had specific reference to me. [01:07:50.480 --> 01:07:55.720] Well, the three employees, I went to a lawyer, and the lawyer didn't want to take the case [01:07:55.720 --> 01:08:04.200] because he saw a real fireworks display coming, and he asked me, he says, who's your witness? [01:08:04.200 --> 01:08:07.160] You better have a priest as a witness. [01:08:07.160 --> 01:08:10.680] I said, how about the three employees and the ADAs off? [01:08:10.680 --> 01:08:12.880] Is that a good enough set of witnesses? [01:08:12.880 --> 01:08:19.040] Well, yeah, I guess so, and he backed off because he knew he was going to get a hotbed. [01:08:19.040 --> 01:08:27.160] Anyway, well, we're doing it again, and the woman who answered the phone at the Commission, [01:08:27.160 --> 01:08:32.640] my relatives talked to her, and she had the official written complaint against this latest [01:08:32.640 --> 01:08:39.200] judge, who was very, and she seemed very interested in the three written requests by the defendant, [01:08:39.200 --> 01:08:44.160] who is my relative, to recuse the judge to recuse himself, and the judge wrote three [01:08:44.160 --> 01:08:50.680] letters back, you know, each time, not right away, but in each circumstance, that he was [01:08:50.680 --> 01:08:52.280] not going to recuse himself. [01:08:52.280 --> 01:08:58.760] So there, well, a couple of those written responses have been misplaced by the defendant. [01:08:58.760 --> 01:09:04.680] The defendant needs those two letters of refusal to recuse himself, the judge, the defendant [01:09:04.680 --> 01:09:09.600] needs these two letters of refusal to recuse himself, and needs to ask the court to send [01:09:09.600 --> 01:09:10.600] them. [01:09:10.600 --> 01:09:15.680] Now, can the court or the judge refuse to send these letters legally, in which the judge [01:09:15.680 --> 01:09:17.120] refused to recuse himself? [01:09:17.120 --> 01:09:19.840] Do they have to send them? [01:09:19.840 --> 01:09:20.840] And tell me about that. [01:09:20.840 --> 01:09:25.400] The reason why I ask, is that every step of the way the judge, the clerk, and the court [01:09:25.400 --> 01:09:32.600] have all thrown all kinds of dirty tricks in the way, and they waited until anyhow. [01:09:32.600 --> 01:09:40.800] Every constitution for every state follows the federal that gives you the right to a [01:09:40.800 --> 01:09:45.400] fair and public court. [01:09:45.400 --> 01:09:48.880] Yes, he has to produce it. [01:09:48.880 --> 01:09:54.960] Okay, now suppose he says, well, we don't have the copies, we lost them. [01:09:54.960 --> 01:09:58.680] Charge him with tampering with the government document. [01:09:58.680 --> 01:10:03.400] But suppose he says, well, we really did lose them. [01:10:03.400 --> 01:10:04.400] Too bad. [01:10:04.400 --> 01:10:05.400] Too bad. [01:10:05.400 --> 01:10:15.520] You are required to set up your office such that you make all public documents available [01:10:15.520 --> 01:10:16.520] to the public. [01:10:16.520 --> 01:10:20.200] If you fail to do so, you've tampered with the government document. [01:10:20.200 --> 01:10:22.200] Okay, good. [01:10:22.200 --> 01:10:26.680] And then who do you charge him with, with that, the commission on judicial conduct? [01:10:26.680 --> 01:10:31.520] No, you charge him that with a magistrate. [01:10:31.520 --> 01:10:33.200] That's what I thought you might say. [01:10:33.200 --> 01:10:34.200] All right. [01:10:34.200 --> 01:10:35.200] Okay. [01:10:35.200 --> 01:10:39.840] That's a, it's a class A misdemeanor in most states, it's a felony in some. [01:10:39.840 --> 01:10:40.840] Okay. [01:10:40.840 --> 01:10:41.840] All right. [01:10:41.840 --> 01:10:46.960] Now that we got that answered, now to the way, oh, the reason why I ask, is that every [01:10:46.960 --> 01:10:50.920] step of the way they've thrown all kinds of dirty tricks in, and I just wanted to be [01:10:50.920 --> 01:10:55.320] prepared for the next dirty trick, which will be that. [01:10:55.320 --> 01:11:00.720] Also the seat belt ticket was retaliation for the three tickets the defendant got dismissed [01:11:00.720 --> 01:11:03.920] one by one by one with your help. [01:11:03.920 --> 01:11:07.400] After we're done creating justice for the cop and the judge, because I'm going to go [01:11:07.400 --> 01:11:13.560] after the cop big time, I guarantee you, their retaliation will make any previous retaliations [01:11:13.560 --> 01:11:15.400] look tame. [01:11:15.400 --> 01:11:21.560] I fully expect them to really retaliate rough and ready and hard. [01:11:21.560 --> 01:11:22.560] Okay. [01:11:22.560 --> 01:11:23.560] Hold on. [01:11:23.560 --> 01:11:24.560] Hold on. [01:11:24.560 --> 01:11:33.000] Ask the, when you, if they refuse to produce these documents, at some point you need to [01:11:33.000 --> 01:11:40.120] find a place to ask the court for a restraining order. [01:11:40.120 --> 01:11:48.640] If you're in the appellate court, then you can file a motion in the appellate court asking [01:11:48.640 --> 01:11:56.520] for a restraining order alleging that this instant action is an act of retaliation because [01:11:56.520 --> 01:12:02.320] you have defeated bad tickets in the past and asked the court for a restraining order [01:12:02.320 --> 01:12:08.240] to prevent the lower court from retaliating against you. [01:12:08.240 --> 01:12:13.160] It doesn't matter if you get the restraining order or not. [01:12:13.160 --> 01:12:17.240] By filing the request, you poison their well. [01:12:17.240 --> 01:12:18.240] Okay. [01:12:18.240 --> 01:12:22.240] And you file it with, again, who do you file that request? [01:12:22.240 --> 01:12:23.240] Court of Appeals. [01:12:23.240 --> 01:12:27.520] What are you, are you appealing in the county court? [01:12:27.520 --> 01:12:30.920] Right now that we're at the next level, we're at the appellate court. [01:12:30.920 --> 01:12:33.360] Oh, then filing with the court of appeals. [01:12:33.360 --> 01:12:35.360] Ask for a read a man, dammit. [01:12:35.360 --> 01:12:38.200] Ask for a read a, oh, I don't even know what a read a man. [01:12:38.200 --> 01:12:40.040] What a man dammit says. [01:12:40.040 --> 01:12:41.040] Mandate. [01:12:41.040 --> 01:12:47.600] Ask the higher court to order the lower court to do something they're required to do. [01:12:47.600 --> 01:12:52.600] And refrain from retaliation is one of the things that they're required to do. [01:12:52.600 --> 01:12:58.720] The likelihood that the appellate court will give you your mandamus is somewhere between [01:12:58.720 --> 01:13:02.080] little and none, but you don't care. [01:13:02.080 --> 01:13:03.680] You're setting the record. [01:13:03.680 --> 01:13:04.680] Right. [01:13:04.680 --> 01:13:05.680] You're on the record. [01:13:05.680 --> 01:13:06.680] That's what I figured. [01:13:06.680 --> 01:13:07.680] Okay. [01:13:07.680 --> 01:13:17.680] So, in the same request that you file, okay, what are the different, what you just told [01:13:17.680 --> 01:13:24.880] me, I'm losing it, but what are the two or three things that you just told me to ask [01:13:24.880 --> 01:13:28.040] of the appellate court? [01:13:28.040 --> 01:13:33.800] Number one, lay off, lower court's got to lay off. [01:13:33.800 --> 01:13:36.960] Number two, what was the second thing? [01:13:36.960 --> 01:13:39.920] There wasn't a second thing. [01:13:39.920 --> 01:13:40.920] That was the only thing. [01:13:40.920 --> 01:13:41.920] Just one. [01:13:41.920 --> 01:13:42.920] Okay. [01:13:42.920 --> 01:13:43.920] The one thing. [01:13:43.920 --> 01:13:44.920] Yeah. [01:13:44.920 --> 01:13:47.920] I was waiting to see if you came up with a number two. [01:13:47.920 --> 01:13:48.920] Yeah. [01:13:48.920 --> 01:13:52.320] You said earlier that you were losing it. [01:13:52.320 --> 01:13:53.320] Yeah. [01:13:53.320 --> 01:13:55.320] I think you're right. [01:13:55.320 --> 01:13:56.320] Yeah. [01:13:56.320 --> 01:13:57.320] Yeah. [01:13:57.320 --> 01:13:58.320] Yeah. [01:13:58.320 --> 01:13:59.320] Yeah. [01:13:59.320 --> 01:14:02.320] Only thing you're asking for is you indicate that you have reason to believe that this [01:14:02.320 --> 01:14:10.880] ticket was retaliatory based on your defeating other tickets and asked the court of appeals [01:14:10.880 --> 01:14:18.240] to order the trial court and the police not to commit any further acts of retaliation. [01:14:18.240 --> 01:14:21.720] And they're going to say, no, we can't do that, blah, blah, blah. [01:14:21.720 --> 01:14:22.720] You don't care. [01:14:22.720 --> 01:14:27.480] But what you've done is put on the record your concern and belief that you have been [01:14:27.480 --> 01:14:29.160] retaliated against. [01:14:29.160 --> 01:14:30.640] You poisoned the rail. [01:14:30.640 --> 01:14:31.640] Right. [01:14:31.640 --> 01:14:32.640] Right. [01:14:32.640 --> 01:14:33.640] I got you. [01:14:33.640 --> 01:14:39.320] And supposing, is this a good time with this paper that you just told me to write to the [01:14:39.320 --> 01:14:44.640] appellate court to stop the retaliation, is this a good time to mention, let's see, I [01:14:44.640 --> 01:14:51.720] lost it again, is this, see, medical is my saying, legal, forget it. [01:14:51.720 --> 01:14:57.240] Is this a good time to claim conspiracy between the cop and the judge? [01:14:57.240 --> 01:14:59.320] And I told you, I can prove that. [01:14:59.320 --> 01:15:00.320] You know, reason. [01:15:00.320 --> 01:15:03.560] Absolutely, if you can prove it. [01:15:03.560 --> 01:15:12.440] Not necessarily conspiracy, conspiracy is a word that's dramatically overused. [01:15:12.440 --> 01:15:13.440] Try collusion. [01:15:13.440 --> 01:15:14.440] Collusion. [01:15:14.440 --> 01:15:15.440] All right. [01:15:15.440 --> 01:15:16.440] Collusion. [01:15:16.440 --> 01:15:18.160] And I know there was collusion. [01:15:18.160 --> 01:15:23.640] If you ever want to hear about it, I'll tell you, but just trust me, I can bring a good [01:15:23.640 --> 01:15:29.880] case of that and let you once said that collusion or conspiracy by its very nature is hidden [01:15:29.880 --> 01:15:37.480] so you don't actually have to have A through Z, you set up the situation and to a reasonable [01:15:37.480 --> 01:15:41.240] person they say, yeah, I guess that could be collusion there, it certainly looks that [01:15:41.240 --> 01:15:44.160] way and so on and so forth. [01:15:44.160 --> 01:15:45.240] Okay. [01:15:45.240 --> 01:15:50.280] You mentioned your advice, okay, so that's your advice to stop them before they start. [01:15:50.280 --> 01:15:51.280] All right. [01:15:51.280 --> 01:15:54.280] Seize you at your liberty. [01:15:54.280 --> 01:15:59.840] You mentioned that in Texas that you know of, is that the same as it is in New York? [01:15:59.840 --> 01:16:00.840] Yes. [01:16:00.840 --> 01:16:12.320] When an officer turns his lights on behind you, what do you believe would happen if you [01:16:12.320 --> 01:16:13.880] did not stop? [01:16:13.880 --> 01:16:18.920] Well, first of all, they chase me and secondly, they probably start shooting at me. [01:16:18.920 --> 01:16:19.920] Okay. [01:16:19.920 --> 01:16:24.240] So you are effectively seized at your liberty. [01:16:24.240 --> 01:16:30.920] You must stop, you don't have an option that not a reasonable viable option. [01:16:30.920 --> 01:16:36.840] So you are arrested in your freedom of movement. [01:16:36.840 --> 01:16:42.120] Now they can say you're not arrested if they want to, but you have been arrested in your [01:16:42.120 --> 01:16:43.120] freedom of movement. [01:16:43.120 --> 01:16:50.720] You could not object even if you believed it was improper because they're prominently [01:16:50.720 --> 01:16:55.240] displaying deadly weapons, so you have been seized at your liberty. [01:16:55.240 --> 01:17:00.280] Hang on, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.280 --> 01:17:05.600] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.600 --> 01:17:09.280] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [01:17:09.280 --> 01:17:13.440] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:17:13.440 --> 01:17:14.720] can win two. 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[01:18:29.280 --> 01:18:31.480] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.480 --> 01:18:37.840] Now, go to logosradio.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.840 --> 01:18:43.520] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.520 --> 01:18:44.520] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.520 --> 01:18:45.520] No. [01:18:45.520 --> 01:18:47.360] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.360 --> 01:18:48.360] No. [01:18:48.360 --> 01:18:49.360] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.360 --> 01:18:50.360] No. [01:18:50.360 --> 01:18:51.360] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.360 --> 01:18:52.360] Wow. [01:18:52.360 --> 01:18:56.000] Giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:56.000 --> 01:18:57.000] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.000 --> 01:18:58.520] We are logos. [01:18:58.520 --> 01:19:00.520] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.520 --> 01:19:13.320] This is the Logos La Pogos Radio Network. [01:19:13.320 --> 01:19:25.320] Oh, come on. [01:19:25.320 --> 01:19:42.640] Okay. [01:19:42.640 --> 01:19:43.640] We are back. [01:19:43.640 --> 01:19:44.640] Randy Kelton. [01:19:44.640 --> 01:19:52.440] Brett Fountain moved our radio on this Friday, the ninth day of August, 2019, and we're talking [01:19:52.440 --> 01:19:58.080] to Ken and, I mean, John in New York, we talked to Ken earlier. [01:19:58.080 --> 01:19:59.720] Okay, John. [01:19:59.720 --> 01:20:00.720] Yep. [01:20:00.720 --> 01:20:01.720] What else? [01:20:01.720 --> 01:20:04.120] Are you pretty well caught up? [01:20:04.120 --> 01:20:06.480] We're pretty well caught up. [01:20:06.480 --> 01:20:08.160] So it's the same in New York. [01:20:08.160 --> 01:20:10.120] Now, how can I use that? [01:20:10.120 --> 01:20:13.280] Well, how is that effective for me? [01:20:13.280 --> 01:20:14.800] What do I need to see? [01:20:14.800 --> 01:20:21.320] What's the name of the section or the name of the law do I look under to find all that [01:20:21.320 --> 01:20:23.640] being seized at your liberty? [01:20:23.640 --> 01:20:28.000] And you are being detained in a manner of speaking, and they'll say, oh, no, am I free [01:20:28.000 --> 01:20:29.000] to go, officer? [01:20:29.000 --> 01:20:30.520] No, you're not free to go. [01:20:30.520 --> 01:20:31.520] Well, am I under arrest? [01:20:31.520 --> 01:20:33.000] Well, no, I'm not under arrest. [01:20:33.000 --> 01:20:35.560] Well, if I'm not free to go, I'm under arrest. [01:20:35.560 --> 01:20:36.560] Okay. [01:20:36.560 --> 01:20:37.560] Okay. [01:20:37.560 --> 01:20:45.040] This is a fine distinction, Terry V. Ohio. [01:20:45.040 --> 01:20:52.920] Terry V. Ohio defines what's called a terry stop, an investigatory stop. [01:20:52.920 --> 01:20:58.080] But I don't care what they call it. [01:20:58.080 --> 01:21:06.080] If my freedom of movement movement has been arrested, I am under arrest, and while they [01:21:06.080 --> 01:21:12.040] may make this fine distinction, I'm being held at my liberty. [01:21:12.040 --> 01:21:16.400] If it's improper, it doesn't matter what they call it. [01:21:16.400 --> 01:21:19.720] Travis Ant got $22,000 a minute. [01:21:19.720 --> 01:21:20.720] What? [01:21:20.720 --> 01:21:23.840] And I'm going to call it false arrest. [01:21:23.840 --> 01:21:30.320] I don't care what they, and let them argue in court that it's not false arrest. [01:21:30.320 --> 01:21:37.840] Well, that happened to me a long time ago, the same time that I had the judge thrown [01:21:37.840 --> 01:21:38.840] out. [01:21:38.840 --> 01:21:39.840] About the same time. [01:21:39.840 --> 01:21:44.280] I was fired every time I went through this one town, but the police would stop me for [01:21:44.280 --> 01:21:45.720] no reason at all. [01:21:45.720 --> 01:21:48.840] And they stopped me three, four, or five times. [01:21:48.840 --> 01:21:52.760] And I mean maybe four or five times, and they had no probable cause. [01:21:52.760 --> 01:21:55.960] So, finally, I'm getting sick of it. [01:21:55.960 --> 01:22:00.640] And I asked one of the officers, I said, why don't you stop me? [01:22:00.640 --> 01:22:02.720] I wasn't breaking any V&T laws. [01:22:02.720 --> 01:22:08.360] Well, it was kind of sort of hard. [01:22:08.360 --> 01:22:15.480] It may be a little hard to see where we were parked back there, but it sort of kind of [01:22:15.480 --> 01:22:21.120] looked like you kind of sort of looked like you kind of sort of crossed the center line. [01:22:21.120 --> 01:22:27.240] Now, I knew where they were parked, and they could see very easily where they were that [01:22:27.240 --> 01:22:29.520] I had not crossed the center line. [01:22:29.520 --> 01:22:36.120] See, they made up their little reasonable suspicion or their probable cause, whichever [01:22:36.120 --> 01:22:37.640] you want to call it. [01:22:37.640 --> 01:22:38.640] They made it up. [01:22:38.640 --> 01:22:39.640] So you know what I did? [01:22:39.640 --> 01:22:43.120] I got sick and tired of being stopped all the time, illegally. [01:22:43.120 --> 01:22:50.440] So I went to the local assemblyman, and I had him go in and explain what they were doing. [01:22:50.440 --> 01:22:53.920] Might be a little too strict. [01:22:53.920 --> 01:23:00.120] And oh, they said, well, John, we just stopped him the other day doing 40 and a 30, and he [01:23:00.120 --> 01:23:04.920] said he was transporting a drunk, and we let him go. [01:23:04.920 --> 01:23:06.960] We're not tough. [01:23:06.960 --> 01:23:09.560] And I said to the assemblyman, you know what? [01:23:09.560 --> 01:23:11.160] Now I'm in trouble. [01:23:11.160 --> 01:23:14.840] I said, that never happened. [01:23:14.840 --> 01:23:17.120] You've embarrassed them. [01:23:17.120 --> 01:23:18.960] This guy was impeccable. [01:23:18.960 --> 01:23:24.440] He was a politician that had the word honest tattooed on his forehead, and everybody knew [01:23:24.440 --> 01:23:25.440] it. [01:23:25.440 --> 01:23:31.040] So when he walked in somewhere, a lot of dignity went with him, and he must have really put [01:23:31.040 --> 01:23:35.800] the embarrassment with their fingers caught in the cookie jar. [01:23:35.800 --> 01:23:40.240] So that's what I did about, you know, even though I didn't know anything about the law, [01:23:40.240 --> 01:23:43.480] I knew a little bit of what to do, and it worked. [01:23:43.480 --> 01:23:49.440] They left me alone, and they would stop me because I had an old looking car. [01:23:49.440 --> 01:23:52.640] That was the probable cause. [01:23:52.640 --> 01:23:55.440] That was the real reason, because they thought they were going to find something wrong with [01:23:55.440 --> 01:23:56.440] it. [01:23:56.440 --> 01:23:57.440] Easy mark. [01:23:57.440 --> 01:23:58.440] Excellent. [01:23:58.440 --> 01:23:59.440] Yeah. [01:23:59.440 --> 01:24:00.440] Yeah. [01:24:00.440 --> 01:24:06.240] I don't know if that's legal or not, but it's probably not anyway. [01:24:06.240 --> 01:24:14.480] Well, it's as legal as, you know, we have problems, especially in the South, that people [01:24:14.480 --> 01:24:23.120] actually get in their cars and drive around while they are black, if you can believe that. [01:24:23.120 --> 01:24:24.120] Against the law? [01:24:24.120 --> 01:24:25.120] Wow. [01:24:25.120 --> 01:24:26.120] Yeah. [01:24:26.120 --> 01:24:29.080] You don't want to be driving while black? [01:24:29.080 --> 01:24:30.960] Yeah, or poor? [01:24:30.960 --> 01:24:38.840] I feel bad for the black people that get that done to them, because I can understand what [01:24:38.840 --> 01:24:42.240] it's like, because I've had it done to me for other reasons. [01:24:42.240 --> 01:24:45.160] No, I can't understand what it's like. [01:24:45.160 --> 01:24:53.960] I was just watching a program yesterday where they sent a black guy into a really upscale [01:24:53.960 --> 01:25:05.560] shop in New York, and they had set up this employee there to discriminate against him, [01:25:05.560 --> 01:25:08.440] and it was really disturbing. [01:25:08.440 --> 01:25:09.440] Yeah. [01:25:09.440 --> 01:25:14.560] I watched this and realized, you know, I don't know what that's like. [01:25:14.560 --> 01:25:20.000] We, for the most part, have never had that done to us. [01:25:20.000 --> 01:25:26.960] Well, I'd say something about crypto now. [01:25:26.960 --> 01:25:33.000] Maybe you'll disagree with me, but I think crypto is there, and there are many reasons [01:25:33.000 --> 01:25:39.600] why crypto is being developed, and you said that crypto will make the banks very nervous, [01:25:39.600 --> 01:25:42.480] because the banks aren't going to be needed anymore. [01:25:42.480 --> 01:25:49.920] Well, I think that crypto is another way of getting everybody on the bandwagon, just [01:25:49.920 --> 01:25:54.720] like 1929 crash, the Depression. [01:25:54.720 --> 01:26:00.600] When we were in grammar school, we were taught that the 29 crash was caused by people buying [01:26:00.600 --> 01:26:04.600] foolishly on the margin, which is true. [01:26:04.600 --> 01:26:05.600] But what the history... [01:26:05.600 --> 01:26:06.600] No, it's not. [01:26:06.600 --> 01:26:10.600] It was caused by naked short selling. [01:26:10.600 --> 01:26:12.600] Well, all right. [01:26:12.600 --> 01:26:13.800] Well, let me finish. [01:26:13.800 --> 01:26:15.480] That's what we were taught. [01:26:15.480 --> 01:26:22.320] Well, what they forgot to include deliberately was the fact that they were encouraging people [01:26:22.320 --> 01:26:27.560] to buy on the margin so that they could crash the market. [01:26:27.560 --> 01:26:30.520] When you buy $100,000, which was the stock... [01:26:30.520 --> 01:26:32.200] Yeah, you're right. [01:26:32.200 --> 01:26:42.200] They created a critical condition, just like the boom from 2000 to 2007. [01:26:42.200 --> 01:26:46.920] If you could stand up and breathe, they would give you a mortgage, so they gave everybody [01:26:46.920 --> 01:26:51.200] all these mortgages, and they're paying in on these mortgages, and then they crash them [01:26:51.200 --> 01:26:52.200] all. [01:26:52.200 --> 01:26:57.240] They did the same thing in 1929, exact same thing. [01:26:57.240 --> 01:27:02.600] So they repossessed everybody's property and sold it back to the grandkids. [01:27:02.600 --> 01:27:04.680] That's been going on since we've kept records. [01:27:04.680 --> 01:27:07.800] We've been discussing that a long time ago, yeah. [01:27:07.800 --> 01:27:10.240] And you mentioned it tonight. [01:27:10.240 --> 01:27:18.200] With digital banks or with digital exchanges, the banks won't have this kind of control [01:27:18.200 --> 01:27:20.480] anymore. [01:27:20.480 --> 01:27:21.920] There are a group of people... [01:27:21.920 --> 01:27:24.720] The banks were never really the problem. [01:27:24.720 --> 01:27:31.880] There are a group of people behind the banks that have always been there in the background. [01:27:31.880 --> 01:27:39.440] They're the ones that are at greatest risk here because the whole system has changed. [01:27:39.440 --> 01:27:47.160] We have been on government-controlled monetary systems as long as there have been governments. [01:27:47.160 --> 01:27:49.880] Yeah, that's right. [01:27:49.880 --> 01:27:54.800] That's going away with the cryptocurrency, government control. [01:27:54.800 --> 01:28:02.440] It all goes up into the space, and the space is not connected to the ground. [01:28:02.440 --> 01:28:09.880] The only way government can get control of the space is to have all of the governments [01:28:09.880 --> 01:28:14.600] agree to control the space, but you're not going to get Iceland to agree to control the [01:28:14.600 --> 01:28:20.760] space, or Finland, or the Netherlands, or a number of countries around the world whose [01:28:20.760 --> 01:28:27.960] primary source of income at this time is the space. [01:28:27.960 --> 01:28:34.040] You're not going to get everybody to agree, and if one country keeps the space open, everybody [01:28:34.040 --> 01:28:37.120] can get to the space. [01:28:37.120 --> 01:28:39.120] That's the problem they have. [01:28:39.120 --> 01:28:40.760] It's always been the problem with the Internet. [01:28:40.760 --> 01:28:43.880] The Internet is like something alive. [01:28:43.880 --> 01:28:46.240] Nobody really owns it. [01:28:46.240 --> 01:28:56.800] It is essentially a network of 1-800 lines owned by hundreds and millions of people. [01:28:56.800 --> 01:28:58.720] They're all connected together. [01:28:58.720 --> 01:29:00.080] They're all connected together. [01:29:00.080 --> 01:29:06.880] You can go in, the Pentagon threatened to pull their hub when they first created the Internet [01:29:06.880 --> 01:29:13.560] because these contractors had leased trunk lines around the Internet, and they weren't [01:29:13.560 --> 01:29:17.520] going through, I mean, around the Pentagon and weren't going through their hub. [01:29:17.520 --> 01:29:22.040] They said, if you guys don't come through our hub, we're going to pull our hub. [01:29:22.040 --> 01:29:23.880] They said, we'll care. [01:29:23.880 --> 01:29:26.360] We'll just ride around it. [01:29:26.360 --> 01:29:28.800] The United States could disconnect from the Internet. [01:29:28.800 --> 01:29:31.360] The Internet just ride around it. [01:29:31.360 --> 01:29:33.000] Any country can disconnect. [01:29:33.000 --> 01:29:37.360] We will ride around and keep going, so nobody can control it at this point. [01:29:37.360 --> 01:29:41.160] Well, here, I've got a question, and then I'll let you have a minute. [01:29:41.160 --> 01:29:42.160] Hang on. [01:29:42.160 --> 01:29:43.160] We're about to go to break. [01:29:43.160 --> 01:29:44.160] Let's see. [01:29:44.160 --> 01:29:46.160] We've only got one segment. [01:29:46.160 --> 01:29:47.880] No, we've got two segments left. [01:29:47.880 --> 01:29:48.880] Okay. [01:29:48.880 --> 01:29:51.360] I'll let you ask one more question on the other side. [01:29:51.360 --> 01:29:58.360] Red Hilton, Brett Fountain, Rula Radio, we'll be right back. [01:30:21.360 --> 01:30:26.760] Once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too, so protect [01:30:26.760 --> 01:30:27.760] your rights. [01:30:27.760 --> 01:30:31.480] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.480 --> 01:30:34.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.040 --> 01:30:39.640] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:39.640 --> 01:30:41.360] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.360 --> 01:30:45.320] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.320 --> 01:30:50.760] In China, more than 20 million citizens spend half a billion dollars a year in smoky cyber [01:30:50.760 --> 01:30:55.680] cafes, lost in the virtual world of multiplayer role-playing. [01:30:55.680 --> 01:31:00.360] It's so popular that Beijing is trying to prevent addiction to online gaining by imposing [01:31:00.360 --> 01:31:03.400] limits on how long citizens can play. [01:31:03.400 --> 01:31:07.880] If they play more than three hours straight, their characters' in-game abilities go down. [01:31:07.880 --> 01:31:11.440] To get those abilities back, players must take a five-hour break. [01:31:11.440 --> 01:31:16.600] I'm all for parents doing this because no kid should waste his life in virtual combat, [01:31:16.600 --> 01:31:21.880] but for the government to monitor and control people's use of their own computers is just [01:31:21.880 --> 01:31:22.880] wrong. [01:31:22.880 --> 01:31:31.280] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.280 --> 01:31:36.640] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.640 --> 01:31:38.960] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.960 --> 01:31:43.720] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.720 --> 01:31:47.720] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.720 --> 01:31:49.160] first responders have died. [01:31:49.160 --> 01:31:52.840] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correctional [01:31:52.840 --> 01:31:57.120] officer, I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans, and we [01:31:57.120 --> 01:31:58.280] deserve the truth. [01:31:58.280 --> 01:32:01.280] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.280 --> 01:32:05.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Center. [01:32:05.680 --> 01:32:09.480] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [01:32:09.480 --> 01:32:13.200] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our home rights. [01:32:13.200 --> 01:32:16.600] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.600 --> 01:32:20.640] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.640 --> 01:32:24.520] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.520 --> 01:32:26.200] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.200 --> 01:32:29.880] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:29.880 --> 01:32:33.640] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.640 --> 01:32:36.040] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.040 --> 01:32:40.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:32:40.000 --> 01:32:43.320] ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you will receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.320 --> 01:32:47.080] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original [01:32:47.080 --> 01:32:51.440] 2009 seminar. Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn [01:32:51.440 --> 01:32:55.400] how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.400 --> 01:33:21.400] For your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:21.400 --> 01:33:45.920] So thank you so much for watching, and see you next time! [01:33:51.400 --> 01:34:06.520] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Pouton with my radio, and we're talking to John in [01:34:06.520 --> 01:34:07.520] New York. [01:34:07.520 --> 01:34:09.320] One more question, John. [01:34:09.320 --> 01:34:10.320] Yep. [01:34:10.320 --> 01:34:11.320] Okay. [01:34:11.320 --> 01:34:16.960] The chain of command, the chain of progression, going up the ladder, I take it we can do the [01:34:16.960 --> 01:34:23.240] same, we can go with the commission and have them do what they're going to do, and also... [01:34:23.240 --> 01:34:26.960] Wait a minute, wait a minute, you started in the middle of something. [01:34:26.960 --> 01:34:27.960] Okay. [01:34:27.960 --> 01:34:35.400] I take it that with the seat belt, complaining about the judge to the commission on judicial [01:34:35.400 --> 01:34:43.000] conduct can be done at the same time as going to a magistrate and charging the judge with [01:34:43.000 --> 01:34:44.480] certain crimes. [01:34:44.480 --> 01:34:51.440] Yes, the criminal accusation is totally separate from everything else, so it doesn't have anything [01:34:51.440 --> 01:34:52.440] to do with it. [01:34:52.440 --> 01:34:54.440] You can do that at any time. [01:34:54.440 --> 01:34:55.440] Okay. [01:34:55.440 --> 01:35:01.440] Now, then the chain of command goes like this, just make sure I get it right. [01:35:01.440 --> 01:35:04.760] We went from the village court, guilty. [01:35:04.760 --> 01:35:09.240] We went to the county court to appeal it, guilty. [01:35:09.240 --> 01:35:18.800] Then now we're going to the appellate court and waiting for their deciding vote. [01:35:18.800 --> 01:35:25.000] When they say, still guilty, then you go to the... [01:35:25.000 --> 01:35:26.000] Supreme. [01:35:26.000 --> 01:35:27.240] They go to... [01:35:27.240 --> 01:35:28.240] That's right. [01:35:28.240 --> 01:35:34.760] Whatever the highest court is, Supreme Court in most every state is the highest court except [01:35:34.760 --> 01:35:35.760] New York. [01:35:35.760 --> 01:35:38.760] It's the lower court. [01:35:38.760 --> 01:35:42.880] What is the highest court in New York? [01:35:42.880 --> 01:35:44.520] What's the highest... [01:35:44.520 --> 01:35:45.520] I don't even know what the... [01:35:45.520 --> 01:35:48.440] I thought the Supreme Court was the highest in New York. [01:35:48.440 --> 01:35:52.760] Now, Supreme Court is like a county court. [01:35:52.760 --> 01:35:56.120] The Supreme Court in New York is a lower court. [01:35:56.120 --> 01:35:57.120] Okay. [01:35:57.120 --> 01:35:59.760] Then there's one beyond it and I don't know the name of it. [01:35:59.760 --> 01:36:01.760] I probably do, but I don't know... [01:36:01.760 --> 01:36:02.760] I can't answer your question. [01:36:02.760 --> 01:36:03.760] Yeah. [01:36:03.760 --> 01:36:04.760] Okay. [01:36:04.760 --> 01:36:08.280] Well, you can find out easy enough where to appeal from the court of appeals. [01:36:08.280 --> 01:36:14.840] Then after that, after the highest court, it would be the... [01:36:14.840 --> 01:36:19.360] What do you call him in Albany, the attorney general? [01:36:19.360 --> 01:36:23.240] No, no, attorney general don't have anything to do with it. [01:36:23.240 --> 01:36:25.800] Oh, so you don't go to the attorney general? [01:36:25.800 --> 01:36:28.560] No, the attorney general is the state's lawyer. [01:36:28.560 --> 01:36:29.560] Right. [01:36:29.560 --> 01:36:30.560] I know. [01:36:30.560 --> 01:36:31.560] I know. [01:36:31.560 --> 01:36:33.520] But you don't file a complaint with the attorney general? [01:36:33.520 --> 01:36:37.520] No, he's part of the executive branch, not the judicial. [01:36:37.520 --> 01:36:38.520] Oh. [01:36:38.520 --> 01:36:39.520] You don't. [01:36:39.520 --> 01:36:40.520] No, wait a minute. [01:36:40.520 --> 01:36:41.520] You're mixing things up. [01:36:41.520 --> 01:36:45.320] You don't file an appeal with the attorney general. [01:36:45.320 --> 01:36:47.520] You can file complaints with him. [01:36:47.520 --> 01:36:48.520] Oh, okay. [01:36:48.520 --> 01:36:49.520] That's what I mean. [01:36:49.520 --> 01:36:50.520] Okay. [01:36:50.520 --> 01:36:51.520] Filing complaints. [01:36:51.520 --> 01:36:52.520] I didn't say that. [01:36:52.520 --> 01:36:53.520] Okay. [01:36:53.520 --> 01:36:57.960] So then you go to the attorney general and after that, it's the special agent in charge [01:36:57.960 --> 01:36:59.200] of the FBI. [01:36:59.200 --> 01:37:00.200] Yes. [01:37:00.200 --> 01:37:03.240] And you file charges with them. [01:37:03.240 --> 01:37:04.240] Okay. [01:37:04.240 --> 01:37:05.240] Got it. [01:37:05.240 --> 01:37:06.240] Okay. [01:37:06.240 --> 01:37:14.760] So with that one, then you do what we had a caller is doing the other day was great. [01:37:14.760 --> 01:37:21.560] See, when you file it with the special agent in charge of the FBI and he doesn't act and [01:37:21.560 --> 01:37:28.400] you file against him with the prosecuting it with the U.S. attorney and the U.S. attorney [01:37:28.400 --> 01:37:35.160] doesn't act, then you file against the U.S. attorney with the grand jury. [01:37:35.160 --> 01:37:43.920] And you send your complaint to the grand jury addressed to the U.S. attorney's office. [01:37:43.920 --> 01:37:48.120] You send it registered restricted. [01:37:48.120 --> 01:37:54.160] That's so that the foreman would have to sign for it because he's the one that's named. [01:37:54.160 --> 01:38:04.560] And then you insure it for 500 bucks cost like $5 that that was so cool. [01:38:04.560 --> 01:38:10.120] When you don't hear back, you put in a cover letter for the foreman and ask him to initial [01:38:10.120 --> 01:38:11.120] it. [01:38:11.120 --> 01:38:17.520] Don't sign it because the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with his name on it. [01:38:17.520 --> 01:38:19.880] And you want to make sure he actually got this. [01:38:19.880 --> 01:38:26.840] So please initial it this letter and return it to me in the included stamp self-addressed [01:38:26.840 --> 01:38:27.840] envelope. [01:38:27.840 --> 01:38:36.080] When you don't get that back, then you file a report, a claim with the postal service [01:38:36.080 --> 01:38:39.520] for your 500 bucks. [01:38:39.520 --> 01:38:42.120] Because it was stolen, it was lost. [01:38:42.120 --> 01:38:48.560] Because it was insured and if you had the foreman had got it, you would have got this [01:38:48.560 --> 01:38:54.080] letter back. [01:38:54.080 --> 01:38:56.080] Is that devious or what? [01:38:56.080 --> 01:38:58.800] Say again, say again. [01:38:58.800 --> 01:39:01.360] I said, is that devious or what? [01:39:01.360 --> 01:39:04.760] You sick the postal inspectors on them. [01:39:04.760 --> 01:39:10.480] Now, 500 bucks for the postal inspectors is nothing. [01:39:10.480 --> 01:39:17.080] The problem is it affects their bond rating because the bond carriers looking for any reason [01:39:17.080 --> 01:39:19.800] they can find to raise the bond rating. [01:39:19.800 --> 01:39:24.840] So when they start having to pay off claims, then they're going to want to raise their [01:39:24.840 --> 01:39:27.120] bond rating. [01:39:27.120 --> 01:39:29.560] That's going to make the post office real unhappy. [01:39:29.560 --> 01:39:30.560] Okay. [01:39:30.560 --> 01:39:34.440] Now, who are they going to be unhappy with? [01:39:34.440 --> 01:39:44.240] The prosecuting attorney for secreting the mail from the foreman, the grand jury. [01:39:44.240 --> 01:39:46.080] I've heard you talk about that before. [01:39:46.080 --> 01:39:47.080] Yeah. [01:39:47.080 --> 01:39:48.080] That makes sense. [01:39:48.080 --> 01:39:51.080] I just use a postcard for the one that comes back. [01:39:51.080 --> 01:39:52.080] Yeah. [01:39:52.080 --> 01:39:58.040] Instead of a letter, just a postcard and he has a little area that he can sign off on. [01:39:58.040 --> 01:39:59.520] It's a little cheaper. [01:39:59.520 --> 01:40:00.520] Yeah. [01:40:00.520 --> 01:40:04.200] Just anything that you would expect to get back because you're not going to get it, whatever [01:40:04.200 --> 01:40:06.200] it is. [01:40:06.200 --> 01:40:09.700] Okay. [01:40:09.700 --> 01:40:10.700] Thank you very much. [01:40:10.700 --> 01:40:11.700] Okay. [01:40:11.700 --> 01:40:12.700] Thank you, John. [01:40:12.700 --> 01:40:16.760] Now, we're going to go to Shane in New York. [01:40:16.760 --> 01:40:26.240] Well, hold on, Shane, Ken called back and he's probably called back to make a comment [01:40:26.240 --> 01:40:28.040] on what we were talking about. [01:40:28.040 --> 01:40:31.440] I've got you on muted, Shane, hang in there a second. [01:40:31.440 --> 01:40:34.440] Ken, you there? [01:40:34.440 --> 01:40:35.440] Yeah. [01:40:35.440 --> 01:40:40.880] Yeah, I hear you now. [01:40:40.880 --> 01:40:45.120] Did you call back to make, to comment on what John was talking about? [01:40:45.120 --> 01:40:50.600] Yeah, I'm pretty sure. [01:40:50.600 --> 01:40:55.600] That's not going to work. [01:40:55.600 --> 01:41:06.200] Okay, Shane, you've got some serious music in your background. [01:41:06.200 --> 01:41:07.200] It's gone. [01:41:07.200 --> 01:41:08.200] Oh, okay. [01:41:08.200 --> 01:41:12.800] I have no idea where that came from. [01:41:12.800 --> 01:41:16.360] Okay, you have two lines up and open on my screen. [01:41:16.360 --> 01:41:19.680] I muted the one that had the music on it. [01:41:19.680 --> 01:41:20.680] Okay. [01:41:20.680 --> 01:41:27.360] Anyway, Ken, did you have a comment based on what John was talking about? [01:41:27.360 --> 01:41:31.360] Yeah, yeah, you're right about the backward system in New York. [01:41:31.360 --> 01:41:34.720] I'm pretty sure that the appellate court is the top one. [01:41:34.720 --> 01:41:35.720] Oh, okay. [01:41:35.720 --> 01:41:37.920] That's all I wanted to say. [01:41:37.920 --> 01:41:38.920] Good night. [01:41:38.920 --> 01:41:40.320] That's for what I kind of suspected. [01:41:40.320 --> 01:41:42.320] Thank you, Ken. [01:41:42.320 --> 01:41:43.320] Okay. [01:41:43.320 --> 01:41:45.680] There we go, Shane. [01:41:45.680 --> 01:41:47.680] Are you ready? [01:41:47.680 --> 01:41:51.120] Hey, what do you have for us today? [01:41:51.120 --> 01:41:52.120] Okay. [01:41:52.120 --> 01:41:57.320] So, I went to court, bankruptcy court on Tuesday. [01:41:57.320 --> 01:41:58.720] Mine was set for 12 o'clock. [01:41:58.720 --> 01:42:02.360] My mom was set for 1.30. [01:42:02.360 --> 01:42:04.160] There was probably about 40 cases going on. [01:42:04.160 --> 01:42:10.880] Of course, I was the last one to be heard, and I didn't get heard until about 1.20. [01:42:10.880 --> 01:42:17.280] And then they finally heard me, and the judge acted really stupid, not stupid, but he acted [01:42:17.280 --> 01:42:18.440] like he didn't know what was going on. [01:42:18.440 --> 01:42:21.440] And he says, does anybody know what's going on with the property I thought it was sold [01:42:21.440 --> 01:42:22.440] on July 24th? [01:42:22.440 --> 01:42:24.960] He was acting like he didn't know what was going on. [01:42:24.960 --> 01:42:29.280] And Key Bank didn't say anything, and Michael Chatlin, the first lean-holder from the Federal [01:42:29.280 --> 01:42:34.360] National Mortgage Association, he jumps up, goes, I do your honor. [01:42:34.360 --> 01:42:38.320] That kid right there, her son, he's the one that stopped everything, and he was like acting [01:42:38.320 --> 01:42:41.640] like a little 12-year-old, like I stole something from him. [01:42:41.640 --> 01:42:46.160] And he was really upset with me, and the judge said, okay, calm down. [01:42:46.160 --> 01:42:50.000] And basically, that stopped the sale of the property, and he was explaining to the judge, [01:42:50.000 --> 01:42:53.440] and he was talking really fast, so the judge said, slow down. [01:42:53.440 --> 01:42:58.120] So he was really excited about the sale not taking place. [01:42:58.120 --> 01:43:05.880] And so, I got my extensions for 14 days, asked for 45, got 14 days to get the forms in, and [01:43:05.880 --> 01:43:13.240] they pulled the stay, released the property, back to Key Bank, and then they're ready to [01:43:13.240 --> 01:43:14.240] sell the property. [01:43:14.240 --> 01:43:20.120] And I figured where I found the bankruptcy to stop it, because I had a quick claim on it. [01:43:20.120 --> 01:43:25.320] Wait, I couldn't understand the last thing you said. [01:43:25.320 --> 01:43:26.320] The quick claim. [01:43:26.320 --> 01:43:29.880] I have a quick claim on the property, and my B file on the bankruptcy stopped to sell [01:43:29.880 --> 01:43:30.880] the property. [01:43:30.880 --> 01:43:31.880] Okay. [01:43:31.880 --> 01:43:38.880] So, I had to go to court on Tuesday, and I did get that extension granted, and I heard [01:43:38.880 --> 01:43:40.880] the music in the background. [01:43:40.880 --> 01:43:47.880] Okay, hang on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we've got a radio. [01:43:47.880 --> 01:43:54.200] I'm not going to give out the call-in number, we're going into our last segment. [01:43:54.200 --> 01:44:00.720] We'll be right back. 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[01:47:07.680 --> 01:47:08.880] Okay, go ahead, Shane. [01:47:08.880 --> 01:47:14.760] You got the sale stopped, and what happens next? [01:47:14.760 --> 01:47:16.400] Let me just back up. [01:47:16.400 --> 01:47:21.880] Sometimes I have a little problem with giving a chronological event or what took place. [01:47:21.880 --> 01:47:26.880] The reason why I was going to bankruptcy court is to get the extension of time to follow [01:47:26.880 --> 01:47:32.720] the proper forms, which is schedules A all the way up to schedule F. I don't have all [01:47:32.720 --> 01:47:36.080] the proper information to do it because this is all last minute, Randy, to stop the sale [01:47:36.080 --> 01:47:37.080] of the profite. [01:47:37.080 --> 01:47:40.480] I didn't really know how the whole thing was going to turn out. [01:47:40.480 --> 01:47:42.000] It stopped the sale of the profite. [01:47:42.000 --> 01:47:43.000] That's the good news. [01:47:43.000 --> 01:47:48.200] But I went in the court on Tuesday because they called me in because I followed that [01:47:48.200 --> 01:47:56.440] motion for extension of the time for 45 days, and I ended up getting 14. [01:47:56.440 --> 01:48:00.840] The same motion was followed exactly one year ago from my mom, and my mom was never even [01:48:00.840 --> 01:48:01.840] called in the court. [01:48:01.840 --> 01:48:07.760] She got the full maximum of 45 days, so they want to get me out of the way so they can [01:48:07.760 --> 01:48:08.760] sell the property. [01:48:08.760 --> 01:48:13.560] But right now, it's a tentative stop, not a complete stop. [01:48:13.560 --> 01:48:22.840] Have you questioned these guys about any derivative sales on the mortgage? [01:48:22.840 --> 01:48:25.000] Nothing. [01:48:25.000 --> 01:48:27.240] Not yet. [01:48:27.240 --> 01:48:31.800] Because this sounds like they have derivative sales on the mortgage, and they absolutely [01:48:31.800 --> 01:48:41.800] have to have a foreclosure sale so that their insurance on these derivative sales pays off, [01:48:41.800 --> 01:48:45.080] and that's all fraud. [01:48:45.080 --> 01:48:47.080] You should ask questions about that. [01:48:47.080 --> 01:48:51.080] Well, I was only in there just to get the extension of time. [01:48:51.080 --> 01:48:54.480] He didn't want to, you know, there were some questions, and I don't want to get into all [01:48:54.480 --> 01:48:57.920] the details, but basically I was only there to get the extension of time, to get the proper [01:48:57.920 --> 01:48:58.920] forms in. [01:48:58.920 --> 01:49:03.760] And what I wanted to tell you is the assistant U.S. attorney kind of like, whoa, what are [01:49:03.760 --> 01:49:04.760] you doing here? [01:49:04.760 --> 01:49:07.000] Why are you following the case court? [01:49:07.000 --> 01:49:11.240] And then the trustee, the head trustee said, oh, I'm not totally unaware of this case. [01:49:11.240 --> 01:49:12.240] I don't know what's going on. [01:49:12.240 --> 01:49:16.520] And he just called a motion to dismiss last week, because all the forms weren't done [01:49:16.520 --> 01:49:20.480] within 14 days, and I was going in there for getting extension of time, and everybody [01:49:20.480 --> 01:49:21.480] acted stupid. [01:49:21.480 --> 01:49:24.840] They didn't know what this was all about. [01:49:24.840 --> 01:49:27.400] It was quite comical. [01:49:27.400 --> 01:49:34.720] But what I wanted to tell you, as of today, Friday, what is this, August the 9th now? [01:49:34.720 --> 01:49:35.720] Yes. [01:49:35.720 --> 01:49:37.200] There's no proof of claim file. [01:49:37.200 --> 01:49:43.040] And generally they file those within a couple of weeks. [01:49:43.040 --> 01:49:46.360] And I filed the bankruptcy way back in July of 2019. [01:49:46.360 --> 01:49:48.480] Nobody's filed any type of proof of claims. [01:49:48.480 --> 01:49:52.840] And I'm not sure how that's going to take place, but as soon as they do that, I already [01:49:52.840 --> 01:49:58.600] have my adversary complaint ready to go, and I have my objections already, pretty much [01:49:58.600 --> 01:49:59.600] already done. [01:49:59.600 --> 01:50:04.680] But I can't do anything until they file their proof of claim. [01:50:04.680 --> 01:50:08.000] How long do they have to file a proof of claim? [01:50:08.000 --> 01:50:12.040] September 28, 2019, that is the deadline. [01:50:12.040 --> 01:50:17.800] Oh, so they've got 40 days left? [01:50:17.800 --> 01:50:20.000] Plenty of time. [01:50:20.000 --> 01:50:21.000] Yeah. [01:50:21.000 --> 01:50:22.000] Plenty of time. [01:50:22.000 --> 01:50:29.120] But I just want to let you know that I'm trying to get as much debt as I possibly can to add [01:50:29.120 --> 01:50:34.680] to the schedules, and then I have to follow through with a proper plan. [01:50:34.680 --> 01:50:39.440] And we'll see what happens here in the next couple of weeks, but he only gave me 14 days. [01:50:39.440 --> 01:50:41.280] I didn't really want to argue with the judge. [01:50:41.280 --> 01:50:44.520] He says, well, how about two weeks? [01:50:44.520 --> 01:50:47.640] And I says, well, I'll do the best I can and see what I can do. [01:50:47.640 --> 01:50:52.720] All I was trying to do was buy some time, get some fresh air, and give you some time [01:50:52.720 --> 01:50:56.320] to regroup, because you never know what can happen. [01:50:56.320 --> 01:51:00.520] You know, as well as I know, they can do whatever they want to do. [01:51:00.520 --> 01:51:03.280] But yeah, early stage, I should get 45 days. [01:51:03.280 --> 01:51:06.880] But I wasn't going to argue with the guys, OK, I'll see what I can do. [01:51:06.880 --> 01:51:11.080] And if I need to file another extension, because I don't have certain forms in, I'll do that [01:51:11.080 --> 01:51:12.680] at that time. [01:51:12.680 --> 01:51:20.400] So the one thing I want to tell you is we filed an adversary proceeding in my mom's bankruptcy [01:51:20.400 --> 01:51:24.040] case going way back in May of 2019. [01:51:24.040 --> 01:51:30.360] And remember, the IRS filed a proof claim last year and have served $250,000. [01:51:30.360 --> 01:51:37.520] And the, it's called, for our priority going to secure debt was way up to some crazy amount [01:51:37.520 --> 01:51:39.720] like $80,000, $90,000. [01:51:39.720 --> 01:51:45.040] And now, as of the hearing on Tuesday, it's dropped all the way down to $2,000. [01:51:45.040 --> 01:51:46.040] Interesting. [01:51:46.040 --> 01:51:51.760] Because of that, because of that adversary proceeding. [01:51:51.760 --> 01:51:58.160] And once they know you're going to fight them, they start, you know, let go, you know, giving [01:51:58.160 --> 01:51:59.160] them away. [01:51:59.160 --> 01:52:04.520] They start getting real numbers instead of just fake numbers, made up stuff. [01:52:04.520 --> 01:52:05.520] Right. [01:52:05.520 --> 01:52:09.840] So what they, they, they, the judge wanted to come back on September 1st and she's trying [01:52:09.840 --> 01:52:14.040] to get my mom's bankruptcy confirmed because she's been making $500 payments for almost [01:52:14.040 --> 01:52:15.040] a year now. [01:52:15.040 --> 01:52:19.520] And he wanted to come back September 1st and the assistant US attorney says, that's not [01:52:19.520 --> 01:52:21.360] going to be enough time, Judge. [01:52:21.360 --> 01:52:22.360] I got to go to the IRS. [01:52:22.360 --> 01:52:23.360] Yeah. [01:52:23.360 --> 01:52:25.800] They have to amend, amend the proof of claim. [01:52:25.800 --> 01:52:31.840] And right, that hearing right there verified that the, their proof of claim was total BS. [01:52:31.840 --> 01:52:40.800] Yeah, then it dropped from 89 to 2, who filed that proof of claim? [01:52:40.800 --> 01:52:46.600] Well, we already know it's not, his name is Douglas Smith, but that's not, that's not [01:52:46.600 --> 01:52:47.600] that's not. [01:52:47.600 --> 01:52:49.600] That's, he doesn't matter if he's using a pseudonym. [01:52:49.600 --> 01:52:50.600] Yeah. [01:52:50.600 --> 01:52:51.600] Yeah. [01:52:51.600 --> 01:52:53.600] That'll work. [01:52:53.600 --> 01:53:01.880] So file, when it's strategic file aggravated perjury against them and fraud. [01:53:01.880 --> 01:53:09.240] So now when they come in with another claim, they can't support it because their claims [01:53:09.240 --> 01:53:10.240] are inconsistent. [01:53:10.240 --> 01:53:13.240] Well, we got to wait for that. [01:53:13.240 --> 01:53:14.240] You're correct. [01:53:14.240 --> 01:53:16.320] And then, and that's supposed to be done by October 1st. [01:53:16.320 --> 01:53:17.320] Okay. [01:53:17.320 --> 01:53:18.320] Go on. [01:53:18.320 --> 01:53:20.080] Well, let me, let me back up. [01:53:20.080 --> 01:53:22.200] You may, you might be sticking your foot in it. [01:53:22.200 --> 01:53:26.560] If you say their claims are inconsistent, they may go back to the 80,000 one. [01:53:26.560 --> 01:53:27.560] Yeah. [01:53:27.560 --> 01:53:33.400] So if it's down to 2000, I'd be inclined to leave alone. [01:53:33.400 --> 01:53:42.120] Randy, last question I had for you is, I noticed that the bankruptcy judge, he acted [01:53:42.120 --> 01:53:43.680] like he didn't know what was going on. [01:53:43.680 --> 01:53:45.520] He's got to know what's going on. [01:53:45.520 --> 01:53:48.760] I mean, he just acted like he's, like this is the first time he's hearing it and he [01:53:48.760 --> 01:53:49.760] made a point of it. [01:53:49.760 --> 01:53:53.280] And he goes, well, yes, you know, as a judge, I'm the last one to find out what's going [01:53:53.280 --> 01:53:54.280] on here. [01:53:54.280 --> 01:53:56.400] So let's find out what's going on today. [01:53:56.400 --> 01:53:58.000] What's going on with Estelle the property? [01:53:58.000 --> 01:53:59.440] He's got to know what's going on. [01:53:59.440 --> 01:54:02.760] I think they just say that to make it look like they don't know what's going on, right? [01:54:02.760 --> 01:54:05.800] Well, it may be, and it also may be that he's busy. [01:54:05.800 --> 01:54:13.200] He's got a lot of cases that he's dealing with and it's hard to keep everything in your [01:54:13.200 --> 01:54:15.200] head. [01:54:15.200 --> 01:54:18.520] Correct. [01:54:18.520 --> 01:54:20.880] That's correct. [01:54:20.880 --> 01:54:28.240] What I was going to say to you is, everybody around the county judge, everybody's been [01:54:28.240 --> 01:54:29.240] really upset. [01:54:29.240 --> 01:54:33.360] They're like, you can see them talking in court after the hearing was done. [01:54:33.360 --> 01:54:39.480] And so I think there's something more, there's something more that I don't know about. [01:54:39.480 --> 01:54:43.200] That's why I ask you to look into derivative sales. [01:54:43.200 --> 01:54:44.200] Okay. [01:54:44.200 --> 01:54:52.600] Now, if they have sold your mortgage eight or 10 times, then they have eight or 10 insurance [01:54:52.600 --> 01:54:55.840] policies against the mortgages. [01:54:55.840 --> 01:55:05.600] When they do the foreclosure sale, all of these insurance policies will pay off. [01:55:05.600 --> 01:55:09.240] And it'll clear all of the mortgages they have sold. [01:55:09.240 --> 01:55:16.920] They sold these things and got 93% of the mortgage on the front end. [01:55:16.920 --> 01:55:21.760] And when it forecloses, the insurance company pays off the mortgages. [01:55:21.760 --> 01:55:24.720] They get to keep that big pot of money. [01:55:24.720 --> 01:55:30.560] If they can't foreclose, they have to give back all this money. [01:55:30.560 --> 01:55:36.360] So your little property is nothing compared to 10 times your property. [01:55:36.360 --> 01:55:37.360] Uh-huh. [01:55:37.360 --> 01:55:38.360] How do we foreclose? [01:55:38.360 --> 01:55:39.360] How do we foreclose that out? [01:55:39.360 --> 01:55:40.360] What do we do? [01:55:40.360 --> 01:55:41.360] File a subpoena? [01:55:41.360 --> 01:55:48.320] I need to look at the documentation to look for clues. [01:55:48.320 --> 01:55:56.040] You need to look to see if the, this would recall a forensic, have you had anybody do [01:55:56.040 --> 01:55:58.680] a forensic audit? [01:55:58.680 --> 01:56:02.200] Just William McCaffrey. [01:56:02.200 --> 01:56:05.200] What did he give you? [01:56:05.200 --> 01:56:11.400] He pretty much said that if the loan is non-accurals, been charged off back in 2013, it's non-collectible. [01:56:11.400 --> 01:56:14.200] I just, I gave you the cliff notes. [01:56:14.200 --> 01:56:22.240] Does, is there any indication there's been so more than once? [01:56:22.240 --> 01:56:28.000] Um, it didn't get into details. [01:56:28.000 --> 01:56:30.080] That's, that's critical. [01:56:30.080 --> 01:56:31.560] That's what you need to know. [01:56:31.560 --> 01:56:32.560] Okay. [01:56:32.560 --> 01:56:41.160] If there's indication of more than one potential holder, right, see all of the holders will [01:56:41.160 --> 01:56:43.080] have the same servicer. [01:56:43.080 --> 01:56:48.160] So the servicer stands before the court as the representative for the holder. [01:56:48.160 --> 01:56:54.320] What the court probably doesn't know is he's likely the representative, representative [01:56:54.320 --> 01:57:01.400] for several holders, right, calling them all holder. [01:57:01.400 --> 01:57:05.360] That makes sense because the first lean holder, Michael Chatwin boy, he's the one that's really, [01:57:05.360 --> 01:57:11.320] you could see he's nervous as, he's really, you could tell he's like, he's like, somebody's [01:57:11.320 --> 01:57:13.040] got a gun to his head or something like that. [01:57:13.040 --> 01:57:14.040] He been, doesn't even care. [01:57:14.040 --> 01:57:17.120] They're standing in the back end trying to sell the property, doing the dirty work for [01:57:17.120 --> 01:57:20.040] the first lean holder, but they can't sell. [01:57:20.040 --> 01:57:24.160] And the first lean holder has been transferred so many times, it's a joke, Randy, even the [01:57:24.160 --> 01:57:33.840] even that almost certainly means that the, that they have sold the note a number of times [01:57:33.840 --> 01:57:39.160] and they have to have a foreclosure. [01:57:39.160 --> 01:57:42.160] You might go through and say, guys, make me a deal. [01:57:42.160 --> 01:57:43.160] Yeah. [01:57:43.160 --> 01:57:44.160] They lost. [01:57:44.160 --> 01:57:45.160] No. [01:57:45.160 --> 01:57:49.200] You might tell them, look, I know you sold this thing a half a dozen times and if you [01:57:49.200 --> 01:57:52.880] can't foreclose on this, you're going to have to pay all that back. [01:57:52.880 --> 01:57:58.960] And if I can find evidence of it, then I get to sue you for fraud. [01:57:58.960 --> 01:58:01.480] So you want me to find that evidence? [01:58:01.480 --> 01:58:02.480] Make me a deal. [01:58:02.480 --> 01:58:07.920] Well, best you can hope for is a deal. [01:58:07.920 --> 01:58:11.080] It sounds like you've got them in a real spot. [01:58:11.080 --> 01:58:15.520] They may pay you off to get you to go away. [01:58:15.520 --> 01:58:18.640] And I hear the music because I want to tell you more, but I want to save it for some other [01:58:18.640 --> 01:58:19.640] time. [01:58:19.640 --> 01:58:20.640] Yeah. [01:58:20.640 --> 01:58:21.880] We are out of time. [01:58:21.880 --> 01:58:28.160] Thank you everyone for listening and we'll be back next Thursday at a regular time and [01:58:28.160 --> 01:58:34.880] make sure to be sure to check out Eddie at eight o'clock on Mondays for his traffic show. [01:58:34.880 --> 01:58:41.000] And it was one of the things I wanted to address, but I forgot what it was. [01:58:41.000 --> 01:58:44.320] Was it fun to raise funds? [01:58:44.320 --> 01:58:47.960] Oh, well, we're out of time. [01:58:47.960 --> 01:58:48.960] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:48.960 --> 01:58:49.960] Good night. [01:58:49.960 --> 01:58:51.960] We'll be right back. [01:58:51.960 --> 01:58:52.960] Bye. [01:58:52.960 --> 01:58:53.960] Bye. [01:58:53.960 --> 01:58:54.960] Bye. [01:58:54.960 --> 01:58:55.960] Bye. [01:58:55.960 --> 01:58:56.960] Bye. [01:58:56.960 --> 01:58:57.960] Bye. [01:58:57.960 --> 01:58:58.960] Bye. [01:58:58.960 --> 01:58:59.960] Bye. [01:58:59.960 --> 01:59:00.960] Bye. [01:59:00.960 --> 01:59:01.960] Bye. [01:59:01.960 --> 01:59:20.960] Bye. [01:59:31.960 --> 01:59:56.280] Bye.