[00:00.000 --> 00:06.720] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.720 --> 00:13.480] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver [00:13.480 --> 00:24.120] $16.45.00, Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63.00, Brent Crude $62.47.00, and Cryptos [00:24.120 --> 00:34.680] and Order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP, Ripple $0.33, Lite [00:34.680 --> 00:42.240] Coin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [00:42.240 --> 00:52.400] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.400 --> 00:57.720] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing [00:57.720 --> 01:04.720] 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.720 --> 01:09.400] And recent news, since the Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing heaven to [01:09.400 --> 01:14.040] Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin [01:14.040 --> 01:18.040] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.040 --> 01:22.240] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:22.240 --> 01:24.680] equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:24.680 --> 01:28.400] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.400 --> 01:32.960] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:32.960 --> 01:33.960] law. [01:33.960 --> 01:37.560] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.560 --> 01:42.040] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.040 --> 01:48.240] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.240 --> 01:54.440] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.440 --> 01:58.920] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:58.920 --> 02:01.760] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.760 --> 02:06.760] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.760 --> 02:10.720] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.720 --> 02:13.440] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.440 --> 02:17.360] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.360 --> 02:22.560] charged with. [02:22.560 --> 02:27.360] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [02:27.360 --> 02:32.280] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.280 --> 02:37.920] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:37.920 --> 02:39.420] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.420 --> 02:43.680] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.680 --> 02:49.960] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:49.960 --> 03:15.960] glow. [03:15.960 --> 03:22.960] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark ever [03:45.960 --> 04:01.960] captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific [04:01.960 --> 04:17.960] Ocean. [04:17.960 --> 04:25.720] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens here with our new co-host, Brett Fountain, [04:25.720 --> 04:33.480] from this, the 15th day of August, 2019. [04:33.480 --> 04:36.600] And things are moving along pretty well. [04:36.600 --> 04:46.160] I have reworked the Rula radio site, we'll have that implemented shortly. [04:46.160 --> 04:49.440] I'm reworking the traffic ticket site now. [04:49.440 --> 04:55.280] I'm going to go ahead and implement the entire site. [04:55.280 --> 05:05.400] So once I get the second half up, it will be a proof of concept. [05:05.400 --> 05:12.160] But once when I do launch it, things are going to get real interesting because the local [05:12.160 --> 05:16.080] yokels are not going to be happy campers. [05:16.080 --> 05:18.960] We will be slamming them big time. [05:18.960 --> 05:28.640] I also have bar grievance.website up so you can go in and create bar grievances. [05:28.640 --> 05:37.200] The primary thing about bar grievance.net, it was the first questionnaire type structure [05:37.200 --> 05:38.760] that I built. [05:38.760 --> 05:44.400] This was when we were first working out these procedures. [05:44.400 --> 05:52.520] And it's still the same way it was because of the nature of bar grievances. [05:52.520 --> 06:04.200] The bar associations, they have in their instructions, they say, do not quote case law, do not quote [06:04.200 --> 06:10.640] bar standards, screw that. [06:10.640 --> 06:12.560] We don't care what they want. [06:12.560 --> 06:19.600] They don't want you not to cite anything so that they're not held liable to anything. [06:19.600 --> 06:30.840] So what I have done is I've broken out the bar standards and the three things I care [06:30.840 --> 06:35.600] about in the model standards. [06:35.600 --> 06:43.000] And I use the model standards because every state except three adopted the American Bar [06:43.000 --> 06:47.480] Association model standards and then they made minor adjustments. [06:47.480 --> 06:52.560] And most of those minor adjustments had to do with some of the more sophisticated things [06:52.560 --> 06:56.120] that are in Chapter 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8. [06:56.120 --> 07:03.320] Those are all about lawyer to lawyer and law firm to lawyer and one law firm to another. [07:03.320 --> 07:11.400] They don't have anything to do with us so I use this as a standard of work in every state. [07:11.400 --> 07:19.960] And what it does is it gives you a way to walk through the standards. [07:19.960 --> 07:25.200] You go in and it's going to ask you if this is an issue between you and your lawyer. [07:25.200 --> 07:32.080] It's an issue between you and another lawyer that didn't have to do with money. [07:32.080 --> 07:38.720] It will break it down into sections so you can find the grievance of their standard that [07:38.720 --> 07:41.400] you want very quickly. [07:41.400 --> 07:49.760] And when you get to that standard, the one that addresses your issue, we don't cite [07:49.760 --> 07:57.200] the standard because each state has numbered there somewhat differently. [07:57.200 --> 08:04.440] We quote the standard where the standard says the lawyer shall not do this that or the other. [08:04.440 --> 08:12.400] We put in this comment box, the lawyer did this as follows colon and then you fill in [08:12.400 --> 08:13.400] the rest. [08:13.400 --> 08:20.640] And once you've got it all filled in, you copy out the entire contents of that box because [08:20.640 --> 08:28.000] the bar associations want you to use their online forms. [08:28.000 --> 08:30.080] That way you don't have a copy. [08:30.080 --> 08:34.800] They don't want you to have a copy so this is why they do this. [08:34.800 --> 08:40.320] You can't download a copy, you can't print this once you have filled it out. [08:40.320 --> 08:42.400] They do that on purpose. [08:42.400 --> 08:54.160] So you take that and you paste it into the appropriate section and then Windows has what's [08:54.160 --> 08:57.440] labeled a snippet tool. [08:57.440 --> 09:02.400] And this snippet tool, you click it, it's called a, I'm sorry, snipping tool. [09:02.400 --> 09:04.640] It comes with Windows. [09:04.640 --> 09:09.600] You click it, it pops up and it'll say new mode, delay, blah, blah, blah. [09:09.600 --> 09:15.920] You click new and all of your screen will fade, will go faded. [09:15.920 --> 09:22.080] Then you select out that portion of the screen you want to make a picture of and save it [09:22.080 --> 09:23.760] as an image. [09:23.760 --> 09:31.880] This way you get to keep a copy of the grievance and if they don't like it, well, tough. [09:31.880 --> 09:32.880] Okay. [09:32.880 --> 09:40.960] But so go have a look at it and you will find out very quickly that while I have some technical [09:40.960 --> 09:50.120] skills, I have no talent, I'm not very good at making things look pretty. [09:50.120 --> 09:57.480] So if you have any suggestions how I can dress up the site and make it easier to maneuver [09:57.480 --> 10:04.040] through, let me know, I want this thing better than what it is, I was doing a lot of sites [10:04.040 --> 10:10.400] at once so I just got some things together so that you guys can start using them. [10:10.400 --> 10:14.520] And I'm hoping you'll start pounding these lawyers. [10:14.520 --> 10:26.200] And one piece of advice about bar grievances, if the lawyer's done a number of things, file [10:26.200 --> 10:32.200] a separate grievance for each individual thing. [10:32.200 --> 10:38.280] And file them at least a few days apart, better if you file one a week. [10:38.280 --> 10:45.880] This keeps them from being able to lump them all together as one grievance. [10:45.880 --> 10:53.680] So if they come with dates separated, then the lawyer has to give notice to his insurance [10:53.680 --> 10:56.880] carrier of each one separately. [10:56.880 --> 11:02.880] And that's going to sting them big time. [11:02.880 --> 11:07.760] And I suspect that, Brett, you're going to have some fun with this. [11:07.760 --> 11:11.040] Oh yes, I certainly do. [11:11.040 --> 11:13.560] I send bar grievances on a regular basis. [11:13.560 --> 11:16.560] I sent one this morning. [11:16.560 --> 11:17.560] Good. [11:17.560 --> 11:28.360] I sent one a couple of days ago and the one for today was basically a repeat of the one [11:28.360 --> 11:34.840] from a couple of days ago except this one had all the same facts and was pointing out [11:34.840 --> 11:42.360] the guilt of the superior, the supervising lawyer of the one who reported a couple of [11:42.360 --> 11:43.360] days ago. [11:43.360 --> 11:47.440] I put the same facts in there and I just pointed it to the superior and now they both [11:47.440 --> 11:51.440] get in trouble for the same violation. [11:51.440 --> 12:00.560] That is a little use of the facts. [12:00.560 --> 12:04.800] So is the superior the head of the law firm? [12:04.800 --> 12:11.640] Oh, in this case, the violator was an assistant county attorney. [12:11.640 --> 12:18.320] So because the county attorney is the one who I consider responsible, so the respondee [12:18.320 --> 12:20.320] at superior. [12:20.320 --> 12:26.280] And so the county attorney is the one who got today's complaint, fired that off before [12:26.280 --> 12:27.560] I went to work this morning. [12:27.560 --> 12:33.960] A couple of days ago was the same facts stated, but it was for the one who the county attorney [12:33.960 --> 12:36.760] hired to assist her. [12:36.760 --> 12:38.760] Good. [12:38.760 --> 12:46.280] My point was make real good use of the facts, use them on everybody. [12:46.280 --> 12:55.280] So if we're going to take this system back, we need to take them to task. [12:55.280 --> 13:02.200] And the next thing, once I get all of these up and working, I have contacted some folks [13:02.200 --> 13:06.840] who are doing these first amendment audits. [13:06.840 --> 13:12.720] And that was kind of interesting, a friend of mine sent me a spreadsheet with a thousand [13:12.720 --> 13:16.560] of them on it and had about 200 emails. [13:16.560 --> 13:25.320] So I sent an email blast all of these guys and got a number of responses and about two [13:25.320 --> 13:31.520] thirds of the ones who responded already knew who we were. [13:31.520 --> 13:37.280] So I will be having some of them on the show. [13:37.280 --> 13:44.240] And these guys are, they're activists, they're out there hammering these police. [13:44.240 --> 13:52.040] And we want to give them some tools, essentially to give them more people to hammer. [13:52.040 --> 14:00.520] Right now, the only ones that are hammering the point of spear, what we want to get them [14:00.520 --> 14:11.080] in a position to do is they go to do the audit and they poke this there. [14:11.080 --> 14:18.760] Their purpose is not just to get this officer jumping up and down and acting ignorant. [14:18.760 --> 14:25.480] Their purpose is to get a shot at their boss and the boss's boss and his boss all the way [14:25.480 --> 14:35.160] up to essentially the Chief Justice of the State Supreme and our process does that. [14:35.160 --> 14:43.320] I think once we start doing some heavy trading on the higher ups, when they start getting [14:43.320 --> 14:51.400] one criminal charge after another filed with a grand jury against them, each time a different [14:51.400 --> 14:53.520] cop does something. [14:53.520 --> 14:58.960] The cop gets it, his boss gets it, and the mayor gets it. [14:58.960 --> 15:02.680] So the mayor gets it over and over and over. [15:02.680 --> 15:08.440] After a while, a grand jury looking at these, what are the odds that you're going to have [15:08.440 --> 15:15.040] somebody on the grand jury that really doesn't like the mayor? [15:15.040 --> 15:26.800] Well, in a majority of the time, you're not going to get an indictment, but the key word [15:26.800 --> 15:30.920] there is majority. [15:30.920 --> 15:35.840] It's always a crap chute. [15:35.840 --> 15:42.760] So if we start putting their jobs in jeopardy every other day with a different complaint, [15:42.760 --> 15:44.920] we'll start seeing some changes. [15:44.920 --> 15:50.840] The call boards are turned about on and they're filling up right away. [15:50.840 --> 15:52.440] Let's go to the call boards. [15:52.440 --> 15:57.240] I'm going to go to, did you have something you wanted to address with it? [15:57.240 --> 16:02.200] So I just wanted to ask you, just for clarity, I guess for everybody to get it in their head [16:02.200 --> 16:03.200] too. [16:03.200 --> 16:10.960] Are you saying that even though we find it so common that these public officials shield [16:10.960 --> 16:18.400] each other from prosecution and they just dust each other's crimes under the rug, we [16:18.400 --> 16:23.520] still have a shot with the grand jury because they can't control the grand jury. [16:23.520 --> 16:27.080] Is that what you're saying? [16:27.080 --> 16:38.000] The grand jury, they think they can, they try to, but at the end of the day, it's always [16:38.000 --> 16:39.680] a crap chute. [16:39.680 --> 16:46.680] So which of you public officials out there want to play Russian roulette with your careers? [16:46.680 --> 16:49.920] How's that going to work for you? [16:49.920 --> 16:56.800] Hang on, go into break, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Denver Steven in the background, [16:56.800 --> 16:57.800] we'll be right back. [16:57.800 --> 17:04.160] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic center. 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[18:49.960 --> 18:57.640] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.640 --> 19:07.640] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:07.640 --> 19:33.640] football music playing [19:33.640 --> 19:43.640] We are experts in milk making, and they don't ever answer, so please let me slide. [19:43.640 --> 19:48.640] They're not going to be so easy, how they want them to see it easy. [19:48.640 --> 19:53.640] They're not going to be too politically young, they're getting mad and angry. [19:53.640 --> 19:58.640] They're not standing up and fighting, fighting for the freedom and the free. [19:58.640 --> 20:04.640] When they let them love say we can get handbooked and the government will try again. [20:04.640 --> 20:07.640] Yeah, that's the question. [20:07.640 --> 20:12.640] They don't ever answer. [20:12.640 --> 20:14.640] They don't ever answer. [20:14.640 --> 20:17.640] Yeah, that's the question. [20:17.640 --> 20:22.640] They don't ever again, and they don't ever answer. [20:22.640 --> 20:25.640] So please let me slide. [20:25.640 --> 20:27.640] Okay, we are back. [20:27.640 --> 20:29.640] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [20:29.640 --> 20:31.640] Deborah in the background. [20:31.640 --> 20:35.640] We have a first time caller. [20:35.640 --> 20:38.640] Chris in Colorado. [20:38.640 --> 20:44.640] I don't have your name yet on my screen. [20:44.640 --> 20:47.640] Okay. [20:47.640 --> 20:51.640] Maybe that Deb's still screening and that's why she didn't respond earlier. [20:51.640 --> 20:57.640] Okay, we're going to go to John first and give Deb time to screen this call. [20:57.640 --> 21:04.640] Okay, John, you got one minute, 35 seconds, so you got time for four questions. [21:04.640 --> 21:07.640] Okay, that's probably all I need. [21:07.640 --> 21:12.640] I'm just kidding. [21:12.640 --> 21:19.640] We'll say that you will say you're interested in photography and photography is your hobby. [21:19.640 --> 21:26.640] If you're in a store, restaurant, church, on the street, if your hobby is photography, [21:26.640 --> 21:36.640] can you legally shoot pictures of people eating, walking, painting a house, shopping, cutting their lawn? [21:36.640 --> 21:44.640] Anything you can see from public space. [21:44.640 --> 21:57.640] If you're in a establishment open to the public and there is no signage to the contrary, then yes, you can. [21:57.640 --> 22:00.640] Anything you can see from the public. [22:00.640 --> 22:04.640] I just read a, I'm from Colorado. [22:04.640 --> 22:07.640] He responded to one of my emails. [22:07.640 --> 22:16.640] And he is just like, I did some cinnamon arts in Colorado. [22:16.640 --> 22:21.640] And those people were so miserable. [22:21.640 --> 22:25.640] They were fighting with each other like cats and dogs. [22:25.640 --> 22:35.640] One of them was absolutely furious because the other one set the venue before she had time to set the venue and they fought the whole time I was there. [22:35.640 --> 22:39.640] And I said then I will never do another seminar in Colorado. [22:39.640 --> 22:44.640] So I get a guy send me a response saying everything that I'm doing is a bunch of crap. [22:44.640 --> 22:47.640] So all bunk. [22:47.640 --> 22:49.640] And he went through some arguments. [22:49.640 --> 22:52.640] He totally misconstrued everything. [22:52.640 --> 22:53.640] And I forgot why. [22:53.640 --> 22:57.640] Why was I ranting about Colorado? [22:57.640 --> 23:05.640] But anyway, I'm still frustrated with this guy. [23:05.640 --> 23:08.640] He was really sharp. [23:08.640 --> 23:13.640] He obviously did his homework and he studied the law. [23:13.640 --> 23:18.640] He can't say I don't see where you come to this conclusion. [23:18.640 --> 23:20.640] He has to say you're full of crap. [23:20.640 --> 23:22.640] You don't know what you're talking about. [23:22.640 --> 23:23.640] Blah, blah, blah. [23:23.640 --> 23:26.640] I just locked him. [23:26.640 --> 23:30.640] Anyway, he's kind of like John from New York. [23:30.640 --> 23:32.640] Okay, what do you have for? [23:32.640 --> 23:35.640] Oh, yeah, you're talking about the videoing. [23:35.640 --> 23:38.640] Well, he was arguing one of those issues. [23:38.640 --> 23:46.640] And some of these two people were arrested for videoing and taping a jail. [23:46.640 --> 23:58.640] And he was arguing how there was case law that said that the lobby and parts of certain public buildings can be restricted. [23:58.640 --> 24:04.640] He's going through this whole routine and then I look through the video. [24:04.640 --> 24:10.640] They walked out to the park lot and they walked up to this no trespassing sign. [24:10.640 --> 24:14.640] And they stopped and they backed up and went in another direction. [24:14.640 --> 24:19.640] They went over to this building and there was a no trespassing sign. [24:19.640 --> 24:23.640] They did not pass the no trespassing sign. [24:23.640 --> 24:26.640] So they had no trespassing signs. [24:26.640 --> 24:33.640] If there were no trespassing signs, they might be able to make an argument that since this was a jail, [24:33.640 --> 24:39.640] that in them coming in and doing the photoing this way, [24:39.640 --> 24:44.640] everybody nervous and they argued that they had to lock down the jail, [24:44.640 --> 24:51.640] get everybody in their cells so they could divert resources to address these issues. [24:51.640 --> 24:58.640] Well, if they hadn't had no trespassing signs, they might have had an argument. [24:58.640 --> 25:04.640] But where they had no trespassing signs and it says you can't pass this point, [25:04.640 --> 25:11.640] then everything that doesn't have a no trespassing sign is public. [25:11.640 --> 25:19.640] And this guy made a good argument for a situation where there were no trespassing signs. [25:19.640 --> 25:31.640] But he ignored the facts he didn't want to address because he wanted to rip to shreds this lawyer that I met when I was in Colorado. [25:31.640 --> 25:34.640] He was lying. [25:34.640 --> 25:38.640] Odd guy ran around with a funny little hat. [25:38.640 --> 25:47.640] He just wanted to rip this lawyer to shreds and he was absolutely, totally wrong. [25:47.640 --> 25:51.640] If you can see it from the public, you can photograph it. [25:51.640 --> 25:55.640] If you don't want to be seen from the public, [25:55.640 --> 26:04.640] they had a wall around it and one of the facilities that one of these guys videotaped [26:04.640 --> 26:11.640] had a wall around their parking lot and they had these gates that closed. [26:11.640 --> 26:14.640] In general, they had bars and you can see the bars. [26:14.640 --> 26:16.640] But this one didn't. [26:16.640 --> 26:20.640] It had a metal screen over it. [26:20.640 --> 26:25.640] You could see through the screen. [26:25.640 --> 26:34.640] You could see through, but when you hit it with the video, you could see something coming through, but it was all distorted. [26:34.640 --> 26:37.640] I thought that was perfect. [26:37.640 --> 26:51.640] And at this place, nobody had a problem with this type of video because seeing that was sensitive, they wanted... [26:51.640 --> 26:54.640] Are you there? [26:54.640 --> 26:56.640] Are you there? [26:56.640 --> 27:01.640] Randy, I think your audio is leaking out on us. [27:01.640 --> 27:08.640] So the bottom line is, if you're in a public place, open to the public, [27:08.640 --> 27:13.640] and there's people doing their public things like eating dinner or shopping, [27:13.640 --> 27:22.640] and your hobby is photography, especially if you're part of a class, taking a class in photography, [27:22.640 --> 27:31.640] you legally can, unless there's signs up, you legally can take pictures of people doing their thing, [27:31.640 --> 27:35.640] shopping, eating, walking, and so on. [27:35.640 --> 27:37.640] Sure, you can. [27:37.640 --> 27:41.640] It's not about whether it's your hobby or even if you're taking a class or not. [27:41.640 --> 27:47.640] Anybody, regardless of hobby, anybody can pull out a camera or a phone at any time, [27:47.640 --> 27:51.640] anything that's visible to the public, no problem. [27:51.640 --> 27:56.640] If it's your hobby or prove that you're in the class or have a special camera, anybody can. [27:56.640 --> 28:00.640] Now, supposing somebody comes up to the photographer and says, [28:00.640 --> 28:02.640] I want you to delete that picture. [28:02.640 --> 28:07.640] I don't want you to have it. [28:07.640 --> 28:10.640] I'll call the police if you don't do it. [28:10.640 --> 28:14.640] You see what I'm saying? [28:14.640 --> 28:15.640] What happened? [28:15.640 --> 28:21.640] Good question. [28:21.640 --> 28:25.640] Well, I can't hear you again. [28:25.640 --> 28:32.640] All of a sudden, you disappeared. [28:32.640 --> 28:35.640] All of a sudden, I couldn't hear a thing now. [28:35.640 --> 28:38.640] Are you there? [28:38.640 --> 28:43.640] Are you there? [28:43.640 --> 28:49.640] Are you there? [28:49.640 --> 28:53.640] Can't hear you. [28:53.640 --> 28:55.640] Hello? [28:55.640 --> 28:57.640] Great. [28:57.640 --> 29:00.640] I can't hear you. [29:00.640 --> 29:04.640] I could take your ride. [29:04.640 --> 29:06.640] But this would be good. [29:06.640 --> 29:07.640] Okay. [29:07.640 --> 29:09.640] This is the way we keep them honest. [29:09.640 --> 29:14.640] And here, you know, this is a situation where you're not at risk. [29:14.640 --> 29:16.640] They're not beating you up this time. [29:16.640 --> 29:18.640] You're beating them up. [29:18.640 --> 29:21.640] And it can absolutely be fun. [29:21.640 --> 29:26.640] I have found these higher level judges, [29:26.640 --> 29:30.640] when you get in front of them, they are polite. [29:30.640 --> 29:32.640] They're considerate. [29:32.640 --> 29:39.640] It's a lot more pleasant experience than dealing with these chunks down here on the bottom. [29:39.640 --> 29:40.640] Hang on. [29:40.640 --> 29:41.640] We're about to go to break. [29:41.640 --> 29:43.640] This is Randy Kelton and Denver Stevens. [29:43.640 --> 29:45.640] And we have our fundraiser going. [29:45.640 --> 29:49.640] So check out Logos Radio Network on the break. [29:49.640 --> 29:52.640] And just a dollar a month would be a great help. [29:52.640 --> 29:54.640] It adds up over time. [29:54.640 --> 29:55.640] Hang on. [29:55.640 --> 30:00.640] We'll be right back. [30:00.640 --> 30:02.640] Could a virus make you fat? [30:02.640 --> 30:06.640] A new study suggests that being overweight might not be all your fault after all. [30:06.640 --> 30:10.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [30:10.640 --> 30:14.640] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches, [30:14.640 --> 30:18.640] and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:18.640 --> 30:19.640] That's creepy. [30:19.640 --> 30:21.640] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:21.640 --> 30:24.640] StarkPage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:24.640 --> 30:26.640] StarkPage doesn't store your IP address, [30:26.640 --> 30:30.640] make a record of your searches, or use tracking cookies, and their third party certified. [30:30.640 --> 30:35.640] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with StarkPage. [30:35.640 --> 30:37.640] Great search results and total privacy. [30:37.640 --> 30:41.640] StarkPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:41.640 --> 30:45.640] Think twice before blaming yourself or someone else for being overweight. [30:45.640 --> 30:49.640] A new study suggests a common childhood virus could be the culprit. [30:49.640 --> 30:52.640] Researchers found that children exposed to adenovirus 36, [30:52.640 --> 30:57.640] an infection that causes short-term gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms, [30:57.640 --> 31:01.640] weighed an average of 52 pounds more than children who were never infected. [31:01.640 --> 31:05.640] Researchers believe this fat virus increases the body's fat cells [31:05.640 --> 31:08.640] and makes it harder for the body to break down mature fat cells later. [31:08.640 --> 31:12.640] The result is that people affected by the virus store more fat overall. [31:12.640 --> 31:15.640] So go easy on the next overweight person you see. [31:15.640 --> 31:19.640] Diet and exercise may not work as well for them as they do for you. [31:19.640 --> 31:24.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:50.640 --> 31:53.640] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [31:53.640 --> 31:56.640] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [31:56.640 --> 31:59.640] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, [31:59.640 --> 32:01.640] but good luck getting them to pay for it. [32:01.640 --> 32:04.640] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:04.640 --> 32:06.640] That's why you have insurance. [32:06.640 --> 32:09.640] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you [32:09.640 --> 32:20.640] with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:20.640 --> 32:24.640] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau [32:24.640 --> 32:26.640] with zero complaints. [32:26.640 --> 32:29.640] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim [32:29.640 --> 32:31.640] and your roof right the first time. [32:31.640 --> 32:37.640] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to Hill Country Home Improvements.com. [32:37.640 --> 32:40.640] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [32:40.640 --> 32:45.640] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.640 --> 32:50.640] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.640 --> 32:56.640] That's 512-992-8745 or Hill Country Home Improvements.com. [32:56.640 --> 32:58.640] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.640 --> 33:01.640] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:01.640 --> 33:12.640] Live, free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:12.640 --> 33:19.640] Yes, Mr. Officer, you've taken the right hand. [33:19.640 --> 33:23.640] I want you to follow the law of the land. [33:23.640 --> 33:29.640] I don't understand. [33:29.640 --> 33:31.640] Okay, we are back. [33:31.640 --> 33:35.640] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, LogosRadio. [33:35.640 --> 33:39.640] And John, hang on a minute. [33:39.640 --> 33:41.640] We have a first-time caller. [33:41.640 --> 33:49.640] And I'm going to take her first if it's okay with you. [33:49.640 --> 33:50.640] Take him first. [33:50.640 --> 33:52.640] This is Chris from Colorado. [33:52.640 --> 33:54.640] Hello, Chris. [33:54.640 --> 33:55.640] Hi there. [33:55.640 --> 33:56.640] Is Randy? [33:56.640 --> 34:00.640] Yeah, sorry about that little glitch we had. [34:00.640 --> 34:02.640] My system flaked out. [34:02.640 --> 34:03.640] It was my fault. [34:03.640 --> 34:05.640] Yeah, this is Randy Kelton. [34:05.640 --> 34:06.640] Hi. [34:06.640 --> 34:13.640] Yeah, I discovered Eddie a couple years ago, but I just never pursued much with digging into it. [34:13.640 --> 34:14.640] I had other things to deal with. [34:14.640 --> 34:19.640] But recently I just decided it's time to start learning this stuff. [34:19.640 --> 34:24.640] And my biggest question is that I'm in Colorado right now. [34:24.640 --> 34:30.640] I had an incident recently, and I'm trying to start to see how all the things that you guys talk about from Texas, [34:30.640 --> 34:35.640] how I can reference that for Colorado statutes, laws, et cetera, [34:35.640 --> 34:43.640] and the parallels to start weaving that or organizing that as a defense. [34:43.640 --> 34:48.640] I just saw Eddie's, I just saw the towel of a law site and just started looking through it. [34:48.640 --> 34:56.640] And there's a thing on there about how officers can't actually enforce transportation codes. [34:56.640 --> 34:59.640] Okay, let me speak to that. [34:59.640 --> 35:03.640] I haven't specifically researched Colorado. [35:03.640 --> 35:14.640] But after World War II, Truman, he was president and he was a road builder before he became president. [35:14.640 --> 35:19.640] And he was aghast at the number of people dying on the highways. [35:19.640 --> 35:25.640] And he complained that the way we're building highways is insane. [35:25.640 --> 35:30.640] We were building highways for the same way we did for horse and buggies. [35:30.640 --> 35:39.640] But now we have 3,000 pound automobiles moving at 40 and 50 miles an hour and we're slaughtering one another on the highways. [35:39.640 --> 35:44.640] And at the time they were just beginning to develop trucks. [35:44.640 --> 35:50.640] The trucks were getting bigger and more powerful and the brakes were horrible. [35:50.640 --> 35:57.640] The drivers didn't have a clue as to how to drive them and they were destroying the roads. [35:57.640 --> 36:00.640] It was just wholesale slaughter. [36:00.640 --> 36:06.640] So he designed the interstate highway system. [36:06.640 --> 36:12.640] He had the Corps of Engineers design it and he instructed them and how to design it. [36:12.640 --> 36:22.640] And he had the federal government put together a model transportation code. [36:22.640 --> 36:30.640] But this was right after World War II where we had just fought a world war to protect our rights. [36:30.640 --> 36:50.640] And at that time, asking the public to allow a whole new set of laws that would curtail their driving privileges was not going to be very popular. [36:50.640 --> 37:09.640] So they passed these laws as a, not only that, it is problematic attempting to interfere with someone's right to locomotion. [37:09.640 --> 37:16.640] I'm using the term locomotion on purpose as opposed to travel. [37:16.640 --> 37:21.640] And that's because of the legalese nature of those terms. [37:21.640 --> 37:34.640] The right to travel as it's addressed in the laws refers to the right to travel from one state to another state. [37:34.640 --> 37:47.640] And the feds do have the power to regulate that if you are in commerce and only if you are in commerce. [37:47.640 --> 37:57.640] So when they passed these professional conduct codes, they only addressed someone in commerce. [37:57.640 --> 38:06.640] And once you were inside of state, then you have the right to freedom of movement around the state. [38:06.640 --> 38:12.640] And this is generally referred to in law as the right to locomotion. [38:12.640 --> 38:28.640] You couldn't curtail that either by essentially attacks. The transportation code was restricted to professional or commercial use of the highways. [38:28.640 --> 38:37.640] It's the same kind of license that a plumber would get, an electrician would get, a doctor or a lawyer. [38:37.640 --> 38:44.640] It's a profession's codes. So your transportation code is a profession's code. [38:44.640 --> 38:57.640] Okay, at the time they went to the sheriffs and say, hey guys, we got this whole big brand spanking new batch of laws for you to enforce. [38:57.640 --> 39:00.640] And the sheriffs told them to go scratch. [39:00.640 --> 39:05.640] We don't have the funds to enforce this whole new batch of laws. [39:05.640 --> 39:10.640] They didn't have to fund us. Are you going to have to find some other way of getting this done? [39:10.640 --> 39:17.640] And they did. They created the highway patrol, state police. [39:17.640 --> 39:27.640] State police were, and almost every state was created for the specific purpose of enforcing the commercial transportation code. [39:27.640 --> 39:31.640] And they're generally called police officers. [39:31.640 --> 39:42.640] A police officer, and this is absolute in Texas. It's a little more vague in other states, but the separations are the same. [39:42.640 --> 39:48.640] The state police were authorized to enforce the transportation code. [39:48.640 --> 40:04.640] In Texas, the code says, the Department of Public Safety shall not enforce the criminal laws except at the request of and under the direction of local law enforcement. [40:04.640 --> 40:11.640] And that was because the sheriff is the highest law enforcement official in the county. [40:11.640 --> 40:24.640] When President Kennedy was shot in Dallas, the feds descended on Dallas and the sheriff threw him out because they didn't have jurisdiction. He did. [40:24.640 --> 40:30.640] He was the high law enforcement officer in the county. [40:30.640 --> 40:42.640] So the states could not create a state police that could then come in and supplant the county sheriff in enforcing the criminal laws. [40:42.640 --> 40:46.640] So they created them just to enforce the transportation code. [40:46.640 --> 40:51.640] But then over time they found, well, this is a pretty cool way of making money. [40:51.640 --> 41:01.640] So local municipalities and local counties started enforcing transportation code. But I really don't think it was to make money. [41:01.640 --> 41:20.640] The easiest way for a police officer, if he's trying to suppress crime and he wants to investigate potential for crime, the easiest way to get an excuse to stop someone is traffic. [41:20.640 --> 41:23.640] You always find something you claim to be violated. [41:23.640 --> 41:31.640] So you can always pull over someone that you want to do some other investigation on. [41:31.640 --> 41:36.640] And I really believe that that's how this got spread, not because it made him more money. [41:36.640 --> 41:41.640] But in either case, this is kind of how the structure is. [41:41.640 --> 41:46.640] And the reason I went through that, Chris, is look at your law. [41:46.640 --> 41:56.640] What does the charter for the state police say about what they can enforce? [41:56.640 --> 42:05.640] What are the restrictions and a piece of information to keep firmly in mind? [42:05.640 --> 42:21.640] A you as a citizen in a republic can do anything you want to, unless the law specifically forbids you to do it. [42:21.640 --> 42:31.640] A public official, on the other hand, may only do what the law specifically authorizes him to do. [42:31.640 --> 42:45.640] So I had this guy from Colorado arguing issues and he was saying his argument went to this thing that we weren't granted these rights. [42:45.640 --> 42:48.640] And I said, wait a minute, wait a minute. [42:48.640 --> 42:55.640] We said, he said that, you know, you weren't granted the right to videotape a public building. [42:55.640 --> 43:03.640] You know what? Wait a minute, then the question has to be asked, who would do the granting? [43:03.640 --> 43:05.640] The legislature. [43:05.640 --> 43:08.640] But that's the people that we elected. [43:08.640 --> 43:12.640] How are we going to elect somebody to give us the right to do something? [43:12.640 --> 43:26.640] Well, we empowered our legislature to write laws to restrict our behaviors in certain ways so that we protect ourselves from one another. [43:26.640 --> 43:28.640] Restrict, yes. [43:28.640 --> 43:31.640] Grant ourselves rights through somebody else. [43:31.640 --> 43:35.640] The guy from Colorado's argument don't mention these things. [43:35.640 --> 43:37.640] Yeah, we can do anything we want to. [43:37.640 --> 43:45.640] You know, I can't harm you because I created tort and we've written laws to prevent us from hurting each other. [43:45.640 --> 43:49.640] And, okay, hang on, we're about to go to break up. [43:49.640 --> 43:50.640] I'll pick this up on the other side. [43:50.640 --> 43:55.640] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Brett Fountain, Lula Radio. [43:55.640 --> 44:00.640] We'll be right back. 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[44:38.640 --> 44:42.640] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept big coins as payment. [44:42.640 --> 44:45.640] Call us at 512-646-6440. [44:45.640 --> 44:50.640] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:50.640 --> 44:53.640] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:53.640 --> 44:59.640] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [44:59.640 --> 45:03.640] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.640 --> 45:06.640] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:06.640 --> 45:14.640] The affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.640 --> 45:18.640] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.640 --> 45:23.640] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.640 --> 45:27.640] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.640 --> 45:33.640] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.640 --> 45:42.640] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.640 --> 45:51.640] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.640 --> 45:55.640] Please visit ruleoflongradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.640 --> 46:14.640] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.640 --> 46:26.640] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? If you could not wait any back too long, what's your purpose as we die? [46:26.640 --> 46:46.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Chris in Colorado, and I don't see crew. [46:46.640 --> 46:48.640] Oh, there you are. You are on my board. [46:48.640 --> 46:58.640] Okay, I'm hoping this is making sense. It's about putting all of the pieces in the right place. [46:58.640 --> 47:08.640] You can do anything you want to. You do not have to have permission. [47:08.640 --> 47:26.640] The only thing you cannot do is what you and the other citizens of this republic have agreed to as a limitation on our ability to do as we please. [47:26.640 --> 47:42.640] We have agreed that we won't be killing each other. We won't be stealing from each other. And over 800 years, we have created some very sophisticated law. [47:42.640 --> 47:56.640] And I'm here to tell everyone, we're probably one of the most pro-government shows on radio. Pastor Massitt included. [47:56.640 --> 48:06.640] He says that at every show that we're most pro-government show on radio, and that's because we're creatures of statute. [48:06.640 --> 48:16.640] Yeah, I've heard about common law and all this stuff about the Fourth Amendment and how that does your government and how the government's not valid or legal. [48:16.640 --> 48:18.640] Well, I don't care about all that. [48:18.640 --> 48:24.640] Right now, we have laws that these guys with guns think apply. [48:24.640 --> 48:34.640] And maybe you don't think they apply, but when the guys with guns come knuckling your head and throwing you in jail, it's going to feel like they apply. [48:34.640 --> 48:48.640] So, okay, let's take your law, the way you choose to use your law, and we'll cram it right down your throat. [48:48.640 --> 49:02.640] We have, every state I've looked at, has a very well-structured, corpus juris, body of law. [49:02.640 --> 49:08.640] The problems we're having arise from no lack of law. [49:08.640 --> 49:20.640] They arise from a lack of enforcement of the law, not on the part of the police, but on the part of you and me. [49:20.640 --> 49:22.640] It is our job. [49:22.640 --> 49:30.640] And these guys doing these First Amendment audits, they're doing exactly what should be done. [49:30.640 --> 49:34.640] Taking our public officials to task. [49:34.640 --> 49:38.640] Giving them experience with difficult people. [49:38.640 --> 49:43.640] They demonstrate how to deal with very difficult people. [49:43.640 --> 49:51.640] When they get done with these auditors, some two-bit chump criminal, he is out of his league. [49:51.640 --> 49:59.640] He is not going to be able to provoke these officers in doing some stupid because they've been provoked by the best. [49:59.640 --> 50:05.640] So, anyway, look at Colorado law. [50:05.640 --> 50:18.640] What does the law specifically say about who can enforce the commercial transportation code? [50:18.640 --> 50:26.640] That's the first place in any criminal case. [50:26.640 --> 50:32.640] The very first issue. Do not go to the merits. Forget that. [50:32.640 --> 50:39.640] The merits go to the discretion of the judge and the judge will always rule against you. [50:39.640 --> 50:41.640] So heck with that. [50:41.640 --> 50:46.640] First thing, when a ticket is written, jurisdiction is presumed. [50:46.640 --> 50:52.640] When any case is filed, jurisdiction is presumed until it's challenged. [50:52.640 --> 51:01.640] Once it is challenged, it is the duty of the judge, not the prosecutor, to prove up his jurisdiction. [51:01.640 --> 51:05.640] So that's the first place you want to go. [51:05.640 --> 51:08.640] That was one of my questions. [51:08.640 --> 51:10.640] Go ahead. [51:10.640 --> 51:15.640] That was one of my questions about jurisdictions, but again, this is all very new to me, but thank you for bringing that up. [51:15.640 --> 51:18.640] Okay. Jurisdiction is the first place. [51:18.640 --> 51:31.640] Next question. Where did this cop get the specific statutory authority to enforce a professional conduct code? [51:31.640 --> 51:45.640] Now, a violation of a professional conduct code, they're generally crimes, but they are not part of the penal laws that peace officers are authorized to enforce. [51:45.640 --> 51:52.640] These are professional conduct codes, and we generally have special commissions and officers for that purpose. [51:52.640 --> 52:05.640] So Mr. Cop with the pistol on your hip, who stopped me, arrested my freedom of movement, and did so while prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [52:05.640 --> 52:20.640] You prove up where you got the authority to do that because if you can't, your act was one of aggravated assault, and I will charge you with it every single time. [52:20.640 --> 52:24.640] So let's dance, guys. [52:24.640 --> 52:29.640] Okay. The first thing you look for. Where were they given this jurisdiction? [52:29.640 --> 52:37.640] Second thing you look at, or see which one of these should be first. [52:37.640 --> 52:47.640] A criminal complaint in order to be valid must allege every element of a crime. [52:47.640 --> 52:51.640] The commercial transportation code. [52:51.640 --> 52:59.640] In order for that to apply, it must allege commerce. [52:59.640 --> 53:11.640] If it does not allege commerce, then it does not allege that you fall within the scope of the statutory scheme. [53:11.640 --> 53:18.640] So whether you fall within the scope or not isn't relevant. [53:18.640 --> 53:30.640] What is relevant is whether or not the charging instrument alleged all of the elements of the crime. [53:30.640 --> 53:40.640] If it didn't allege commerce and facts to support commerce, then the complaint is insufficient on its face. [53:40.640 --> 53:42.640] Here's the deal. [53:42.640 --> 53:50.640] The states, the feds have said that the states have a vested interest in the safety of the public. [53:50.640 --> 54:09.640] And based on that, it is reasonable for them to require that anyone who operates a motorized conveyance secure a license for the restricted purpose of determining [54:09.640 --> 54:17.640] competence in operating the vehicle and knowledge of the rules of the road. [54:17.640 --> 54:19.640] But that's all. [54:19.640 --> 54:24.640] It's like a gun license or any other license. [54:24.640 --> 54:38.640] It does not create the presumption that if you are operating a motor vehicle, you are necessarily operating that vehicle in commerce. [54:38.640 --> 54:47.640] If a truck driver drops off a load at a warehouse and he has to dead head to another warehouse to pick up a load. [54:47.640 --> 54:52.640] He's not getting paid for this trip from one warehouse to the other. [54:52.640 --> 54:54.640] He's not in commerce. [54:54.640 --> 54:59.640] Code doesn't apply to him, doesn't go on his logbook. [54:59.640 --> 55:02.640] All these highway patrol know that. [55:02.640 --> 55:06.640] All the local cops know that too. [55:06.640 --> 55:09.640] They really know the code does not apply to you. [55:09.640 --> 55:14.640] But it doesn't matter if you don't claim it. [55:14.640 --> 55:21.640] The courts have ruled that rights belong to the belligerent litigant. [55:21.640 --> 55:27.640] If you want them, you must claim them. [55:27.640 --> 55:29.640] So this is where we start. [55:29.640 --> 55:33.640] Jurisdiction, you can't get past it. [55:33.640 --> 55:36.640] Okay, I've got this website. [55:36.640 --> 55:42.640] At the end of the day, the law don't matter. [55:42.640 --> 55:49.640] You can never expect to win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [55:49.640 --> 55:54.640] I get all these guys hopping up and down and arguing about minor points of law. [55:54.640 --> 56:00.640] And I want to say, guys, that really don't matter. [56:00.640 --> 56:02.640] The law doesn't matter. [56:02.640 --> 56:07.640] The only thing that matters, the only time you'll win, you can expect to win your case. [56:07.640 --> 56:15.640] Not if you have the law and the facts on your side, but if you have the politics on your side. [56:15.640 --> 56:19.640] So how do we get politics on our side? [56:19.640 --> 56:25.640] Well, that involves being a good citizen. [56:25.640 --> 56:28.640] That's a great way to put it. [56:28.640 --> 56:32.640] I'm a citizen in a republic. [56:32.640 --> 56:41.640] I ask my police to restrict my behavior to protect me from my own distraction and my own indulgence, [56:41.640 --> 56:46.640] to keep me from doing things that'll harm others or harm myself. [56:46.640 --> 56:49.640] Then I don't return the favor. [56:49.640 --> 56:56.640] I owe it to my police to hold them as tightly to rule of law as they hold me. [56:56.640 --> 57:06.640] So if I can get a policeman to step half inch across a legal line, I'm fixing to land on him like a ton of bricks. [57:06.640 --> 57:09.640] And that's really what our show is about. [57:09.640 --> 57:14.640] How do you land on these guys like a ton of bricks? [57:14.640 --> 57:16.640] Forget the law. [57:16.640 --> 57:18.640] It's all politics. [57:18.640 --> 57:27.640] You know what happens if you file a professional conduct complaint against a peace officer? [57:27.640 --> 57:35.640] Well, the commission that oversees peace officers will get that complaint and they will throw it in the trash. [57:35.640 --> 57:37.640] Well, usually they do. [57:37.640 --> 57:40.640] I got a little bit different response yesterday. [57:40.640 --> 57:41.640] I'll tell you about that in a minute. [57:41.640 --> 57:42.640] Go ahead. [57:42.640 --> 57:49.640] Okay, and the reason I say it this way is this is what you must expect. [57:49.640 --> 57:53.640] Sometimes they'll surprise you and actually do something. [57:53.640 --> 57:59.640] But you have to expect that they're going to do nothing and that's okay. [57:59.640 --> 58:01.640] Because whatever they do. [58:01.640 --> 58:03.640] I learned that in Chicago. [58:03.640 --> 58:06.640] Whatever they do is nothing. [58:06.640 --> 58:11.640] Chicago, near Northside? [58:11.640 --> 58:17.640] I'm not sure why I was in several different wards out there playing a game with the towing industry. [58:17.640 --> 58:20.640] Okay, I grew up with the near Northside. [58:20.640 --> 58:22.640] Anyway, okay, hang on. [58:22.640 --> 58:25.640] We'll pick this up on the other side. [58:25.640 --> 58:29.640] This is the most important part to get your head wrapped around. [58:29.640 --> 58:35.640] You start filing professional conduct complaints against them and they will start hopping up and down. [58:35.640 --> 58:39.640] I'll explain why when we come back on the other side. [58:39.640 --> 58:44.640] We'll be right back. [59:09.640 --> 59:17.640] This new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.640 --> 59:27.640] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.640 --> 59:32.640] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.640 --> 59:43.640] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.640 --> 59:47.640] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.640 --> 59:52.640] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.640 --> 01:00:00.640] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.640 --> 01:00:05.640] The following is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:31.640 --> 01:00:45.640] XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $0.0031, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [01:00:45.640 --> 01:01:00.640] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day Bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:01:00.640 --> 01:01:18.640] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, [01:01:18.640 --> 01:01:24.640] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.640 --> 01:01:33.640] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.640 --> 01:01:51.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney, in El Paso, [01:01:51.640 --> 01:02:01.640] Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.640 --> 01:02:12.640] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:12.640 --> 01:02:22.640] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:22.640 --> 01:02:38.640] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:38.640 --> 01:02:50.640] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.640 --> 01:03:00.640] This is Wolf Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:21.640 --> 01:03:30.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Denver Stevens, Ruvila Radio, and we're talking to Chris in Colorado. [01:03:30.640 --> 01:03:40.640] Chris, essentially your first time caller, you gave me excuse and opportunity to go through some of these basics. [01:03:40.640 --> 01:03:47.640] It's all about politics, and all politics is local. [01:03:47.640 --> 01:03:55.640] Once you learn, you know, when we say that, people say, oh, that's horrible. That's horrible. No, it's not. No, it's not. [01:03:55.640 --> 01:04:02.640] It's only a problem if you don't understand it's all about politics. [01:04:02.640 --> 01:04:11.640] And we have ways of generating politics. I filed a habeas corpus in Conroe, Texas, Montgomery County. [01:04:11.640 --> 01:04:20.640] They stopped a murder trial, finished interviewing a witness, sent him out, sent the jury out, and the judge said, are you Randall Kelton? [01:04:20.640 --> 01:04:26.640] Yes, your Honor, I am. Are you the one that filed this habeas? Yes, matter of fact, I did. [01:04:26.640 --> 01:04:29.640] He said, are you an attorney? Oh, no judge. [01:04:29.640 --> 01:04:41.640] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets, thank you very much. And he said, well, since you're not an attorney, I'm not going to accept this habeas. [01:04:41.640 --> 01:04:51.640] Oops, I turned to the bailiff. Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. Arrest that judge. [01:04:51.640 --> 01:05:00.640] He said, well, I can't arrest the judge. I said, sure, go up there and throw the cuffs on him and drag him to jail. It's right down in the basement. You don't have far to go. [01:05:00.640 --> 01:05:07.640] Well, I'm not going to arrest the judge. Mr. Bailiff, you need to take your chicken suit off. I'm not taking my chicken suit off. [01:05:07.640 --> 01:05:29.640] And we had this back and forth for about 10 minutes. And the judge sat there and kept his mouth shut because he knew, and he knew that I knew, one word out of him while I'm making criminal accusations to the court safety officer, [01:05:29.640 --> 01:05:38.640] would be construed as witness tampering and obstruction. So he sat there and kept his mouth shut. [01:05:38.640 --> 01:05:49.640] While I worked over the bailiff, when the bailiff absolutely refused, the judge said, Mr. Bailiff, if Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my courtroom, you're to arrest him. [01:05:49.640 --> 01:06:00.640] He picked up the gavel. I said, with all due respect, Your Honor, that's cheating. He said, maybe, but I got the gavel. [01:06:00.640 --> 01:06:07.640] Good point. I turned to the bailiff. Yeah, come with me and I stormed out of the courtroom. [01:06:07.640 --> 01:06:27.640] Chris, you have not lived until you've done that at least once. That was so much fun. You won't believe it. That writ of habeas corpus is on my website, juristimprudence.website. [01:06:27.640 --> 01:06:43.640] I filed that with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. We have two high courts in Texas, one for civil, one for criminal, supreme for civil, court of criminal appeals for criminal. [01:06:43.640 --> 01:06:54.640] They would not take it unless I filed a motion for leave to file. I told the clerk, screw that. This is the habeas, the great writ, the writ of right. [01:06:54.640 --> 01:07:05.640] This court has no power to grant or deny leave. And the clerk said, well, I can't take it without the motions. So I made up a motion because I'm trying to get this kid out of jail. [01:07:05.640 --> 01:07:13.640] Filed the writ with the motion, the court denied the writ of habeas the right to file a writ of habeas corpus. [01:07:13.640 --> 01:07:30.640] I said, are you kidding me? Went straight to the grand jury, took me an over a year. But as soon as I filed the habeas with the Court of Criminal Appeals, they let the kid out of jail in Conroe. [01:07:30.640 --> 01:07:43.640] So now he's out of jail. I don't have to worry about it. And I went after him. It took over a year. I finally got it. My complaints presented to the grand jury. [01:07:43.640 --> 01:08:00.640] All nine judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals, I got presented to the grand jury. And I was just to pat myself on the back about this. This was all because of my eloquent oratory and all the pressure I put on these guys. [01:08:00.640 --> 01:08:21.640] Oh, yeah, I'm bad. Turned out the district attorney, Ron Earl, 25 year prosecuting attorney. He's the guy that took out Tom DeLay, Speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives, and no one ever accused Tom DeLay of a crime. [01:08:21.640 --> 01:08:41.640] I filed a habeas corpus in his case too. But I won't go into that one. This guy was a real political wheeler and dealer. 25 year prosecutor, Democrat, not running for office. All nine of these judges were Republicans. [01:08:41.640 --> 01:09:04.640] He used my complaints as cannon fodder to try to take those judges out with him. That was an education. It's all politics. You will never get the courts to be afraid of you. [01:09:04.640 --> 01:09:14.640] What you will get them to be afraid of is the political cannon fodder you give their political enemies. [01:09:14.640 --> 01:09:21.640] Once you understand that, everything changes. [01:09:21.640 --> 01:09:37.640] I watched these guys going and doing these first amendment audits and they go in and they hammer the police and get them all hopping up and down and ranting and raving and I'm saying that is a great idea. That's a great thing to do. [01:09:37.640 --> 01:09:57.640] But you should not be going in there simply to get the police jumping up and down and waving their arms and doing stupid stuff. You should be going in there to get the police to give you a reason to call 911. [01:09:57.640 --> 01:10:09.640] See, I got this little invisible tar baby and I go around with it and I take it around to public officials. I got this little invisible tar baby. [01:10:09.640 --> 01:10:34.640] Now why not touch it? Go ahead, touch it. We have this rule. Never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want him to do because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not command him to do. [01:10:34.640 --> 01:10:43.640] So when he doesn't do it, you're stuck and then don't tell him to give legal advice. [01:10:43.640 --> 01:10:52.640] Oh, I got this right. I got that right. You're supposed to do this. No, no, no, no, no. Never give legal advice. [01:10:52.640 --> 01:11:02.640] That comes under the heading of fair warning and the police will always label you as agitated. [01:11:02.640 --> 01:11:06.640] That's their magic word. Agitated. [01:11:06.640 --> 01:11:20.640] So what you do is you kill them to touch your tar baby. If you're doing an audit, you want to get them all upset and order you to put that camera down or I'll arrest you. Gotcha. That's enough. [01:11:20.640 --> 01:11:32.640] 9-1-1. I got this guy out here and he appears to be agitated and he's got a gun and I'm afraid he's going to shoot me. [01:11:32.640 --> 01:11:40.640] Can you get someone out here to take my complaint against him for aggravated assault and get him under control? [01:11:40.640 --> 01:11:54.640] Everything just changed. All of a sudden you are the victim and you've got it recorded on the 9-1-1 operator's system. [01:11:54.640 --> 01:12:00.640] Now they send an officer out to investigate your accusation. [01:12:00.640 --> 01:12:12.640] When the cop gets there, if the police there, then continue to try to talk to you. You tell them, no, no, no, stop, stop, stop. [01:12:12.640 --> 01:12:21.640] We should not have any further communication. I have someone coming and I will give him a complete statement when he gets here. [01:12:21.640 --> 01:12:31.640] But since I'm going to be filing criminal accusations against you, anything you do now will come up retaliation and obstruction and witness tampering. [01:12:31.640 --> 01:12:45.640] So you might want to just wait until this other officer gets here. They're stuck. So the other officer gets there and then you get to see what we call this little chicken dance. [01:12:45.640 --> 01:12:53.640] When the other officer gets there, you're going to ask him to arrest these guys. Well, they're his buddies. He's not going to want to arrest his buddies. [01:12:53.640 --> 01:12:58.640] So he's going to try to come up with reasons not to arrest his buddies. [01:12:58.640 --> 01:13:07.640] And when he does that, he'll be shifting from one foot to the other because he's kind of nervous. We call that the little chicken dance. [01:13:07.640 --> 01:13:18.640] Guarantee the first time you do that, you'll get to see that chicken dance. And then when he refuses to take you, Brett's laughing because he's seen it. [01:13:18.640 --> 01:13:28.640] Then you, that officer won't take your complaint. Oh, that's good. That's wonderful. He just stuck to your tar, baby. [01:13:28.640 --> 01:13:41.640] Then you go to some judge, any judge or all magistrates with a verified criminal complaint against that officer who wouldn't arrest the first officer. [01:13:41.640 --> 01:13:50.640] He'll worry about the first officer yet. You go after the second one. And the magistrate, he'll refuse to take your complaint. [01:13:50.640 --> 01:13:53.640] At least you hope he does. [01:13:53.640 --> 01:14:02.640] He's got some serious crimes to deal with, like somebody was speeding or rolled through a stop sign or something like that. [01:14:02.640 --> 01:14:05.640] Got some money to collect. He's busy. [01:14:05.640 --> 01:14:17.640] And then now all of a sudden you're asking him to hold a preliminary hearing on a felony charge against the police officer. [01:14:17.640 --> 01:14:25.640] He is going to want to slither up behind that green, that thin blue line. [01:14:25.640 --> 01:14:36.640] At least we hope he does. Because when he doesn't take your complaint, he will say, oh, well, you all really should take that to the sheriff's department. [01:14:36.640 --> 01:14:43.640] And you say, oh, wow. Well, thank you very much. That was very helpful of you. Then you go to the sheriff's department. [01:14:43.640 --> 01:14:55.640] You file against the magistrate. But don't tell him what the law is. Bushwack is so much better. [01:14:55.640 --> 01:15:00.640] You tell the guy you're trying to get to arrest him, what the law is. [01:15:00.640 --> 01:15:08.640] And then this guy calls the first guy and say, I got this guy down here trying to get me to arrest you. [01:15:08.640 --> 01:15:15.640] Imagine what is going on with the guy when he gets that call. [01:15:15.640 --> 01:15:24.640] This is kind of the basis of how we handle these guys. I have a traffic ticket site and it produces a whole bunch of documents. [01:15:24.640 --> 01:15:32.640] And while I've tried to make the documents well-structured in law, at the end of the day, don't make any difference. [01:15:32.640 --> 01:15:40.640] You file all this stuff with a traffic court and the judge is going to get it and he's just going to blow it all off. [01:15:40.640 --> 01:15:55.640] At least we hope he does. I've got case law that says that a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [01:15:55.640 --> 01:15:59.640] A failure to do so is an abusive discretion. [01:15:59.640 --> 01:16:09.640] Well, if a public official abuses his discretion and in the process denies this in full free access to or enjoyment of a right, [01:16:09.640 --> 01:16:17.640] that's a crime in every state because it reflects 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:16:17.640 --> 01:16:26.640] And it's kind of long. I'm just going to paraphrase here. Everybody should have this statute memorized. [01:16:26.640 --> 01:16:37.640] If a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not have or fails to perform a duty he is required to perform in the process, [01:16:37.640 --> 01:16:43.640] denies the citizen in full free access to enjoyment of a right, that's a crime in every state. [01:16:43.640 --> 01:16:48.640] In Texas, it's official oppression and every state has it as a class A misdemeanor. [01:16:48.640 --> 01:16:55.640] You can have so much fun with it. We've got Scott. I'm going to bring him in when we come back talking about professional conduct complaints. [01:16:55.640 --> 01:16:59.640] Ready, Kelton? All the other guys, we'll be right back. [01:17:26.640 --> 01:17:28.640] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:28.640 --> 01:17:33.640] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.640 --> 01:17:40.640] The Michael Merris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.640 --> 01:17:48.640] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. [01:17:48.640 --> 01:17:56.640] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.640 --> 01:17:59.640] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.640 --> 01:18:00.640] Bang, Cookie. [01:18:00.640 --> 01:18:02.640] Cookie? Me love cookies. [01:18:02.640 --> 01:18:05.640] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:18:05.640 --> 01:18:08.640] Cookie? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:18:08.640 --> 01:18:11.640] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:18:11.640 --> 01:18:13.640] No, can't you eat? [01:18:13.640 --> 01:18:16.640] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:18:16.640 --> 01:18:20.640] Me that apple. Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:18:20.640 --> 01:18:22.640] Hmm, yummy apple. [01:18:22.640 --> 01:18:26.640] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:18:26.640 --> 01:18:32.640] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookie and clear them. [01:18:32.640 --> 01:18:34.640] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:18:34.640 --> 01:18:41.640] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, bookmark the link, [01:18:41.640 --> 01:18:46.640] and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [01:18:46.640 --> 01:18:48.640] New cookies? For me? [01:18:48.640 --> 01:18:50.640] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:18:50.640 --> 01:18:56.640] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:18:56.640 --> 01:18:57.640] These are cookies. [01:18:57.640 --> 01:18:59.640] These are classified. [01:18:59.640 --> 01:19:10.640] This is the Logos, Logos Radio Network. [01:19:14.640 --> 01:19:19.640] Ain't gonna blind me. [01:19:19.640 --> 01:19:26.640] Don't want me. [01:19:26.640 --> 01:19:30.640] Well. [01:19:30.640 --> 01:19:35.640] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:35.640 --> 01:19:38.640] I was blindsided, but now I'm blindsided. [01:19:38.640 --> 01:19:44.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton, Deborah Stevens, Rue of Law Radio, [01:19:44.640 --> 01:19:47.640] and we're talking to Chris in Colorado. [01:19:47.640 --> 01:19:52.640] Chris, I'm gonna bring in Scott from Texas. [01:19:52.640 --> 01:19:57.640] We're talking about professional conduct complaints. [01:19:57.640 --> 01:20:02.640] If an officer gets six professional conduct complaints, [01:20:02.640 --> 01:20:14.640] is the bonding agent for the company that ensures the department will declare that officer an unacceptable risk [01:20:14.640 --> 01:20:23.640] for all the department, if you keep this officer, we will raise your bond rating for your entire department. [01:20:23.640 --> 01:20:30.640] So, Chris, what do you think is gonna happen to that officer? [01:20:30.640 --> 01:20:36.640] Scott, can you address what happens? [01:20:36.640 --> 01:20:46.640] We have these key closed complaints that you can follow up here, and it's administrative type of complaint. [01:20:46.640 --> 01:20:54.640] And you follow this, and even though Eddie, I was listening to Eddie on a recording he did just this week and talking about it, [01:20:54.640 --> 01:21:02.640] it doesn't have a permanent mark that goes on the record, but the insurance side of it probably gets triggered on it [01:21:02.640 --> 01:21:10.640] because there's an administrative complaint being filed against the guy, and that's all we're really concerned about [01:21:10.640 --> 01:21:20.640] is hitting their insurance side, hitting their bond side, and then the more that you file against these guys, [01:21:20.640 --> 01:21:26.640] then the more complaints, the more their bond ratings go up and it affects everything. [01:21:26.640 --> 01:21:33.640] So, you definitely want to file as many complaints against the officer, and Eddie, [01:21:33.640 --> 01:21:40.640] but I'm sure he was right about going down and filing it with internal affairs to have a permanent mark put on their record, [01:21:40.640 --> 01:21:50.640] and that was more clarification from him, and Eddie used to be a cop, so he would probably know pretty well about that. [01:21:50.640 --> 01:22:00.640] But yeah, you file those key closed complaints, and all of a sudden they pay attention to it, [01:22:00.640 --> 01:22:06.640] so that's for sure everything though, but whenever you don't file any of these complaints, [01:22:06.640 --> 01:22:14.640] no matter if you're bar grieving, judicial conduct, or anything, always attach a criminal, [01:22:14.640 --> 01:22:23.640] verify criminal affidavit in your complaint, and in that way, even though you go to key closed and you give it to key closed [01:22:23.640 --> 01:22:32.640] and the commanding officer, they don't do anything, but still, they have a criminal complaint in their hand, [01:22:32.640 --> 01:22:39.640] and they're supposed to now follow procedure of law, take it to a magistrate and have a hearing and do all this other stuff. [01:22:39.640 --> 01:22:44.640] And they say, oh no, he's our buddy, and we're not going to do that, blah, blah, blah, blah, great. [01:22:44.640 --> 01:22:53.640] You've got a criminal complaint against you now, and so you follow criminal complaint against them and send it to them. [01:22:53.640 --> 01:23:01.640] Scott sent me a stack of bar grievances that he had filed. [01:23:01.640 --> 01:23:05.640] What was it, about three and a half inches tall? [01:23:05.640 --> 01:23:11.640] Oh, yeah. Here's the deal on bar grievances. [01:23:11.640 --> 01:23:18.640] If you file a bar grievance with state bar association, state bar is going to get that grievance and they're going to throw it in the trash, [01:23:18.640 --> 01:23:25.640] and they're going to send you this letter that says we examined into your accusation and find it does not rise to the level of misconduct. [01:23:25.640 --> 01:23:35.640] The state of Colorado will try to misdirect you and have you send your complaints to the state bar. [01:23:35.640 --> 01:23:44.640] In Colorado, they go to the state supreme court, not the bar, but they don't try to hide that from you. [01:23:44.640 --> 01:23:51.640] But it doesn't matter. They won't do anything to the lawyer. They just throw it in the trash. [01:23:51.640 --> 01:23:59.640] And so their insurance carrier, there are errors in emissions policy carrier, how does he gauge his level of risk? [01:23:59.640 --> 01:24:03.640] By valid bar grievances? Throw them all in the trash. [01:24:03.640 --> 01:24:07.640] By the numbers. One bar grievance your first year. [01:24:07.640 --> 01:24:14.640] As far as I can tell, there are nine primary underwriters for malpractice insurance in the country. [01:24:14.640 --> 01:24:20.640] They're all underwritten by Lloyds of London. They all have the same requirements. [01:24:20.640 --> 01:24:24.640] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. [01:24:24.640 --> 01:24:29.640] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they cancel. [01:24:29.640 --> 01:24:32.640] Three, they cancel your law firms malpractice insurance. [01:24:32.640 --> 01:24:36.640] Valid, invalid, they don't care. [01:24:36.640 --> 01:24:45.640] That agent is there to collect as much money from his client as he can and avoid any claims. [01:24:45.640 --> 01:24:59.640] If you file a complaint against the lawyer, the lawyer must notify his insurance carrier as if he doesn't and subsequently gets sued. [01:24:59.640 --> 01:25:04.640] He's not covered. [01:25:04.640 --> 01:25:08.640] They will love you when you file bar grievances against them. [01:25:08.640 --> 01:25:15.640] Judge is the same way. You get a mark on their chart that never goes away. [01:25:15.640 --> 01:25:22.640] A lawyer gets three bar grievances against him. No law firm in their right mind will hire him. [01:25:22.640 --> 01:25:30.640] He becomes a political risk. They hire this guy and he loses a case and the client finds out he's had three bar grievances. [01:25:30.640 --> 01:25:33.640] He's going to sue the law firm. [01:25:33.640 --> 01:25:37.640] It's not about the law. [01:25:37.640 --> 01:25:43.640] It's all about politics and politics always goes to the money. [01:25:43.640 --> 01:25:45.640] Does that make sense, Chris? [01:25:45.640 --> 01:25:48.640] Yeah, I mean, I think like this. [01:25:48.640 --> 01:25:52.640] I immediately, when I get a ticket, I go right to the supervisor. [01:25:52.640 --> 01:25:55.640] I don't know why. I don't know what I'm going to do. [01:25:55.640 --> 01:25:59.640] I'm just like, I'm trying to move something and I just never had enough ammunition. [01:25:59.640 --> 01:26:02.640] Let me give you a suggestion of what to do. [01:26:02.640 --> 01:26:08.640] When the supervisor comes, make a criminal accusation against the officer. [01:26:08.640 --> 01:26:14.640] It doesn't matter what it is. The supervisor's not going to take it. [01:26:14.640 --> 01:26:17.640] So it makes no difference what it is. [01:26:17.640 --> 01:26:21.640] The refusal of the supervisor to take the complaint. [01:26:21.640 --> 01:26:25.640] That's crime all by itself. [01:26:25.640 --> 01:26:29.640] He touches your tar baby. [01:26:29.640 --> 01:26:33.640] You immediately become a protected class. [01:26:33.640 --> 01:26:38.640] Where does Colorado live? [01:26:38.640 --> 01:26:41.640] I don't live in Colorado actually. [01:26:41.640 --> 01:26:45.640] The story is a little bit more tricky, but I got pulled over for a non-yielding, [01:26:45.640 --> 01:26:49.640] which is actually a lie. The guy never signaled and so we met in the middle of the street [01:26:49.640 --> 01:26:53.640] in a turn lane and we forgave each other in winter separate ways, [01:26:53.640 --> 01:26:58.640] but there was a cop watching and he pulled me over and said, you failed to yield. [01:26:58.640 --> 01:27:02.640] I'm from Arkansas. That's my license, at least that's what I thought I had. [01:27:02.640 --> 01:27:07.640] I paid for a license a year ago and never got it apparently [01:27:07.640 --> 01:27:09.640] because they had no license on record. [01:27:09.640 --> 01:27:12.640] So when he pulled me over and ran me, he says, you're driving without a license. [01:27:12.640 --> 01:27:15.640] I said, no, I'm not. Here's the receipt. I paid for a license. [01:27:15.640 --> 01:27:17.640] Now you have no license. [01:27:17.640 --> 01:27:21.640] So he wrote me two tickets essentially. [01:27:21.640 --> 01:27:24.640] And summoned me to court and I refused to sign. [01:27:24.640 --> 01:27:28.640] And it's the first time I've refused to sign for a summons. Not that that happens a lot. [01:27:28.640 --> 01:27:30.640] It happened one other time years ago. [01:27:30.640 --> 01:27:33.640] He didn't threaten to take me to jail, but he didn't sign. [01:27:33.640 --> 01:27:35.640] He let me go. [01:27:35.640 --> 01:27:45.640] So that's the thing, I'm from Arkansas essentially and I'm dealing with this accusation in Colorado. [01:27:45.640 --> 01:27:48.640] It's hard to deal with them from a distance. [01:27:48.640 --> 01:27:51.640] You certainly need to start filing criminal charges against them. [01:27:51.640 --> 01:27:59.640] Did you, okay, did you address the plate issue with Arkansas? [01:27:59.640 --> 01:28:03.640] You mean the license? No, I'm in my driver's license. [01:28:03.640 --> 01:28:06.640] I'm in the middle of that. Yeah, driver's license. [01:28:06.640 --> 01:28:09.640] I'm in the middle of that. They're fine. [01:28:09.640 --> 01:28:11.640] There's nothing they just said. Just got to get back here in person. [01:28:11.640 --> 01:28:13.640] There must have been a misunderstanding. [01:28:13.640 --> 01:28:17.640] I'm trying to get some, you know, consideration for that, [01:28:17.640 --> 01:28:21.640] but I still have to go back and get it actually enacted. [01:28:21.640 --> 01:28:26.640] It was silly, but they did something, something happened and there was a mistake. [01:28:26.640 --> 01:28:28.640] Because that you can do by mail. [01:28:28.640 --> 01:28:36.640] You can file a motion to dismiss with proof from the state of Arkansas. [01:28:36.640 --> 01:28:39.640] Wait, you're back in Colorado now? [01:28:39.640 --> 01:28:42.640] I'm still in Colorado. That's just happened a few days ago. [01:28:42.640 --> 01:28:48.640] Okay, so you're still in Colorado? Well, yeah, so you can still deal with it or you're at that. [01:28:48.640 --> 01:28:58.640] And just start, yeah, following the bar grievance to go after them, whatever you're going to do. [01:28:58.640 --> 01:29:06.640] Okay, wait, hold on. Was that the only citation did he cite you for any moving violation? [01:29:06.640 --> 01:29:15.640] Yeah, there was a citation for failure to yield. [01:29:15.640 --> 01:29:17.640] I don't know what that means, but... [01:29:17.640 --> 01:29:23.640] Okay, so then the first thing we need to do is look at his authority to enforce. [01:29:23.640 --> 01:29:28.640] I've had other people do that in Colorado and they don't have authority to enforce, [01:29:28.640 --> 01:29:36.640] but I will have to do some research to find the codes. I've got it in my research. [01:29:36.640 --> 01:29:42.640] I've got a 60 gig research repository I got to look in. [01:29:42.640 --> 01:29:50.640] But if you'll send me an email to randy at ruleoflawradio.com, [01:29:50.640 --> 01:29:53.640] that'll remind me to look that up and I'll pull that research out for you. [01:29:53.640 --> 01:29:57.640] Hang on, go ahead and break. We'll be right back. [01:29:57.640 --> 01:30:02.640] Bye. [01:30:02.640 --> 01:30:09.640] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.640 --> 01:30:12.640] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.640 --> 01:30:16.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.640 --> 01:30:21.640] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.640 --> 01:30:26.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.640 --> 01:30:32.640] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.640 --> 01:30:37.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:30:37.640 --> 01:30:41.640] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.640 --> 01:30:45.640] Start over with Start Page. [01:30:45.640 --> 01:30:48.640] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.640 --> 01:30:52.640] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.640 --> 01:30:56.640] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.640 --> 01:31:00.640] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.640 --> 01:31:04.640] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.640 --> 01:31:10.640] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.640 --> 01:31:15.640] That's the part of the brain that helps us wake inflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.640 --> 01:31:21.640] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.640 --> 01:31:26.640] This is Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:51.640 --> 01:31:53.640] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.640 --> 01:31:55.640] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.640 --> 01:31:57.640] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.640 --> 01:32:26.640] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.640 --> 01:32:34.640] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:34.640 --> 01:32:42.640] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie. [01:32:42.640 --> 01:32:44.640] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:44.640 --> 01:32:47.640] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:47.640 --> 01:32:51.640] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:51.640 --> 01:32:55.640] Order your copy today and together we can have the free service of our home country, [01:32:55.640 --> 01:33:00.640] coffee today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:00.640 --> 01:33:17.640] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:30.640 --> 01:33:58.640] Logos Radio Network [01:33:58.640 --> 01:34:26.640] Logos Radio Network [01:34:26.640 --> 01:34:34.640] Okay, Chris, Brett wanted to address this with you. He's done a little research. [01:34:34.640 --> 01:34:45.640] Okay, you started out asking about, you mentioned that you don't know how to find something that's in Colorado or we're always talking about Texas. [01:34:45.640 --> 01:34:56.640] And yeah, we're more familiar with Texas because, well, I mean, I live in Texas. Randy's getting really familiar with Tennessee now as he's going back and forth. [01:34:56.640 --> 01:35:08.640] What I do, if I'm taking a road trip and I know that I'm going to pass through, you know, Arkansas, Missouri, whatever, Kansas, I'll do a little bit of just to get on some search engine first. [01:35:08.640 --> 01:35:29.640] Start page, dot, dot, go, just put in Colorado space and then whatever's the phrase that I know what it is in the Texas law, then it'll pretty well give me, it doesn't take too many clicks to land on Colorado saying almost the same thing in a little bit different way. [01:35:29.640 --> 01:35:32.640] So that's just, that's what I do. [01:35:32.640 --> 01:35:43.640] Let me give a little piece of information on that. The federal government produced a uniform penal code and criminal procedure code. [01:35:43.640 --> 01:35:57.640] And all of the states but three adopted that uniform code and that was so that a person could move from one state to another and pretty well understand what the laws were. [01:35:57.640 --> 01:36:04.640] And then those states made adjustments to their codes and the states when they adopted them numbered them differently. [01:36:04.640 --> 01:36:16.640] But if it's a law in one state, unless it's a really peculiar law, you can be sure it's a law in another state. It's just a matter of doing the cross reference. [01:36:16.640 --> 01:36:18.640] Okay. [01:36:18.640 --> 01:36:19.640] Okay. [01:36:19.640 --> 01:36:29.640] Oh, and the other thing, what they're going to try to do is they try to wear you down. They summon you to court, especially if you fight them. [01:36:29.640 --> 01:36:41.640] And then, oh, the law your case show the prosecutor can't show up or some blah, blah, blah, the judge had something else come up and you got an appointment. [01:36:41.640 --> 01:36:43.640] You got to come back. [01:36:43.640 --> 01:36:51.640] Had to give his cat a bath. So you have to come back, build them for your time. [01:36:51.640 --> 01:36:54.640] And you know they're not going to pay the bill. [01:36:54.640 --> 01:36:55.640] Right. [01:36:55.640 --> 01:37:05.640] Then you then you contact the credit reporting agencies and file with them for nonpayment. [01:37:05.640 --> 01:37:13.640] It'll put a ding on the the jurisdictions credit rating and lower the credit rate. [01:37:13.640 --> 01:37:27.640] I had a guy in I think it was Mississippi somewhere that might have been Arkansas did that and said next time he went in they were going crazy. [01:37:27.640 --> 01:37:31.640] There's more than one way to get at these guys. [01:37:31.640 --> 01:37:35.640] Generally insurances are weak under belly. [01:37:35.640 --> 01:37:41.640] Well, that's a nice one. I've never heard that name. [01:37:41.640 --> 01:37:50.640] Well, you know, people, you know, we're taught to that we live in a land of law and we have to follow law. [01:37:50.640 --> 01:37:57.640] And if if something happens, we defend ourselves by law as a bunch of garbage. [01:37:57.640 --> 01:38:04.640] It ain't about law. The judges don't care about law. They care about politics. [01:38:04.640 --> 01:38:20.640] And as I think you see, Chris, once you understand that it's about politics, and then you get some idea of how to use the politics, that is not a problem at all. [01:38:20.640 --> 01:38:33.640] It's only a problem if you don't know that it's all about politics. And once you understand that it's all about politics, you become bad news. [01:38:33.640 --> 01:38:41.640] Because that's not something they can do anything about. Chris, were you ever in the military? [01:38:41.640 --> 01:38:44.640] No, no. [01:38:44.640 --> 01:38:58.640] If you would understand if you were in the military, when I was in the military, if a general was coming on base, we had to cut every single piece of grass exactly perfect, pick up every cigarette, but everything had to be perfect. [01:38:58.640 --> 01:39:04.640] There was only one person people were more afraid of than the general. [01:39:04.640 --> 01:39:18.640] That was a civilian. Because the civilian was the only one who could march into the general's office and crawl down his throat stomping his feet all the way. [01:39:18.640 --> 01:39:26.640] And when the civilian gets done with the general, the general is not going to be a happy camper. [01:39:26.640 --> 01:39:36.640] But he's not going to talk to the guy who upset the civilian. He's going to get the guy below him and chew him out. [01:39:36.640 --> 01:39:48.640] Because one of his underlings did not properly train their troops so he gets chewed out by a civilian. [01:39:48.640 --> 01:39:57.640] And then this guy is going to get the guy below him and chew him out worse. And the next one is going to chew him out worse every time it gets to the guy at the bottom. [01:39:57.640 --> 01:40:07.640] Doesn't matter if you did it right, wrong, it makes no difference. The only thing that matters is the general got chewed out. [01:40:07.640 --> 01:40:20.640] When they start after you and you start running our routine on them and start walking up the chain and everybody that tries to protect them, you hammer them. [01:40:20.640 --> 01:40:28.640] The higher you get in the pecking order, the more politically sensitive they are. [01:40:28.640 --> 01:40:39.640] This municipal judge down at the bottom, if he was one of the sharpest knives in the drawer, he wouldn't be down here in the municipal courts grubbing for dollars. [01:40:39.640 --> 01:40:49.640] He'd be out making the big bucks. When you start moving up into the guys who are making the big bucks, they got lots of people below them that want their place. [01:40:49.640 --> 01:40:58.640] When you start filing criminal charges against them, they're not worried about being prosecuted for those because they know everybody to protect them. [01:40:58.640 --> 01:41:07.640] What they're worried about is the next time they run for office, their political opponents are going to drag these out and wave them in front of everybody. [01:41:07.640 --> 01:41:10.640] Perception is everything. [01:41:10.640 --> 01:41:19.640] Ken, I got a friend named Ken. Well, he used the term loosely friend. But he's got these four rules. [01:41:19.640 --> 01:41:31.640] First rule, perception is everything. Second rule, everything's political and all politics is local. [01:41:31.640 --> 01:41:42.640] Third rule, everything is negotiable. Fourth rule, document, document, document. [01:41:42.640 --> 01:41:53.640] Never ever talk to these people on the phone. Never talk to them when you're not being recorded if there's any possible way of avoiding it. [01:41:53.640 --> 01:42:12.640] If you have to talk to them when you're not being recorded immediately after the conversation, sit down and write a synopsis and then mail that mail or email that synopsis to them and ask them to confirm that this was the gist of our conversation. [01:42:12.640 --> 01:42:24.640] It does not matter if they confirm it or not, you have it documented. Document everything. These guys will lie like dogs. [01:42:24.640 --> 01:42:31.640] Colorado is a one-party consent. I learned that a long time ago and I started recording phone calls. [01:42:31.640 --> 01:42:43.640] Colorado, I went up there to do some seminars. I bought property in Colorado outside of Colorado Springs, but the people were just so miserable. [01:42:43.640 --> 01:42:51.640] I gave the property to my daughter. I didn't even want to go back to sell it. I did not want to go back there. [01:42:51.640 --> 01:43:02.640] I was called up there to do some seminars. I couldn't even talk to these guys. They're so busy fighting with each other like cats and dogs. [01:43:02.640 --> 01:43:13.640] I don't ever want to go back to Colorado. I was really frustrated. The most beautiful place I'd ever seen, but the people were so miserable. [01:43:13.640 --> 01:43:21.640] Everybody from Colorado is going to be mad at me now. I'm sure not everybody's that way, but that was my impression. [01:43:21.640 --> 01:43:26.640] Are you primed for bear? [01:43:26.640 --> 01:43:28.640] Primed for bear? [01:43:28.640 --> 01:43:34.640] Yeah. You get to go in and poke the bear. [01:43:34.640 --> 01:43:39.640] This is so much fun. You will not believe it. [01:43:39.640 --> 01:43:46.640] All they can do is charge you what they're going to anyway, so if you get them, beat them up big time. [01:43:46.640 --> 01:44:00.640] Hang on, go in the break, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. We'll be right back. [01:44:00.640 --> 01:44:06.640] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.640 --> 01:44:11.640] They feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.640 --> 01:44:17.640] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.640 --> 01:44:25.640] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.640 --> 01:44:31.640] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.640 --> 01:44:39.640] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. 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[01:45:27.640 --> 01:45:33.640] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.640 --> 01:45:42.640] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.640 --> 01:45:51.640] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.640 --> 01:46:00.640] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.640 --> 01:46:31.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Chris in Colorado and Chris. [01:46:31.640 --> 01:46:40.640] We kind of used up the whole show for this, and John, Scott, Shane, I'm not going to apologize for that. [01:46:40.640 --> 01:46:45.640] This is something I need to go over on occasion anyway. [01:46:45.640 --> 01:46:51.640] But if you guys have a call back tomorrow night, I'll take you first. [01:46:51.640 --> 01:46:55.640] Chris, did you have anything else for us tonight? [01:46:55.640 --> 01:47:00.640] I have endless questions, but you've been more than generous with everything you've given tonight. [01:47:00.640 --> 01:47:09.640] My one concern, a lot of the things you said were based on in the moment, you know, and I'm doing this after the fact. [01:47:09.640 --> 01:47:14.640] I've already been pulled over. They have me. They've got the tickets. I've been summoned in the court. [01:47:14.640 --> 01:47:20.640] A lot of things you said I could just go ahead anyway as with the process and let it unfold. [01:47:20.640 --> 01:47:26.640] Yep, yep. And we do have archives. This will be online where you can pull this down. [01:47:26.640 --> 01:47:35.640] And I kind of fed you with a fire hose, and I meant to do that. I wanted to get the whole process out. [01:47:35.640 --> 01:47:45.640] Now, if you go back and go through the archive and hear this a second time, these pieces will start stitching together. [01:47:45.640 --> 01:47:53.640] And I tried to present it so that I understand that this is new and it sounds okay when you hear it, [01:47:53.640 --> 01:47:59.640] but when you go back and try to think over it and put them together, it's just a mishmash. [01:47:59.640 --> 01:48:10.640] So when you listen to it a second time, because you heard the front and the back, then you'll be able to make connections from the front to the back [01:48:10.640 --> 01:48:14.640] and stitch all this together and it'll start to make sense to you. [01:48:14.640 --> 01:48:20.640] I'm going to have a quick suggestion about just action items. [01:48:20.640 --> 01:48:27.640] In this time, the situation where you're in right now, there's a lot of things that you can file. [01:48:27.640 --> 01:48:31.640] There's a lot of things that you can respond to. [01:48:31.640 --> 01:48:37.640] However, in Texas, you have to look and see if there's the same in Colorado. [01:48:37.640 --> 01:48:45.640] In Texas, the first thing you file needs to be a special appearance for the purpose of challenging jurisdiction. [01:48:45.640 --> 01:48:49.640] That has to be first. And then after that, you can file whatever you need to. [01:48:49.640 --> 01:48:57.640] Go to www.trafficticket.website. [01:48:57.640 --> 01:49:04.640] Fill in your ticket information and then download all those documents. [01:49:04.640 --> 01:49:21.640] Now, what you'll get, we wrote this primarily for Texas, but the majority of the documents included in there are applicable to any state. [01:49:21.640 --> 01:49:24.640] So this will spit you out a whole bunch of documents. [01:49:24.640 --> 01:49:28.640] There will be a special appearance in there. [01:49:28.640 --> 01:49:38.640] There'll be a Brady motion in there, a Mother Hubbard motion that notices the court you preserve all your rights, [01:49:38.640 --> 01:49:45.640] a demand for speedy trial, a demand for examining trial. [01:49:45.640 --> 01:49:47.640] Oh, we got a whole bunch of stuff. [01:49:47.640 --> 01:49:50.640] And a motion in lemony. [01:49:50.640 --> 01:49:53.640] You know what a motion in lemony is? [01:49:53.640 --> 01:49:58.640] No. Oh, this is so much fun. [01:49:58.640 --> 01:50:05.640] A motion in lemony are all of the questions the prosecutor can't ask. [01:50:05.640 --> 01:50:09.640] I got a 20 page motion in lemony. [01:50:09.640 --> 01:50:17.640] The judge wants to be out playing golf, but he's in here in the court hearing my motion in lemony and he is furious. [01:50:17.640 --> 01:50:28.640] He gets to the one that objects to any questions concerning anything that occurred in any hypnotic interviews. [01:50:28.640 --> 01:50:48.640] The judge said, Mr. Calton, were you hypnotized? Well, I don't know, Judge. You know how they make you forget that kind of stuff. [01:50:48.640 --> 01:50:52.640] You don't need that judge to like you. [01:50:52.640 --> 01:51:02.640] You don't care what he thinks. The more PO'd you can get him, the better, because the more likely he is to do something stupid [01:51:02.640 --> 01:51:06.640] so you can kick him while squaring his professional behind. [01:51:06.640 --> 01:51:10.640] And if it's a municipal court, he's probably a lawyer. [01:51:10.640 --> 01:51:16.640] He got a bar card. You can bar grieve him at the same time. [01:51:16.640 --> 01:51:22.640] You'll never expect to win your case in the trial court. [01:51:22.640 --> 01:51:30.640] Your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [01:51:30.640 --> 01:51:38.640] So you don't care what that chump rules. The worse he does, the better for you. [01:51:38.640 --> 01:51:53.640] This guy on the bottom, he don't care about anything but collecting money. But as you move up from the municipal or justice of the peace, you'll appeal to the county. [01:51:53.640 --> 01:51:56.640] And the county appeal is a do-over. [01:51:56.640 --> 01:52:04.640] From the county, you appeal to the court of appeals. Now the court of appeals, they got a whole different agenda. [01:52:04.640 --> 01:52:10.640] They have to maintain the sanctity of the law. [01:52:10.640 --> 01:52:20.640] If they render a ruling to screw you, every other lawyer out there can use that bogus decision to screw somebody else. [01:52:20.640 --> 01:52:25.640] So the court of appeals has to be careful how they rule. [01:52:25.640 --> 01:52:28.640] Never expect to win in the trial court. [01:52:28.640 --> 01:52:31.640] They're starting to start in county court. [01:52:31.640 --> 01:52:40.640] You see, don't even expect to win in the county court because they're just as corrupt as the municipal court. [01:52:40.640 --> 01:52:44.640] However, the county court is elected. [01:52:44.640 --> 01:52:49.640] So you want to bar grieve him every time he moves. [01:52:49.640 --> 01:52:53.640] He says one word you don't like, bar grieve him. [01:52:53.640 --> 01:53:02.640] If he says one word about the bar grievance, he moved to disqualify. Now he has a personal interest in the case. [01:53:02.640 --> 01:53:10.640] And you charge him with witness tampering and obstruction of justice. Try that on, smart guy. [01:53:10.640 --> 01:53:12.640] We see how this works for you. [01:53:12.640 --> 01:53:22.640] If anybody says anything to you after you have filed a complaint, filing a complaint changes everything. [01:53:22.640 --> 01:53:40.640] These guys out here doing audits, if they call 911 and anybody says anything to them that they can't construe as a threat like you have to be careful. [01:53:40.640 --> 01:53:45.640] You can get in a lot of trouble 9-1-1. [01:53:45.640 --> 01:53:51.640] You want somebody to arrest him for witness tampering and retaliation. [01:53:51.640 --> 01:53:57.640] Well, I didn't threaten you. Well, it doesn't matter what you intended. [01:53:57.640 --> 01:54:02.640] It matters how I took it and I took it as a threat. [01:54:02.640 --> 01:54:06.640] I'll make the charge, but don't worry about it. It's all okay. [01:54:06.640 --> 01:54:13.640] I'm sure when you explain this to a grand jury, why they'll just throw it out. [01:54:13.640 --> 01:54:24.640] But as a citizen of the state, if I have reason to believe and do believe that a crime has been committed, it is my duty to report it. [01:54:24.640 --> 01:54:30.640] Then in Texas, if it's a felony and you don't report it, that's a class A misdemeanor. [01:54:30.640 --> 01:54:38.640] Oh, God, shoot the messenger here. You become protected. [01:54:38.640 --> 01:54:42.640] It ruins everything for him. [01:54:42.640 --> 01:54:44.640] Okay. [01:54:44.640 --> 01:54:51.640] Let me go back to Scott. I was going to go to Scott, but he dropped off. [01:54:51.640 --> 01:54:55.640] Did you have anything else, Chris? [01:54:55.640 --> 01:55:04.640] Just in the past, at one time, I started something like this and the judge actually allowed me to do it over the phone to appear by phone. [01:55:04.640 --> 01:55:07.640] Do you or do you not recommend I start it this way? [01:55:07.640 --> 01:55:16.640] I absolutely recommend you do that. In the documents you will download, there will be an objection to oral argument. [01:55:16.640 --> 01:55:24.640] You will ask the court to make all its rulings based on the pleadings. [01:55:24.640 --> 01:55:30.640] And then you can send a request for a hearings by phone. [01:55:30.640 --> 01:55:32.640] Okay. [01:55:32.640 --> 01:55:40.640] And that's a great idea. I should have that included. I need to mark that down. I need to add that to my documents. [01:55:40.640 --> 01:55:41.640] Okay. [01:55:41.640 --> 01:55:44.640] Phone appearance. [01:55:44.640 --> 01:55:48.640] Because then they can't bully me. It's fine. [01:55:48.640 --> 01:56:01.640] Yeah. Oh, Vinny, once you start going back after them, you will have grounds for a pretty major civil suit against them. [01:56:01.640 --> 01:56:06.640] It's just not the sharpest knives in the drawer. [01:56:06.640 --> 01:56:12.640] And it takes them a while to realize you've been setting them up. [01:56:12.640 --> 01:56:24.640] When you go in there and ask them to do something that you don't want them to do, and you're asking them because you don't want them to do it, [01:56:24.640 --> 01:56:33.640] when they blow you off, they're going to see in your face something that they're not going to be happy with. [01:56:33.640 --> 01:56:40.640] They're going to see something that says, this guy's not responding right. [01:56:40.640 --> 01:56:44.640] Something else going on here. [01:56:44.640 --> 01:56:51.640] And when they start getting worried and afraid, they start acting really ignorant. [01:56:51.640 --> 01:57:10.640] They try to get you worried and afraid so that you go to your response set that you tend to use when you're frightened or when you're out of your element. [01:57:10.640 --> 01:57:17.640] We don't get in these spots often, so we don't have a lot of good responses, and you tend to respond badly. [01:57:17.640 --> 01:57:20.640] And they take advantage of that. [01:57:20.640 --> 01:57:26.640] Well, if you're baiting them to get them to do it, and that changes everything. [01:57:26.640 --> 01:57:34.640] You're not responding right, and then they wind up out of their element, and they wind up doing stupid stuff. [01:57:34.640 --> 01:57:40.640] Once you've done this once, your whole perspective of change, and I suggest people fight tickets. [01:57:40.640 --> 01:57:52.640] It is the simplest way to get a good idea of how things work in the real world we live in. [01:57:52.640 --> 01:58:03.640] Once you've been through this once, when those lights come on behind you, you won't get that butterflies in the pity of your stomach. [01:58:03.640 --> 01:58:11.640] Lights come on behind me, and I look up in the mirror and think, Bubba, I'm fixing to give you a romp through the legal system. [01:58:11.640 --> 01:58:15.640] You are not going to believe me. [01:58:15.640 --> 01:58:19.640] Okay, thank you, Chris. [01:58:19.640 --> 01:58:22.640] Craig Caller used up the whole show. [01:58:22.640 --> 01:58:27.640] We'll be back tomorrow night at 8 o'clock central. [01:58:27.640 --> 01:58:29.640] Make sure you... [01:58:29.640 --> 01:58:33.640] Listen, I'm having a little trouble with my voice here at the end. Excuse me for that. [01:58:33.640 --> 01:58:36.640] But we'll be back tomorrow night for our four-hour show. [01:58:36.640 --> 01:58:39.640] So if you have a complex issue, we'll have a lot more time. [01:58:39.640 --> 01:58:49.640] Thank you all for listening, and good night. [01:58:49.640 --> 01:58:57.640] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.640 --> 01:59:04.640] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says, verse by verse, [01:59:04.640 --> 01:59:08.640] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.640 --> 01:59:11.640] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.640 --> 01:59:20.640] Call us toll-free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.640 --> 01:59:27.640] This translation is highly accurate, and it comes with over 13,000 cross-references, plus charts and maps, [01:59:27.640 --> 01:59:29.640] and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.640 --> 01:59:32.640] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.640 --> 01:59:40.640] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll-free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.640 --> 01:59:51.640] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:51.640 --> 02:00:10.640] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com.