[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flashes brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:15.480] Markets for Monday 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver $16.45.00, [00:15.480 --> 00:24.560] Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63.00, Brent Crude $62.47.00, and Cryptos in order [00:24.560 --> 00:34.020] of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, [00:34.020 --> 00:41.400] Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 of Crypto Coin. [00:41.400 --> 00:52.320] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.320 --> 00:57.000] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [00:57.000 --> 01:06.920] killing 10 and injuring 40. Today in History, and recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed [01:06.920 --> 01:12.240] House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into Texas' law back in June, county prosecutors around [01:12.240 --> 01:16.520] the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession [01:16.520 --> 01:20.400] charges and even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not [01:20.400 --> 01:25.480] have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, [01:25.480 --> 01:29.240] the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing [01:29.240 --> 01:33.640] 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:33.640 --> 01:37.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.640 --> 01:42.160] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.160 --> 01:48.280] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.280 --> 01:54.520] well as other cities, too, like the district attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.520 --> 01:59.000] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.000 --> 02:03.960] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue was succinctly summarized [02:03.960 --> 02:08.920] by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender, in Harris County, who stated that, quote, [02:08.920 --> 02:13.520] the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.520 --> 02:17.440] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.440 --> 02:18.840] charged with. [02:18.840 --> 02:27.280] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.280 --> 02:32.400] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.400 --> 02:38.080] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.080 --> 02:42.680] Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid [02:42.680 --> 02:49.240] from a gland near its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may [02:49.240 --> 02:50.720] be drawn into the glow. [02:50.720 --> 02:57.720] This is Roof Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:50.720 --> 04:20.680] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Felton, David Stevens here with our newest co-host, [04:20.680 --> 04:30.840] Brett Felton, on this Thursday, the fifth day of September, 2019. [04:30.840 --> 04:35.920] We don't have a guest today, so I'm going to turn the phones on and we will keep them [04:35.920 --> 04:36.920] on all night. [04:36.920 --> 04:44.920] If you have any questions or comments, give us a call or call in number, 512-646-1984. [04:44.920 --> 04:51.080] Brett, do you have any interesting developments in Hood County? [04:51.080 --> 05:01.600] Well, I have been all over Texas paperwork-wise, kind of giving these people a lot to work [05:01.600 --> 05:02.600] on. [05:02.600 --> 05:15.080] Did I tell you I went to the governor about the appointee? [05:15.080 --> 05:17.840] One of the prosecuting attorney appointees. [05:17.840 --> 05:25.440] Yes. Well, she's awaiting Senate confirmation because Governor Abbott had to stick her in [05:25.440 --> 05:33.600] place when the person before her lost he left a vacancy because of official oppression. [05:33.600 --> 05:42.760] So she's in there by appointment of the governor, and here she is letting her subordinates. [05:42.760 --> 05:45.360] Have you charged her with official oppression yet? [05:45.360 --> 05:47.720] I've charged her with a few things. [05:47.720 --> 05:54.800] I don't think official oppression was one of them yet, but yes, she's got some heavy [05:54.800 --> 05:56.080] ditty ones. [05:56.080 --> 06:01.280] You might send these to the committee that has to approve her. [06:01.280 --> 06:04.480] Yes, it turns out that that's the Senate. [06:04.480 --> 06:05.480] She's awaiting Senate confirmation. [06:05.480 --> 06:06.480] Oh, I did. [06:06.480 --> 06:15.160] I sent a good power pack document to the senators, all of them individually. [06:15.160 --> 06:19.720] And so they'll have something to talk about when they try to decide whether or not they're [06:19.720 --> 06:23.320] going to confirm her. [06:23.320 --> 06:30.160] And I also sent in some public information requests to Governor Abbott, because I'm really [06:30.160 --> 06:35.160] wanting to find out what was he thinking, but I put it in a really polite way. [06:35.160 --> 06:41.240] I said, I want to see records, all the documents, emails, memos, any kind of communications [06:41.240 --> 06:44.480] that indicate factors that you consider. [06:44.480 --> 06:46.160] That was what you were thinking. [06:46.160 --> 06:52.800] Right. Factors that you considered when you decided that it was that this person wasn't [06:52.800 --> 06:55.120] an appropriate appointee. [06:55.120 --> 07:00.360] And just as a little follow-up, I would like you to also give me all the public records [07:00.360 --> 07:04.760] and memos that indicate what is the proper procedure for us, we, the people, to get a [07:04.760 --> 07:10.680] real election to oust a bad appointee. [07:10.680 --> 07:15.560] So I'm sure they're putting that together right away, aren't they? [07:15.560 --> 07:16.560] Oh. [07:16.560 --> 07:19.600] Or are they going to wait for me to go to the Attorney General about the governor? [07:19.600 --> 07:24.880] This is, you know, this is what we keep telling people, the most powerful thing we can do. [07:24.880 --> 07:30.360] You know, we go down to Senate subcommittee hearings when we have legislation that we're [07:30.360 --> 07:32.080] concerned with. [07:32.080 --> 07:42.640] The last one I went to was when the legislature was considering upgrading 39.03 from a class [07:42.640 --> 07:50.680] A misdemeanor to a felony if any bodily injury was incurred in the process of an active official [07:50.680 --> 07:52.320] oppression. [07:52.320 --> 08:02.640] And there were probably 50 people in the room and 45 of them were special interests, companies, [08:02.640 --> 08:15.960] other departments, maybe five or six individuals in a country, in a state of 25 million. [08:15.960 --> 08:21.760] And there was one particular individual down there, he was, he was tough. [08:21.760 --> 08:26.520] I want to say he was a horse he's behind, but I can't say that on the radio, so I won't [08:26.520 --> 08:36.080] call Eddie Craig a horse he's behind, but he was on his preacher's soapbox. [08:36.080 --> 08:43.800] He crawled right down their throats and a prosecutor from Houston got up in front of [08:43.800 --> 08:51.000] them and told them that when these officers chased down this 15-year-old, 120-pound boy [08:51.000 --> 08:55.600] and kicked and stomped him for a minute and 20 seconds, that the only thing he could charge [08:55.600 --> 08:58.800] was his official oppression. [08:58.800 --> 09:06.440] And Eddie Craig got down there and stuffed 2202B2A down their throat, first degree felony [09:06.440 --> 09:08.800] aggravated assault. [09:08.800 --> 09:17.640] And this lawyer was sitting there with this, wish you were somewhere else, look. [09:17.640 --> 09:24.840] Well the upgrade to 39.03 got passed relatively easily. [09:24.840 --> 09:28.800] We can affect government. [09:28.800 --> 09:39.040] I suspect that it's seldom that an appointment of this type has received any series of opposition. [09:39.040 --> 09:48.480] And if you're sending criminal accusations against the appointee before she's even confirmed, [09:48.480 --> 09:54.360] this will demonstrate her as a political liability. [09:54.360 --> 10:01.280] And if you could knock out the district attorney using the governor and the Senate to do it, [10:01.280 --> 10:05.680] oh that will be choice. [10:05.680 --> 10:13.040] Well you know it's been almost 10 days since I asked the governor for that, what were you [10:13.040 --> 10:14.560] thinking? [10:14.560 --> 10:18.880] So we passed just a few more days here and it'll be his turn to talk to the Attorney [10:18.880 --> 10:21.680] General about why he's not giving me those records. [10:21.680 --> 10:27.560] Now it should be his time and his opportunity to talk to a grand jury why he's not giving [10:27.560 --> 10:29.080] those records. [10:29.080 --> 10:35.520] What do you have to hide? [10:35.520 --> 10:38.760] What are you trying to pull? [10:38.760 --> 10:41.360] We are having way too much fun with this stuff. [10:41.360 --> 10:47.040] Okay, I do have a couple of callers and one of them is Ted in California, haven't talked [10:47.040 --> 10:50.560] to him in a while. [10:50.560 --> 10:53.560] Do you have more for us, Brett? [10:53.560 --> 10:57.840] Well, I am enjoying this public records thing. [10:57.840 --> 11:03.520] This is, there's a couple of friends right now that have been asking me questions and [11:03.520 --> 11:10.400] I'm telling them how they can go and deal with this, just doesn't take too much paperwork [11:10.400 --> 11:15.360] and they can put these people on the dime with public information requests. [11:15.360 --> 11:22.080] Of course we have the bar grievances and judicial misconduct and all of that but sometimes just [11:22.080 --> 11:27.760] asking questions stirs things up in a good way. [11:27.760 --> 11:37.320] Oh yes, public, if you, I consider public information requests an art form. [11:37.320 --> 11:47.040] If you ask your question in just the right way, whoever gets it will look at it and say, [11:47.040 --> 11:52.040] why in the heck is he looking for this? [11:52.040 --> 11:53.040] And that's what I try to do. [11:53.040 --> 11:55.240] I try to get him to wonder why I'm looking for it. [11:55.240 --> 12:03.600] And if I'm looking for something very specific, specific, I try to ask my questions in a way [12:03.600 --> 12:07.720] that it's unclear what I'm actually looking for. [12:07.720 --> 12:11.720] You're not trying to bait them into asking why are you? [12:11.720 --> 12:12.720] Me? [12:12.720 --> 12:15.720] Well, I feel disparaged. [12:15.720 --> 12:19.000] Yes, as a matter of fact, I am. [12:19.000 --> 12:25.720] I'm always trying to get him to ask me why because for those who don't get the joke, [12:25.720 --> 12:37.320] there are two things, the custodian, two inquiries the custodian may make of the requestor to [12:37.320 --> 12:43.160] determine his identity and the record sought. [12:43.160 --> 12:51.440] So if he makes any request other than one of those two, gotcha, and it's reasonable [12:51.440 --> 13:00.040] why, you can't ask why, because if they know why and you don't find the records you're [13:00.040 --> 13:06.280] seeking, then they would be compromised. [13:06.280 --> 13:15.600] So there's a good reason for that restriction, but generally they don't ask unless I can [13:15.600 --> 13:18.040] bait them into it. [13:18.040 --> 13:20.280] And I do try to bait them into it. [13:20.280 --> 13:22.960] I always ask records I don't care about. [13:22.960 --> 13:25.680] And that works better in person, doesn't it? [13:25.680 --> 13:29.920] When you're hoping that they're going to ask you why, that works better in person. [13:29.920 --> 13:30.920] Yes. [13:30.920 --> 13:38.120] What they do, if I'm not in person, they ask me to narrow scope and sometimes in person [13:38.120 --> 13:39.120] they do that. [13:39.120 --> 13:46.680] They did that in Williamson County because they asked me, they told me that they didn't [13:46.680 --> 13:50.560] understand what I was asking for. [13:50.560 --> 14:01.560] And I told this assistant prosecuting attorney dressed like a hooker to ask the legislature. [14:01.560 --> 14:05.720] I asked for all records collected, simply maintained by the department that has specifically [14:05.720 --> 14:10.480] referenced the article 17.30 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and apparently she couldn't [14:10.480 --> 14:15.320] read that statute and figure out what I was asking for. [14:15.320 --> 14:22.800] So I told her I asked the legislature, she looked like she wanted to shoot me. [14:22.800 --> 14:26.720] I bet she did have that kind of a thought going on. [14:26.720 --> 14:34.720] There's also, you can draw an inference there that part of her competence to be able to [14:34.720 --> 14:41.320] do her job would have been literacy and you can bargree for obviously being illiterate. [14:41.320 --> 14:57.120] Well that, it's an art form, if you do it right, you use that to plant seeds of doubt [14:57.120 --> 15:00.120] and it has been my experience. [15:00.120 --> 15:07.280] The more corrupt a jurisdiction is, the more afraid of you they are because they know if [15:07.280 --> 15:13.280] you come down there and you make requests that are cryptic, like when I went to Williamson [15:13.280 --> 15:18.720] County and I didn't tell them why I was there and they asked me if they could help me and [15:18.720 --> 15:22.760] I dismissed them. [15:22.760 --> 15:28.040] They knew that I had looked at Doug Bell's records. [15:28.040 --> 15:35.600] They dismissed his case immediately, got his bond back to him the next day because these [15:35.600 --> 15:39.360] guys were all dirty and they knew they were. [15:39.360 --> 15:44.360] They knew that the procedures they had to follow were not proper but if they're going [15:44.360 --> 15:48.680] to keep their jobs they're going to follow these and then somebody comes in who's apparently [15:48.680 --> 15:50.960] looking at their procedure. [15:50.960 --> 15:58.640] So they're all afraid, each one of them goes home and cracks the closet door open to their [15:58.640 --> 16:07.040] deepest darkest skeletons and they know on thereafter them personally and the more corrupt [16:07.040 --> 16:08.760] they are, the worse they are. [16:08.760 --> 16:12.400] If they're not corrupt at all, I don't bother them a bit. [16:12.400 --> 16:17.880] They don't have a thing to worry about but if they're corrupt, makes them crazy and I [16:17.880 --> 16:20.160] have great fun at their expense. [16:20.160 --> 16:24.640] Okay, we are getting close to the end of this segment. [16:24.640 --> 16:29.520] When we come back, we're going to go to Ted in California and then we have Tina, we have [16:29.520 --> 16:35.360] a couple empty places on the call board so if you have a question or a comment, give [16:35.360 --> 16:44.320] us a call, 512-646-1984, we'll be taking your calls all night and I'll try not to preach [16:44.320 --> 16:47.120] too much. [16:47.120 --> 16:50.640] We only preach the gospel according to Randy here anyway. [16:50.640 --> 16:55.440] Okay, I'll be right back. [16:55.440 --> 16:57.720] We'll be right back. [16:57.720 --> 16:58.720] Something like that. [16:58.720 --> 17:04.400] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [17:04.400 --> 17:08.000] In today's America, we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [17:08.000 --> 17:12.360] going to have a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.360 --> 17:15.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [17:15.400 --> 17:19.440] in our own private capacity and most importantly, the right to do process of law. [17:19.440 --> 17:23.280] Rule of law courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.280 --> 17:25.160] our rights through due process. [17:25.160 --> 17:28.640] Former sheriff's deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with rule of law radio has put together the [17:28.640 --> 17:32.400] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [17:32.400 --> 17:34.800] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [17:34.800 --> 17:38.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [17:38.800 --> 17:40.120] ordering your copy today. [17:40.120 --> 17:43.480] By wearing now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [17:43.480 --> 17:47.920] The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [17:47.920 --> 17:50.240] documents and other useful resource material. [17:50.240 --> 17:54.200] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [17:54.200 --> 18:00.800] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:00.800 --> 18:06.120] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:06.120 --> 18:09.600] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meyers Proven Method. [18:09.600 --> 18:13.920] Michael Meyers has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.920 --> 18:14.920] can win too. [18:14.920 --> 18:19.800] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.800 --> 18:25.520] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer [18:25.520 --> 18:30.160] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [18:30.160 --> 18:34.360] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.360 --> 18:39.480] The Michael Meyers Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.480 --> 18:41.600] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.600 --> 18:47.160] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meyers banner [18:47.160 --> 18:50.160] or email MichaelMeyers at yahoo.com. [18:50.160 --> 18:57.840] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.840 --> 19:05.680] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, you're listening to the logos of radio network, [19:05.680 --> 19:12.680] sky.com. [19:35.680 --> 19:49.680] Okay, we are back. [19:49.680 --> 19:52.720] It's the rule of law radio, Randy Kilton. [19:52.720 --> 19:56.480] I'm Brett Fountain and we are going to go to Ted in California. [19:56.480 --> 19:57.480] Hi, Ted. [19:57.480 --> 19:58.480] Oh, wait. [19:58.480 --> 19:59.480] Ted, can you hear it? [19:59.480 --> 20:00.480] We can hear him. [20:00.480 --> 20:01.480] Okay, got you a muted, Ted. [20:01.480 --> 20:02.480] Bye, bad. [20:02.480 --> 20:09.480] No problem. [20:09.480 --> 20:10.480] Can you hear me now? [20:10.480 --> 20:11.480] And we can hear you. [20:11.480 --> 20:12.480] What do you have? [20:12.480 --> 20:13.480] Yes. [20:13.480 --> 20:18.080] Okay, again, hello, Brett and Randy. [20:18.080 --> 20:26.400] What I got for you tonight is I was at court today, you know, doing not in any hearings. [20:26.400 --> 20:33.800] And what I did last week, however, was I've been sick quite a bit. [20:33.800 --> 20:35.400] I've been sick in bed quite a bit. [20:35.400 --> 20:42.000] I got myself out of bed, wrote a quick motion and got it filed at the last minute last Friday. [20:42.000 --> 20:46.080] So the reason for the background is you'll understand in a minute. [20:46.080 --> 20:47.720] I went down there. [20:47.720 --> 20:49.520] My motion's proper. [20:49.520 --> 20:51.400] It's written proper. [20:51.400 --> 20:57.520] And at the window, they're going to give you a date and time, they're going to schedule [20:57.520 --> 20:58.520] it. [20:58.520 --> 20:59.520] Okay. [20:59.520 --> 21:02.840] And so those items are open on the pleading. [21:02.840 --> 21:07.400] And so how it's supposed to work is you're supposed to go up to the window, present your [21:07.400 --> 21:08.400] papers. [21:08.400 --> 21:15.480] The clerk is supposed to get on our computer, find the next available date and tell you. [21:15.480 --> 21:18.400] And then you handwrite it in, she files your papers. [21:18.400 --> 21:21.400] That's how it's supposed to work. [21:21.400 --> 21:22.400] Okay. [21:22.400 --> 21:29.000] How it works for me, I go down, my papers are all in order last Friday, my prints lent [21:29.000 --> 21:30.840] them to the clerk. [21:30.840 --> 21:34.880] She starts out just like she's supposed to. [21:34.880 --> 21:42.960] And all of a sudden, looking on the computer, she starts slowing down. [21:42.960 --> 21:45.680] She bogs down to almost a stop. [21:45.680 --> 21:50.400] And at that point, without even looking at me, she gets up from her chair, walks back [21:50.400 --> 21:56.120] to some other cubicles, and I hear some conversations, but I can't hear exactly what they're saying. [21:56.120 --> 21:58.560] She's talking to a supervisor. [21:58.560 --> 22:02.840] She comes back, sits down in her chair, and the supervisor stands behind her. [22:02.840 --> 22:07.600] They then pick up the phone and they call somebody. [22:07.600 --> 22:11.760] Conversations on the phone, pause, more conversation. [22:11.760 --> 22:19.240] They hang up, and then they say, okay, we'll file this for you. [22:19.240 --> 22:21.640] And they give a date. [22:21.640 --> 22:27.400] Now they gave a date and a time and a department, and because I was sick, I missed it. [22:27.400 --> 22:33.520] I know from experience that motions are heard in Department 29. [22:33.520 --> 22:36.320] That is the motion calendar. [22:36.320 --> 22:40.400] They didn't put my case or my motion in Department 29. [22:40.400 --> 22:42.440] They put it in Department 24. [22:42.440 --> 22:50.040] Department 24 is the presiding judge's general calendar courtroom, and that's where you get [22:50.040 --> 22:52.840] usually 100-plus people in there. [22:52.840 --> 22:58.840] Now they pulled this on me four months ago. [22:58.840 --> 23:03.600] Pretty much exactly what I just laid out to you was done four months ago. [23:03.600 --> 23:08.800] Four months ago, I didn't know any better at all. [23:08.800 --> 23:15.240] And so four months ago, when I went to the hearing in Department 24, which is not a motion [23:15.240 --> 23:23.360] calendar, I walk in there, they treated it like a status conference hearing at first, [23:23.360 --> 23:29.400] and then as a kind of an afterthought, the judge says, oh, by the way, that motion you [23:29.400 --> 23:35.280] filed in the wrong department, you'll have to take care of that. [23:35.280 --> 23:40.280] And that's how they deny you your due process out here. [23:40.280 --> 23:50.280] So and remember, Randy, once before, after a hearing to vacate trial date, they denied [23:50.280 --> 23:59.280] my motion to vacate trial date, but they granted the motion of the DA to vacate trial date. [23:59.280 --> 24:07.440] I went a day later and put a motion in for reconsideration, and I did it because I didn't [24:07.440 --> 24:10.160] have a copy of the DA's papers. [24:10.160 --> 24:15.920] And I didn't know what the hell they even said to the judge in their papers. [24:15.920 --> 24:21.960] And so what happened in that one is the judge on her own just removed my motion off-calendar [24:21.960 --> 24:24.920] without saying anything to anybody. [24:24.920 --> 24:28.680] And I went down for the hearing, and I wasn't on calendar. [24:28.680 --> 24:34.760] So back to the current situation because of the experience four months ago, which basically [24:34.760 --> 24:38.160] they just denied me my due process. [24:38.160 --> 24:44.480] Last night, I was just kind of looking at the case, and now they've gone electronically [24:44.480 --> 24:51.280] so I can see a lot of things on my computer at home, like the register of record. [24:51.280 --> 24:58.560] And that's when I caught it, and I said, those SOBs are doing it to me again. [24:58.560 --> 25:04.560] So I went down there today with a witness, went down there for two reasons. [25:04.560 --> 25:09.600] This witness is a notary, and the first thing is we went to the record side of the room [25:09.600 --> 25:14.280] and asked to see the court case file, and of course, it's not available. [25:14.280 --> 25:18.640] But again, now it's online, and the girls ask me, well, what do you want to see? [25:18.640 --> 25:22.560] And I said, I want a copy of the arrest warrant. [25:22.560 --> 25:30.160] And one thing leaves another, and it's about 30 minutes, and they, after she tells me the [25:30.160 --> 25:35.880] file is not available, but she also tells us there is no arrest warrant looking on her [25:35.880 --> 25:42.920] screen because now every document in the file on her screen is a PDF. [25:42.920 --> 25:52.880] And she's not finding a PDF arrest warrant like she would normally find, and knows. [25:52.880 --> 25:57.360] And she also knows they're usually right at the top of the whole thing. [25:57.360 --> 26:02.440] So on her own, after she told me the court case file was not available, she decided to [26:02.440 --> 26:06.460] go up to the courtroom where she knew the damn file was. [26:06.460 --> 26:12.440] She went up there, and I guess looked at the file, but she didn't bring it down. [26:12.440 --> 26:15.560] And then she again said, well, I don't see an arrest warrant in there. [26:15.560 --> 26:18.640] Maybe it's up there because they're fixing that. [26:18.640 --> 26:20.840] You brought this up, and they're fixing it. [26:20.840 --> 26:25.480] And I go, I brought it up two years ago. [26:25.480 --> 26:36.840] And so we established with a notary witness there today that there is no arrest warrant, [26:36.840 --> 26:40.080] but there never was. [26:40.080 --> 26:46.120] But then I went back over to the other side about this issue of my motion that was filed [26:46.120 --> 26:47.680] last Friday. [26:47.680 --> 26:52.720] And at this point, I got a clerk there, and I got that manager standing there. [26:52.720 --> 26:57.200] And I got that manager to tell us every detail of what happened last Friday, and Mike Notary [26:57.200 --> 26:58.700] heard it all. [26:58.700 --> 27:03.400] And he said it just like this, well, yeah, you came down, you wanted to file that. [27:03.400 --> 27:12.800] And well, we called up to the courtroom, and I go courtroom, and I go, I don't understand. [27:12.800 --> 27:18.040] Well, the judge told us to schedule it in Department 24. [27:18.040 --> 27:22.080] I go, well, I don't care what the judge told you, that's not the motion department, is [27:22.080 --> 27:23.080] it? [27:23.080 --> 27:25.280] Department 29 is the motion department. [27:25.280 --> 27:28.440] Well, yeah. [27:28.440 --> 27:30.600] But I go, so you talked to the judge. [27:30.600 --> 27:33.240] No, well, well, we talked to the judge's clerk. [27:33.240 --> 27:40.000] So what they said is, when I came in last week, that phone call was to the judge's clerk. [27:40.000 --> 27:42.320] The judge's clerk talked to the judge. [27:42.320 --> 27:47.920] The judge instructed her clerk what to tell the clerk down at the filing room, and told [27:47.920 --> 27:49.680] him what to do. [27:49.680 --> 27:54.320] So now, I think I know what Randy's going to tell me, got to start writing some criminal [27:54.320 --> 27:55.560] complaints here. [27:55.560 --> 28:00.240] Not yet, not yet. [28:00.240 --> 28:01.920] Hang on. [28:01.920 --> 28:09.880] Go to that hearing on the 24, actually at Department 24 and get the judge to tell you [28:09.880 --> 28:11.440] you're not on calendar. [28:11.440 --> 28:16.200] Oh, I'm going to be on calendar, but what she's going to say is what she said four [28:16.200 --> 28:18.840] months ago when she did this to me. [28:18.840 --> 28:22.000] She's going to say, you put this in the wrong department. [28:22.000 --> 28:23.000] Good. [28:23.000 --> 28:24.000] Good. [28:24.000 --> 28:28.120] Get her to say that on the record. [28:28.120 --> 28:31.640] Even what I did today, she may not do that. [28:31.640 --> 28:40.040] What she may do on the 11th is send us up to Department 29. [28:40.040 --> 28:43.480] She may do that. [28:43.480 --> 28:47.120] Because you already called him on it? [28:47.120 --> 28:48.120] Right. [28:48.120 --> 28:51.920] But she's already done this to me once before. [28:51.920 --> 28:54.640] It's all documented in the court record. [28:54.640 --> 28:56.000] So if she does do it again. [28:56.000 --> 29:02.760] Now another thing you need to know is my trial is set for September 30th. [29:02.760 --> 29:09.200] And remember when I called in last time, it's been a while, two months ago, I went to court. [29:09.200 --> 29:15.680] What was on calendar that day that I appeared was identification of counsel. [29:15.680 --> 29:21.360] So when they called the case, I got up and I said, I haven't found counsel. [29:21.360 --> 29:28.240] And she asked what you want me to do and I was a dummy and didn't say I want you to dismiss [29:28.240 --> 29:31.720] this fabulous thing. [29:31.720 --> 29:37.240] In any case, when I told her I didn't have counsel, she went ahead and scheduled a trial [29:37.240 --> 29:42.200] date and I told her you're violating my constitutional rights. [29:42.200 --> 29:48.960] I said, I just told you I don't have counsel. [29:48.960 --> 29:53.680] Did you ask the court to appoint counsel? [29:53.680 --> 29:56.680] No. [29:56.680 --> 30:02.040] Did the court offer to appoint counsel? [30:02.040 --> 30:06.200] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.200 --> 30:10.720] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.720 --> 30:11.720] secrets. [30:11.720 --> 30:16.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.120 --> 30:17.720] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.720 --> 30:21.320] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.320 --> 30:26.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.120 --> 30:27.560] So protect your rights. [30:27.560 --> 30:31.200] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.200 --> 30:33.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.880 --> 30:38.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:38.200 --> 30:41.680] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.680 --> 30:45.360] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.360 --> 30:50.120] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.120 --> 30:51.600] your personal information. [30:51.600 --> 30:54.560] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.560 --> 30:56.280] It's not an idle question. [30:56.280 --> 31:01.400] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.400 --> 31:03.720] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.720 --> 31:07.600] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [31:07.600 --> 31:12.280] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.280 --> 31:15.680] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.680 --> 31:16.680] to see. [31:16.680 --> 31:18.200] The cupboard would be bare. [31:18.200 --> 31:21.280] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.280 --> 31:23.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.240 --> 31:30.960] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.960 --> 31:31.960] I lost my son. [31:31.960 --> 31:32.960] My nephew. [31:32.960 --> 31:33.960] My uncle. [31:33.960 --> 31:34.960] My son. [31:34.960 --> 31:35.960] On September 11, 2004. [31:35.960 --> 31:39.240] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.240 --> 31:43.320] Old Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.320 --> 31:47.240] I will tell you the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [31:47.240 --> 31:52.080] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more [31:52.080 --> 31:53.080] to the story. [31:53.080 --> 31:54.480] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.480 --> 31:55.480] My uncle. [31:55.480 --> 31:56.480] My nephew. [31:56.480 --> 31:57.480] My son. [31:57.480 --> 31:58.480] Go to building what.org. [31:58.480 --> 32:01.000] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.000 --> 32:03.600] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.600 --> 32:06.600] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.600 --> 32:10.280] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [32:10.280 --> 32:11.280] them to pay for it. [32:11.280 --> 32:14.880] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.880 --> 32:18.680] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:18.680 --> 32:21.440] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.440 --> 32:25.720] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [32:25.720 --> 32:27.040] zero complaints. [32:27.040 --> 32:31.240] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [32:31.240 --> 32:32.480] the first time. [32:32.480 --> 32:41.120] You can call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show, and get $100 off. [32:41.120 --> 32:45.720] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:45.720 --> 32:50.880] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:50.880 --> 32:56.920] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:56.920 --> 32:58.880] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:58.880 --> 33:05.880] I may not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:28.880 --> 33:57.280] Okay, we are back. [33:57.280 --> 34:05.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Ranoff to Cliff last time. [34:05.800 --> 34:10.600] I take no responsibility for my behavior. [34:10.600 --> 34:18.200] But we were talking on the break, Ted, and did you have counsel at one time? [34:18.200 --> 34:23.240] Yeah, remember, this has been going on for almost five years. [34:23.240 --> 34:25.440] They forced the public defender on me. [34:25.440 --> 34:31.560] The only way I got him off was by hiring private counsel that represented me through the preliminary [34:31.560 --> 34:32.560] hearing. [34:32.560 --> 34:36.440] And now, for almost three years, I've been representing myself. [34:36.440 --> 34:41.880] But for the last year, on every paper, I've been putting without counsel. [34:41.880 --> 34:47.400] And at the first of this year, I told them very clear, I am not representing myself. [34:47.400 --> 34:48.920] I'm here under duress. [34:48.920 --> 34:50.400] I'm not a lawyer. [34:50.400 --> 34:51.560] I'm not a lawyer. [34:51.560 --> 34:54.160] What happened to the counsel you hired? [34:54.160 --> 34:58.920] Well, we had an agreement that he just represented me through preliminary hearing. [34:58.920 --> 34:59.920] So he... [34:59.920 --> 35:01.640] Then ask them to appoint counsel. [35:01.640 --> 35:07.720] The first thing you do is take control of your counsel. [35:07.720 --> 35:13.920] Let him know that he will adequately adjudicate every issue before the court. [35:13.920 --> 35:17.960] For every issue, he does not adequately adjudicate, you're bar-grieving. [35:17.960 --> 35:18.960] Okay. [35:18.960 --> 35:25.120] Then he will move the court to allow him to withdraw. [35:25.120 --> 35:30.160] And then you object and order the court to stay out of your private business. [35:30.160 --> 35:33.000] This is a private contract. [35:33.000 --> 35:38.280] You let the lawyer know if the judge who moves you from this case, I get to sue the judge [35:38.280 --> 35:41.800] for interfering with the private contract. [35:41.800 --> 35:43.440] That's not within scope. [35:43.440 --> 35:46.400] That's what I did to my lawyer in Austin. [35:46.400 --> 35:49.800] And he was sure I was going to get him disbarred. [35:49.800 --> 35:54.760] And that gave him plausible deniability so he could go in and fight for my case. [35:54.760 --> 35:59.720] The judge dismissed the case to protect my lawyer from me. [35:59.720 --> 36:00.720] Okay. [36:00.720 --> 36:05.000] Something to think about. [36:05.000 --> 36:10.200] I just filed another bar agreement against the public defender's office. [36:10.200 --> 36:18.000] And I cited that they committed malpractice that they tried to take me to trial without [36:18.000 --> 36:21.400] not securing any of the evidence that proves my innocence. [36:21.400 --> 36:26.320] They did not hire any expert witness to testify at trial. [36:26.320 --> 36:30.880] And they, you know, I just listed everything that they did wrong in the bar complaint. [36:30.880 --> 36:40.000] I did that because you asked me, as we ran into the break, if the judge offered counsel [36:40.000 --> 36:45.840] and she asked me, do you want me to give you a referral to the public defender's office, [36:45.840 --> 36:50.240] my response was they are conflicted out. [36:50.240 --> 36:51.240] Okay. [36:51.240 --> 36:55.000] That's what my response was. [36:55.000 --> 37:00.960] And she, like I said, she set this trial date and I don't have representation. [37:00.960 --> 37:06.120] And so I told her, until you have representation, if you want representation, they're not supposed [37:06.120 --> 37:08.080] to move forward with the case. [37:08.080 --> 37:17.320] Now, I've also sent out by fax letter to 23 defense lawyers a one-page contract. [37:17.320 --> 37:23.440] It's very simple that you'll, I'm looking for an attorney and my contract is this, that [37:23.440 --> 37:31.440] you agree that you will protect and defend all of my constitutional and other rights. [37:31.440 --> 37:38.640] And then I ask them if they want their payment in federal reserve debt notes or lawful money. [37:38.640 --> 37:40.360] I only ask those two things. [37:40.360 --> 37:44.400] I can't find a single attorney to sign that contract. [37:44.400 --> 37:48.920] And so I've documented all of that and I'm going to be submitting it to the court that [37:48.920 --> 37:56.240] I can't, I've, I've got sponsors who will pay for my private counsel, but I can't find [37:56.240 --> 37:59.760] an attorney that'll agree to protect my constitutional rights. [37:59.760 --> 38:05.240] Okay, you have a right to counsel of your choice. [38:05.240 --> 38:11.840] So move the court to appoint you counsel of your choice and pick the most expensive lawyer [38:11.840 --> 38:14.360] in the jurisdiction. [38:14.360 --> 38:21.280] Oh, I know who I, if that's the case, I want Daniel Horowitz. [38:21.280 --> 38:26.880] Ask, you request him counsel of choice. [38:26.880 --> 38:30.320] And then when he finds out that you've been barred, we've been barred, the prosecutor, [38:30.320 --> 38:34.240] he is not going to touch you with a 10 foot pole. [38:34.240 --> 38:40.920] And now if he gets appointed, he has no option and you, you know, he's looking at you damaging [38:40.920 --> 38:44.240] his illustrious career. [38:44.240 --> 38:47.480] And that gives him plausible deniability with the court. [38:47.480 --> 38:52.000] So he can come in and put pressure on the prosecutor, make this go away, Ted. [38:52.000 --> 38:54.920] I can almost guarantee you. [38:54.920 --> 39:00.160] This will go away on the courthouse steps. [39:00.160 --> 39:07.720] Mike Handel, they fought him to the courthouse steps and made him a final offer on the courthouse [39:07.720 --> 39:11.160] steps and he told them to go scratch. [39:11.160 --> 39:16.680] They walked into the courtroom, dismissed everything out of hand. [39:16.680 --> 39:21.560] There is no way these guys are going to want to get this in front of a jury. [39:21.560 --> 39:26.920] Well, Justin, it's all smoke and mirrors. [39:26.920 --> 39:31.400] Let me move on to something that will give you a bigger picture. [39:31.400 --> 39:36.960] I finally went before the appellate court on the civil action. [39:36.960 --> 39:37.960] Okay. [39:37.960 --> 39:44.040] Remember, the house was put back in my name and so the guy that bought the house at foreclosure [39:44.040 --> 39:50.800] stale sued me for quiet title and ultimately ran into court without noticing the trial [39:50.800 --> 39:51.800] date. [39:51.800 --> 39:57.840] It was a five-minute trial and actually was calendared as a prove-up against the other [39:57.840 --> 40:04.120] named defendants, but somehow suckered this judge who had never seen the case to go ahead [40:04.120 --> 40:09.040] and basically an evidentiary trial, five minutes they took my house. [40:09.040 --> 40:10.920] They didn't notice that trial. [40:10.920 --> 40:13.160] I put that on appeal. [40:13.160 --> 40:14.520] It took two years. [40:14.520 --> 40:17.200] My oral argument was last Tuesday. [40:17.200 --> 40:23.720] I went and gave the oral argument with blood pressure of 167 over 111 and the first thing, [40:23.720 --> 40:27.640] of course, I said, I told them I'm medically incompetent to give this today and I want [40:27.640 --> 40:30.840] a continuance and they denied me. [40:30.840 --> 40:36.160] Justice Greenwood is the lead justice in the Sixth District Court of Appeals. [40:36.160 --> 40:43.320] Turns out she used to be the public defender for Santa Clara County. [40:43.320 --> 40:53.200] Turns out, I found out last night, she's married to federal court judge. [40:53.200 --> 40:55.360] His name just flew out of my head. [40:55.360 --> 41:01.040] Anyway, go on, it'll come back to the federal court judge. [41:01.040 --> 41:03.200] I've got a beef. [41:03.200 --> 41:05.520] I have a beef with that fed judge. [41:05.520 --> 41:16.960] I had cases before him and remember down at the state court, Socrates Peter Mnuchin is [41:16.960 --> 41:22.600] the guy that's caused this whole damn thing because I sued him in federal court in front [41:22.600 --> 41:24.280] of that fed judge. [41:24.280 --> 41:30.200] Now, guess who's standing in front of me on this appellate court? [41:30.200 --> 41:35.040] The wives of these two judges. [41:35.040 --> 41:38.680] You've got a huge problem out here. [41:38.680 --> 41:39.680] You can't... [41:39.680 --> 41:46.200] It's California, the most corrupt state in the Union. [41:46.200 --> 41:50.000] So what is that guy's name? [41:50.000 --> 41:53.040] That is unbelievable, but it's just... [41:53.040 --> 42:04.000] My mom is 96, almost 97 and she'll tell you that is not going to get better. [42:04.000 --> 42:13.040] Well, they tell me it's the second thing to go, but they don't forgot what the first [42:13.040 --> 42:15.040] one was. [42:15.040 --> 42:22.880] So this, the Socrates Peter Mnuchin, remember, sent the SWAT team to a house. [42:22.880 --> 42:31.080] They intended on killing me that day and I'm not being overdramatic here, folks. [42:31.080 --> 42:40.000] That was the plan and unfortunately for them, I happen to walk outside at the right time. [42:40.000 --> 42:44.960] But they planned on busting down the door and lying and say that I reached for something. [42:44.960 --> 42:48.760] They had machine guns, okay? [42:48.760 --> 42:55.920] They fully intended because how dare I sue Socrates Peter Mnuchin? [42:55.920 --> 42:57.200] That's what we're dealing with. [42:57.200 --> 43:02.220] This is...California is the... [43:02.220 --> 43:03.720] It's gone. [43:03.720 --> 43:04.920] It's gone. [43:04.920 --> 43:06.440] We can't get any justice out here. [43:06.440 --> 43:08.000] I'm not the only one. [43:08.000 --> 43:14.040] So again, Greenwood is married to Judge Davila. [43:14.040 --> 43:17.440] He's a justice, I guess, in the federal court. [43:17.440 --> 43:25.000] Then we have Socrates Peter Mnuchin and his wife, Batramus Mnuchin, sat on this appell court. [43:25.000 --> 43:29.280] Now, I did an excellent job. [43:29.280 --> 43:37.440] I just seemed to get better and better in court and your music's playing. [43:37.440 --> 43:43.360] I'm glad somebody can hear that music because I was about to dive off the cliff again. [43:43.360 --> 43:44.360] Hang on. [43:44.360 --> 43:45.760] We'll be right back. [43:45.760 --> 43:53.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [43:53.840 --> 43:57.520] We'll be right back. [43:57.520 --> 44:04.960] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.960 --> 44:09.360] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. 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[44:43.600 --> 44:46.600] Call us at 512-646-6404. [44:46.600 --> 44:51.600] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.600 --> 44:54.600] We open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.600 --> 44:59.600] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6404. [44:59.600 --> 45:04.600] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.600 --> 45:10.600] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD [45:10.600 --> 45:15.600] course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.600 --> 45:19.600] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.600 --> 45:23.600] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.600 --> 45:28.600] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.600 --> 45:34.600] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.600 --> 45:39.600] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.600 --> 45:43.600] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.600 --> 45:48.600] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:48.600 --> 45:51.600] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:51.600 --> 46:20.600] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:21.600 --> 46:31.600] Thank you for watching. [46:51.600 --> 47:01.600] Okay, we are back. [47:01.600 --> 47:07.600] This is rule of law radio on the 5th of September, 2019. [47:07.600 --> 47:12.600] We are talking with Ted in California. [47:12.600 --> 47:21.600] Okay, Brett, so where I left off was that these two justices in the Sixth District Court of Appeals, [47:21.600 --> 47:31.600] I've already had problems with their husbands, and I sued the one Socrates Peter Mnuchin [47:31.600 --> 47:39.600] in federal court and judge Davila in the federal court ultimately dismissed that lawsuit [47:39.600 --> 47:44.600] and dismissed it on papers that were not signed. [47:44.600 --> 47:53.600] That Mnuchin had to go hire a law firm, and the lawyer submitted papers for dismissal and various things, [47:53.600 --> 47:58.600] but didn't sign a single one of them ever to this day, I'm going to check, they're not signed. [47:58.600 --> 48:04.600] Not signed by the lawyer or the dismissal is not signed by the judge? [48:04.600 --> 48:09.600] The lawyer's papers motioning for dismissal. [48:09.600 --> 48:11.600] But that's not what's important. [48:11.600 --> 48:15.600] What's important is these two justices in the Sixth District Court of Appeals, [48:15.600 --> 48:27.600] how in the hell can they sit up there with a straight face and not self-recuse for all of the background on this? [48:27.600 --> 48:29.600] And here's the kicker. [48:29.600 --> 48:37.600] I went in there, gave the oral argument, and I left out of there just before 3 p.m. on Tuesday. [48:37.600 --> 48:45.600] The following day, they had in the mail to me an order affirming the lower court judgment. [48:45.600 --> 48:47.600] It was a 16-page order. [48:47.600 --> 48:51.600] They had that out the next day in the mail. [48:51.600 --> 48:56.600] Now, how's that possible? [48:56.600 --> 49:00.600] Well, obviously, they deliberated it over all night long. [49:00.600 --> 49:07.600] They worked so hard to make sure that you got that in a timely manner. [49:07.600 --> 49:09.600] That's right. [49:09.600 --> 49:13.600] So, obviously, I'm going to appeal that. [49:13.600 --> 49:18.600] For everyone, I think I made one mistake that would have made it even stronger, [49:18.600 --> 49:24.600] which would have been submitting an affidavit in support of my opening brief. [49:24.600 --> 49:31.600] And the key is that the opposing side never filed a single paper in this appeal. [49:31.600 --> 49:37.600] And the court had to fault at them, fully default at them. [49:37.600 --> 49:40.600] And I need to lose. [49:40.600 --> 49:46.600] And it's not possible for me to lose if you follow the law because the law is very clear. [49:46.600 --> 49:53.600] If you're not given the trial date, if there's no notice of trial date, that trial is void, period. [49:53.600 --> 49:56.600] That's by operation of law. [49:56.600 --> 50:04.600] And in their ruling, which I skimmed at once, read it quickly a second time through, [50:04.600 --> 50:10.600] all I can see in there regarding that one issue I raised, a mini, [50:10.600 --> 50:14.600] they're saying that I didn't cite the actual statute. [50:14.600 --> 50:17.600] And therefore, they didn't have to rule in my favor. [50:17.600 --> 50:19.600] That's wrong. [50:19.600 --> 50:28.600] In the statute, I cited the Fifth and Sixth Amendment, which trumps any statute all day long. [50:28.600 --> 50:39.600] So they're dead wrong, and they've outed themselves for not following the law. [50:39.600 --> 50:47.600] And I also cited a case they just ruled on and ordered published at the end of July. [50:47.600 --> 50:53.600] The similarity is, is that case, that person who I happen to know who calls into this show, [50:53.600 --> 50:57.600] they reversed in his. [50:57.600 --> 51:03.600] Why? Because he wasn't given notice of the trial. [51:03.600 --> 51:07.600] And so I cited their published opinion that they just made, and I told them, [51:07.600 --> 51:13.600] if you don't rule in the same way in my case, then you are not being consistent. [51:13.600 --> 51:17.600] I'm telling you, my presentation, I was going to take a lawyer. [51:17.600 --> 51:24.600] I don't care if I had a pocket full of money and paid some lawyer, the top lawyer around to come. [51:24.600 --> 51:26.600] It wouldn't have mattered. [51:26.600 --> 51:30.600] They couldn't have done any better than I did. [51:30.600 --> 51:35.600] They just flat ruled against me, and I think it's for the reasons that I've already discussed. [51:35.600 --> 51:37.600] They have nothing to do in law. [51:37.600 --> 51:45.600] So now they've outed themselves as they don't even follow the law. [51:45.600 --> 51:47.600] So I'm curious, Ted. [51:47.600 --> 51:53.600] You mentioned a moment ago that they would have reason to self-recuse. [51:53.600 --> 51:55.600] Obviously they would. [51:55.600 --> 51:57.600] Did you know about that at the time? [51:57.600 --> 52:00.600] Did you try to follow a motion to disqualify? [52:00.600 --> 52:07.600] I knew about Manukian. I did not know about Greenwood until after. [52:07.600 --> 52:15.600] On the advice of the guy that won before them, he told me not to bring it up about Manukian [52:15.600 --> 52:17.600] because she ruled in his favor. [52:17.600 --> 52:24.600] Just to tell her and remind her that she had just ruled in his favor. [52:24.600 --> 52:27.600] He talked me into it. [52:27.600 --> 52:31.600] It was my plan to go in there and tell Manukian, you have to recuse yourself. [52:31.600 --> 52:36.600] I said, come on, man, I sued your husband. [52:36.600 --> 52:43.600] Now, honestly, Brett, from all my experience, you know what I think she would have said? [52:43.600 --> 52:46.600] Oh, well, is that suit still open? [52:46.600 --> 52:47.600] No. [52:47.600 --> 52:52.600] Oh, well, there's no current conflict then. [52:52.600 --> 52:56.600] That's what California judges do. [52:56.600 --> 52:59.600] But she doesn't get to talk with you about it. [52:59.600 --> 53:04.600] If you follow the motion, that triggers the judge's responsibility. [53:04.600 --> 53:12.600] The judge has a duty to either acknowledge that that's the truth and back down gracefully [53:12.600 --> 53:19.600] or refer that motion for some other judge to take a look at it from the outside. [53:19.600 --> 53:22.600] They don't get to just talk you out of it. [53:22.600 --> 53:23.600] Hold on, Ted. [53:23.600 --> 53:34.600] The suit against Manukian, is there an appeal in place on that? [53:34.600 --> 53:36.600] No. [53:36.600 --> 53:38.600] Oh, okay. [53:38.600 --> 53:44.600] But here's what I'm going to do because there were three cases that day. [53:44.600 --> 53:51.600] The case before mine, Manukian did not sit and hear that. [53:51.600 --> 53:56.600] And so when they concluded that case, they called the next case. [53:56.600 --> 54:01.600] The next case lasted, but hold on, they called the first case. [54:01.600 --> 54:06.600] And when it concluded, one of the justices got up and walked out. [54:06.600 --> 54:09.600] Greenwood said, as you can see, justice so-and-so just left. [54:09.600 --> 54:11.600] Another justice will be joining us in a minute. [54:11.600 --> 54:15.600] And go ahead, case number two, come on up and get situated. [54:15.600 --> 54:18.600] That case lasted less than two minutes. [54:18.600 --> 54:21.600] And then my case was called. [54:21.600 --> 54:26.600] Now, what I'm going to say is she wasn't on the bench. [54:26.600 --> 54:33.600] And I was caught off guard that she came up on the bench as the proceeding started. [54:33.600 --> 54:38.600] And so, and I wasn't aware because of my illness, [54:38.600 --> 54:45.600] and I didn't realize who she was until after the hearing. [54:45.600 --> 54:49.600] And that's what I'm going to bring up. [54:49.600 --> 54:54.600] And it isn't an interesting that one of the justices got up and walked out, [54:54.600 --> 54:59.600] and then she comes in and Manukian comes in and replaces that one to hear my case. [54:59.600 --> 55:01.600] Right. [55:01.600 --> 55:04.600] Pretty shady. [55:04.600 --> 55:12.600] And by the way, at the end, as she got up, [55:12.600 --> 55:15.600] she looked down, you know, when someone first goes to get up out of a chair, [55:15.600 --> 55:17.600] they kind of look down. [55:17.600 --> 55:21.600] She tilted her head down, but her eyes locked on my eyes. [55:21.600 --> 55:27.600] And as she rose out of the chair, she kept her eyes locked on my eyes. [55:27.600 --> 55:30.600] I could almost hear her head. [55:30.600 --> 55:31.600] You sued my husband. [55:31.600 --> 55:35.600] I could almost hear it. [55:35.600 --> 55:39.600] And remember, guys, these people, [55:39.600 --> 55:44.600] there's a lot of claims out here against them. [55:44.600 --> 55:49.600] There's a lot of claims against them, and they call them the Manukian crime family. [55:49.600 --> 55:55.600] You can go online and see all the claims that people are making. [55:55.600 --> 56:02.600] And anyway, that's pretty much all I have, Randy. [56:02.600 --> 56:04.600] I don't know what else you could. [56:04.600 --> 56:07.600] So I'm going to go to this hearing next Wednesday. [56:07.600 --> 56:14.600] Have you filed any criminal complaints against him with the U.S. Attorney General? [56:14.600 --> 56:16.600] No. [56:16.600 --> 56:18.600] Let me tell you why. [56:18.600 --> 56:22.600] At the end of the day, it's all politics. [56:22.600 --> 56:30.600] And right now, there is one place the president is not happy with, [56:30.600 --> 56:34.600] and that's California. [56:34.600 --> 56:38.600] And the California cartels out here, you know, [56:38.600 --> 56:42.600] Trump may have a snout in somebody's trough. [56:42.600 --> 56:46.600] It's not theirs. [56:46.600 --> 56:56.600] He might just look forward to an excuse to hammer these judges in California just before the election. [56:56.600 --> 57:00.600] Well, Randy, also very important. [57:00.600 --> 57:07.600] Our sheriff is in a big fight with our district attorney right now. [57:07.600 --> 57:12.600] And what the beef is, is the district attorney went to the county board of supervisors. [57:12.600 --> 57:20.600] He's asking for direct access to the computer electronic recording system of all phone calls from the jail. [57:20.600 --> 57:23.600] The current process does not allow that. [57:23.600 --> 57:25.600] He has to put a request into the sheriff. [57:25.600 --> 57:27.600] The sheriff wants things to... [57:27.600 --> 57:28.600] Wait a minute. [57:28.600 --> 57:38.600] The federal judge just hammered every U.S. attorney in Kansas for that kind of garbage. [57:38.600 --> 57:39.600] Well, okay. [57:39.600 --> 57:41.600] Let's take that up in a second. [57:41.600 --> 57:48.600] So what did this SOB do after I sent you those video recordings of me talking to the supervisors [57:48.600 --> 57:53.600] and telling them we got an out of control district attorney and I want a vote of no confidence [57:53.600 --> 57:59.600] because he is knowingly prosecuting people that are innocent, that he knows are innocent, [57:59.600 --> 58:02.600] not just me, many other people. [58:02.600 --> 58:08.600] And he turned around and he raided the sheriff's home and offices. [58:08.600 --> 58:14.600] He's trying to find something to charge the sheriff with now. [58:14.600 --> 58:18.600] So he's kind of in open warfare. [58:18.600 --> 58:22.600] Yep. [58:22.600 --> 58:26.600] And you need to give the sheriff a reason to go after him. [58:26.600 --> 58:28.600] Oh, that's what I was going to tell you. [58:28.600 --> 58:39.600] I think I need to go to her and charge him and especially him and his deputy DA for sending me that email extortion offer. [58:39.600 --> 58:42.600] Politics. [58:42.600 --> 58:46.600] That may be what she needs. [58:46.600 --> 58:47.600] You never know. [58:47.600 --> 58:50.600] I almost got all the highest judges in... [58:50.600 --> 58:53.600] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [58:53.600 --> 58:58.600] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.600 --> 59:01.600] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.600 --> 59:06.600] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.600 --> 59:09.600] Enter the recovery version. 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[01:00:05.600 --> 01:00:10.600] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, [01:00:10.600 --> 01:00:15.600] gold at $1,429 an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, [01:00:15.600 --> 01:00:20.600] copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:20.600 --> 01:00:25.600] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, [01:00:25.600 --> 01:00:31.600] Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, [01:00:31.600 --> 01:00:36.600] XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, [01:00:36.600 --> 01:00:45.600] and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.600 --> 01:00:50.600] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, [01:00:50.600 --> 01:00:54.600] a time suitcase bomb was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco [01:00:54.600 --> 01:00:59.600] during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:00:59.600 --> 01:01:01.600] Today in history. [01:01:01.600 --> 01:01:08.600] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 [01:01:08.600 --> 01:01:11.600] legalizing Hempett attacks his law back in June, [01:01:11.600 --> 01:01:14.600] county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin and San Antonio [01:01:14.600 --> 01:01:18.600] have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:01:18.600 --> 01:01:22.600] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:01:22.600 --> 01:01:24.600] to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.600 --> 01:01:28.600] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier this month [01:01:28.600 --> 01:01:32.600] that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:01:32.600 --> 01:01:33.600] because of the law. [01:01:33.600 --> 01:01:36.600] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, [01:01:36.600 --> 01:01:39.600] stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday [01:01:39.600 --> 01:01:42.600] that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas [01:01:42.600 --> 01:01:47.600] and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, [01:01:47.600 --> 01:01:52.600] as well as other cities too like the district attorney in El Paso, [01:01:52.600 --> 01:01:56.600] Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law [01:01:56.600 --> 01:02:01.600] quote will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.600 --> 01:02:04.600] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, [01:02:04.600 --> 01:02:08.600] an assistant public defender in Harris County who stated that quote, [01:02:08.600 --> 01:02:11.600] the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal [01:02:11.600 --> 01:02:13.600] based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.600 --> 01:02:15.600] It's important that if someone is charged with something, [01:02:15.600 --> 01:02:18.600] the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:18.600 --> 01:02:25.600] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American [01:02:25.600 --> 01:02:29.600] pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [01:02:29.600 --> 01:02:34.600] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded [01:02:34.600 --> 01:02:38.600] with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:38.600 --> 01:02:42.600] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid [01:02:42.600 --> 01:02:47.600] from a gland near its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized [01:02:47.600 --> 01:02:50.600] to lure and prey who may be drawn into the globe. [01:03:17.600 --> 01:03:39.600] Okay, we are back. [01:03:39.600 --> 01:03:41.600] It's the rule of law radio. [01:03:41.600 --> 01:03:42.600] Randy Kelton. [01:03:42.600 --> 01:03:43.600] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:03:43.600 --> 01:03:49.600] And we are talking to Ted in California. [01:03:49.600 --> 01:03:54.600] And Ted, when we went to break there, [01:03:54.600 --> 01:03:59.600] what were you telling us? [01:03:59.600 --> 01:04:00.600] Ted? [01:04:00.600 --> 01:04:01.600] Oh, wait, wait a minute. [01:04:01.600 --> 01:04:03.600] It helps if I knew. [01:04:03.600 --> 01:04:04.600] Yeah. [01:04:04.600 --> 01:04:06.600] There you go, Ted. [01:04:06.600 --> 01:04:10.600] I was saying that, yeah, Randy got it right. [01:04:10.600 --> 01:04:15.600] There's open warfare between the sheriff and the district attorney over [01:04:15.600 --> 01:04:19.600] what I see is the district attorney is just out of control, [01:04:19.600 --> 01:04:23.600] power mad, couldn't have his way, so now he's going to try to find [01:04:23.600 --> 01:04:26.600] something to criminally charge the sheriff with. [01:04:26.600 --> 01:04:30.600] And this is what we're dealing with out here. [01:04:30.600 --> 01:04:32.600] But I want to use that to my advantage. [01:04:32.600 --> 01:04:36.600] Now, I said at the break that I want to get the sheriff to charge the DA. [01:04:36.600 --> 01:04:39.600] I know that's not exactly how it would go. [01:04:39.600 --> 01:04:42.600] The sheriff could investigate the district attorney. [01:04:42.600 --> 01:04:47.600] I don't know where the attorney general is in it. [01:04:47.600 --> 01:04:50.600] Okay. [01:04:50.600 --> 01:04:53.600] So I've got an idea about that. [01:04:53.600 --> 01:04:56.600] It's called personal financial disclosure. [01:04:56.600 --> 01:04:59.600] Any of these people that are elected officials, [01:04:59.600 --> 01:05:05.600] they've got a disclosure that they need to make about their finances [01:05:05.600 --> 01:05:09.600] when they're stepping up into public office. [01:05:09.600 --> 01:05:13.600] And so you can request those records and you can simultaneously [01:05:13.600 --> 01:05:19.600] request from the person who had to turn in their financial disclosure [01:05:19.600 --> 01:05:23.600] and ask them for a fresh copy right now, current stuff. [01:05:23.600 --> 01:05:26.600] That'll get them excited. [01:05:26.600 --> 01:05:30.600] In California, they're called Form 700s. [01:05:30.600 --> 01:05:34.600] I'm familiar because I ran for office a few times myself. [01:05:34.600 --> 01:05:38.600] So yes, they have to do Form 700s. [01:05:38.600 --> 01:05:43.600] And based on, depending on where they're at in the political cycle, [01:05:43.600 --> 01:05:45.600] there's various requirements. [01:05:45.600 --> 01:05:52.600] But beyond the Form 700s, I don't want to use his name on the radio, Randy, [01:05:52.600 --> 01:05:54.600] but he does call in. [01:05:54.600 --> 01:05:59.600] And what he has found here in Santa Clara County is we have judges with no bond. [01:05:59.600 --> 01:06:05.600] And by California law, within 30 days of taking office, [01:06:05.600 --> 01:06:09.600] they have to have a bond and they have to record that bond in the county [01:06:09.600 --> 01:06:10.600] recorders office. [01:06:10.600 --> 01:06:18.600] And he has found none in the ones that he's investigated. [01:06:18.600 --> 01:06:23.600] So what is the remedy for no bond? [01:06:23.600 --> 01:06:27.600] Well, it's a misdemeanor for them not recording it. [01:06:27.600 --> 01:06:32.600] It's a criminal charge and they have vacated their office [01:06:32.600 --> 01:06:35.600] if they have not got a bond. [01:06:35.600 --> 01:06:39.600] That's what I was going to essentially call warrant or removal. [01:06:39.600 --> 01:06:41.600] That's something that should go to the Attorney General. [01:06:41.600 --> 01:06:48.600] How are the Attorney General and the local prosecutor getting along? [01:06:48.600 --> 01:06:52.600] Well, my take on our Attorney General is he's a total criminal [01:06:52.600 --> 01:06:54.600] and so they're probably best buddies. [01:06:54.600 --> 01:06:57.600] That's not necessarily a problem. [01:06:57.600 --> 01:07:03.600] You know, I maintain that the reason we have remedies written into law, [01:07:03.600 --> 01:07:05.600] it's not for us. [01:07:05.600 --> 01:07:10.600] It's for the scoundrels in the system. [01:07:10.600 --> 01:07:15.600] They're sharks, but they know they're swimming around in a pool full of sharks. [01:07:15.600 --> 01:07:21.600] So they need these remedies to protect themselves from the other sharks. [01:07:21.600 --> 01:07:25.600] So just because the Attorney General is a criminal, [01:07:25.600 --> 01:07:32.600] is he a criminal who has the prosecuting attorney in his pocket [01:07:32.600 --> 01:07:39.600] or is the prosecuting attorney looking to become the Attorney General criminal? [01:07:39.600 --> 01:07:42.600] Where's the politics? [01:07:42.600 --> 01:07:45.600] I'm sure it is. [01:07:45.600 --> 01:07:49.600] Now, remember, I did a quail warranty. [01:07:49.600 --> 01:07:51.600] It's beautiful. [01:07:51.600 --> 01:07:52.600] I'm starting to talk like Trump. [01:07:52.600 --> 01:07:54.600] I'm sorry for that. [01:07:54.600 --> 01:07:56.600] I mean, nothing against Trump. [01:07:56.600 --> 01:07:57.600] I'm just saying. [01:07:57.600 --> 01:08:03.600] I did a very good quail warranty against the Judge Thomas Hastings [01:08:03.600 --> 01:08:07.600] who violated all my rights at my arraignment hearing. [01:08:07.600 --> 01:08:13.600] And ultimately, the division of the Attorney General's office [01:08:13.600 --> 01:08:17.600] that handles those, a lawyer wrote me a letter back saying [01:08:17.600 --> 01:08:22.600] many lawyers can file quail warrantos. [01:08:22.600 --> 01:08:24.600] And that's written into code. [01:08:24.600 --> 01:08:27.600] I know in some states probably in California. [01:08:27.600 --> 01:08:29.600] Right. [01:08:29.600 --> 01:08:40.600] So that's where my quail warranty went on that particular Judge. [01:08:40.600 --> 01:08:51.600] So what we've discussed here is does the Judge have political enemies? [01:08:51.600 --> 01:08:53.600] Which Judge? [01:08:53.600 --> 01:08:55.600] I mean, do you remember they told me around? [01:08:55.600 --> 01:08:59.600] Well, the prosecutor has some political enemies. [01:08:59.600 --> 01:09:01.600] Find their enemies and feed. [01:09:01.600 --> 01:09:06.600] The way I got all the highest judges in Texas before grand jury [01:09:06.600 --> 01:09:09.600] didn't have anything to do with anything I did. [01:09:09.600 --> 01:09:12.600] It had to do with a prosecuting attorney who was retiring. [01:09:12.600 --> 01:09:13.600] He was a Democrat. [01:09:13.600 --> 01:09:15.600] They're all Republicans. [01:09:15.600 --> 01:09:18.600] It's all politics. [01:09:18.600 --> 01:09:21.600] Find out who these judges' political enemies are. [01:09:21.600 --> 01:09:24.600] Who wants to take these judges' place? [01:09:24.600 --> 01:09:29.600] Who would like some political cannon fodder to use against them? [01:09:29.600 --> 01:09:31.600] I understand. [01:09:31.600 --> 01:09:35.600] Tell me what just almost happened in Kansas. [01:09:35.600 --> 01:09:42.600] A judge, a federal judge, found that the prosecutors, [01:09:42.600 --> 01:09:50.600] the US prosecutors in Kansas were monitoring all of the conversations [01:09:50.600 --> 01:09:59.600] in the prisons, in the federal prisons, between lawyers and their clients. [01:09:59.600 --> 01:10:05.600] And he held them all in contempt. [01:10:05.600 --> 01:10:11.600] Sounded exactly like what the prosecutor is trying to get the sheriff to let him do. [01:10:11.600 --> 01:10:14.600] Exactly. [01:10:14.600 --> 01:10:21.600] And that's why our county board of supervisors, [01:10:21.600 --> 01:10:24.600] the fact that they're even letting this go on now, [01:10:24.600 --> 01:10:28.600] I think the debate has been going on for like six months or more, [01:10:28.600 --> 01:10:32.600] you know, that they're having meetings and commissions and all this stuff [01:10:32.600 --> 01:10:34.600] over all this nonsense. [01:10:34.600 --> 01:10:40.600] When, obviously, if they allow the district attorney direct access to this system, [01:10:40.600 --> 01:10:45.600] it's ripe for abuse. [01:10:45.600 --> 01:10:52.600] This is pretty outrageous for a prosecutor to try to get access to this kind of information. [01:10:52.600 --> 01:11:01.600] I mean, that's pretty blatant, and it sounds like he may be under stress. [01:11:01.600 --> 01:11:07.600] And the best time to get someone is when they're injured. [01:11:07.600 --> 01:11:13.600] You know, a pool full of sharks, let one of those sharks get injured. [01:11:13.600 --> 01:11:18.600] What happens to, what do the rest of them do? [01:11:18.600 --> 01:11:20.600] Feasts. [01:11:20.600 --> 01:11:27.600] One other thing you should note, this district attorney stabbed in the back [01:11:27.600 --> 01:11:35.600] the previous district attorney, Dolores Carr, just diced her up to pieces and took her job. [01:11:35.600 --> 01:11:39.600] Contact her, see what she can do. [01:11:39.600 --> 01:11:42.600] She may have politics for you. [01:11:42.600 --> 01:11:47.600] Or she may have people that are willing to prosecute this guy. [01:11:47.600 --> 01:11:52.600] If I saw politics, find his weakness. [01:11:52.600 --> 01:11:58.600] And if he's stepping this far out, you know, people just think, [01:11:58.600 --> 01:12:05.600] I can go into people do opposites, but people create their own downfalls. [01:12:05.600 --> 01:12:10.600] Gary Hart, shoe in for nomination for the president. [01:12:10.600 --> 01:12:14.600] At the time, there was actually nobody there to run against him. [01:12:14.600 --> 01:12:24.600] And then he winds up in Miami on the docks with a woman who is at best of a repute, at worst a prostitute. [01:12:24.600 --> 01:12:33.600] He's married, he's got kids, he's this squeaky clean family guy, and he does this stuff. [01:12:33.600 --> 01:12:35.600] People do opposites. [01:12:35.600 --> 01:12:38.600] They create their own misery. [01:12:38.600 --> 01:12:44.600] They know deep in their hearts, they're dirty, rotten scoundrels who try to hide it from everybody, [01:12:44.600 --> 01:12:49.600] but something in us makes it come out. [01:12:49.600 --> 01:12:57.600] Sounds like from what you're saying about this prosecutor is he's pushing himself past his limits. [01:12:57.600 --> 01:13:03.600] Openly taking on the sheriff is a really bad idea. [01:13:03.600 --> 01:13:06.600] So help him out. [01:13:06.600 --> 01:13:17.600] And if he screwed the prosecutor before him to get into office, he's making a lot of political enemies to see if you can find him. [01:13:17.600 --> 01:13:18.600] Got it. [01:13:18.600 --> 01:13:23.600] And in Gary Hart's defense, at least she was good looking. [01:13:23.600 --> 01:13:27.600] Yes, she was. [01:13:27.600 --> 01:13:37.600] Okay, sometimes if we have time, I'll go into rubber ball theory and how it leads to people do opposites. [01:13:37.600 --> 01:13:41.600] What's his name that I think it was named in a minute. [01:13:41.600 --> 01:13:54.600] The preacher who went to Louisiana and hired a prostitute and had her get out of the car and take her clothes off and get out of the car. [01:13:54.600 --> 01:14:04.600] Oh, what was his name? He was a pilot for the guy in Oklahoma. [01:14:04.600 --> 01:14:06.600] I can see his face, but I can't think of his name. [01:14:06.600 --> 01:14:12.600] Yeah, and he learned on the same same piano as Jerry Lewis. [01:14:12.600 --> 01:14:14.600] Is that all Roberts? [01:14:14.600 --> 01:14:24.600] No, Roberts was he was all Roberts pilot. And then he when all Roberts retired, he took his place. [01:14:24.600 --> 01:14:25.600] Oh, thank you. [01:14:25.600 --> 01:14:26.600] And you'll know him. [01:14:26.600 --> 01:14:27.600] I can think of him. [01:14:27.600 --> 01:14:29.600] He does this and he gets caught. [01:14:29.600 --> 01:14:33.600] And all this retribution comes down on it. [01:14:33.600 --> 01:14:36.600] And everybody's saying, Oh, the demons go to him. [01:14:36.600 --> 01:14:38.600] You guys aren't paying attention. [01:14:38.600 --> 01:14:40.600] He's trying to tell you some. [01:14:40.600 --> 01:14:46.600] Born deep in the Bible belt told from day one, he was basically rotten, violent, no good. [01:14:46.600 --> 01:14:50.600] And he didn't like hearing that and wasn't intended that he should. [01:14:50.600 --> 01:14:56.600] But unlike Jerry Lewis, Jerry Lewis did player response. [01:14:56.600 --> 01:14:59.600] They told him he was basically rotten, violent, no good. [01:14:59.600 --> 01:15:04.600] And he said, OK, I can go with that. [01:15:04.600 --> 01:15:05.600] He didn't. [01:15:05.600 --> 01:15:09.600] He wanted he didn't like hearing that he was basically rotten, violent or good. [01:15:09.600 --> 01:15:11.600] He wanted to be good kind and virtuous. [01:15:11.600 --> 01:15:15.600] So he tried to prove everybody that in fact he was good kind and virtuous. [01:15:15.600 --> 01:15:18.600] And he did that by doing all these good kind and virtuous things. [01:15:18.600 --> 01:15:24.600] And everybody said to him, Oh, wow, you're good kind and virtuous problem. [01:15:24.600 --> 01:15:31.600] I don't know if we were created or if we evolved, but in either case, we came up with honesty genes. [01:15:31.600 --> 01:15:34.600] If we lie, we pay. [01:15:34.600 --> 01:15:39.600] And all these people are telling him how good kind and virtuous is, but he is. [01:15:39.600 --> 01:15:42.600] But deep in his heart, he knows he's a no good rotten scoundrel. [01:15:42.600 --> 01:15:52.600] So he goes out and does this stupid stuff to let everybody know who he really is. [01:15:52.600 --> 01:15:55.600] And the sky falls in and on him. [01:15:55.600 --> 01:16:01.600] He suffers all this retribution and everybody thinks this is all horrible and awful. [01:16:01.600 --> 01:16:05.600] But he got that monkey off his back. [01:16:05.600 --> 01:16:07.600] And they're all saying the demons got in him. [01:16:07.600 --> 01:16:09.600] I told my wife, you're not listening. [01:16:09.600 --> 01:16:11.600] He's trying to tell him something. [01:16:11.600 --> 01:16:12.600] He's going to do this again. [01:16:12.600 --> 01:16:16.600] And sure enough, he did it again. [01:16:16.600 --> 01:16:23.600] And then after the second time, he seemed to figure it out himself and got it fixed. [01:16:23.600 --> 01:16:24.600] People do opposite. [01:16:24.600 --> 01:16:25.600] Opposites. [01:16:25.600 --> 01:16:29.600] When somebody does something and what they do stands out from the cultural norm. [01:16:29.600 --> 01:16:33.600] Look at what they're doing and ask yourself, what's the opposite? [01:16:33.600 --> 01:16:38.600] What's he trying to convince us of and thereby convince himself of? [01:16:38.600 --> 01:16:43.600] Now you may not always be right, but it will give you a whole different way of looking at things [01:16:43.600 --> 01:16:45.600] and you might find some serious answers. [01:16:45.600 --> 01:16:48.600] It sounds like this prosecutor is pushing out on a limb. [01:16:48.600 --> 01:16:49.600] Hang on. [01:16:49.600 --> 01:16:50.600] About to go to break. [01:16:50.600 --> 01:16:51.600] Randy Kelton. [01:16:51.600 --> 01:16:52.600] Brett Fountain. [01:16:52.600 --> 01:16:59.600] Will's Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:16:59.600 --> 01:17:04.600] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[01:17:40.600 --> 01:17:46.600] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner [01:17:46.600 --> 01:17:51.600] or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:51.600 --> 01:17:57.600] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.600 --> 01:18:00.600] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.600 --> 01:18:01.600] Dang, Cookie. [01:18:01.600 --> 01:18:03.600] Cookie? Me love cookies. [01:18:03.600 --> 01:18:06.600] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:18:06.600 --> 01:18:09.600] Cookie? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:18:09.600 --> 01:18:12.600] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:18:12.600 --> 01:18:16.600] You can't eat? No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:18:16.600 --> 01:18:20.600] These have apples. Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:18:20.600 --> 01:18:23.600] Hmm, yummy apple. [01:18:23.600 --> 01:18:26.600] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:18:26.600 --> 01:18:32.600] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:18:32.600 --> 01:18:34.600] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:18:34.600 --> 01:18:40.600] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:18:40.600 --> 01:18:47.600] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [01:18:47.600 --> 01:18:49.600] New cookies? For me? [01:18:49.600 --> 01:18:51.600] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:18:51.600 --> 01:18:57.600] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [01:18:57.600 --> 01:19:00.600] This is for Cookie. This is for classified. [01:19:00.600 --> 01:19:10.600] This is for logosradionetwork.com [01:19:10.600 --> 01:19:29.600] Music [01:19:29.600 --> 01:19:38.600] Music [01:19:38.600 --> 01:19:46.160] Okay, we are back. [01:19:46.160 --> 01:19:50.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Lula Radio, we're talking to Ted in California. [01:19:50.360 --> 01:19:51.960] We do need to move along, Ted. [01:19:51.960 --> 01:19:58.400] This has been great, but I've got three more callers and three segments. [01:19:58.400 --> 01:20:05.560] Well, thank you again, Randy, and I'll get off this phone and monitor on the computer. [01:20:05.560 --> 01:20:14.720] Okay, thank you, Ted, and keep it up and see what kind of politics, what kind of dirt you can dig up. [01:20:14.720 --> 01:20:16.160] Okay, thank you. [01:20:16.160 --> 01:20:17.320] Okay, thank you. [01:20:17.320 --> 01:20:19.920] Now we're going to go to Tina in California. [01:20:19.920 --> 01:20:20.920] Hello, Tina. [01:20:20.920 --> 01:20:25.920] What do you have for us today? [01:20:25.920 --> 01:20:26.920] Hello, Randy. [01:20:26.920 --> 01:20:30.120] I don't think I know you, but I know you can't... [01:20:30.120 --> 01:20:31.120] Wait a minute. [01:20:31.120 --> 01:20:33.720] You sound like you're in a well. [01:20:33.720 --> 01:20:37.320] I was trying to turn my Bluetooth off, so that you... [01:20:37.320 --> 01:20:39.320] Yeah, that works better. [01:20:39.320 --> 01:20:40.320] Okay. [01:20:40.320 --> 01:20:45.640] Well, that was really, really enlightening from Ted. [01:20:45.640 --> 01:20:54.160] He is just amazing how he's fighting and bringing out so much, and I can attest to the corruption [01:20:54.160 --> 01:20:56.160] here, that's for sure. [01:20:56.160 --> 01:21:05.880] Yeah, I'm beginning to think that with Ted's health condition, that this fight may be what's [01:21:05.880 --> 01:21:09.400] keeping him going. [01:21:09.400 --> 01:21:14.480] You need something to keep you going, and this is keeping his heart pumping and giving [01:21:14.480 --> 01:21:20.640] him a reason to keep stroking it, and he has done a great job. [01:21:20.640 --> 01:21:24.920] He has, and we have to fight, and that's what I keep telling people. [01:21:24.920 --> 01:21:29.920] They said, why don't you have a life and stop fighting, and I said, you can't. [01:21:29.920 --> 01:21:32.200] Someone has to do it. [01:21:32.200 --> 01:21:33.200] Nobody has to. [01:21:33.200 --> 01:21:34.680] And it gives us purpose. [01:21:34.680 --> 01:21:37.600] It's something we said for purpose. [01:21:37.600 --> 01:21:41.520] Yeah, it gives us purpose. [01:21:41.520 --> 01:21:48.640] Benjamin Desiree Lee said, nothing can resist the human will that will place its very existence [01:21:48.640 --> 01:21:54.520] upon the extent of its purpose. [01:21:54.520 --> 01:21:57.800] And Ted has essentially done that. [01:21:57.800 --> 01:22:02.000] Okay, what do you have going today? [01:22:02.000 --> 01:22:08.720] Well, as you know, I finally filed my declaratory judgment, thank you for that help, and I hope [01:22:08.720 --> 01:22:16.080] you've gotten my donation to Lander's Beer Fund for that. [01:22:16.080 --> 01:22:23.200] I wanted to, and what I did was I filed it in the, I nodorized it, filed it in the courthouse, [01:22:23.200 --> 01:22:26.880] because I couldn't get the scanner to work properly. [01:22:26.880 --> 01:22:32.720] And then I sent it to the other side, just priority mail, not overnight mail, because [01:22:32.720 --> 01:22:37.760] that was $25.50, and priority mail was $7.00. [01:22:37.760 --> 01:22:45.640] Yes, and always send those kind of things, very, very slow mail. [01:22:45.640 --> 01:22:50.520] It counts when it's postmarked, not when they get it. [01:22:50.520 --> 01:23:00.160] So, if you do the book rate, and it goes through Greenland, well, I didn't want them to say [01:23:00.160 --> 01:23:05.960] to the judge next week, oh, we didn't get it two days before, even though I know they [01:23:05.960 --> 01:23:08.240] waited for the last second to give it to me. [01:23:08.240 --> 01:23:12.080] But then out of courtesy, I did a little bit of sniting. [01:23:12.080 --> 01:23:17.680] I sent them an email late yesterday afternoon saying, out of courtesy, I thought I'd send [01:23:17.680 --> 01:23:21.800] you an email copy of my filed. [01:23:21.800 --> 01:23:26.680] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:23:26.680 --> 01:23:27.680] Lawyers have e-file. [01:23:27.680 --> 01:23:28.680] They do. [01:23:28.680 --> 01:23:35.160] If you filed it with court, they don't e-file it to the lawyers. [01:23:35.160 --> 01:23:37.800] Have you signed up for e-file? [01:23:37.800 --> 01:23:44.080] I was trying to, and I had to directly file something, and I couldn't get the scanner [01:23:44.080 --> 01:23:46.360] to work, to file the document. [01:23:46.360 --> 01:23:51.520] So rather than be late and do all this, I just race down to the courthouse to get it [01:23:51.520 --> 01:23:52.520] in regularly. [01:23:52.520 --> 01:23:59.480] But I'm going to try to sign up, but every site so far keeps asking me for money to do [01:23:59.480 --> 01:24:00.480] e-file. [01:24:00.480 --> 01:24:05.400] Well, the thing about e-file is you don't have to send anybody copies. [01:24:05.400 --> 01:24:07.400] You can do everything electronic. [01:24:07.400 --> 01:24:09.640] So you don't have the mailing. [01:24:09.640 --> 01:24:13.240] You don't have all these copies you have to produce. [01:24:13.240 --> 01:24:19.040] You just e-file it to the court, and the court e-files it to the litigants. [01:24:19.040 --> 01:24:20.040] I know. [01:24:20.040 --> 01:24:28.280] It was just a rush, and I didn't want to spend the money they wanted for signing up for e-file, [01:24:28.280 --> 01:24:32.320] and every time you send something e-file, they charge you. [01:24:32.320 --> 01:24:35.240] Yeah, but they only charge you a buck or two. [01:24:35.240 --> 01:24:39.800] I mean, it's just a chump change compared to what it costs you to copy and then pay [01:24:39.800 --> 01:24:43.680] for the filing and all the time you've got to put into it. [01:24:43.680 --> 01:24:55.840] Pay for the filing, because I filed with the, I forget what they called it, but you don't [01:24:55.840 --> 01:24:56.840] have any money. [01:24:56.840 --> 01:24:57.840] So that's how I filed. [01:24:57.840 --> 01:24:58.840] Yeah. [01:24:58.840 --> 01:24:59.840] Inability to pay. [01:24:59.840 --> 01:25:00.840] Yeah. [01:25:00.840 --> 01:25:01.840] Inability to pay. [01:25:01.840 --> 01:25:09.120] So anyway, what I wanted to know, because the hearing is next Wednesday, 9-11, how [01:25:09.120 --> 01:25:18.160] do I handle the, you know, the judge, one of the things, you know, there was some mistakes, [01:25:18.160 --> 01:25:22.760] you know, little grammatical and typos. [01:25:22.760 --> 01:25:29.600] Do I sort of, you know, introduce and say, you know, your honor, I'm sorry that my, [01:25:29.600 --> 01:25:34.840] you know, my filing wasn't perfect, but I'm untrained at this, and I got to... [01:25:34.840 --> 01:25:35.840] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:25:35.840 --> 01:25:37.840] You don't have to do that. [01:25:37.840 --> 01:25:38.840] Okay. [01:25:38.840 --> 01:25:47.880] If you look at these lawyer's filings, they are a mess to fill the typos. [01:25:47.880 --> 01:25:50.840] The court really doesn't care about that. [01:25:50.840 --> 01:25:51.840] Okay. [01:25:51.840 --> 01:25:56.800] It's not important if it's not something substantive. [01:25:56.800 --> 01:26:01.360] They know that sometimes when you're typing into a word processor, you'll put in no and [01:26:01.360 --> 01:26:04.840] the word processor will put in not. [01:26:04.840 --> 01:26:09.920] They know that, and they know lawyers are busy, and they don't care about that stuff. [01:26:09.920 --> 01:26:16.040] I've got documents, I couldn't believe what a mess they were from lawyers. [01:26:16.040 --> 01:26:17.040] The lawyers are busy. [01:26:17.040 --> 01:26:19.120] They don't have time to be perfectionists. [01:26:19.120 --> 01:26:21.800] So you really don't have to worry about that kind of stuff. [01:26:21.800 --> 01:26:26.520] So long as the typo is not substantive. [01:26:26.520 --> 01:26:29.960] Okay, none of them are. [01:26:29.960 --> 01:26:33.720] This meaningless, the judge won't even pay attention to it. [01:26:33.720 --> 01:26:36.280] He's different than we are. [01:26:36.280 --> 01:26:38.800] We're trying to get these things to look right. [01:26:38.800 --> 01:26:42.080] The judge is just trying to get through the substance. [01:26:42.080 --> 01:26:44.320] He's got too many to go through. [01:26:44.320 --> 01:26:48.560] He don't have time to mess with minor grammatical crap. [01:26:48.560 --> 01:26:51.440] He's just looking for substance. [01:26:51.440 --> 01:26:54.400] So do not let that slow you down. [01:26:54.400 --> 01:26:55.400] Okay. [01:26:55.400 --> 01:27:00.760] If you don't have a document, completed the way you want it, and your time is running [01:27:00.760 --> 01:27:04.520] out, file it. [01:27:04.520 --> 01:27:06.480] You can file an amended later. [01:27:06.480 --> 01:27:07.480] Yeah. [01:27:07.480 --> 01:27:17.320] If you file an amended, you notice the judge is that you file this and found that there [01:27:17.320 --> 01:27:25.960] were some grammatical errors, and that the only change of substance in the amendment [01:27:25.960 --> 01:27:30.040] is in XYZ paragraph. [01:27:30.040 --> 01:27:33.640] All the rest of the document is substantially the same. [01:27:33.640 --> 01:27:35.840] And the judge will say, thank you. [01:27:35.840 --> 01:27:37.280] I don't have to read the whole thing. [01:27:37.280 --> 01:27:41.120] I just have to read this part, and I don't have to worry about it. [01:27:41.120 --> 01:27:46.480] He may scan the rest of it to make sure it's substantially the same, but he's just not [01:27:46.480 --> 01:27:50.760] reading it, just checking it to make sure it matches what was there before, and then [01:27:50.760 --> 01:27:54.280] he only reads the part of substance that'll get your. [01:27:54.280 --> 01:27:58.200] These guys are, the judges were lawyers, they're dealing with lawyers. [01:27:58.200 --> 01:27:59.200] They know lawyers are busy. [01:27:59.200 --> 01:28:04.040] They've got several clients going on, and they just don't have time to be perfectionists, [01:28:04.040 --> 01:28:06.080] so they don't worry about that. [01:28:06.080 --> 01:28:07.080] Okay. [01:28:07.080 --> 01:28:13.640] Well, next to the next thing, how do I handle, and what tips do you have for me regarding [01:28:13.640 --> 01:28:21.360] the hearing, because they're going to harp again on the, all the, the vexations, litigant, [01:28:21.360 --> 01:28:25.040] all the prayer lawsuits, because that's the only thing. [01:28:25.040 --> 01:28:31.400] You don't have, there's no grounds for vexation, so how do I, you know, you have to have filed [01:28:31.400 --> 01:28:41.960] three suits, and they have to have been dismissed for being frivolous filings, before you're [01:28:41.960 --> 01:28:49.160] eligible for vexation, so litigant, and if the other side raises the issue, then you [01:28:49.160 --> 01:28:53.760] ask for sanctions against them for firing a frivolous plea. [01:28:53.760 --> 01:28:55.240] Okay. [01:28:55.240 --> 01:29:04.160] The only one that was ever called frivolous was my appeal to the Supreme, California Supreme, [01:29:04.160 --> 01:29:05.160] after these. [01:29:05.160 --> 01:29:06.160] Okay. [01:29:06.160 --> 01:29:07.160] Appeals don't count. [01:29:07.160 --> 01:29:10.480] They do not count. [01:29:10.480 --> 01:29:15.320] Filing a frivolous suit counts. [01:29:15.320 --> 01:29:18.440] Filing an insufficient argument does not count. [01:29:18.440 --> 01:29:19.440] Okay. [01:29:19.440 --> 01:29:22.000] And a suit that's already in place. [01:29:22.000 --> 01:29:28.960] If it wasn't frivolous to begin with, and you screw up on your subsequent defenses, [01:29:28.960 --> 01:29:32.360] your problem, it doesn't make the original suit frivolous, so you'd have to worry about [01:29:32.360 --> 01:29:33.360] that. [01:29:33.360 --> 01:29:34.360] Okay. [01:29:34.360 --> 01:29:40.040] So, what should I look for, are we going off the cliff here? [01:29:40.040 --> 01:29:41.040] No. [01:29:41.040 --> 01:29:43.520] Yes, as a matter of fact, we are. [01:29:43.520 --> 01:29:44.520] We are. [01:29:44.520 --> 01:29:45.520] Okay. [01:29:45.520 --> 01:29:46.520] Thank God. [01:29:46.520 --> 01:29:47.520] Thank you, Randy. [01:29:47.520 --> 01:29:48.520] Randy Kelton. [01:29:48.520 --> 01:29:55.520] Thank you very much for your time, and I'll see you in the next video. [01:29:55.520 --> 01:29:56.520] Okay. [01:29:56.520 --> 01:29:57.520] Okay. [01:29:57.520 --> 01:29:58.520] Okay. [01:29:58.520 --> 01:29:59.520] Okay. [01:29:59.520 --> 01:30:00.520] Okay. [01:30:00.520 --> 01:30:01.520] Okay. [01:30:01.520 --> 01:30:02.520] Okay. [01:30:02.520 --> 01:30:03.520] Okay. [01:30:03.520 --> 01:30:04.520] Okay. [01:30:04.520 --> 01:30:05.520] Okay. [01:30:05.520 --> 01:30:06.520] Okay. [01:30:06.520 --> 01:30:07.520] Okay. [01:30:07.520 --> 01:30:08.520] Okay. [01:30:08.520 --> 01:30:09.520] Okay. [01:30:09.520 --> 01:30:10.520] Okay. [01:30:10.520 --> 01:30:11.520] Okay. [01:30:11.520 --> 01:30:12.520] Okay. [01:30:12.520 --> 01:30:19.520] Okay. [01:30:42.520 --> 01:30:52.520] Okay. [01:30:52.520 --> 01:31:04.520] Okay. [01:31:04.520 --> 01:31:28.520] Okay. [01:31:28.520 --> 01:31:36.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.960 --> 01:31:38.920] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.920 --> 01:31:44.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.000 --> 01:31:46.720] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.720 --> 01:31:49.480] And thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.480 --> 01:31:50.880] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.880 --> 01:31:51.880] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.880 --> 01:31:53.320] I'm a New York City correctional officer. [01:31:53.320 --> 01:31:54.320] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.320 --> 01:31:55.920] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.920 --> 01:31:58.520] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.520 --> 01:32:01.520] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.520 --> 01:32:06.120] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.120 --> 01:32:08.520] In today's America, we live in a us-against-them society. [01:32:08.520 --> 01:32:13.520] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.520 --> 01:32:18.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.120 --> 01:32:20.720] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.720 --> 01:32:26.520] Our epic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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[01:32:59.720 --> 01:33:04.720] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.720 --> 01:33:56.720] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we still have our fundraising going. [01:33:56.720 --> 01:34:03.720] We need all the help we can get, and I do appreciate that Tina dropped some into Randy's beer fund, [01:34:03.720 --> 01:34:08.720] and just so everybody knows, Randy's beer fund is kind of a running joke. [01:34:08.720 --> 01:34:14.720] Everything that goes into the beer fund goes into the radio station. I don't take any of that out. [01:34:14.720 --> 01:34:17.720] I'm too fat and old to drink beer anyway. [01:34:17.720 --> 01:34:27.720] But we do need all the help we can get right now to keep this thing going, because we've all been pretty well funding this out of our own pockets. [01:34:27.720 --> 01:34:31.720] It's getting to be a struggle, and we don't need a lot. [01:34:31.720 --> 01:34:42.720] If you just put in a dollar, a couple bucks a month with as many listeners as we have, it will make a big difference. [01:34:42.720 --> 01:34:57.720] So if you got a couple extra bucks to bypass a couple Starbucks coffee once a month, and that's about five bucks, that would help us keep this thing going. [01:34:57.720 --> 01:35:00.720] Okay, going back to Tina. [01:35:00.720 --> 01:35:15.720] Okay, so what should I focus on? Normally, I think the petitioner or plaintiff gets to talk first, but my experience with Dean Postay is they generally then refer to the attorney to go first. [01:35:15.720 --> 01:35:18.720] So which would be good for me? [01:35:18.720 --> 01:35:30.720] I don't know what, you know, what should I focus on here to keep the... Okay, wait a minute. Which issue are we addressing here? This, the... [01:35:30.720 --> 01:35:32.720] The... [01:35:32.720 --> 01:35:35.720] Objection to their request for judicial notice. [01:35:35.720 --> 01:35:39.720] Oh, okay. Really, not much. [01:35:39.720 --> 01:35:43.720] I would move the court to rule on the pleadings. [01:35:43.720 --> 01:35:47.720] This is not something that needs any oral argument. [01:35:47.720 --> 01:35:55.720] You only have... If I'm making sure I'm getting all these right, you only have one issue. [01:35:55.720 --> 01:35:57.720] Yes. [01:35:57.720 --> 01:36:06.720] So they have filed a bunch of garbage that has nothing to do with what's before this court. [01:36:06.720 --> 01:36:07.720] Correct. [01:36:07.720 --> 01:36:29.720] All of that stuff is irrelevant. The only issue before this court is, does the property code, when it requires that a note, original note be returned to the borrower, where the note is... [01:36:29.720 --> 01:36:31.720] What's the term? [01:36:31.720 --> 01:36:32.720] When it's paid off. [01:36:32.720 --> 01:36:34.720] No discipline was filed. [01:36:34.720 --> 01:36:47.720] The required... Does the statute require them to give it back to the original borrower or not? That's solids before the court. All this junk in here has nothing to do with anything. [01:36:47.720 --> 01:36:56.720] Yeah. I like the way you put in here my heading here when I was struggling with headings and you made it stand out and you put the simple solution. [01:36:56.720 --> 01:37:03.720] Simply put, this case could be quickly and easily resolved by the respondent sending the original note as promised. [01:37:03.720 --> 01:37:09.720] And a petitioner asked the court to consider the possibility that respondent is trying to hide something. [01:37:09.720 --> 01:37:16.720] And so you put... Spending so much money avoiding what they originally promised. [01:37:16.720 --> 01:37:31.720] So underneath that, what they did, because you then did it with... You changed my wording a little here and I like the way you ended it, to produce what petitioner is entitled to receive according to the simple meaning of California statute. [01:37:31.720 --> 01:37:42.720] So underneath that, where you showed me how to put everything in italics, I put the California Constitution right there where it says Article 1. [01:37:42.720 --> 01:37:54.720] Okay. Hold on. Let me explain to everybody what she's talking about. She sent me her document and it was pretty well written, but it was written like lawyers don't do the right documents. [01:37:54.720 --> 01:38:02.720] Where quotations and citations are all integrated into the text. [01:38:02.720 --> 01:38:10.720] And I've kind of worked out a style where I have anything that's quoted. [01:38:10.720 --> 01:38:14.720] These courts want their documentation double spaced. [01:38:14.720 --> 01:38:22.720] The reasons that they say double spaced is because manual typewriters, if they did single space or double space, that was it. [01:38:22.720 --> 01:38:31.720] So I always set mine to one and a half. So it saves a little space on the page, but gives space between each line. [01:38:31.720 --> 01:38:44.720] But then where I have a quotation, like where I'm quoting a section out of a case law, I put that in single space and ended it both sides half an inch. [01:38:44.720 --> 01:38:59.720] So the reader going down the page can very easily separate the quotations from the actual dialogue of the pleading. [01:38:59.720 --> 01:39:04.720] If the judge is familiar with the case law, the judge can just jump over it. [01:39:04.720 --> 01:39:15.720] But if he wants to check the case law, it's there, he can read it. And we try to, at each paragraph, set a heading. [01:39:15.720 --> 01:39:19.720] Tell them what you're going to tell them, then tell them. [01:39:19.720 --> 01:39:25.720] And the conclusion, you tell them what you told them, but in the body, you tell them what you're going to tell them. [01:39:25.720 --> 01:39:33.720] So put a heading for the paragraph and that tends to frame your argument within the context of that heading. [01:39:33.720 --> 01:39:43.720] And then when your argument moves to a different, slightly different subject, you put another heading to tell them where you're going to in the next paragraph. [01:39:43.720 --> 01:39:46.720] How did that work out to you? [01:39:46.720 --> 01:40:04.720] It really worked out very well because it made what I had said, and you write about it being attorney speak, because I shamelessly plagiarized a bunch of, you know, objections to, you know, requests for judicial notices, [01:40:04.720 --> 01:40:08.720] including one from our former attorney general and some big ones from Santa Monica. [01:40:08.720 --> 01:40:13.720] So I was just putting it in there, but I couldn't quite get it clear, so this made it clear. [01:40:13.720 --> 01:40:30.720] And it also gave me a way to put in that California Constitution under that simple solution where it says, Article 1, Declaration of Right, the statute, court rule, or other authority, including those in effect on the effective date of this subdivision, [01:40:30.720 --> 01:40:39.720] shall be broadly construed if it furthers the people's right of access and narrowly construed if it limits the right of access. [01:40:39.720 --> 01:40:53.720] So I underlined that and I bolded the statute and then I put at the end emphasis added, but I found that was the perfect place, I think, to put that so the judge sees that she really should... [01:40:53.720 --> 01:40:58.720] Okay, let me make one suggestion about bolding and underlining. [01:40:58.720 --> 01:41:02.720] Don't do it. [01:41:02.720 --> 01:41:08.720] If you do that, the judge will see that and it will annoy the judge. [01:41:08.720 --> 01:41:15.720] It says to the judge, you don't think I'm smart enough to pull out of this what's pertinent. [01:41:15.720 --> 01:41:20.720] You got to do all this bolding and stuff to force me to pay attention to this. [01:41:20.720 --> 01:41:22.720] It annoys me when I see it. [01:41:22.720 --> 01:41:32.720] And I've talked to three different judges about that, about highlighting and uppercase and bolding, and they said it annoys a crap out of me. [01:41:32.720 --> 01:41:34.720] I can read these documents and know what's important. [01:41:34.720 --> 01:41:40.720] I don't need them to do all that stuff. Only process do that. Lawyers never do that. [01:41:40.720 --> 01:41:44.720] Oh, I've seen a couple of lawyers do it. [01:41:44.720 --> 01:41:46.720] Wait, I couldn't. [01:41:46.720 --> 01:41:48.720] Wait, say that again? [01:41:48.720 --> 01:41:51.720] I've seen a couple of lawyers do it in my cases. [01:41:51.720 --> 01:41:53.720] Yeah, they shouldn't. [01:41:53.720 --> 01:41:56.720] Lawyers, the judges hadn't chewed them out for yet. [01:41:56.720 --> 01:42:16.720] Then again, the way the lawyers tend to build their documents, where you've got this huge paragraph with everything stuck together in it, where you can't tell what is actually the verbiage from the lawyer and what is part of court cases because they all blend together. [01:42:16.720 --> 01:42:19.720] Yeah, then it may help. [01:42:19.720 --> 01:42:23.720] But there are much more effective ways of doing it. [01:42:23.720 --> 01:42:35.720] When you look at the way I structured this document, this is all about moving the mind, about directing the attention. [01:42:35.720 --> 01:42:44.720] When I get through an argument, you want to stop right there and put another heading to say, I've argued this issue and I'm stopping. [01:42:44.720 --> 01:42:54.720] I'm going to this next issue. This is what's going to be in it. You won't need to highlight it. And it's kind of off topic, but it's just that's a minor issue. [01:42:54.720 --> 01:43:06.720] But I liked what you did. And I will tell everybody on this call, it really made what I'd written. It added an extra page, but it made it very clear. [01:43:06.720 --> 01:43:23.720] And I wanted to ask you, how did you decide on the headings like you put requirements met, no claims against respondents, because I was struggling to figure out how to make these headings as you could see. [01:43:23.720 --> 01:43:31.720] And I like when you put the requirements met, if we can bring this out for everyone on the call, it puts... [01:43:31.720 --> 01:43:49.720] Okay, it gets... When you start breaking these paragraphs down and putting a heading on each one, it really gets pretty easy to figure out where you need to break, where you need to make a different argument. [01:43:49.720 --> 01:43:53.720] The document begins to organize itself. [01:43:53.720 --> 01:44:00.720] Hang on, about to go to break. Brandy Kelton with Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.720 --> 01:44:11.720] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.720 --> 01:44:17.720] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.720 --> 01:44:31.720] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.720 --> 01:44:39.720] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.720 --> 01:44:51.720] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.720 --> 01:45:00.720] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:00.720 --> 01:45:14.720] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.720 --> 01:45:22.720] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.720 --> 01:45:33.720] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:33.720 --> 01:45:42.720] 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. [01:45:42.720 --> 01:45:55.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflongradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:55.720 --> 01:46:22.720] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.720 --> 01:46:34.720] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with our radio here with Tina. [01:46:34.720 --> 01:46:46.720] Greg, if you're still listening, I apologize. Ted hasn't been on in quite a while, and Ted has really been fighting these guys. [01:46:46.720 --> 01:46:53.720] If you know his story, it's pretty incredible, and he definitely earned the time we spent with him. [01:46:53.720 --> 01:47:01.720] So I apologize for holding you on that long and not getting to you. If you'll call back to Nomarnat, we'll take you in early. [01:47:01.720 --> 01:47:15.720] Okay, back to Tina, and your document. I looked at it first and read through it, and it was hard for me to put all the pieces together. [01:47:15.720 --> 01:47:29.720] Well, once I went back and broke it apart into separate paragraphs, there was very little I had to change, and the changes were mostly outros and intros. [01:47:29.720 --> 01:47:45.720] A lead out from one paragraph, just the paragraph, so it kind of ended there on its own, and then passed the next heading, and the next paragraph started so it was clear that they were separate paragraphs. [01:47:45.720 --> 01:47:56.720] Really, it was almost nothing substantial. It was just structural, and you see how just changing structure made it a lot easier. [01:47:56.720 --> 01:48:05.720] The biggest thing in all of that is breaking out the quotations. [01:48:05.720 --> 01:48:19.720] That was the biggest piece that had more effect than anything else when I broke the statutory citations out from the narrative. [01:48:19.720 --> 01:48:32.720] You look at all these lawyers' documents, and their narrative and citations run together. It's not always clear what the lawyer is saying as opposed to what the court has said. [01:48:32.720 --> 01:48:43.720] And I think lawyers do that on purpose to try to confuse the judge, but it's not a good strategy. They assume the judges are stupid, [01:48:43.720 --> 01:48:56.720] and they're not, once they video of court clerks, not clerks, the clerks that work for the judges, that actually do the research and stuff. [01:48:56.720 --> 01:49:05.720] There was two of them that were Supreme Court clerks, and they were telling you what to do and what not to do. [01:49:05.720 --> 01:49:13.720] And they suggested that you put all your quotations single-spaced this way, to separate them out. [01:49:13.720 --> 01:49:19.720] So we know when we're going through a quotation and back to the narrative. [01:49:19.720 --> 01:49:27.720] And they suggested never use highlighting and such, because all I gave was irritate them. [01:49:27.720 --> 01:49:37.720] The main thing was to just break things apart in logical pieces. Your document was very well written. [01:49:37.720 --> 01:49:47.720] And all I had to do was break the paragraphs apart so that the reader could always know where he was oriented. [01:49:47.720 --> 01:49:54.720] I hope that when you saw the document, it made sense what I was doing. [01:49:54.720 --> 01:50:01.720] I did, and I wanted to tell people it made a lot of sense, and it was really helpful. [01:50:01.720 --> 01:50:11.720] As was your prior counsel on some of these calls where you say you can, you know, you plagiarize a lot, [01:50:11.720 --> 01:50:19.720] and that's what gave me the impetus to go in and Google, you know, objections to requests for judicial notice [01:50:19.720 --> 01:50:24.720] and pick out one from our former attorney general and certainly the other. [01:50:24.720 --> 01:50:28.720] But I loved the way you put where the requirement met. [01:50:28.720 --> 01:50:34.720] You know, and I always use the attorneys for the other side always say it is indisputable that Ms. Colbert did this. [01:50:34.720 --> 01:50:40.720] It is indisputable and it's indisputable. So I just kind of used that word against them. [01:50:40.720 --> 01:50:46.720] And then I put it, it is indisputable that the note is fully satisfied as their exhibits say, [01:50:46.720 --> 01:50:52.720] and doesn't begin at its communication with the petitioner's former attorney dated, which reads as follows, [01:50:52.720 --> 01:50:59.720] and then you broke that out, what he said, and you put it in quotes in the italics, [01:50:59.720 --> 01:51:04.720] and it was like, oh my gosh, that really hit. I've seen it. I know it. [01:51:04.720 --> 01:51:09.720] But it hit me even more when you broke it out like that. [01:51:09.720 --> 01:51:16.720] And then we put it is indisputable that respondent has failed to adhere to those written promises. [01:51:16.720 --> 01:51:23.720] One simple sentence and it's like, okay, if the judge doesn't ruin my favor, [01:51:23.720 --> 01:51:27.720] just the fact that he didn't adhere to those promises. [01:51:27.720 --> 01:51:34.720] But I think his argument is going to be, well, I found case law that said, you know, in a foreclosure case, [01:51:34.720 --> 01:51:46.720] we don't have to do that. So how do I get around his, you know, probable, likely claim that he was going to promise that. [01:51:46.720 --> 01:51:49.720] But as an attorney, he should have known that, right? [01:51:49.720 --> 01:51:51.720] Yes. [01:51:51.720 --> 01:51:58.720] A lot of this, you need to really trust the judges. They know what they're reading. [01:51:58.720 --> 01:52:00.720] Well, you can't in California. [01:52:00.720 --> 01:52:05.720] And, you know, the judges, they know how to read law. [01:52:05.720 --> 01:52:10.720] They know when they're reading bull crap. You don't have to tell them. [01:52:10.720 --> 01:52:20.720] As I do more of these, I'd leaned more toward not rebutting horse manure. [01:52:20.720 --> 01:52:29.720] Just ignoring horse manure or implying that, you know, the judges understood that this is horse manure. [01:52:29.720 --> 01:52:37.720] So I wouldn't waste your time with it and just go to the only point that's before the court. [01:52:37.720 --> 01:52:40.720] And that was the main thing in this document. [01:52:40.720 --> 01:52:48.720] When the lawyers don't have any facts and law on their side, they try to create distracting arguments. [01:52:48.720 --> 01:52:51.720] And that's what these lawyers are doing. [01:52:51.720 --> 01:52:55.720] If we pick up the gambit, then we lose our momentum. [01:52:55.720 --> 01:52:59.720] So you don't have to rebut trash. [01:52:59.720 --> 01:53:03.720] If you read it and it comes up trash, the court's going to read it. [01:53:03.720 --> 01:53:05.720] It's going to come up trash. [01:53:05.720 --> 01:53:11.720] And one thing I did want to address you indicated that this was a page longer. [01:53:11.720 --> 01:53:23.720] The court is not going to have a problem with that if you've broken it into paragraphs because it's clear there's a lot of white space. [01:53:23.720 --> 01:53:37.720] And if the document is compelling, if you tell them what you're going to tell them and then tell them, [01:53:37.720 --> 01:53:43.720] if you tell them, I'm going to talk about this and then you actually talk about that. [01:53:43.720 --> 01:53:49.720] And when you tell them you're going to talk about something, they have an expectation that you'll talk about something. [01:53:49.720 --> 01:53:55.720] If you talk about what you told them you were going to talk about, that will give you rapport. [01:53:55.720 --> 01:53:59.720] They will expect, they will know what they're looking for. [01:53:59.720 --> 01:54:05.720] If they see what they expect to see, then it will be more compelling. [01:54:05.720 --> 01:54:18.720] And when you tell them, okay, now I'm going to shift to this other subject and they don't have to look in the verbiage and try to figure out when you're shifting gears. [01:54:18.720 --> 01:54:24.720] You tell them, you put the clutch in and there's white space on each side of the clutch. [01:54:24.720 --> 01:54:31.720] You clutch it, you shift the gear, you release the clutch, there's some white space on each side, they can see it. [01:54:31.720 --> 01:54:33.720] So they don't have to figure this out. [01:54:33.720 --> 01:54:36.720] It causes the read to be easier. [01:54:36.720 --> 01:54:47.720] If they can move logically from one to the next, they won't notice that it's longer and they won't have any objection to it. [01:54:47.720 --> 01:54:51.720] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:54:51.720 --> 01:54:53.720] Well, it is actually very good. [01:54:53.720 --> 01:55:06.720] I loved one of the comments you put in here and I can't find it right now about, you basically said, you know, his argument was lost in yours, what you basically were saying. [01:55:06.720 --> 01:55:09.720] And I loved the way you worded it. [01:55:09.720 --> 01:55:20.720] But I would like to, you know, if anyone wants to see this, a copy of it, I'm happy to share it now. [01:55:20.720 --> 01:55:30.720] It's filed as public knowledge and it might help somebody else to write something that they want to do because it certainly helped me. [01:55:30.720 --> 01:55:46.720] So if anyone contextually wants a copy, I'm happy to give them a copy because I needed this myself to make it clearer and let's talk to anyone else if it gives them an idea. [01:55:46.720 --> 01:55:53.720] I would like to be able to do a show on mental flow. [01:55:53.720 --> 01:55:55.720] It's in the e-book. [01:55:55.720 --> 01:55:58.720] There's a whole section on mental flow. [01:55:58.720 --> 01:56:01.720] And that's the most important understanding. [01:56:01.720 --> 01:56:07.720] Most everything I do in constructing documents is about mental flow. [01:56:07.720 --> 01:56:16.720] How do you move the mind of the reader and never cause the reader to trip up? [01:56:16.720 --> 01:56:26.720] I mean, we've all had the experience of picking up a book and start reading it and it's so compelling that you fall into the narrative. [01:56:26.720 --> 01:56:31.720] And then a couple hours later, you wake up just like you've come out of it. [01:56:31.720 --> 01:56:40.720] A writer who can do that, he never interrupts your expectations. [01:56:40.720 --> 01:56:41.720] He leads you. [01:56:41.720 --> 01:56:44.720] He paces, leads you and leads you. [01:56:44.720 --> 01:56:49.720] He lets you know where you're going and takes you where he's told you're going to go. [01:56:49.720 --> 01:56:54.720] He never creates any questions in your mind that he doesn't answer. [01:56:54.720 --> 01:57:01.720] He keeps you walking from one point to the next to the next. [01:57:01.720 --> 01:57:03.720] That is an art. [01:57:03.720 --> 01:57:05.720] And we have some tools for that. [01:57:05.720 --> 01:57:10.720] One of the more, some of the more subtle tools that I really like, [01:57:10.720 --> 01:57:14.720] assonance, consonance, alliteration, rhyming meter. [01:57:14.720 --> 01:57:18.720] One of the things I use a lot is alliteration. [01:57:18.720 --> 01:57:28.720] Alliteration is where you rhyme the first or middle syllables of a word instead of the last syllable. [01:57:28.720 --> 01:57:33.720] Rhyme rings sing song in the mind. [01:57:33.720 --> 01:57:36.720] Alliteration doesn't. [01:57:36.720 --> 01:57:50.720] Alliteration is the shiny shores where when you rhyme the first parts of a word, [01:57:50.720 --> 01:57:55.720] the middle of the word, it sticks in the mind differently. [01:57:55.720 --> 01:58:00.720] And if it's done well, the reader never really consciously notices it. [01:58:00.720 --> 01:58:06.720] That's a lot of the, I'd like to spin the show on this kind of stuff. It's kind of one of my favorite subjects. [01:58:06.720 --> 01:58:09.720] But I've kind of used up this show. [01:58:09.720 --> 01:58:13.720] And Scott, Greg, I'm sorry I didn't get to you. [01:58:13.720 --> 01:58:16.720] If you're calling tomorrow night, I don't have any guests for tomorrow night. [01:58:16.720 --> 01:58:20.720] We'll be taking calls all night, so we'll get to everybody. [01:58:20.720 --> 01:58:49.720] And I especially want to stop this. [01:58:49.720 --> 01:58:57.720] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.720 --> 01:59:04.720] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.720 --> 01:59:08.720] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.720 --> 01:59:11.720] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.720 --> 01:59:20.720] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.720 --> 01:59:27.720] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps, [01:59:27.720 --> 01:59:30.720] and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.720 --> 01:59:32.720] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.720 --> 01:59:40.720] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.720 --> 01:59:49.720] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:49.720 --> 02:00:11.720] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. 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