[00:11.840 --> 00:20.840] an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [00:20.840 --> 00:29.120] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, bitcoin core $10,566.52, [00:29.120 --> 00:40.880] ethereum $227.26, xrp ripple $0.33, litecoin $100.31, and bitcoin cash $324.10 a crypto [00:40.880 --> 00:45.880] coin. [00:45.880 --> 00:52.240] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.240 --> 00:57.560] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day parade, killing [00:57.560 --> 01:04.560] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.560 --> 01:09.720] In recent news, since Gov. Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp in a Texas [01:09.720 --> 01:14.080] law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and [01:14.080 --> 01:18.640] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.640 --> 01:22.560] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.560 --> 01:24.600] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.600 --> 01:28.240] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier this month that [01:28.240 --> 01:33.160] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.160 --> 01:34.160] law. [01:34.160 --> 01:37.400] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.400 --> 01:41.920] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:41.920 --> 01:48.040] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.040 --> 01:54.320] well as other cities too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Jaime Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.320 --> 01:58.800] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:58.800 --> 02:01.400] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.400 --> 02:06.560] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.560 --> 02:11.040] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.040 --> 02:13.280] illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.280 --> 02:17.200] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.200 --> 02:22.400] charged with. [02:22.400 --> 02:27.040] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [02:27.040 --> 02:32.160] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.160 --> 02:37.800] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:37.800 --> 02:39.080] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.080 --> 02:43.600] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.600 --> 02:45.440] its front fins. [02:45.440 --> 02:53.640] For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [02:53.640 --> 03:22.520] This is Rook Rode with your lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [03:22.520 --> 03:32.640] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.640 --> 03:38.480] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.480 --> 03:43.920] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you'd go to school and learn the golden rule. [03:43.920 --> 03:46.760] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.760 --> 03:49.360] If you get hot, then you must get cool. [03:49.360 --> 04:01.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:01.960 --> 04:04.520] You chuck it on this one You chuck it on your mother and [04:04.520 --> 04:07.460] You chuck it on your father You chuck it on your brother and [04:07.460 --> 04:10.100] You chuck it on your sister You chuck it on that one and [04:10.100 --> 04:11.280] you chuck it on me [04:11.280 --> 04:16.820] Bad Boys Bad Boys Whatcha gonna do Whatchagonna do when they come for you [04:16.820 --> 04:22.260] Bad Boys Bad Boys Whatcha gonna do And Whatcha gonna do when they come for you [04:22.260 --> 04:27.760] Bad Boys Bad Boys Whatcha gonna do Whatcha gonna do when they come for you [04:27.760 --> 04:33.840] Bad Boys, Bad Boys, whatcha gonna do, Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:33.840 --> 04:35.840] Nobody nah giv'e no break. [04:35.840 --> 04:35.980] microscope [04:35.980 --> 04:40.820] Police nah give'e no break, Not old Soulja manna give'e no break, [04:40.820 --> 04:44.180] Not even your Iron Man give'e no breaks, Hey, Hey... [04:44.180 --> 04:48.180] Bad Boys, Bad Boys, whatcha gonna do, Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:48.180 --> 04:53.180] Bad Boys, Bad Boys, whatcha gonna do, Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:23.180 --> 05:30.180] Why did you have to ask some me? [05:30.180 --> 05:33.180] Don't you know you're a human being? [05:33.180 --> 05:35.180] Born of a mother with a love of a father [05:35.180 --> 05:38.180] Reflection comes and reflection goes [05:38.180 --> 05:43.180] I know sometimes you wanna let go [05:43.180 --> 05:49.180] Hey, hey, hey, I know sometimes you wanna let go [05:49.180 --> 05:52.180] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [05:52.180 --> 05:54.180] What you gonna do when they come for you? [05:54.180 --> 05:57.180] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [05:57.180 --> 06:00.180] What you gonna do when they come for you? [06:00.180 --> 06:05.180] You're too bad, you're too rude [06:05.180 --> 06:11.180] You're too bad, you're too rude, yeah [06:11.180 --> 06:13.180] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do [06:13.180 --> 06:16.180] What you gonna do when they come for you? [06:16.180 --> 06:25.120] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 11th [06:25.120 --> 06:29.540] day of June 2020. [06:29.540 --> 06:34.060] And we're having a little issue bringing up Brett, as soon as he comes up, he's been [06:34.060 --> 06:41.520] after one of the counties in South Texas again with information requests. [06:41.520 --> 06:45.140] They can't seem to get that part right. [06:45.140 --> 06:52.460] And I do a show on another network, on Pastor Messick's network, and in that show it kind [06:52.460 --> 06:59.900] of sort of occurred to me that I'm at the point where I can begin to launch part of [06:59.900 --> 07:02.580] my Legal Earth network. [07:02.580 --> 07:13.140] I'm in the process of taking the due process portion of Legal Earth and getting it ready [07:13.140 --> 07:15.000] for launch. [07:15.000 --> 07:25.200] With all of this issue about police misconduct, my questionnaire, what I've built so far, [07:25.200 --> 07:34.460] we ran it into a linked list database, and it counted 1.5 million questions so far. [07:34.460 --> 07:42.380] And the significance of that is that the vast majority of those questions go to due process. [07:42.380 --> 07:48.060] Due process I pretty well have mapped out. [07:48.060 --> 07:55.060] And when it comes to police misconduct, that all goes to due process. [07:55.060 --> 08:04.260] So I got some funding in, so I'm going to spend the next week or so working up the due [08:04.260 --> 08:10.820] process section to have all the questions that lead to all of the issues, but I don't [08:10.820 --> 08:15.940] have all the documentation, the backside documentation finished yet. [08:15.940 --> 08:20.340] Like when you ask, were you arrested, yes, or were you taken directly to the nearest [08:20.340 --> 08:30.380] magistrate, no, then the system will generate a number of documents based on that. [08:30.380 --> 08:33.580] One of them is a demand for an examining trial. [08:33.580 --> 08:38.260] Another one is a criminal complaint against the officer for failure to take directly to [08:38.260 --> 08:41.460] the nearest magistrate and a number of other documents. [08:41.460 --> 08:47.540] Each time I ask one of these questions, or generally a group of questions that develop [08:47.540 --> 08:55.300] a legal issue, if the answer in the negative when you're dealing with due process, that's [08:55.300 --> 08:57.580] going to go to a criminal complaint. [08:57.580 --> 09:03.220] And when you get a criminal complaint, it gets a professional conduct complaint as well. [09:03.220 --> 09:09.180] So and then motions to dismiss, motions to suppress evidence. [09:09.180 --> 09:16.780] So there's just an incredible number of documents this thing can produce. [09:16.780 --> 09:22.380] I have to start generating those documents, but frankly, I have most of them where we [09:22.380 --> 09:28.140] have generated them for other people in other situations. [09:28.140 --> 09:32.860] So that won't be terribly difficult and just a little bit time consuming. [09:32.860 --> 09:40.900] Once I get that done, then I can launch due process. [09:40.900 --> 09:47.100] So if you have a police encounter, as soon as you get away from the policeman, you go [09:47.100 --> 09:53.220] to the website, click on the questionnaire, go through the questions, and it'll start [09:53.220 --> 10:02.460] spitting out documents for you that you can file in your behalf that go directly to the [10:02.460 --> 10:05.580] issues in your particular case. [10:05.580 --> 10:08.260] And that's the beauty of this tool. [10:08.260 --> 10:13.600] It's not some generic fill in the blanks form. [10:13.600 --> 10:17.180] It's online interactive. [10:17.180 --> 10:23.340] It will adjust itself based on your particular circumstances. [10:23.340 --> 10:33.420] And another issue that became apparent, if you have viewed this video of Mr. Floyd being [10:33.420 --> 10:45.740] choked to death, then if you saw that video and you accepted what you saw on its face, [10:45.740 --> 10:54.260] then under 18 U.S. Code 4, you have a duty to give notice of crime. [10:54.260 --> 11:01.660] Failure to do so under 18 U.S. Code 4 is misprision of felony. [11:01.660 --> 11:03.540] Interesting. [11:03.540 --> 11:09.540] So if you have a statutory requirement to do something, you cannot be faulted for doing [11:09.540 --> 11:13.060] that. [11:13.060 --> 11:18.380] So all of these people who are looking at this video and are just out, enraged by it, [11:18.380 --> 11:24.200] they can go onto the website, fill out the questionnaire, and it will produce a criminal [11:24.200 --> 11:26.980] complaint for them. [11:26.980 --> 11:27.980] They can file it. [11:27.980 --> 11:31.620] One of these guys, what's this prosecutor going to do when he starts getting thousands [11:31.620 --> 11:35.020] of criminal complaints? [11:35.020 --> 11:47.940] Then each one of those persons have standing to chart the progress of the complaint. [11:47.940 --> 11:53.660] The prosecutor will have a duty to respond to them, to answer to them. [11:53.660 --> 12:03.180] This whole thing of prosecutors deciding not to prosecute, that needs to be fixed. [12:03.180 --> 12:06.180] The prosecuting attorney is not a judicial officer. [12:06.180 --> 12:07.940] He's not a judge. [12:07.940 --> 12:11.500] He has no power to make a judicial determination. [12:11.500 --> 12:16.780] That's what magistrates and judges are for. [12:16.780 --> 12:25.900] So we moved this back to judges and magistrates the way it was supposed to be. [12:25.900 --> 12:27.840] You and I can do that. [12:27.840 --> 12:37.500] We can literally flood the market or flood the jurisdiction with criminal complaints [12:37.500 --> 12:42.140] against these officers and professional conduct complaints. [12:42.140 --> 12:46.660] I have the professional conduct complaint form for the state of Texas, but I have to [12:46.660 --> 12:50.740] go in and build them for each of the separate states. [12:50.740 --> 13:01.580] When you start filing professional conduct complaints against the different jurisdictions, [13:01.580 --> 13:09.580] these policemen will have no alternative but to change their behavior because they get [13:09.580 --> 13:15.900] half a dozen professional conduct complaints, they become unemployable. [13:15.900 --> 13:24.620] The insurance company, when after they get half a dozen complaints, will go to the jurisdiction [13:24.620 --> 13:35.260] and tell the jurisdiction that this particular individual has become an unacceptable risk. [13:35.260 --> 13:40.660] You either get rid of him or we increase your bond rating for the entire department. [13:40.660 --> 13:46.540] What do you think is going to happen to the officer? [13:46.540 --> 13:48.840] Good luck, Bubba. [13:48.840 --> 13:50.980] See you in another life. [13:50.980 --> 14:02.620] They're going to fire him and no other jurisdiction is going to hire him because he's already [14:02.620 --> 14:07.140] an unacceptable risk. [14:07.140 --> 14:08.140] See the strategy? [14:08.140 --> 14:09.820] We have the tools here. [14:09.820 --> 14:15.020] We've always had the tools to handle these problems. [14:15.020 --> 14:19.700] We just haven't used those tools. [14:19.700 --> 14:23.740] Now we have an opportunity, now we have a situation where we can, if I can get this [14:23.740 --> 14:25.640] thing launched. [14:25.640 --> 14:27.780] That should not be too difficult. [14:27.780 --> 14:39.680] From my perspective, it's a good idea because it will act as a proof of concept of the platform [14:39.680 --> 14:43.300] that I'm using, the legal areas platform. [14:43.300 --> 14:49.180] If I seem a little bit distracted, I'm on a brand new machine and I don't have my [14:49.180 --> 14:54.700] caller page up, so I can't turn the phones on quite yet. [14:54.700 --> 14:57.300] Deborah is there in the background somewhere. [14:57.300 --> 15:02.940] If she will send me the link to the caller page, I can bring that up and watch me, let [15:02.940 --> 15:08.120] me know when I'm about to run off the cliff because everybody who listens to my show knows [15:08.120 --> 15:14.580] how much I hate to run off the cliff and I only run off the cliff four or five times [15:14.580 --> 15:15.580] of the show. [15:15.580 --> 15:19.620] For those of you who don't know what that is, when we get to our breaks, you'll hear [15:19.620 --> 15:20.620] bumper music. [15:20.620 --> 15:24.020] Well, in my system, I can't hear that bumper music. [15:24.020 --> 15:30.300] I have to watch the clock and I sometimes talk when we go to break. [15:30.300 --> 15:37.340] That's always a bad idea, but anyway, this is going to work. [15:37.340 --> 15:42.700] This will serve both my purpose of getting a proof of concept on, plus it will empower [15:42.700 --> 15:49.700] the individual to start taking these people to task and with the amount of outrage against [15:49.700 --> 15:57.460] the police right now, now is a very good time to get a large number of complaints flooding [15:57.460 --> 16:00.060] into these jurisdictions. [16:00.060 --> 16:11.740] I've heard interviews about how the insurance companies should take some action to help [16:11.740 --> 16:23.140] alleviate this problem by increasing the amounts they charge the jurisdictions when they keep [16:23.140 --> 16:24.460] bad policemen. [16:24.460 --> 16:33.500] I heard this interview and I said, wait a minute, they're already doing that. [16:33.500 --> 16:37.900] It's not the insurance companies that's the problem, it's you and I. [16:37.900 --> 16:43.700] For the most part, the public doesn't know that they need to file professional conduct [16:43.700 --> 16:46.600] complaints against these individuals. [16:46.600 --> 16:52.380] That tells the insurance company when they have a bad actor. [16:52.380 --> 16:55.340] They realize they have no real way of knowing that. [16:55.340 --> 17:04.300] When you file a complaint with a jurisdiction, that... [17:04.300 --> 17:10.220] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway, sponsored by Central Texas [17:10.220 --> 17:11.220] Gunworks. [17:11.220 --> 17:14.860] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [17:14.860 --> 17:18.500] Any amount is appreciated, everything helps to keep us on the air. [17:18.500 --> 17:24.940] From Central Texas Gunworks, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [17:24.940 --> 17:27.500] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:27.500 --> 17:30.700] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:30.700 --> 17:36.260] When you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:36.260 --> 17:39.980] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [17:39.980 --> 17:44.540] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [17:44.540 --> 17:48.900] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [17:48.900 --> 17:51.800] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:51.800 --> 17:55.660] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:55.660 --> 18:01.660] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:01.660 --> 18:06.020] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [18:06.020 --> 18:12.220] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [18:12.220 --> 18:15.300] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. [18:15.300 --> 18:20.320] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [18:20.320 --> 18:21.860] which is in heaven. [18:21.860 --> 18:26.660] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:26.660 --> 18:32.220] Join Nana and guests for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [18:32.220 --> 18:35.340] to provoke unto love and good works. [18:35.340 --> 18:39.720] Our verse-by-verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [18:39.720 --> 18:41.500] one chapter per week. [18:41.500 --> 18:46.580] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [18:46.580 --> 18:48.780] Christian character development. [18:48.780 --> 18:54.620] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to [18:54.620 --> 19:13.300] 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [19:13.300 --> 19:37.700] Look what we got, we ask the Christian, don't wonder what they're hiding, they don't have [19:37.700 --> 19:53.640] an answer and they don't have the answer. [19:53.640 --> 19:58.640] But they're not standin' up and fightin', fight for the freedom and the free [19:58.640 --> 20:02.640] And they like them love slavery and get hand out from the government [20:02.640 --> 20:03.640] Make love again [20:03.640 --> 20:06.640] We are the Christians [20:06.640 --> 20:09.640] I wonder what they'll hide in [20:09.640 --> 20:11.640] They don't have the answer [20:11.640 --> 20:14.640] Open up your body [20:14.640 --> 20:17.640] And we are the Christians [20:17.640 --> 20:18.640] Make love again [20:18.640 --> 20:21.640] And they don't have the answer [20:21.640 --> 20:23.640] Open up your body [20:23.640 --> 20:25.640] And they like the answer [20:25.640 --> 20:27.640] Open up your body [20:27.640 --> 20:29.640] Open up your body [20:29.640 --> 20:31.640] Open up your body [20:31.640 --> 20:37.520] I would have because I want the [20:37.640 --> 20:41.640] making it up. [20:41.640 --> 20:44.640] So pull up your body [20:44.640 --> 20:45.520] And rise up and [20:45.520 --> 20:48.640] noise up your body [20:48.640 --> 20:53.640] Nuclear weapon and big gun dem a point in the country of money [20:53.640 --> 20:58.640] Here I need dem a tell you dem a tell me Lord dem a tell the country [20:58.640 --> 21:03.640] Here I need dem a tell you dem a tell me Lord dem a tell the country [21:03.640 --> 21:08.640] We ask the question [21:08.640 --> 21:13.640] Don't have the answer [21:13.640 --> 21:18.640] Don't be asked in question [21:18.640 --> 21:23.640] They don't have the answer [21:23.640 --> 21:28.640] We ask the question [21:28.640 --> 21:33.640] We ask the question why dem need to we hold nuclear weapon in a country [21:33.640 --> 21:38.640] When a final bomb a gone why the hell we have children you see [21:38.640 --> 21:43.640] I send dem overseas in army in Lord Navy what dem do it we [21:43.640 --> 21:48.640] Dem up dem gone crazy know dem want to how come tell me [21:48.640 --> 21:51.640] Home if you sign up you let the service in [21:51.640 --> 21:53.640] If you join up for some commie [21:53.640 --> 21:57.640] We ask the question [21:57.640 --> 22:02.640] Don't have the answer [22:02.640 --> 22:07.640] Don't be asked in question [22:07.640 --> 22:12.640] Don't have the answer [22:12.640 --> 22:17.640] Don't be asked in question [22:17.640 --> 22:22.640] Don't have the answer [22:22.640 --> 22:27.640] Don't have the answer [22:27.640 --> 22:32.640] Don't have the answer [22:32.640 --> 22:37.640] Don't have the answer [22:37.640 --> 22:42.640] Don't be asked in question [22:42.640 --> 22:47.640] Don't have the answer [22:47.640 --> 22:52.640] Don't have the answer [22:52.640 --> 22:57.640] Don't have the answer [22:57.640 --> 23:06.360] So the guy was not a stranger and Pastor Massa commented on the video. [23:06.360 --> 23:12.400] He watched the video and he said for the last three minutes the policeman, he had already [23:12.400 --> 23:21.600] stopped breathing and the policeman was looking down at him with his knees still on his neck [23:21.600 --> 23:24.120] after he had stopped breathing. [23:24.120 --> 23:29.520] He clearly knew and he still kept pressing on him. [23:29.520 --> 23:31.480] Wow, something sick. [23:31.480 --> 23:37.000] It was incredibly cold blooded. [23:37.000 --> 23:43.280] One guy tried to charge through, they had policemen out there holding the crowd back, [23:43.280 --> 23:47.120] one tried to get through the crowd to get to him to get him off of him and they held [23:47.120 --> 23:49.920] him back. [23:49.920 --> 23:55.640] So the public watching knew they were killing this guy. [23:55.640 --> 24:07.740] This was really outrageous but I think the important part of this is that the people [24:07.740 --> 24:14.600] associated with him, the policemen that were with him, they all got charged. [24:14.600 --> 24:19.520] This is the first time I've seen that happen. [24:19.520 --> 24:24.480] One of them could have walked over and put his hand on the guy's shoulder and said you [24:24.480 --> 24:30.480] need to give this guy some air and this would have been done with. [24:30.480 --> 24:33.200] That's not so hard to do. [24:33.200 --> 24:41.800] Are policemen really so terrified of saying anything to another policeman that they would [24:41.800 --> 24:45.760] stand there and watch him murder someone? [24:45.760 --> 24:47.960] It appears that way. [24:47.960 --> 24:57.400] I had a sheriff's deputy try to kill me back in 92 and he was just nuts and he had a kid [24:57.400 --> 25:04.280] with him that he was training and the guy grabbed me and pinned my arms to my side and [25:04.280 --> 25:10.460] drug me down the side of his car and tried to heave me over his head and drive my head [25:10.460 --> 25:14.480] into concrete with my arms pinned to my side. [25:14.480 --> 25:20.800] I hit the ground so hard my next door neighbor heard my body hit the ground from inside his [25:20.800 --> 25:22.940] house. [25:22.940 --> 25:28.280] He came out to see what was going on and when he saw what was going on he come over to put [25:28.280 --> 25:30.520] an end to it. [25:30.520 --> 25:35.240] Leon was six foot seven, five hundred pounds. [25:35.240 --> 25:40.340] You know a lot of times big guys are just big teddy bears. [25:40.340 --> 25:44.180] Leon was no teddy bear. [25:44.180 --> 25:49.400] This trainee policeman handled, did everything right. [25:49.400 --> 25:50.400] He handled Leon. [25:50.400 --> 25:51.800] He got Leon stopped. [25:51.800 --> 25:58.760] He come over and stopped the policeman, got him off of me, did everything right. [25:58.760 --> 26:08.200] And then he got in court and got up on the stand and he lied like a dog. [26:08.200 --> 26:15.320] I flipped over a gooseneck trailer in the highway a few years later and the first policeman [26:15.320 --> 26:30.800] to show up was this guy and the guy that lied and he said he'd call a tow truck for me. [26:30.800 --> 26:35.560] I said don't you do anything for me. [26:35.560 --> 26:40.760] You get back in that police car and you get out of here. [26:40.760 --> 26:44.920] I've had enough of you lying about me now just get out of here. [26:44.920 --> 26:53.520] I'm embarrassed even to be speaking to you and the guy was clearly mortified. [26:53.520 --> 26:56.000] But he lied anyway. [26:56.000 --> 27:01.240] He was probably a good policeman and he wanted to be a good policeman. [27:01.240 --> 27:11.200] But when it came to police officers you had to protect the police officer no matter what [27:11.200 --> 27:13.000] and that's what disappeared to me. [27:13.000 --> 27:15.040] That's a problem. [27:15.040 --> 27:21.440] We needed to start going after the policeman who didn't stop the one who was acting out. [27:21.440 --> 27:22.440] That's complicity. [27:22.440 --> 27:28.400] You know I was in combat and in combat you take care of one another. [27:28.400 --> 27:34.040] If one of you guys starts getting careless or out of hand you stop him. [27:34.040 --> 27:38.520] You don't let him go do something stupid to get him killed and you killed. [27:38.520 --> 27:40.360] This is how you watch one another's back. [27:40.360 --> 27:46.220] You don't just watch them to keep somebody else from harming them or interfering with [27:46.220 --> 27:47.440] them. [27:47.440 --> 27:53.880] You keep them from harming or interfering with or injuring themselves. [27:53.880 --> 27:57.360] That's what friends do. [27:57.360 --> 28:04.520] The policeman got this crazy thing this thin blue line thing going on and I've been a long [28:04.520 --> 28:07.960] time wanting to erase that thin blue line. [28:07.960 --> 28:12.380] I want to tell these police there is no thin blue line. [28:12.380 --> 28:16.220] The only thin blue line is the one you try to make. [28:16.220 --> 28:24.680] You and I were both on the same side and this Legal Earth project is a tool to demonstrate [28:24.680 --> 28:34.680] to them that you forget that we are on your side at your peril because this tool will [28:34.680 --> 28:38.160] take you to task and it's time we did. [28:38.160 --> 28:45.960] I'm more interested in the bystander cop not the actor. [28:45.960 --> 28:49.280] We start taking on the bystander for not doing his job. [28:49.280 --> 28:51.760] That would definitely help. [28:51.760 --> 28:55.960] Then the guy is going to say, don't get upset at me. [28:55.960 --> 29:00.800] You're going to get me put in jail or you're going to cost me my job. [29:00.800 --> 29:02.800] Not going to happen. [29:02.800 --> 29:06.680] You want to get yourself fired, well knock yourself out. [29:06.680 --> 29:11.640] But I didn't come here to have you get me fired or get me put in jail and here these [29:11.640 --> 29:18.280] guys are likely to go to jail for a long time because it really blew up in their face. [29:18.280 --> 29:22.880] But it was, it was outrageous enough that it should. [29:22.880 --> 29:29.860] I want to see something blow up that's not so outrageous. [29:29.860 --> 29:35.880] When they step a little bit across the line I want to see them hammered. [29:35.880 --> 29:38.240] You know it's like my grandkids. [29:38.240 --> 29:42.560] I love them dearly but if one of them runs out towards the road I'm not waiting until [29:42.560 --> 29:43.560] he gets in the road. [29:43.560 --> 29:45.840] I'm going to tan his hide. [29:45.840 --> 29:54.960] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, our call-in number 512-646-1984, [29:54.960 --> 30:01.960] we'll be right back. [30:01.960 --> 30:06.480] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe but [30:06.480 --> 30:11.320] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.320 --> 30:15.680] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:15.680 --> 30:17.680] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.680 --> 30:22.080] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:22.080 --> 30:26.060] is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.060 --> 30:31.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.280 --> 30:33.820] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.820 --> 30:38.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.120 --> 30:41.660] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.660 --> 30:45.320] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.320 --> 30:50.120] Data privacy is a big deal so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.120 --> 30:54.560] your personal information but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.560 --> 30:55.920] It's not an idle question. [30:55.920 --> 31:01.360] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.360 --> 31:04.160] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:04.160 --> 31:07.520] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.520 --> 31:12.240] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.240 --> 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 --> 31:17.800] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.800 --> 31:21.320] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.320 --> 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, 2001. [31:35.960 --> 31:39.120] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.120 --> 31:42.160] World Trade Center 7, a 47 story skyscraper. [31:42.160 --> 31:43.320] Was not hit by a plane. [31:43.320 --> 31:47.200] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7. [31:47.200 --> 31:52.000] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more [31:52.000 --> 31:53.000] to the story. [31:53.000 --> 31:54.400] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.400 --> 31:55.400] My uncle. [31:55.400 --> 31:56.400] My nephew. [31:56.400 --> 31:57.400] My son. [31:57.400 --> 31:58.400] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.400 --> 31:59.400] Why it fell. [31:59.400 --> 32:00.400] Why it matters. [32:00.400 --> 32:01.400] And what you do. [32:01.400 --> 32:04.320] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:04.320 --> 32:07.880] In today's America, we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [32:07.880 --> 32:12.000] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.000 --> 32:15.280] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:15.280 --> 32:19.320] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.320 --> 32:23.160] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:23.160 --> 32:24.480] our rights through due process. [32:24.480 --> 32:28.520] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:28.520 --> 32:32.300] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:32.300 --> 32:34.680] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:34.680 --> 32:38.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:38.680 --> 32:39.680] ordering your copy today. [32:39.680 --> 32:43.200] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:43.200 --> 32:47.800] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:47.800 --> 32:50.120] documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.120 --> 32:53.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:53.240 --> 33:01.960] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.960 --> 33:13.080] Order now at free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the law in [33:13.080 --> 33:14.080] your hand. [33:14.080 --> 33:15.080] Won't you follow the law of the land? [33:15.080 --> 33:16.080] I don't understand. [33:16.080 --> 33:34.000] Your job is to protect and preserve, not be abused, officer. [33:34.000 --> 33:39.480] When you gonna stop abuse, your power. [33:39.480 --> 33:46.840] When you gonna stop abuse, your power. [33:46.840 --> 33:53.120] When you gonna stop abuse, your power. [33:53.120 --> 33:57.920] When you gonna stop abuse, your power. [33:57.920 --> 34:01.400] So please, Mr. Mackler, teach officers not to abuse their power. [34:01.400 --> 34:06.280] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. [34:06.280 --> 34:11.680] Tell them to uphold the law or we gonna abuse their power. [34:11.680 --> 34:18.760] Okay, we are back and Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this, the 11th [34:18.760 --> 34:27.800] day of June, 2020 and if that last segment seemed a little odd, well, we were having [34:27.800 --> 34:28.800] some issues. [34:28.800 --> 34:34.200] It was on my end, I'm having some issues and we were trying to sort that out and we put [34:34.200 --> 34:36.720] it in an archive and took it back out. [34:36.720 --> 34:38.760] So just ignore that last segment. [34:38.760 --> 34:43.080] Let me go back and recap what I was talking about. [34:43.080 --> 34:53.680] When I read 18 US Code 4, and it should be noted that 18 US Code 3 has been repealed. [34:53.680 --> 35:02.760] 18 US Code is the criminal statutes for the Fed. [35:02.760 --> 35:09.120] So the third one, I mean, it's not way down there in the back somewhere, but right up [35:09.120 --> 35:13.280] there in the front, it's called misprison of felony. [35:13.280 --> 35:21.880] If you have knowledge that a felony has been committed and you don't report that knowledge, [35:21.880 --> 35:27.500] that's the crime of misprison of felony and you can go to jail for that. [35:27.500 --> 35:36.000] So I get on my computer or I get on the turn on the news and I see this video of a police [35:36.000 --> 35:46.520] officer killing someone, committing cold blooded murder. [35:46.520 --> 35:52.840] I have a duty to report crime, if I don't report that crime, I can be prosecuted. [35:52.840 --> 36:01.840] If you've seen that video, you can be prosecuted, every single solitary person within the jurisdiction [36:01.840 --> 36:09.520] of the United States who has seen that video has a statutory duty to report the crime. [36:09.520 --> 36:19.040] Now, as far as I know, I have no duty or I even have no authority to decide that the [36:19.040 --> 36:21.760] crime has already been reported. [36:21.760 --> 36:30.140] That's not a determination 18 US 4 authorizes me to make. [36:30.140 --> 36:33.400] If I have knowledge, I'm required to report it, period. [36:33.400 --> 36:39.560] There's no extenuating circumstances in there and if I don't, they can prosecute me. [36:39.560 --> 36:44.120] So if you see your next door neighbor murder somebody in the backyard and you don't tell [36:44.120 --> 36:47.420] anybody, you go to jail for that. [36:47.420 --> 36:56.040] So if you can go to jail for not reporting crime, you are absolutely protected when you [36:56.040 --> 36:59.640] do report crime. [36:59.640 --> 37:01.640] You see my point? [37:01.640 --> 37:07.160] On the show, we talk about filing criminal charges against public officials all the time. [37:07.160 --> 37:13.440] They're not always felonies that we file, although I really like the felonies. [37:13.440 --> 37:20.720] Sometimes all I get is a class A misdemeanor, but when I give notice of crime, I become [37:20.720 --> 37:23.680] a protected class. [37:23.680 --> 37:33.520] Let's say I observe that killing on a video and I see it on the news, I see it all over [37:33.520 --> 37:39.360] the internet, so I have reason to believe it's valid and not some made up video. [37:39.360 --> 37:43.600] I have a duty to report that. [37:43.600 --> 37:52.040] So if I don't, I can be prosecuted for it, therefore if I do and anyone says or does [37:52.040 --> 38:01.740] anything that I can in any way take as threatening, well that's an act of retaliation on the part [38:01.740 --> 38:06.440] of the actor. [38:06.440 --> 38:12.440] We talk about this on the air all the time and we have all these people protesting in [38:12.440 --> 38:17.760] the streets, people actually getting killed to protest these issues. [38:17.760 --> 38:23.380] I want to say let's stop dying out there on the streets, I got a better way of doing this. [38:23.380 --> 38:31.440] So I'm going to take my due process portion of the Legal Earth Project, due process of [38:31.440 --> 38:38.920] which I have most completed, and load that up. [38:38.920 --> 38:44.600] Like I was saying in the first segment, I don't have all the backside documentation [38:44.600 --> 38:52.960] prepared yet, but I will load up a portion of it that goes to the reporting of crime. [38:52.960 --> 38:57.920] So if you have reason to believe that a crime has been committed, you go on this questionnaire [38:57.920 --> 39:04.600] and it'll ask you some questions, and then it will start spitting out criminal complaints [39:04.600 --> 39:11.020] that you can simply sign before a notary and send. [39:11.020 --> 39:16.480] Like for things like the Floyd incident, we can build up a statement of facts that will [39:16.480 --> 39:24.640] be printed out with it, and you can take both of those to a notary, sign them in front of [39:24.640 --> 39:28.960] a notary, and send them to the jurisdiction. [39:28.960 --> 39:34.800] What do you think is going to happen when the prosecutors start, or magistrates in the [39:34.800 --> 39:40.160] state, it doesn't go to the prosecutor, it goes to magistrates, when they start getting [39:40.160 --> 39:46.600] verified criminal affidavits by the thousands? [39:46.600 --> 39:56.920] Each one invokes a statutory duty on the part of the person who receives the complaint. [39:56.920 --> 40:02.180] These magistrates are not going to want to go to jail for this policeman who committed [40:02.180 --> 40:04.600] absolutely cold-blooded murder. [40:04.600 --> 40:06.800] Yeah, they want to protect the court. [40:06.800 --> 40:10.440] It might even have an effect on the way that the grand jury looks at the situation. [40:10.440 --> 40:11.440] Exactly. [40:11.440 --> 40:19.400] Like, they don't just have one criminal complaint against someone, they have, see these three [40:19.400 --> 40:21.560] rooms over here and those two boxes? [40:21.560 --> 40:23.720] Yeah, this is all the same issue. [40:23.720 --> 40:27.200] These are all criminal complaints. [40:27.200 --> 40:29.440] Yes, we can start. [40:29.440 --> 40:38.040] We are, we're the master of the servant, and this will give us a tool to act like the master. [40:38.040 --> 40:45.200] Speaking of acting like the master, you sent me a text earlier about some fun you were [40:45.200 --> 40:46.960] having in South Texas. [40:46.960 --> 40:57.000] Well, yeah, I'm doing some records requests and it started out with one records request [40:57.000 --> 41:00.960] and they ignored me. [41:00.960 --> 41:06.000] And then I sent in another records request and they ignored that. [41:06.000 --> 41:11.600] And then a lawyer stepped in, as they often do, just out of the blues, trying to butt [41:11.600 --> 41:17.620] in and, you know, do his pushback, you know, the normal routine to tell you, you can't, [41:17.620 --> 41:20.320] we don't have to, all that stuff. [41:20.320 --> 41:28.240] But he said something that intrigued me because I asked for the recipient of my records request [41:28.240 --> 41:32.680] to acknowledge that they received the request. [41:32.680 --> 41:38.960] And they usually do, they usually will acknowledge at least, say, I'll get something back from [41:38.960 --> 41:44.040] some, you know, helper that says, yeah, we've received your request. [41:44.040 --> 41:47.680] And they often take that opportunity to say, but we don't have to answer you for 10 business [41:47.680 --> 41:48.680] days. [41:48.680 --> 41:55.640] Anyway, this lawyer, he said that there is no statutory requirement that the receipt [41:55.640 --> 41:58.240] of your request be acknowledged. [41:58.240 --> 42:04.200] I got to thinking, when you click that checkbox on your computer, you're about to send your [42:04.200 --> 42:10.640] email and you click a little checkbox up there that says request a read receipt, that in [42:10.640 --> 42:15.000] itself qualifies as a records request. [42:15.000 --> 42:20.340] You are requesting in writing, it's a header, it's a specific email header that goes to [42:20.340 --> 42:30.400] their server and it tells that server, I want a record of the receipt of your message. [42:30.400 --> 42:38.040] And that server will tell the recipient, hey, somebody is asking for a read receipt, you [42:38.040 --> 42:40.600] want to send one or not? [42:40.600 --> 42:50.280] And if they don't send it to you, they've just denied a records request out of hand. [42:50.280 --> 42:56.480] You are having way too much fun, but the way I read it, that's exactly right. [42:56.480 --> 43:04.360] And so, you know, I'm sitting on a grand jury and you tell me that this lawyer did that. [43:04.360 --> 43:13.480] My first question is, why on earth would they have an objection to doing that? [43:13.480 --> 43:18.080] It's unreasonable. [43:18.080 --> 43:25.320] And you know, you raise the issue that the jurisdiction would like to be able to avoid [43:25.320 --> 43:34.300] this so that they can raise the claim that they did not timely receive your communication. [43:34.300 --> 43:39.640] So you say they didn't respond to 10 days and they say, oh, well, we didn't get it until [43:39.640 --> 43:42.200] 10 days from the time you sent it. [43:42.200 --> 43:43.200] Right. [43:43.200 --> 43:45.640] How are you going to prove otherwise? [43:45.640 --> 43:50.760] So you want to see him after the sponsors? [43:50.760 --> 43:56.440] OK, Randy, Kel, Brett, Phil, radio. [43:56.440 --> 43:58.400] I got phone lines on. [43:58.400 --> 44:00.120] So give us a call. [44:00.120 --> 44:02.720] I love logos without the shows on this network. [44:02.720 --> 44:04.680] I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.680 --> 44:07.320] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.320 --> 44:08.320] I need my truth. [44:08.320 --> 44:10.520] I'd be lost without logos. [44:10.520 --> 44:14.480] And I really want to help keep this network on the air and love to volunteer as a show [44:14.480 --> 44:18.440] producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because [44:18.440 --> 44:20.360] I spend it all on supplements. [44:20.360 --> 44:21.880] How can I help Logos? [44:21.880 --> 44:23.920] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.920 --> 44:28.200] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies [44:28.200 --> 44:29.420] or holiday gifts. [44:29.420 --> 44:31.380] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.380 --> 44:34.480] Now go to Logos Radio Network dot com. [44:34.480 --> 44:37.760] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.760 --> 44:43.400] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.400 --> 44:44.400] Do I pay extra? [44:44.400 --> 44:45.400] No. [44:45.400 --> 44:47.040] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.040 --> 44:48.040] No. [44:48.040 --> 44:49.040] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.040 --> 44:50.040] No. [44:50.040 --> 44:51.040] I mean, yes. [44:51.040 --> 44:52.040] Wow. [44:52.040 --> 44:54.280] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:54.280 --> 44:55.840] This is perfect. [44:55.840 --> 44:56.840] Thank you so much. [44:56.840 --> 44:57.840] You're welcome. [44:57.840 --> 44:58.840] Happy holidays, Logos. [44:58.840 --> 45:04.360] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.360 --> 45:09.580] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [45:09.580 --> 45:14.800] four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.800 --> 45:19.320] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.320 --> 45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.080 --> 45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:27.960 --> 45:34.520] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.520 --> 45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.280 --> 45:43.600] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.600 --> 45:49.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.760 --> 45:52.360] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.360 --> 46:10.160] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EASY. [46:10.160 --> 46:26.480] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? [46:26.480 --> 46:56.360] Let me know in the comments below and I'll see you in the next one. [46:56.480 --> 47:12.760] Okay. [47:12.760 --> 47:13.760] We are back. [47:13.760 --> 47:19.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 11th day of June [47:19.240 --> 47:21.240] 2020. [47:21.240 --> 47:23.200] And I finally got the phones turned on. [47:23.200 --> 47:27.080] Brett, are you ready to go to calls? [47:27.080 --> 47:28.080] Sure. [47:28.080 --> 47:29.080] Okay. [47:29.080 --> 47:34.080] I wasn't sure if you had any more on your fun and games with the local yokels. [47:34.080 --> 47:38.440] Oh yeah, I can tell a little more about it, but we got some callers, so I'd just as soon [47:38.440 --> 47:39.440] go to them. [47:39.440 --> 47:44.520] Well, go ahead and just finish off that briefly and then we'll go to callers. [47:44.520 --> 47:48.920] Well I was talking about Reeb's Receipts on an email. [47:48.920 --> 47:52.000] This gives me one more reason to send my records requests. [47:52.000 --> 47:57.320] Even if they're, you know, I was ready to print them up and fax them, instead I'm going [47:57.320 --> 48:04.500] to send a PDF via email and I'm going to check the box for read receipt request because if [48:04.500 --> 48:09.800] I don't get one back, they have just denied me in a records request. [48:09.800 --> 48:17.640] I've requested the record from a public official in writing, I've requested the record of delivery [48:17.640 --> 48:19.240] of my email. [48:19.240 --> 48:21.800] And if they deny that, that's not right. [48:21.800 --> 48:24.480] It's official misconduct, it's official oppression, technically. [48:24.480 --> 48:31.520] It's a very small version of it, but it fits the law. [48:31.520 --> 48:40.260] So I checked that box and we've had, let's see, I'm up to six records requests now with [48:40.260 --> 48:51.320] these people and it is beginning to look like now with the way I'm phrasing my requests, [48:51.320 --> 48:59.240] it's beginning to look like there is a lawyer who has clandestine access to the IT director's [48:59.240 --> 49:03.200] email account and network credentials. [49:03.200 --> 49:09.080] And they have got some bad cybersecurity practices in place and they're using the bad cybersecurity [49:09.080 --> 49:16.140] practices to cover up their cryptocurrency unethical transactions. [49:16.140 --> 49:20.400] So I'm sure they're not very comfortable right now. [49:20.400 --> 49:23.840] How did you get to the cryptocurrency issue? [49:23.840 --> 49:28.560] I read that in your text and I didn't understand that. [49:28.560 --> 49:33.680] Well they don't get to ask me why I need to know these things. [49:33.680 --> 49:37.400] So I asked about the cryptocurrency. [49:37.400 --> 49:40.960] This is the guy, he's the IT director, he's the head of a department, so he's required [49:40.960 --> 49:42.320] to answer. [49:42.320 --> 49:48.720] And I'm looking for records of where he paid off the lawyer or the lawyer paid off the [49:48.720 --> 49:55.320] judge or he paid off the judge and I'm looking for traces of that. [49:55.320 --> 50:05.460] And I'm asking the IT director to find it in his server logs. [50:05.460 --> 50:08.280] You're having way too much fun here. [50:08.280 --> 50:14.320] So you're essentially accusing them of wrongdoing by the way you ask the question. [50:14.320 --> 50:16.920] I guess you could say that. [50:16.920 --> 50:25.260] We now have the county auditor interested and the HR director as well. [50:25.260 --> 50:35.240] Are you deliberately constructing your information requests so as to frighten and intimidate [50:35.240 --> 50:36.240] these guys? [50:36.240 --> 50:40.000] Would you do something that low down? [50:40.000 --> 50:50.080] Well now, you know, Randy, do they have it coming? [50:50.080 --> 50:52.360] They have it coming. [50:52.360 --> 50:59.520] And just the point to everybody listening, they're the servants, we're the masters. [50:59.520 --> 51:03.680] They answer to us, we don't answer to them. [51:03.680 --> 51:07.440] And that was the point I wanted to bring up about what Brad is doing. [51:07.440 --> 51:10.160] He is taking them to task. [51:10.160 --> 51:14.040] If they've been quite responsive on the first request, we wouldn't have ever got to the [51:14.040 --> 51:18.560] second request. [51:18.560 --> 51:21.840] And that's the lesson, that's the moral of the story. [51:21.840 --> 51:29.480] And I'm hoping that if I get this questionnaire project, the due process project up, that [51:29.480 --> 51:37.960] we will begin to bring police officers to task as well, letting them know that they're [51:37.960 --> 51:44.000] dealing with the masters, not the subjects or the civilians. [51:44.000 --> 51:48.240] Okay, let's go to Scott in Texas. [51:48.240 --> 51:49.240] Hello, Scott. [51:49.240 --> 51:50.240] Howdy, howdy. [51:50.240 --> 52:02.080] And Brett, please don't forget 552.353, refusing access to public records, that's my favorite [52:02.080 --> 52:03.080] charge. [52:03.080 --> 52:04.960] Yes, sir. [52:04.960 --> 52:11.880] Official misconduct, and it's official oppression in the penal code. [52:11.880 --> 52:21.280] They should understand that the Open Government Act in Texas is not a civil statute. [52:21.280 --> 52:23.760] It's a criminal statute. [52:23.760 --> 52:28.220] So when they say you can sue us, yes, we can. [52:28.220 --> 52:32.160] We can also take you to the grand jury. [52:32.160 --> 52:37.740] A violation of the Open Records Act would go to due process. [52:37.740 --> 52:47.960] You have a right to a reasonable expectation to the proper enforcement and to the due course [52:47.960 --> 52:48.960] of the laws. [52:48.960 --> 52:53.800] You have a right to expect that your public officials will follow your laws as written. [52:53.800 --> 52:58.440] A violation of that is a denial of due process. [52:58.440 --> 53:01.640] Does not only ring in the state, it rings in the Fed. [53:01.640 --> 53:13.160] Brett, have you ever thought about filing in the Fed for due process violation over [53:13.160 --> 53:16.880] Open Records Act? [53:16.880 --> 53:23.240] I'm sure if that IT director were to see something like that happen, he would be really quick [53:23.240 --> 53:26.560] to throw that lawyer under the bus. [53:26.560 --> 53:35.640] Now, we know that the FBI is not going to do anything, but if you file it with a special [53:35.640 --> 53:43.080] agent in charge, because that's the only actual name you can get of an FBI agent, then [53:43.080 --> 53:50.240] he is at the very least going to cover his backside by having two suits go out and talk [53:50.240 --> 53:53.440] to this guy. [53:53.440 --> 53:56.560] That should get interesting. [53:56.560 --> 54:05.440] I had two suits go to my brother-in-law's house, FBI, and knocked on his door and they [54:05.440 --> 54:12.960] asked him if, he knew Randall Kelp, he told me he's my brother-in-law, they asked him [54:12.960 --> 54:17.520] what my politics were and he said, I don't know that he has any. [54:17.520 --> 54:18.520] Why are you asking? [54:18.520 --> 54:23.800] And the agent said, we're the ones asking the questions here, not you. [54:23.800 --> 54:28.960] Well, they shouldn't have said that to that old grumpy old jarhead. [54:28.960 --> 54:31.840] He said, no, you're the one, you're not. [54:31.840 --> 54:35.840] Hack off my porch and slam the door in their face. [54:35.840 --> 54:40.760] He said he looked out the side window and the one agent looked at the other and kind [54:40.760 --> 54:45.920] of hunched his shoulders and said, oh, well, and they left. [54:45.920 --> 54:50.760] Anyway, that's one of my great stories of old brother-in-law. [54:50.760 --> 54:52.720] We lost him a few years ago. [54:52.720 --> 54:53.720] Oh. [54:53.720 --> 54:58.440] Anyway, anyway, we're the masters, they're the servants. [54:58.440 --> 55:02.000] There's nothing like setting them up so we can sting them and I'm going to look forward [55:02.000 --> 55:07.400] to getting this questionnaire together so we can start stinging them. [55:07.400 --> 55:11.040] Scott, we kind of ignored you again. [55:11.040 --> 55:12.960] You must be used to that. [55:12.960 --> 55:15.000] I kind of noticed that. [55:15.000 --> 55:17.440] So I was just waiting for you to fall off the cliff. [55:17.440 --> 55:20.520] I was like, sooner or later, he's going to talk himself right off the cliff. [55:20.520 --> 55:23.440] I was just, it was just any minute it was coming up now. [55:23.440 --> 55:25.720] So I was just waiting. [55:25.720 --> 55:29.240] You got three minutes and 20 seconds to wait. [55:29.240 --> 55:33.240] Oh, well shoot, then might as well kill some time. [55:33.240 --> 55:39.440] You know, this is, this is really ironic how all this stuff is really playing out because [55:39.440 --> 55:45.320] you see all the protests about, you know, defund the cops and everything. [55:45.320 --> 55:52.520] And the cops have basically set themselves up for this because they, you know, had their [55:52.520 --> 55:56.240] constitutional powers, duties, and limitations. [55:56.240 --> 56:01.480] And those duties are when the upper chain of command is giving them illegal orders, [56:01.480 --> 56:08.840] they should be out, you know, arresting those people instead they're out there riding tickets. [56:08.840 --> 56:12.680] So all the people see is like, what do we need cops for? [56:12.680 --> 56:15.800] All they do is write us tickets and harass us and stuff. [56:15.800 --> 56:22.000] And whenever there's any crimes that happen in the upper chain of command, nothing happens. [56:22.000 --> 56:28.760] And there's that thin blue line you were talking about on some of these clowns. [56:28.760 --> 56:31.800] So now that's why, you know, people- [56:31.800 --> 56:38.060] When it goes to traffic, you know, that part I have worked out the due process portion [56:38.060 --> 56:45.080] of that, where was the officer a DPS officer? [56:45.080 --> 56:50.360] If they say no, was the officer a sheriff's deputy? [56:50.360 --> 56:58.280] If they say yes, was the officer riding a motorcycle? [56:58.280 --> 57:05.820] And there's a very good reason for asking that particular question because in the codes, [57:05.820 --> 57:10.200] it's not for you, Scott, you know this, but in the code, it says that the county commissioner's [57:10.200 --> 57:15.640] court can appoint a sheriff's deputy as a traffic control officer, and that gives them [57:15.640 --> 57:19.040] authority to enforce the transportation code. [57:19.040 --> 57:26.700] But he must be paid by the county commissioner's court and he must be riding a motorcycle. [57:26.700 --> 57:29.920] So if he's not riding a motorcycle, you have reason to believe he is not authorized to [57:29.920 --> 57:35.920] enforce transportation code, and that gets first degree felony aggravated assault charges. [57:35.920 --> 57:45.640] And that's the transportation code 701.003 subsection A1. [57:45.640 --> 57:53.880] Well, it starts at 001, 001 is the one that says that the county commissioner's court [57:53.880 --> 58:01.300] has to appoint a sheriff's deputy, who is already a sheriff's deputy, to be a traffic [58:01.300 --> 58:02.300] control officer. [58:02.300 --> 58:08.160] They only have two in a county under two million and over that they can have as many as they [58:08.160 --> 58:09.160] want. [58:09.160 --> 58:12.440] But they have to be paid by the county commissioner's court, not by the sheriff's department. [58:12.440 --> 58:17.120] I'll kind of explain that when we come back. [58:17.120 --> 58:23.240] The way all of this got set up created some problems and they had to do it this way. [58:23.240 --> 58:27.120] You know, it doesn't sound like it makes sense, but when I explain it, you'll understand why [58:27.120 --> 58:28.700] it's set up this way. [58:28.700 --> 58:32.680] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [58:32.680 --> 58:38.200] Our call-in number, 512-646-1984, we'll be taking your calls all night. [58:38.200 --> 58:42.720] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [58:42.720 --> 58:45.120] This is a two-hour show, so it moves quickly. [58:45.120 --> 58:46.120] Tomorrow we do four-hour. [58:46.120 --> 58:50.280] I'll be right back. [58:50.280 --> 58:55.720] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.720 --> 58:58.520] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.520 --> 59:03.920] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.920 --> 59:07.000] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.000 --> 59:08.960] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.960 --> 59:14.860] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.860 --> 59:18.280] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.280 --> 59:23.600] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.600 --> 59:28.280] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.280 --> 59:33.440] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.440 --> 59:43.880] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.880 --> 59:47.960] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.960 --> 01:00:00.560] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.560 --> 01:00:06.640] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.640 --> 01:00:11.800] Markets for Monday, the 22nd of July, 2019, open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 [01:00:11.800 --> 01:00:20.720] an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:20.720 --> 01:00:29.000] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:29.000 --> 01:00:40.800] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a [01:00:40.800 --> 01:00:42.840] crypto coin. [01:00:42.840 --> 01:00:52.200] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [01:00:52.200 --> 01:00:57.520] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day parade, killing [01:00:57.520 --> 01:01:04.520] 10 and injuring 40, today in history. [01:01:04.520 --> 01:01:09.160] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, legalizing hemp and [01:01:09.160 --> 01:01:13.720] a Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:01:13.720 --> 01:01:17.800] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:01:17.800 --> 01:01:22.480] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:01:22.480 --> 01:01:24.560] to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.560 --> 01:01:28.200] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:01:28.200 --> 01:01:32.800] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:01:32.800 --> 01:01:33.800] law. [01:01:33.800 --> 01:01:37.360] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.360 --> 01:01:41.840] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:01:41.840 --> 01:01:48.000] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works. [01:01:48.000 --> 01:01:54.240] As well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Jaime Esparza, a Democrat, [01:01:54.240 --> 01:01:58.720] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:01:58.720 --> 01:02:01.480] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.480 --> 01:02:06.480] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.480 --> 01:02:10.480] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [01:02:10.480 --> 01:02:13.200] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.200 --> 01:02:17.120] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [01:02:17.120 --> 01:02:22.320] charged with. [01:02:22.320 --> 01:02:26.960] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [01:02:26.960 --> 01:02:32.100] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [01:02:32.100 --> 01:02:37.720] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [01:02:37.720 --> 01:02:39.200] Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.200 --> 01:02:43.520] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [01:02:43.520 --> 01:02:45.360] its front fins. [01:02:45.360 --> 01:02:50.480] For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.480 --> 01:03:05.840] This is Rook Rodey with your Lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:03:05.840 --> 01:03:33.840] This is Rook Rodey with your Lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:03:33.840 --> 01:04:01.840] This is Rook Rodey with your Lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:04:01.840 --> 01:04:14.800] Okay, we are back. [01:04:14.800 --> 01:04:18.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:04:18.080 --> 01:04:22.320] Brett, I was going to say something when we went out, but I was so busy on the break, [01:04:22.320 --> 01:04:23.320] lost track of it. [01:04:23.320 --> 01:04:24.320] Scott? [01:04:24.320 --> 01:04:33.200] You were just about to tell Scott, or everybody, why the county traffic officers are paid by [01:04:33.200 --> 01:04:35.080] the conditioner's court. [01:04:35.080 --> 01:04:36.600] Yes, yes. [01:04:36.600 --> 01:04:44.200] Truman used to, President Truman, before he became a politician, built roads. [01:04:44.200 --> 01:04:50.240] And he was aghast at the number of people dying on the roadways with these new automobiles. [01:04:50.240 --> 01:04:52.520] This is back in the late 40s. [01:04:52.520 --> 01:04:55.080] We were losing 50,000 people a year in the 40s. [01:04:55.080 --> 01:04:58.880] We're losing about 60,000 now. [01:04:58.880 --> 01:05:02.680] And we've more than quadrupled the number of cars on the road. [01:05:02.680 --> 01:05:10.800] He had the Corps of Engineers develop this superhighway system to accommodate these faster [01:05:10.800 --> 01:05:11.800] vehicles. [01:05:11.800 --> 01:05:16.360] And he also had them build a model transportation code. [01:05:16.360 --> 01:05:19.160] And we went to all the states and asked them to adopt it. [01:05:19.160 --> 01:05:24.760] And all of them did but three, and those three already had their own code. [01:05:24.760 --> 01:05:30.660] So then they came to the sheriffs and said, hey, guys, we got this whole new stack of [01:05:30.660 --> 01:05:33.980] laws for you guys to enforce. [01:05:33.980 --> 01:05:39.080] And the sheriff said, we don't have funds to enforce those laws. [01:05:39.080 --> 01:05:42.920] You're either going to have to fund us or find some other way of doing this. [01:05:42.920 --> 01:05:48.960] So they found another way, which was create state police for this purpose. [01:05:48.960 --> 01:05:51.600] That's exactly what Texas did. [01:05:51.600 --> 01:05:58.360] The highway patrol are police officers, not peace officers. [01:05:58.360 --> 01:06:04.360] They are all certified peace officers, but they're not employed as peace officers. [01:06:04.360 --> 01:06:10.380] They're employed as police officers, and those are traffic cops. [01:06:10.380 --> 01:06:15.360] But there were places like out in West Texas that were very sparsely populated. [01:06:15.360 --> 01:06:24.820] So it wasn't really very profitable to put highway patrol out in those areas. [01:06:24.820 --> 01:06:30.200] So they carved out an exemption. [01:06:30.200 --> 01:06:35.200] County commissioners court can appoint two sheriff's deputies. [01:06:35.200 --> 01:06:39.920] They have to be working sheriff's deputies. [01:06:39.920 --> 01:06:44.080] And they can be appointed as traffic control officers. [01:06:44.080 --> 01:06:46.720] But they must be paid by the county commissioners court. [01:06:46.720 --> 01:06:52.040] They can't come out of the sheriff's budget and they have to ride motorcycles. [01:06:52.040 --> 01:06:53.680] That's why they did that. [01:06:53.680 --> 01:06:58.760] I'm curious, who would pay for the motorcycle? [01:06:58.760 --> 01:07:05.640] Because normally the whichever fleet they're working for, they would use that fleet, right? [01:07:05.640 --> 01:07:07.820] That's a good question. [01:07:07.820 --> 01:07:11.640] That's not addressed in 701. [01:07:11.640 --> 01:07:16.320] They probably have to figure that out because generally when an officer rides a motorcycle [01:07:16.320 --> 01:07:19.520] he pays for it himself. [01:07:19.520 --> 01:07:20.520] All of these officers- [01:07:20.520 --> 01:07:25.860] It says that the commissioner's court may provide necessary equipment for the officer [01:07:25.860 --> 01:07:28.720] at the county's expense. [01:07:28.720 --> 01:07:31.640] Well, that would indicate they could. [01:07:31.640 --> 01:07:34.720] That's not an issue I've ever addressed, so I don't know who would pay for it. [01:07:34.720 --> 01:07:40.440] But I've never found any place where any officers have been appointed by the county commissioners [01:07:40.440 --> 01:07:42.600] court. [01:07:42.600 --> 01:07:49.000] The problem with sheriff's deputies and municipal police, see the legislature carved out an [01:07:49.000 --> 01:07:54.040] exemption for sheriff's deputies. [01:07:54.040 --> 01:07:58.920] Otherwise Department of Public Safety were police officers. [01:07:58.920 --> 01:08:02.040] Everybody else was peace officers. [01:08:02.040 --> 01:08:07.040] But they carved out an exemption so that certain sheriff's deputies could enforce the transportation [01:08:07.040 --> 01:08:08.200] code. [01:08:08.200 --> 01:08:15.720] The legislature never carved out any exemption for municipal police officers. [01:08:15.720 --> 01:08:25.080] Nothing in the code authorizes a municipal peace officer to enforce transportation code. [01:08:25.080 --> 01:08:37.320] Now there is a provision that will allow a municipal police officer to do safety inspection. [01:08:37.320 --> 01:08:40.320] A lot of transportation inspections on commercial vehicles. [01:08:40.320 --> 01:08:41.320] Right. [01:08:41.320 --> 01:08:45.680] If he goes through a bunch of training, gets the certification, and if he works for a city [01:08:45.680 --> 01:08:48.560] that meets a whole bunch of weird requirements. [01:08:48.560 --> 01:08:50.680] And they're really strange requirements. [01:08:50.680 --> 01:08:56.240] But even then he can only do safety inspections, that's it. [01:08:56.240 --> 01:09:04.560] There is no authorization for a municipal police officer to enforce transportation code, [01:09:04.560 --> 01:09:06.040] period. [01:09:06.040 --> 01:09:10.920] And whoever is these county guys you were talking about, if they did have the county [01:09:10.920 --> 01:09:15.840] commissioners court paying their way, they would need to stay on the highway. [01:09:15.840 --> 01:09:20.600] They have to remain on and patrol the highway at all times when performing their duties. [01:09:20.600 --> 01:09:27.160] They can't go running around and like tagging people in a parking lot or any old place. [01:09:27.160 --> 01:09:30.240] Does it say highway or thoroughfare? [01:09:30.240 --> 01:09:31.240] Yes. [01:09:31.240 --> 01:09:33.840] It says highway. [01:09:33.840 --> 01:09:38.520] Highway was, I think that has a definition. [01:09:38.520 --> 01:09:41.320] That's a state road. [01:09:41.320 --> 01:09:48.560] That won't include county roads or streets. [01:09:48.560 --> 01:09:51.140] Need to check that definition. [01:09:51.140 --> 01:09:56.560] But it's kind of moot because I've never come across a place, I think there was one place, [01:09:56.560 --> 01:10:02.320] Scott, Scott, didn't you look into that at one time? [01:10:02.320 --> 01:10:04.200] Of course I did. [01:10:04.200 --> 01:10:11.360] I hit all the county commissioners courts for all the officers that were employed. [01:10:11.360 --> 01:10:18.640] Not one of them have an officer that is employed by a commissioner's court. [01:10:18.640 --> 01:10:19.640] So that makes- [01:10:19.640 --> 01:10:22.040] So that's pretty definitive. [01:10:22.040 --> 01:10:23.040] Yes. [01:10:23.040 --> 01:10:24.600] And in fact- [01:10:24.600 --> 01:10:30.440] Scott, you're the one that got me started on knowing about this because you're the one [01:10:30.440 --> 01:10:35.960] that you got your records request back and they said, we have no records responsive to [01:10:35.960 --> 01:10:41.260] your request when you asked for the names of those officers. [01:10:41.260 --> 01:10:46.280] And so I took up the baton where you were doing that and I started asking some counties [01:10:46.280 --> 01:10:52.280] around where I'm doing my traveling and none of them had any either. [01:10:52.280 --> 01:10:59.480] Yeah, so they're not even following their own laws that are written. [01:10:59.480 --> 01:11:05.000] So it's just like, you're talking about it as kind of what I was alluding to is like, [01:11:05.000 --> 01:11:07.620] you know, people are like, what are the police for? [01:11:07.620 --> 01:11:11.680] They're not even actually in force legally. [01:11:11.680 --> 01:11:18.600] They just kind of are a quasi group of people out there, you know, going haywire on the [01:11:18.600 --> 01:11:25.040] public, not even having any type of Brady training whatsoever, because if they actually [01:11:25.040 --> 01:11:31.640] did have a correct training, they'd be arresting all the bosses up above them for giving them [01:11:31.640 --> 01:11:32.640] illegal orders. [01:11:32.640 --> 01:11:39.440] So they lost all the way around because they look completely despicable at this point. [01:11:39.440 --> 01:11:48.520] Nobody can, it's hard to defend the cops anymore on anything and they put their- [01:11:48.520 --> 01:11:59.820] And we have the police kill someone in Minnesota and we wind up with very large demonstrations [01:11:59.820 --> 01:12:04.800] all over the world. [01:12:04.800 --> 01:12:14.160] Everywhere I go, when I was in Australia, the Australians talked about how aggressive [01:12:14.160 --> 01:12:16.640] the American police were. [01:12:16.640 --> 01:12:22.160] Nowhere are police as aggressive as they are in the United States. [01:12:22.160 --> 01:12:30.140] We live in the worst police state the world has ever seen by far. [01:12:30.140 --> 01:12:35.480] The next country to us is Russia. [01:12:35.480 --> 01:12:46.640] And they arrest about two thirds the number per capita that we do, we're not just above [01:12:46.640 --> 01:12:49.680] Russia, we're way above Russia. [01:12:49.680 --> 01:12:50.680] Wow. [01:12:50.680 --> 01:12:59.080] And in the United States, the average conviction rate, 99.6. [01:12:59.080 --> 01:13:02.640] Worst police state the world has ever seen for the most part, nobody knows. [01:13:02.640 --> 01:13:06.840] It's time to start taking this apart. [01:13:06.840 --> 01:13:12.920] So I'm going to get to work on getting my due process questionnaire out there and I [01:13:12.920 --> 01:13:19.440] will frame it toward police actions, police stops and their behavior. [01:13:19.440 --> 01:13:23.880] So that anybody gets stopped by a policeman, first thing they get is a professional conduct [01:13:23.880 --> 01:13:26.120] complaint. [01:13:26.120 --> 01:13:35.880] And every minor misstep of the policeman gets another one, and criminal complaints and everything [01:13:35.880 --> 01:13:40.720] we can throw at them. [01:13:40.720 --> 01:13:46.560] If we do have a method to fix this problem, it won't get fixed by demonstrations in [01:13:46.560 --> 01:13:49.760] the street, that will get people's attention. [01:13:49.760 --> 01:13:53.340] But that's not going to fix it, it's going to take something else. [01:13:53.340 --> 01:13:58.320] If we start filing a professional conduct complaint against a police officer every time [01:13:58.320 --> 01:14:06.800] he violates a statute or a rule, this problem will begin to fix itself. [01:14:06.800 --> 01:14:08.800] Okay. [01:14:08.800 --> 01:14:15.400] We have a whole board full of callers and we've only got three segments left. [01:14:15.400 --> 01:14:16.400] I do have... [01:14:16.400 --> 01:14:18.400] Go ahead, Scott. [01:14:18.400 --> 01:14:24.960] I'll let you go so you can get to the rest of the callers, but that's all, I'll finish [01:14:24.960 --> 01:14:28.800] up the rest of it tomorrow night, so it's no big deal. [01:14:28.800 --> 01:14:30.800] Thank you, Scott. [01:14:30.800 --> 01:14:32.240] Okay. [01:14:32.240 --> 01:14:41.960] Now we're going to go to, let's see, we have a caller here, I think it's a first time caller. [01:14:41.960 --> 01:14:45.360] Hello, I have a 512 number. [01:14:45.360 --> 01:14:47.760] Yes, Mr. Gelson. [01:14:47.760 --> 01:14:48.760] Yes. [01:14:48.760 --> 01:14:49.760] First name. [01:14:49.760 --> 01:14:50.760] Christopher. [01:14:50.760 --> 01:14:51.760] Christopher. [01:14:51.760 --> 01:14:52.760] Okay. [01:14:52.760 --> 01:14:57.600] What do you have for us today? [01:14:57.600 --> 01:15:05.840] Yes, I spoke with you yesterday about an issue I had with the Fayette County Sheriff's Office. [01:15:05.840 --> 01:15:10.920] I was at my own home, minding my own business, watching some TV, and a sheriff pulls up to [01:15:10.920 --> 01:15:12.240] my house. [01:15:12.240 --> 01:15:16.400] So I go outside and ask him what the issue is, I don't know her because obviously he's [01:15:16.400 --> 01:15:17.960] there for something. [01:15:17.960 --> 01:15:22.160] So he gets out of the car and immediately says, you're the one that ran away from me [01:15:22.160 --> 01:15:24.600] across the road a few minutes ago. [01:15:24.600 --> 01:15:29.800] So I respond, obviously it's not me, what's going on here? [01:15:29.800 --> 01:15:35.480] And he informs me that the landowner across the street chased two people that were armed [01:15:35.480 --> 01:15:38.120] on his property apparently poaching. [01:15:38.120 --> 01:15:43.080] So they were armed and apparently he wasn't armed, he chased them and they ran away. [01:15:43.080 --> 01:15:47.480] So he begins to ask me who was with me, who lives here. [01:15:47.480 --> 01:15:52.920] I tell him me, my dad, and my mom are just living out here in the woods and he asked [01:15:52.920 --> 01:15:53.920] what my dad was wearing. [01:15:53.920 --> 01:15:58.520] I told him my red polo shirt from his job and he switched to a white shirt, he was picking [01:15:58.520 --> 01:16:02.040] up my mom at the time, and I'm wearing a black shirt. [01:16:02.040 --> 01:16:07.960] And he goes, what are the odds that you two match the description I was given exactly? [01:16:07.960 --> 01:16:13.000] And I tell him that would be absolutely crazy because I mean, I've been here all day. [01:16:13.000 --> 01:16:15.200] I have no reason to go on my neighbor's property over there. [01:16:15.200 --> 01:16:16.200] I don't know him. [01:16:16.200 --> 01:16:21.080] I don't have permission and it's just dangerous to be on somebody else's property. [01:16:21.080 --> 01:16:23.680] So obviously I wasn't going to do that. [01:16:23.680 --> 01:16:28.040] So I tell him I've been home all day, not lying to him, give him my ID, runs all my [01:16:28.040 --> 01:16:34.880] stuff, comes back clean, tells me I'm lying to him and if he can prove it, that he's taking [01:16:34.880 --> 01:16:37.320] me to jail tonight on a felony. [01:16:37.320 --> 01:16:40.400] So I tell him, do what you have to do, but it's not me. [01:16:40.400 --> 01:16:46.120] So, you know, he takes pictures of me and he sends it to, I guess, the landowner. [01:16:46.120 --> 01:16:48.160] And we sit there for a while. [01:16:48.160 --> 01:16:51.840] While we're sitting there, he says, dear, I'm waiting on your father to come back so [01:16:51.840 --> 01:16:52.840] I can identify him. [01:16:52.840 --> 01:16:55.840] I say, well, we're just going to sit here then. [01:16:55.840 --> 01:17:00.360] And the dispatcher, ironically or not, is relevant. [01:17:00.360 --> 01:17:05.040] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [01:17:05.040 --> 01:17:11.240] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [01:17:11.240 --> 01:17:14.320] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5 16. [01:17:14.320 --> 01:17:19.360] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [01:17:19.360 --> 01:17:20.880] which is in heaven. [01:17:20.880 --> 01:17:25.720] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:25.720 --> 01:17:31.240] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [01:17:31.240 --> 01:17:34.400] to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.400 --> 01:17:38.800] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [01:17:38.800 --> 01:17:40.560] one chapter per week. [01:17:40.560 --> 01:17:45.640] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [01:17:45.640 --> 01:17:47.860] Christian character development. [01:17:47.860 --> 01:17:53.680] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to [01:17:53.680 --> 01:18:04.080] 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [01:18:04.080 --> 01:18:09.600] That's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central [01:18:09.600 --> 01:18:10.600] Texas Gunworks. [01:18:10.600 --> 01:18:14.640] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:14.640 --> 01:18:16.280] Any amount is appreciated. [01:18:16.280 --> 01:18:18.280] Everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.280 --> 01:18:24.680] From Central Texas Gunworks, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:24.680 --> 01:18:27.240] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:18:27.240 --> 01:18:30.440] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.440 --> 01:18:36.040] When you purchase Randy Kelton's eBook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.040 --> 01:18:39.760] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:39.760 --> 01:18:44.320] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [01:18:44.320 --> 01:18:48.680] keep bringing you the best quality programming on Talk Radio today. [01:18:48.680 --> 01:18:51.600] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [01:18:51.600 --> 01:18:55.720] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:55.720 --> 01:19:02.720] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:25.720 --> 01:19:36.240] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.240 --> 01:19:41.400] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan. [01:19:41.400 --> 01:19:46.720] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand. [01:19:46.720 --> 01:19:55.320] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:55.320 --> 01:20:14.760] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:20:14.760 --> 01:20:16.680] Okay, we are back. [01:20:16.680 --> 01:20:20.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruval Radio. [01:20:20.240 --> 01:20:21.880] And wait a minute, what did you say your name was? [01:20:21.880 --> 01:20:22.880] Chris? [01:20:22.880 --> 01:20:25.440] Chris, Christopher, yes. [01:20:25.440 --> 01:20:28.160] Okay, Christopher, okay. [01:20:28.160 --> 01:20:31.040] You're Enrique's son? [01:20:31.040 --> 01:20:36.360] And I need to tell you, Chris, I won't hold that against you. [01:20:36.360 --> 01:20:40.960] No, yeah, yeah, yeah, obviously. [01:20:40.960 --> 01:20:45.480] Enrique's been annoying me for years. [01:20:45.480 --> 01:20:47.320] Yeah, yeah. [01:20:47.320 --> 01:20:49.680] Well, buds. [01:20:49.680 --> 01:20:58.880] Okay, so one thing, a comment Brett made when we went to the break was, why were you so [01:20:58.880 --> 01:21:00.560] accommodating to the police? [01:21:00.560 --> 01:21:04.320] And I explained to him that you're one of these people that's never had any particular [01:21:04.320 --> 01:21:05.320] problem with them. [01:21:05.320 --> 01:21:07.720] You don't have an issue with the police. [01:21:07.720 --> 01:21:17.120] So your first primary encounter with the police, they teach you why you don't trust the police. [01:21:17.120 --> 01:21:20.800] Unless they give you reason not to trust them. [01:21:20.800 --> 01:21:27.880] So I take it that the identification did not go so well for the officer? [01:21:27.880 --> 01:21:34.400] Well, at that point, I told you he was waiting for my father to come home, took five or 10 [01:21:34.400 --> 01:21:35.400] minutes. [01:21:35.400 --> 01:21:40.560] And the dispatcher at that time, stupidly called for one at gunpoint to my address. [01:21:40.560 --> 01:21:44.080] And so two more officers showed up loaded and armed, ready for bear. [01:21:44.080 --> 01:21:46.840] And I'm thinking this is just gonna get worse. [01:21:46.840 --> 01:21:51.320] But they couldn't have been nicer to me and my dad showed up, they questioned him. [01:21:51.320 --> 01:21:54.680] And I just asked them if they were finished because they were just standing around. [01:21:54.680 --> 01:21:59.080] They said, yeah, we're finished here and they left. [01:21:59.080 --> 01:22:04.840] Did anyone ever put their hand on their gun? [01:22:04.840 --> 01:22:09.640] The main officer had his hand on his head really, really near his gun the whole time [01:22:09.640 --> 01:22:10.640] I was talking to him. [01:22:10.640 --> 01:22:13.040] He was really aggressive. [01:22:13.040 --> 01:22:16.320] You need to get, you got his name? [01:22:16.320 --> 01:22:20.400] I think his name is Sergeant Broil for the Fayette County Police Department. [01:22:20.400 --> 01:22:25.120] Like I told you, well, I didn't tell you, none of them had identification tags on them. [01:22:25.120 --> 01:22:27.640] They just had their vest that said Sheriff. [01:22:27.640 --> 01:22:30.960] I mean, I believe I asked at one point, but I was given just the last name. [01:22:30.960 --> 01:22:35.160] I wasn't given anything else and they didn't produce identification of any kind. [01:22:35.160 --> 01:22:43.280] I'm gonna suggest for your own safety, if a supposed peace officer shows up and he doesn't [01:22:43.280 --> 01:22:47.080] have identification, you ask them for a card. [01:22:47.080 --> 01:22:50.000] If they don't have a card, get lost. [01:22:50.000 --> 01:22:51.920] There's the road, hit it. [01:22:51.920 --> 01:22:55.680] If they don't leave immediately, call 911. [01:22:55.680 --> 01:23:00.600] Anytime you're dealing with the police and you're concerned with their behavior, call [01:23:00.600 --> 01:23:02.600] 911. [01:23:02.600 --> 01:23:10.180] And here's the word you use, they have a magic word, agitated. [01:23:10.180 --> 01:23:18.400] They want to get you to get frustrated or angry so they can call you agitated. [01:23:18.400 --> 01:23:22.720] Once they call you agitated, they can beat you up, they can shoot you, they can do pretty [01:23:22.720 --> 01:23:27.640] much anything they want to and feel as though they're covered. [01:23:27.640 --> 01:23:32.240] So the first thing you want to do is accuse him of being agitated. [01:23:32.240 --> 01:23:42.240] I told one once, one of these big, you see these guys, tight-skinned, bustle-bound, looks [01:23:42.240 --> 01:23:46.840] like if you poke them with a pen, they'd pop like a tick. [01:23:46.840 --> 01:23:48.480] That's anabolic steroids. [01:23:48.480 --> 01:23:52.600] I accused one once heavy. [01:23:52.600 --> 01:23:57.360] Too many anabolic steroids, wait, say that again. [01:23:57.360 --> 01:24:02.360] He came out real agitated and like you said, like that real, real puffy and muscle-bound. [01:24:02.360 --> 01:24:11.600] 911, 911 is your protection. [01:24:11.600 --> 01:24:19.640] I got someone out here, he's agitated, he is in a police uniform but has no identification [01:24:19.640 --> 01:24:21.240] and I'm afraid he's going to shoot me. [01:24:21.240 --> 01:24:27.640] Get someone out here to take my complaint against him for aggravated assault. [01:24:27.640 --> 01:24:30.240] Here's what the code says. [01:24:30.240 --> 01:24:38.800] The code says that if you exert or purport to exert an authority you do not expressly [01:24:38.800 --> 01:24:43.840] have and in the process deny citizen free access to or enjoy them out of right, that's [01:24:43.840 --> 01:24:45.520] a class A misdemeanor. [01:24:45.520 --> 01:24:48.000] So you're on your own property. [01:24:48.000 --> 01:24:54.700] This peace officer enters onto your own property. [01:24:54.700 --> 01:25:02.240] He has now left the public domain and entered into a private domain. [01:25:02.240 --> 01:25:06.080] That has to be careful because a different set of rules apply. [01:25:06.080 --> 01:25:08.240] It's called criminal trespass. [01:25:08.240 --> 01:25:10.200] Did you at any time ask them to leave? [01:25:10.200 --> 01:25:11.200] No. [01:25:11.200 --> 01:25:17.200] As I said, I was accommodating of them but I did make a remark at one point that after [01:25:17.200 --> 01:25:22.000] the dispatch called for one at gunpoint mistakenly, I told that officer I'm feeling pain, I'm [01:25:22.000 --> 01:25:27.520] not feeling well, I'm feeling nauseous that this is happening. [01:25:27.520 --> 01:25:30.360] Always ask them to leave the property. [01:25:30.360 --> 01:25:36.040] When you ask them to leave the property and they don't leave the property, that becomes [01:25:36.040 --> 01:25:39.080] criminal trespass. [01:25:39.080 --> 01:25:44.120] And here's what the law says, our legislature, Texas, is the only one that has this law. [01:25:44.120 --> 01:25:50.640] When our legislature put guns in the hands of peace officers, they placed upon that peace [01:25:50.640 --> 01:26:00.080] officer a responsibility that I haven't found in any other state law in the country. [01:26:00.080 --> 01:26:12.000] If someone commits simple assault and if someone acts in a way that through either speech or [01:26:12.000 --> 01:26:19.640] action that causes you to feel threatened under 2201, that's simple assault. [01:26:19.640 --> 01:26:26.000] If they commit simple assault while prominently displaying a deadly weapon, that's a second [01:26:26.000 --> 01:26:36.160] degree felony under 2202 unless they are a public official acting under the color or [01:26:36.160 --> 01:26:44.600] pretense of an official capacity, in which case it is a felony of the first degree. [01:26:44.600 --> 01:26:48.440] File criminal charges charging with first degree felony for putting his hand near his [01:26:48.440 --> 01:26:55.800] gun while he is acting in a aggressive and agitated manner he may cause you to fear for [01:26:55.800 --> 01:26:59.560] your life, charging with first degree felony aggravated assault. [01:26:59.560 --> 01:27:04.380] Now he's never going to get prosecuted for that, but we don't care. [01:27:04.380 --> 01:27:10.040] It puts a mark on his chart. [01:27:10.040 --> 01:27:16.240] And a TECO complaint, I talked to you and your dad about that. [01:27:16.240 --> 01:27:21.440] That is absolutely the worst thing you could do to a police officer. [01:27:21.440 --> 01:27:26.760] It's much worse than filing criminal charges against him because if you file a professional [01:27:26.760 --> 01:27:35.200] conduct complaint, and anybody who's not in Texas, TECO is the organization that licenses [01:27:35.200 --> 01:27:39.120] professional police, peace officers. [01:27:39.120 --> 01:27:44.720] Every state has a commission that trains and licenses peace officers. [01:27:44.720 --> 01:27:50.560] In Tennessee it's called POST, peace officer certification and training. [01:27:50.560 --> 01:27:52.680] And there's a couple of states that have it called POST. [01:27:52.680 --> 01:27:55.680] Lots of states have POST. [01:27:55.680 --> 01:28:00.160] So there is always an agency that certifies peace officers. [01:28:00.160 --> 01:28:05.760] You find out who that is and you file a complaint with that agency claiming that they failed [01:28:05.760 --> 01:28:08.640] to properly train this officer. [01:28:08.640 --> 01:28:13.840] Well, they're going to get that and they're going to throw it in the trash. [01:28:13.840 --> 01:28:18.760] But you got this insurance agent or bonding agent. [01:28:18.760 --> 01:28:24.080] Bonding is insurance that goes to organizations. [01:28:24.080 --> 01:28:31.160] You got this bonding agent and it is his job to charge his client as much as he possibly [01:28:31.160 --> 01:28:35.540] can while avoiding any claims. [01:28:35.540 --> 01:28:41.320] And if you file a complaint with the police themselves, they'll always trash it because [01:28:41.320 --> 01:28:43.260] they protect your own. [01:28:43.260 --> 01:28:49.360] So they can't go by complaints filed with the police because they never hear about them. [01:28:49.360 --> 01:28:57.440] But if they file one with the agency that licenses peace officers, the insurance company [01:28:57.440 --> 01:29:00.200] monitors all of those. [01:29:00.200 --> 01:29:08.520] Bar grievances, complaints against doctors, complaints against electricians, plumbers. [01:29:08.520 --> 01:29:16.600] That's what the insurance companies tend to monitor to determine the level of risk. [01:29:16.600 --> 01:29:23.280] A lawyer, if he gets two bar grievances in one year of practice, they cancel. [01:29:23.280 --> 01:29:25.040] But they're somewhat different. [01:29:25.040 --> 01:29:30.240] Police officers can get up to six, but if they get six professional conduct complaints, [01:29:30.240 --> 01:29:33.680] that bonding agent is going to come to the jurisdiction and say, hey, you got this guy [01:29:33.680 --> 01:29:36.520] here who's an unacceptable risk. [01:29:36.520 --> 01:29:41.000] If you keep him, we're going to raise your bond rating for all of your officers. [01:29:41.000 --> 01:29:44.840] What do you think is going to happen to that peace officer? [01:29:44.840 --> 01:29:50.200] Adios, Baba, and adios for this segment. [01:29:50.200 --> 01:29:58.200] Brandi Kelton, Brett Fountain, we love our radio, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [01:29:58.200 --> 01:30:00.200] We'll be right back. [01:30:00.200 --> 01:30:08.600] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:30:08.600 --> 01:30:09.600] on growing. [01:30:09.600 --> 01:30:12.720] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.720 --> 01:30:16.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.880 --> 01:30:18.600] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.600 --> 01:30:22.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.200 --> 01:30:27.180] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.180 --> 01:30:32.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.840 --> 01:30:34.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.960 --> 01:30:40.560] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:40.560 --> 01:30:42.320] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.320 --> 01:30:44.040] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.040 --> 01:30:48.520] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.520 --> 01:30:52.240] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.240 --> 01:30:55.960] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:55.960 --> 01:31:01.040] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.040 --> 01:31:04.600] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.600 --> 01:31:08.540] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:31:08.540 --> 01:31:10.840] in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.840 --> 01:31:16.000] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.000 --> 01:31:18.280] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.280 --> 01:31:21.400] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.400 --> 01:31:31.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.200 --> 01:31:36.560] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.560 --> 01:31:38.800] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.800 --> 01:31:43.600] 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.600 --> 01:31:46.320] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.320 --> 01:31:49.040] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.040 --> 01:31:50.440] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.440 --> 01:31:51.440] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.440 --> 01:31:52.880] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.880 --> 01:31:53.880] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.880 --> 01:31:55.560] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.560 --> 01:31:58.160] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.160 --> 01:32:00.640] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.640 --> 01:32:05.520] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.520 --> 01:32:09.400] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [01:32:09.400 --> 01:32:13.360] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.360 --> 01:32:16.560] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.560 --> 01:32:20.360] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.360 --> 01:32:24.440] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.440 --> 01:32:25.840] our rights through due process. 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[01:32:55.320 --> 01:33:02.520] Order your copy today, and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.520 --> 01:33:07.240] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:34:32.520 --> 01:34:48.080] We'll be right back with the Logos Radio Network, the Logos Radio Network, the Logos Radio [01:34:48.080 --> 01:34:49.080] Network. [01:34:49.080 --> 01:35:16.160] Okay, we [01:35:16.160 --> 01:35:17.160] are back. [01:35:17.160 --> 01:35:21.800] We have a call from Brett Fountain of Law Radio, and we were having way too much fun [01:35:21.800 --> 01:35:22.760] on the break. [01:35:22.760 --> 01:35:29.260] Chris, and if Brett brought up something on the break, Brett, would you address what you [01:35:29.260 --> 01:35:30.980] brought up on the break? [01:35:30.980 --> 01:35:34.920] We have some interesting ammo in Texas. [01:35:34.920 --> 01:35:42.560] When Randi was talking just a moment ago about a T call complaint, this has a really interesting [01:35:42.560 --> 01:35:45.400] extra twist, if you want to follow it. [01:35:45.400 --> 01:35:53.700] We have the Texas Administrative Code, Title 37 of our Texas Administrative Code has requirements [01:35:53.700 --> 01:36:05.960] that when you file criminal charges against a cop, the chief has a responsibility of duty [01:36:05.960 --> 01:36:12.360] according to Section 211.27 of our Texas Administrative Code. [01:36:12.360 --> 01:36:14.560] He has to report that to TECL. [01:36:14.560 --> 01:36:21.400] So you can report it to TECL, but also his superior is required to report it within 30 [01:36:21.400 --> 01:36:22.400] days. [01:36:22.400 --> 01:36:29.920] So there's 211.27, 211.28. [01:36:29.920 --> 01:36:34.960] So if you can go to TECL, go ahead. [01:36:34.960 --> 01:36:41.920] What if we sent a letter to an information request to the chief on the 31st day and asked [01:36:41.920 --> 01:36:48.880] to see a copy of the notice as required by, what was the statute number? [01:36:48.880 --> 01:36:55.600] Texas Administrative Code, Section 211.27 and 28. [01:36:55.600 --> 01:36:59.720] He's going to have to go read that in order to know what we're asking. [01:36:59.720 --> 01:37:05.760] We'll get him educated. [01:37:05.760 --> 01:37:11.280] And then there'll be another criminal complaint against for that. [01:37:11.280 --> 01:37:17.480] Back to Chris, excuse me, I'm having a little voice issue, back to Chris. [01:37:17.480 --> 01:37:25.960] You need to first contact the department and find out who all of the officers were who [01:37:25.960 --> 01:37:29.240] responded to this incident. [01:37:29.240 --> 01:37:36.160] And then file a criminal complaint against all of them for aggravated assault. [01:37:36.160 --> 01:37:51.160] Okay, you got to know, Christopher, Chris, you know how to do that? [01:37:51.160 --> 01:37:55.680] I mean, I called the police department and asked for names and they were basically- [01:37:55.680 --> 01:37:57.680] That won't get you anywhere. [01:37:57.680 --> 01:37:58.680] Yeah. [01:37:58.680 --> 01:37:59.680] Send information. [01:37:59.680 --> 01:38:01.240] It has to be in writing. [01:38:01.240 --> 01:38:02.560] You have to put it in writing. [01:38:02.560 --> 01:38:04.720] That immediately triggers their duty. [01:38:04.720 --> 01:38:09.320] They have a statutory duty to respond to you promptly. [01:38:09.320 --> 01:38:13.080] They like to say they have up to two weeks and that's just the time that it takes when [01:38:13.080 --> 01:38:15.860] they switch over to a crime. [01:38:15.860 --> 01:38:21.040] They have officially committed the crime of official misconduct and official oppression [01:38:21.040 --> 01:38:23.280] if they wait more than 10 business days. [01:38:23.280 --> 01:38:26.680] But the law requires them to respond promptly. [01:38:26.680 --> 01:38:30.580] And it even defines promptly without unnecessary delay. [01:38:30.580 --> 01:38:33.360] So they know those guys' names, they can look it up right now. [01:38:33.360 --> 01:38:37.960] They should answer you in five minutes. [01:38:37.960 --> 01:38:42.040] It'll be on the dispatch logs. [01:38:42.040 --> 01:38:51.040] What we do, what we promote here is a set of rules of how to deal with these people. [01:38:51.040 --> 01:39:01.080] Never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want them to do because [01:39:01.080 --> 01:39:08.160] you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [01:39:08.160 --> 01:39:11.720] Then when they don't do it, boom, you get to hammer them. [01:39:11.720 --> 01:39:16.640] So you send them an information request in writing, otherwise they'll claim they didn't [01:39:16.640 --> 01:39:17.960] get it. [01:39:17.960 --> 01:39:22.040] Never ever talk to them in person if you can avoid it. [01:39:22.040 --> 01:39:24.000] I know that's satisfying. [01:39:24.000 --> 01:39:27.000] I really like to talk to these guys. [01:39:27.000 --> 01:39:29.860] I have so much fun at their expense. [01:39:29.860 --> 01:39:33.540] But I've been doing this a long time. [01:39:33.540 --> 01:39:38.200] If you haven't been doing it a long time, they are very good at manipulating you. [01:39:38.200 --> 01:39:45.080] And when they look at you, they feel like they can take your measure. [01:39:45.080 --> 01:39:51.360] If they can't look at you and they can't talk to you directly, you're an unknown quantity. [01:39:51.360 --> 01:39:53.760] They don't know what they're dealing with. [01:39:53.760 --> 01:39:57.600] So best way is do everything in writing. [01:39:57.600 --> 01:40:02.960] And if they try to call you and talk to you on the phone, no, no, I don't do phone conversations. [01:40:02.960 --> 01:40:07.140] You got something to say, send it in writing or I don't want to talk to you, click. [01:40:07.140 --> 01:40:09.240] You do not have to be polite. [01:40:09.240 --> 01:40:13.100] You do not have to be accommodating. [01:40:13.100 --> 01:40:16.080] You are the master, they're the servants. [01:40:16.080 --> 01:40:22.000] So send them a written request always. [01:40:22.000 --> 01:40:25.800] And then when they don't respond to it within 10 days, we'll on another show, maybe you [01:40:25.800 --> 01:40:29.060] tell them tomorrow night, we'll talk about the procedure. [01:40:29.060 --> 01:40:37.760] We have a whole procedure for setting these guys up and running them through the system. [01:40:37.760 --> 01:40:44.000] If you follow this, people are afraid, if I get the police mad at me, they're likely [01:40:44.000 --> 01:40:46.000] to do this, that or other. [01:40:46.000 --> 01:40:51.400] Well, if you shout at the police and you threaten the police, then they got all kinds of things [01:40:51.400 --> 01:40:53.680] they can do to you. [01:40:53.680 --> 01:40:58.560] But when a policeman gives me just a little bit, I got stopped for in a small town and [01:40:58.560 --> 01:41:00.600] I asked the officer, why did you stop me? [01:41:00.600 --> 01:41:01.820] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:41:01.820 --> 01:41:06.240] He stopped me and he said, I said, why did you pull me over? [01:41:06.240 --> 01:41:11.520] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, your registration is expired. [01:41:11.520 --> 01:41:16.960] He said, I said, only two years, what's the problem? [01:41:16.960 --> 01:41:21.500] He went back to his car to write a ticket, I called 911, I want him arrested for first [01:41:21.500 --> 01:41:24.880] degree felony aggravated assault. [01:41:24.880 --> 01:41:30.200] Now all of a sudden I am a protected class. [01:41:30.200 --> 01:41:39.320] They say or do anything that I can in any way take as a threat that gets really, really [01:41:39.320 --> 01:41:43.760] serious really, really fast. [01:41:43.760 --> 01:41:46.160] And they know it. [01:41:46.160 --> 01:41:50.920] The policeman comes up to me and he puts his hand on or near his weapon. [01:41:50.920 --> 01:41:55.080] Have you ever noticed sometimes when you're talking to a policeman that they reach up [01:41:55.080 --> 01:42:04.440] and hook their fingers in their vest and let their arm hang on the vest? [01:42:04.440 --> 01:42:07.080] That's not by accident. [01:42:07.080 --> 01:42:13.060] They are trained to do that, to keep their hand away from their pistol because if their [01:42:13.060 --> 01:42:18.960] hand moves near their pistol or if they prop their hand on their pistol, you know, that's [01:42:18.960 --> 01:42:20.680] just a natural thing. [01:42:20.680 --> 01:42:26.040] If you've got a tape measure on your belt, you'll tend to prop your hand on it. [01:42:26.040 --> 01:42:29.640] They got a pistol on their belt and they'll tend to prop their hand on it. [01:42:29.640 --> 01:42:36.320] Well, now he's got his hand on his gun, big, big problem. [01:42:36.320 --> 01:42:42.440] If he says anything that can be taken as the slightest threatening, he's just threatened [01:42:42.440 --> 01:42:47.200] you with that pistol he's got his hand on or near. [01:42:47.200 --> 01:42:52.080] It is, if he had his hand near that weapon, he knew that was a no-no. [01:42:52.080 --> 01:42:54.560] He was trained not to do that. [01:42:54.560 --> 01:42:58.740] He's trained to keep his hand away from that weapon while he's talking to someone. [01:42:58.740 --> 01:43:05.020] So the fact that his hand was near the weapon, that's aggravated assault. [01:43:05.020 --> 01:43:09.760] So finally, you don't want him in charge, you don't want him actually prosecuted. [01:43:09.760 --> 01:43:17.040] If you filed against him for official misconduct and you've got a jury who maybe the foreman's [01:43:17.040 --> 01:43:22.080] granddaughter just got pulled over and harassed by a policeman, he may be PO'd and may get [01:43:22.080 --> 01:43:26.180] this guy indicted over some minor stuff. [01:43:26.180 --> 01:43:30.940] So if you charge him with first degree felony aggravated assault, there's no way they're [01:43:30.940 --> 01:43:34.040] going to indict him. [01:43:34.040 --> 01:43:38.960] But what if an officer charged you with first degree felony aggravated assault and you didn't [01:43:38.960 --> 01:43:41.480] do anything? [01:43:41.480 --> 01:43:45.760] You're going to be terrified. [01:43:45.760 --> 01:43:50.240] There's no way the grand jury will indict you unless there's some really horrible stuff [01:43:50.240 --> 01:43:52.240] going on. [01:43:52.240 --> 01:43:55.120] But you've got to look at that possibility. [01:43:55.120 --> 01:44:00.100] Policemen think that the higher ups will, hang on, be right back. [01:44:00.100 --> 01:44:05.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:05.240 --> 01:44:08.880] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meris proven method. [01:44:08.880 --> 01:44:13.240] Michael Meris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:44:13.240 --> 01:44:14.240] can win too. [01:44:14.240 --> 01:44:19.000] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:44:19.000 --> 01:44:24.880] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:44:24.880 --> 01:44:29.400] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:44:29.400 --> 01:44:33.620] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.620 --> 01:44:38.480] The Michael Meris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:38.480 --> 01:44:40.880] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:40.880 --> 01:44:46.420] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Meris banner [01:44:46.420 --> 01:44:48.840] or email MichaelMeris at Yahoo.com. [01:44:48.840 --> 01:44:58.960] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at Yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [01:44:58.960 --> 01:45:00.960] now. [01:45:00.960 --> 01:45:04.160] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.160 --> 01:45:09.400] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [01:45:09.400 --> 01:45:14.640] four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.640 --> 01:45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.120 --> 01:45:22.760] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.760 --> 01:45:27.760] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:27.760 --> 01:45:34.320] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.320 --> 01:45:39.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.080 --> 01:45:43.400] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.400 --> 01:45:49.560] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.560 --> 01:45:52.360] pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:52.360 --> 01:45:59.600] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:45:59.600 --> 01:46:19.520] Hello, oh man, you're in jail, you got busted man, oh man, I'm broke dude. [01:46:19.520 --> 01:46:38.200] Hey, there. [01:46:38.200 --> 01:46:47.120] There's always a room at the top of the hill I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely [01:46:47.120 --> 01:46:51.320] there still They're wishing it was more than opposition [01:46:51.320 --> 01:46:56.120] to feel They know that if they don't do it, somebody [01:46:56.120 --> 01:46:58.120] will I know it's amazing [01:46:58.120 --> 01:47:01.120] This world will never understand I know it's amazing [01:47:01.120 --> 01:47:06.120] Some things are realized fully I know it's amazing [01:47:06.120 --> 01:47:14.120] Somebody's gonna police, that's what is mine Somebody's gonna book the boys [01:47:14.120 --> 01:47:20.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Chris [01:47:20.120 --> 01:47:27.120] in Texas. And Brett, where was I when I went out? We had too much fun on the break. You [01:47:27.120 --> 01:47:34.720] guys miss all the fun on the breaks. No, I don't remember where you got off there. [01:47:34.720 --> 01:47:41.920] I was looking for this sergeant broil and trying to find a sergeant broil and I found [01:47:41.920 --> 01:47:46.720] Fayette County and I found a couple of sergeants but not a broil. [01:47:46.720 --> 01:47:57.920] Well, the thing you can do, Chris, is once you understand that they are all public servants [01:47:57.920 --> 01:48:03.480] and you are the master of those servants, then you go down there and ask them to do [01:48:03.480 --> 01:48:11.120] things they don't want to do. First thing you do is ask the chief of police or the sheriff's [01:48:11.120 --> 01:48:16.960] department, they ask the sheriff to arrest this officer for first degree felony aggravated [01:48:16.960 --> 01:48:22.840] assault because he approached you in an abusive and aggressive manner and had his hand under [01:48:22.840 --> 01:48:28.440] his pistol and you feared for your life. So charge him with first degree felony aggravated [01:48:28.440 --> 01:48:35.240] assault and we can help you do that. And he's not going to do anything with it. At least [01:48:35.240 --> 01:48:41.640] we hope he doesn't. And you do this in writing. If you go down there and make a complaint, [01:48:41.640 --> 01:48:49.160] they're going to give you a voluntary statement. The heck with that voluntary statement means [01:48:49.160 --> 01:48:54.680] we'll show you how to make up a verified criminal affidavit. You take it to a magistrate, to [01:48:54.680 --> 01:49:02.040] a notary and have them notarize it. And then you send that to them in the mail. Now that [01:49:02.040 --> 01:49:10.480] has put them right square on top of the dime and since the chief is ordered to give notice [01:49:10.480 --> 01:49:19.040] to T. Close, you send it directly to him by name and put a cover letter in it with a stamp [01:49:19.040 --> 01:49:24.880] self-addressed envelope and ask him to sign the cover letter and return it to you so that [01:49:24.880 --> 01:49:30.240] you'll know he actually got it. Well, you can be pretty sure you're never going to get [01:49:30.240 --> 01:49:38.800] one of those back, but that's okay because seven to 10 days after you have mailed it, [01:49:38.800 --> 01:49:46.840] if you don't receive that back, you have reason to believe that he didn't get it. Because [01:49:46.840 --> 01:49:53.680] if he had got it, well, you'd have got that letter back. You might also want to send it [01:49:53.680 --> 01:50:05.600] to registered and insure it for 500 bucks. It costs about $5. This is so rotten. You [01:50:05.600 --> 01:50:12.000] put that letter in there and you don't get that letter back. So you go to the post office. [01:50:12.000 --> 01:50:17.360] What the heck is going on here? I sent this letter to the chief of police and it had a [01:50:17.360 --> 01:50:22.000] document in there and stamp self-addressed envelope for him to sign and return to me [01:50:22.000 --> 01:50:28.640] and I never received that. And the chief being a law enforcement officer, he will certainly [01:50:28.640 --> 01:50:37.240] follow law. So it's reasonable to assume he didn't get this letter. So I want my $500 [01:50:37.240 --> 01:50:43.800] back. What do you think the postal inspectors are going to do when you want them to pay [01:50:43.800 --> 01:50:45.360] you 500 bucks? [01:50:45.360 --> 01:50:49.760] Oh, the government doesn't give money back. You know that. [01:50:49.760 --> 01:50:57.400] Yeah. They're going to send the postal inspectors to talk to the chief of police. Hey, I got [01:50:57.400 --> 01:51:04.960] this guy trying to collect insurance on a letter he sent you. Did you get this? And [01:51:04.960 --> 01:51:12.320] chief of police is not going to have like answering questions to the postal inspectors. [01:51:12.320 --> 01:51:18.640] I had a friend who was in mail order years ago and he said, you think the FBI is bad? [01:51:18.640 --> 01:51:25.200] You haven't lived until you've had the postal inspectors after you. The postal inspectors [01:51:25.200 --> 01:51:30.520] don't care about 500 bucks, but if they have to pay you, that raises their bond rating [01:51:30.520 --> 01:51:34.680] and that they care about. So they're going to go out there and stomp all over the chief [01:51:34.680 --> 01:51:41.920] of police. And then they can say, oh yeah, he got it. He told us he got it. But the main [01:51:41.920 --> 01:51:48.200] thing is, is now you've got the chief of police answering to a federal agency. He is [01:51:48.200 --> 01:51:56.760] not going to be a happy camper. And then in 31 days you send a request for a copy of the [01:51:56.760 --> 01:52:06.120] notice to T. Cole that the chief of police sent and he's not going to have one. Now [01:52:06.120 --> 01:52:14.320] it gets deep. Now it doesn't make any difference whether they believe your original complaint [01:52:14.320 --> 01:52:21.160] was valid or not. That becomes irrelevant. The chief has now failed to perform a duty [01:52:21.160 --> 01:52:29.280] he's required to perform. And you get to go after the chief directly. And imagine really [01:52:29.280 --> 01:52:30.280] chief- [01:52:30.280 --> 01:52:34.920] The circumstances of your accusations just got really cleaner and one level separated [01:52:34.920 --> 01:52:40.520] from you where there's not, it's not muddy about, well, he said, she said, it's really [01:52:40.520 --> 01:52:46.960] clean and clear. On this date, such and such a paper was filed triggering his duty. On [01:52:46.960 --> 01:52:52.640] such and such a date was his last day to do it. Day after it, he still hadn't done it. [01:52:52.640 --> 01:52:55.640] Bing, crime. [01:52:55.640 --> 01:53:02.800] So now you've got the chief in trouble because of something one of his officers started. [01:53:02.800 --> 01:53:08.640] Chris, imagine you're the chief. What are you going to have to say to this officer? [01:53:08.640 --> 01:53:19.060] I got picked, I got pulled over out in the county, pulling a 30 foot gooseneck with two [01:53:19.060 --> 01:53:25.680] year old plates on it, 70 and a 60. Cop told me to slow down and get those plates fixed [01:53:25.680 --> 01:53:31.840] and left. Next day I went into the pit stop across the street and Bobby Jack Cruz, who [01:53:31.840 --> 01:53:36.240] always listened to the dispatch, said, what'd you do to that sheriff's deputy yesterday? [01:53:36.240 --> 01:53:40.860] I didn't do anything to him, why? He said, well, he called in your name and dispatch [01:53:40.860 --> 01:53:45.880] told him, don't you dare give that SOB no ticket. You give him his license and get him [01:53:45.880 --> 01:53:48.280] out of there. [01:53:48.280 --> 01:53:55.320] That's what'll happen to you. Once you've hammered them a time or two, when they pull [01:53:55.320 --> 01:54:02.220] up your name, they'll get this little red line diagonal across it that says, do not [01:54:02.220 --> 01:54:10.120] detain. They do not like it when you come for their throats, especially when you know [01:54:10.120 --> 01:54:14.360] how to do it, and that's what we're sure how to do. [01:54:14.360 --> 01:54:20.320] We've only got four minutes in this show tonight, but if you will call back tomorrow night, [01:54:20.320 --> 01:54:29.480] I will use your case as a opportunity to go back through the process that we use. How [01:54:29.480 --> 01:54:37.560] we go in and set them up, because everything we do is a setup. When you start going after [01:54:37.560 --> 01:54:43.800] these guys, you never want them to do what you ask them to do, and we'll show you how [01:54:43.800 --> 01:54:48.800] to walk them right through the process, it'll make them crazy. [01:54:48.800 --> 01:54:55.520] They won't ever want to see you again. Scott Richardson had called in first. You can't [01:54:55.520 --> 01:55:03.640] tie a Garland police officer up and throw him at Scott Richardson. They pull in behind [01:55:03.640 --> 01:55:10.360] him, check his license, and turn around and go the other way. [01:55:10.360 --> 01:55:16.040] Cop wrote him a ticket, and before the cop got off his shift, when he got off his shift, [01:55:16.040 --> 01:55:19.960] he came to the police department and saw Scott coming out of the police department after [01:55:19.960 --> 01:55:29.220] he filed suit against the police department for the ticket. The same day he wrote it. [01:55:29.220 --> 01:55:35.020] This is how we fix them. We'll show you how to set the system up. [01:55:35.020 --> 01:55:44.400] Nothing we do is malicious, and nothing we do is what you would call Patriot mythology. [01:55:44.400 --> 01:55:53.180] All we do is take the very law that these officers claim to enforce and take it back [01:55:53.180 --> 01:56:00.760] to them. We don't ask them to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. The [01:56:00.760 --> 01:56:08.980] only problem you're likely to have with this, Chris, is it can get to be way too much fun. [01:56:08.980 --> 01:56:15.000] And you begin to see these officers doing what we call this little chicken dance. [01:56:15.000 --> 01:56:21.360] And that's where the officers start shifting from one foot to the other. Well, Mr. Kelton, [01:56:21.360 --> 01:56:26.800] I can't really arrest that judge. I say, sure you can. Just throw the cuffs on him and drag [01:56:26.800 --> 01:56:36.480] him off to jail. It's just way too much fun to be legal. We'll show you how to do that, [01:56:36.480 --> 01:56:44.360] and I need to go back overdue process. I haven't done that in a while. And it'll set you up [01:56:44.360 --> 01:56:48.980] so that you don't have to be afraid of these policemen. And the more people we can get [01:56:48.980 --> 01:56:54.640] in this position, the more people we can get to help us fix the problems that we're having [01:56:54.640 --> 01:56:55.640] with the police. [01:56:55.640 --> 01:57:01.760] Tina, Scott, I'm sorry I didn't get to you tonight. If you will call back tomorrow night, [01:57:01.760 --> 01:57:09.640] we'll take you first. And Scott, Michigan, yeah, make sure you call in early cuz I'm [01:57:09.640 --> 01:57:20.680] gonna wanna talk to you. But what you're speaking to, Chris, goes to the primary issue. If we're [01:57:20.680 --> 01:57:26.360] gonna fix this system, we're gonna fix it here at the point of the spear. [01:57:26.360 --> 01:57:32.460] The police are not the problem. The prosecutors are not the problem. The judges are not the [01:57:32.460 --> 01:57:40.320] problem. You, Chris, you're the problem. And me, I'm the problem. We ask our police [01:57:40.320 --> 01:57:48.000] to police us, then we don't return the favor and police our police. When we start policing [01:57:48.000 --> 01:57:57.240] our police, these problems we're having with the police will simply go away. And we have [01:57:57.240 --> 01:58:04.600] over the years on this show developed a set of procedures to where we can show you precisely [01:58:04.600 --> 01:58:09.000] how to do that by the numbers. [01:58:09.000 --> 01:58:13.880] There's nothing we do that's vague or obtuse. You just ask them to do something they're [01:58:13.880 --> 01:58:18.040] supposed to do, they don't do it, bang, you hammer them. And when you hammer them, you [01:58:18.040 --> 01:58:22.320] hammer them with somebody else who's not gonna wanna do what he's supposed to do. So then [01:58:22.320 --> 01:58:26.920] you get to hammer him. And wait till you start filing criminal charges against the Chief [01:58:26.920 --> 01:58:35.960] Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Texas. That is great fun. And I got all [01:58:35.960 --> 01:58:41.120] the highest judges in Texas put in front of a grand jury using these procedures. [01:58:41.120 --> 01:58:46.160] Okay, we're out of time for today. Give us a call tomorrow night. Randy Kelton, Brett [01:58:46.160 --> 01:59:16.120] Fountain Blue Law Radio. Thank you all for listening. [01:59:46.160 --> 01:59:59.360] And we'll see you next time.