[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 Open with Precious Metals Gold $1,429 an ounce [00:13.040 --> 00:17.760] Silver $16.45 an ounce Copper $2.75 an ounce [00:17.760 --> 00:23.720] Oil Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel Brent Crude $62.47 a barrel [00:23.720 --> 00:29.360] And Crypto is an order of market cap Bitcoin Core $10,566.52 [00:29.360 --> 00:34.720] Ethereum $227.26 XRP Ripple $0.33 [00:34.720 --> 00:41.560] Light Coin $100.31 and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin [00:41.560 --> 00:53.040] The year 1916 the Preparedness Day Bombing a Thai suitcase bomb was detonated on Market [00:53.040 --> 00:58.680] Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade killing 10 and injuring [00:58.680 --> 01:04.680] 40. [01:04.680 --> 01:09.520] And recent news since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into [01:09.520 --> 01:14.280] the Texas law back in June, County prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, [01:14.280 --> 01:18.920] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.920 --> 01:22.920] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to [01:22.920 --> 01:24.760] test the herb for THC. [01:24.760 --> 01:28.520] Margaret Moore the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier this month that [01:28.520 --> 01:33.040] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.040 --> 01:34.040] law. [01:34.040 --> 01:37.680] Mr. Abbott and other state officials including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.680 --> 01:42.120] that County District Attorney's back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.120 --> 01:48.280] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works as [01:48.280 --> 01:54.520] well as other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, Khyma Esparza a Democrat [01:54.520 --> 01:59.720] who also stated earlier this month that the law quote will not have an effect on the prosecution [01:59.720 --> 02:01.800] of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.800 --> 02:06.760] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball an assistant public defender [02:06.760 --> 02:11.280] in Harris County who stated that quote the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.280 --> 02:13.520] illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.520 --> 02:17.440] It's important that if someone is charged with something the test matches what they're [02:17.440 --> 02:22.640] charged with. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.680] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the [02:27.680 --> 02:32.760] first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico the specimen being only the second pocket shark [02:32.760 --> 02:38.400] ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific [02:38.400 --> 02:39.400] Ocean. [02:39.400 --> 02:43.800] According to the university paper the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.800 --> 02:50.040] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.040 --> 03:11.520] glow. [03:11.520 --> 03:24.480] Well, I received my remedy today, it came in the box just like they say. [03:24.480 --> 03:29.680] Okay, we are back to Randy Colton, Brett Fountain, Lou LaRio. [03:29.680 --> 03:35.680] Just Randy Colton today, where it is taking the night off working out in Hillbilly land, [03:35.680 --> 03:37.840] where's that redneck land. [03:37.840 --> 03:45.680] Anyway, we're talking to Chris in Texas, and so first thing you want to do, Chris, [03:47.200 --> 03:51.840] my colleagues are beginning to build up, so I need to start moving along a little further, [03:52.960 --> 03:54.960] is start sending information requests. [03:56.560 --> 04:01.440] You want the names of all officers who responded to this particular call, [04:01.440 --> 04:08.480] you know, give them the date, and the time, and ask for the names of all officers who responded [04:08.480 --> 04:15.520] to this call, and a technique for information requests. [04:16.720 --> 04:25.760] You tend to want to ask for one thing on a single request, and if you want more than one thing, [04:25.760 --> 04:32.880] you send multiple requests. If you put everything in one request, they'll complain to one part of [04:32.880 --> 04:39.760] it and withhold everything based on the one part they complain about, so you send them all separate. [04:41.200 --> 04:48.000] You want to know who all the officers were, you want to see their TECO certification, [04:48.000 --> 04:57.520] you want to see any complaints that were filed against them, and they're going to object to [04:57.520 --> 05:05.760] that, they always do. Just think of a bunch of stuff that you want to know about these officers [05:05.760 --> 05:13.680] that they're not going to want to tell you, and when you do that, the jurisdictions always [05:13.680 --> 05:21.600] screw up the Open Records Act. We need Brett on to talk about what happens when you start [05:22.160 --> 05:29.360] issuing information requests. That starts giving you criminal complaints you can file against each [05:29.360 --> 05:37.600] guys. They want to threaten you with criminal action, we'll take it right back to them, [05:37.600 --> 05:45.280] and if they were on your property and they had pistols on their hips, that's assault, [05:45.280 --> 05:51.360] that's aggravated assault, and if they did not have evidence to indicate that you were [05:51.360 --> 05:59.120] its perpetrator, then you have grounds to raise the issue. I'm not trying to get [05:59.120 --> 06:12.480] peace officers arrested or even ruin their careers, but we need to remind them who is [06:12.480 --> 06:21.440] the master and who is the servant. If a policeman comes and treats me like a criminal, [06:21.440 --> 06:32.400] he gets himself a problem really, really fast. I am not the criminal. I am the master of the [06:32.400 --> 06:42.320] servant. You forget that at your professional peril, because I will come right at you and use [06:42.320 --> 06:52.080] your tools to do it with. Does that make sense, Christopher? Yeah, I absolutely like that. So, [06:52.080 --> 06:56.480] first thing you do is send us some information requests, give them an opportunity to screw them [06:56.480 --> 07:01.920] up. You're still going to screw them up. Never talk to them on the phone if you can avoid it. [07:03.840 --> 07:07.920] They always feel like they can take your measure if they can talk to you in person, [07:07.920 --> 07:12.480] and if you talk to them on the phone, they can feel like they can say anything they want to, [07:13.840 --> 07:21.520] and if not anything, you have no recourse. If you choose to talk to them on the phone, [07:21.520 --> 07:27.760] make sure you're recording it. And if they ask you if you're recording it, lie like a dog. [07:27.760 --> 07:36.960] Absolutely not. My favorite recording incident as I was intervening in a foreclosure suit, [07:36.960 --> 07:43.840] a friend of mine, I had him wipe me a quick claim or claim against his property, [07:44.800 --> 07:53.280] and when they tried to foreclose, I filed an intervener, and the judge knew me real well. [07:54.880 --> 07:59.600] They started the hearing, and the judge looked over and had a cell phone in my hand. I did that [07:59.600 --> 08:06.320] on purpose. She said, Mr. Kelton, do you have that cell phone on? Oh, yes, your honor. So, [08:06.320 --> 08:11.600] you need to turn that off. Oh, but your honor, I wanted to use this to record these proceedings. [08:13.920 --> 08:19.440] She took the bailiff. Mr. Bailiff, take that cell phone away from Mr. Kelton. It takes my cell [08:19.440 --> 08:25.360] phone. And then she starts the hearing again, and then I'm sitting here all grins and smiles, [08:26.560 --> 08:31.920] and surely she knows something's wrong with that. She stopped and said, Mr. Kelton, [08:31.920 --> 08:39.680] do you have anything else on your person capable of recording these proceedings? Oh, judge, [08:40.720 --> 08:48.880] I was hoping you weren't going to ask me that. And I pulled this zip drive I had, I had a name tag [08:48.880 --> 08:54.160] on, and it was spell code to the name tag. I pulled it off and had a little switch on it. I turned [08:54.160 --> 08:59.920] it off, and the bailiff come over and he jerked it out of my hand. She started again, and then [08:59.920 --> 09:07.360] stopped. Mr. Kelton, do you have anything else? Judge, I wish you hadn't asked me that, and I [09:07.360 --> 09:19.040] pulled one out of my pocket. That was so much fun. When you, if they think you're recording them, [09:20.560 --> 09:25.120] and they ask you to turn off your recorder, something odd happens. [09:25.120 --> 09:32.400] Art Patton in North Carolina, they were going to meet with a district attorney, [09:33.040 --> 09:36.320] district attorney wanted to meet with them because they filed criminal complaints with [09:36.320 --> 09:43.040] the grand jury against the peace officer. And they asked if they could record it. They asked [09:43.040 --> 09:50.400] me if they could record it. Absolutely you could record it. So, but what I suggest you do is take [09:50.400 --> 09:56.320] two recordings with you. Put one out there on the table in front of them, and when they asked [09:56.320 --> 10:02.960] you to turn it off, say, oh sure, no problem, turn it off. When they think you have turned [10:02.960 --> 10:08.880] off the recorder, it does something to them. Now they feel like they can do anything they want to, [10:08.880 --> 10:15.680] and Assistant DA just read them the right act and told them how if they tried to file criminal [10:15.680 --> 10:23.440] complaints with a grand jury again, that they would be arrested. He said, you can all that, [10:23.440 --> 10:31.920] that in this county, as concerns the grand jury, this man is God, and he pointed at the elected DA. [10:32.960 --> 10:41.120] Nobody go after the grand jury except by him. I played that on the air and two weeks later, [10:41.120 --> 10:47.600] the district attorney resigned. They had the second recorders going after they had two more [10:47.600 --> 10:54.800] recorders going. Once he thought the recorder was turned off, he felt like he could say anything he [10:54.800 --> 11:02.240] wanted to, and he really got ignorant. So, if you want to talk to them on the phone, fine, [11:02.240 --> 11:08.320] but make sure you're recording them. If they want to talk to you, like if they call you in or something, [11:08.320 --> 11:13.600] you take out a recorder and put it on the table. If they object to it, you get up and leave, [11:15.200 --> 11:18.800] and I suggest you don't go in and talk to them unless they send you a subpoena. [11:20.720 --> 11:24.880] You want to talk to me, send me a letter, tell me what you want to talk about, [11:24.880 --> 11:30.720] ask me what you want to ask me, and I'll respond in writing. If they can't see you, [11:30.720 --> 11:36.240] if they can't look you in your eye and talk to you, they don't feel like they can control you. [11:36.240 --> 11:47.360] You're an unknown, and I know we really like to read and write an act. We really like to see how [11:48.560 --> 11:51.600] uncomfortable they get when you put them on the legal dime, [11:53.440 --> 11:59.600] but still it's better if you do it all in paper. So, what I suggest to you, Chris, [11:59.600 --> 12:07.360] just start peppering on with some information request. They will screw it up, and when they [12:07.360 --> 12:13.280] screw it up, then you make up a criminal complaint against whoever you sent the complaint to. [12:14.160 --> 12:19.440] Now, what they're going to do is when you send in, I said the complaint, I'm sorry, [12:19.440 --> 12:23.040] when you send in the information request, they're going to have a lawyer answer, [12:24.640 --> 12:27.200] but you don't know anything about that lawyer. You don't care about that lawyer. [12:27.200 --> 12:33.360] What lawyers will tell you is you can't talk to a client. If they have a lawyer, [12:33.360 --> 12:40.720] you have to talk to the lawyer. Not true. If both sides have lawyers, [12:42.320 --> 12:48.560] then the lawyers cannot talk to either of the clients because they're licensed professionals. [12:48.560 --> 12:56.320] They're restricted in that way, but you're not. You don't have that restriction. You can talk to [12:56.320 --> 13:00.480] the client if you want to, and you don't have to deal with that lawyer. You didn't hire the lawyer, [13:00.480 --> 13:04.640] and this is what Brett does. He tells the lawyer, who are you? Scoot, get lost. [13:05.520 --> 13:08.160] I don't like you. I didn't hire you. I don't want to talk to you. [13:08.880 --> 13:13.280] And the lawyers don't know how to handle it. They always act really ignorant. So, [13:13.280 --> 13:22.560] you're not responsible for their lawyer, and they cannot transfer their duty to respond to you [13:22.560 --> 13:30.880] to their lawyer. So, if the lawyer submits a request for an opinion from the state attorney general, [13:33.040 --> 13:38.080] and there are pre-existing determinations, which there always are, [13:40.320 --> 13:42.880] that say that you have a right to this information. [13:44.720 --> 13:49.040] So, when you put in a re-information request, they put in a request for an opinion. [13:49.040 --> 13:56.400] If they get a letter opinion, and they will state that it's a letter opinion, [13:57.280 --> 14:04.240] rather than a full opinion, they only give a full opinion on a first blush issue, [14:04.240 --> 14:09.040] something they haven't addressed before. If they send you a letter opinion, [14:10.240 --> 14:16.080] or they respond to the requester with a letter opinion, that means there were pre-existing [14:16.080 --> 14:25.920] determinations. The custodian of the record has a duty to examine the record to see if there are [14:25.920 --> 14:32.560] pre-existing determinations before he denies you access to your records for the purpose [14:32.560 --> 14:37.840] of requesting an opinion. So, if they get a letter opinion, you immediately file criminal charges [14:37.840 --> 14:47.920] against the custodian of the record for delay for denying you and your right to open records. [14:49.360 --> 14:57.280] 552.353 makes that a class A misdemeanor. So, you file a criminal against the custodian [14:57.280 --> 15:06.240] for what the lawyer did. It's all politics. What do you think that the custodian is going to do [15:06.240 --> 15:10.560] when you file a criminal charges against him because of what his job lawyer did? [15:12.320 --> 15:19.360] What would you do? You hire a lawyer and he does something, and now you're getting criminal charges? [15:20.720 --> 15:21.440] Go ahead, Chris. [15:27.440 --> 15:28.320] Are you there, Chris? [15:29.600 --> 15:30.320] Yes, I'm here. [15:30.320 --> 15:35.600] So, what would you do if your lawyer did something to get you charged with the crime? [15:37.200 --> 15:38.800] I'd sue him. Get rid of him. [15:40.960 --> 15:45.360] That's what's going to happen, and it's going to be the prosecuting attorney who does it. [15:47.280 --> 15:53.600] The custodian of the record is not going to be a happy camper. I've got one of those from the [15:53.600 --> 15:58.880] district judge that I requested a list of all lawyers on the attorney wheel, and he went to [15:58.880 --> 16:03.280] the district attorney, and the district attorney told him to give him the records. I know that [16:03.280 --> 16:08.720] because he knows me real well, and the judge didn't like it, so he went to the county attorney, [16:08.720 --> 16:14.880] and the county attorney requested an opinion, and they and the county and the attorney general [16:14.880 --> 16:19.120] told him they didn't have to give me those records under the Open Records Act, and that's true. [16:20.400 --> 16:24.960] They have to give me those records under the constitutional right to a public court, [16:24.960 --> 16:31.760] but he went to the county attorney. The county attorney works for the county, [16:31.760 --> 16:37.280] not for the state. That's misappropriation of public funds. I'm going to file a criminal [16:37.280 --> 16:44.640] against both of them. Oh, this is going to be so much fun. Hang on. Go into our sponsors, [16:44.640 --> 16:51.760] ready to count them. Brett Fountain, Ruva Radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. [16:51.760 --> 16:56.000] Call board's full, so wait till somebody drops off. We'll be right back. [17:00.000 --> 17:04.560] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:05.120 --> 17:10.720] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. Michael Meares has won six cases [17:10.720 --> 17:15.520] in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. You'll get step-by-step [17:15.520 --> 17:20.560] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [17:20.560 --> 17:25.840] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? How to answer letters and phone [17:25.840 --> 17:30.480] calls? How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? How to turn the financial tables [17:30.480 --> 17:36.480] on them and make them pay you to go away? The Michael Meares proven method is the solution [17:36.480 --> 17:41.200] for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more [17:41.200 --> 17:46.480] information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner, [17:46.480 --> 17:55.920] or email michaelmeares at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [17:55.920 --> 17:59.520] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors next. 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[19:24.480 --> 19:28.960] My friend, now I got your little cup. [19:54.480 --> 19:58.960] He's everything to me, that's all I call him. [20:24.480 --> 20:31.440] Tell him your problem and say it. How about this name once again, bring it because you know you [20:31.440 --> 20:37.920] are a failure. But you're calling, you're calling Buhuda, you call him an Allah, you're calling [20:37.920 --> 20:46.320] J-Obiah. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. And I do have to [20:46.320 --> 20:55.120] tell everybody that I use Christopher. Christopher, I've used you. This is something I need to go over [20:55.120 --> 21:04.240] on a more regular basis about how you and I as the ordinary individual have power over public [21:04.240 --> 21:13.600] officials. Public officials do everything they can to keep us from understanding how powerful we [21:13.600 --> 21:22.000] really are. And the whole point of the show that I do is about empowering the individual. [21:23.680 --> 21:32.640] If I could get one percent of my listeners to understand this, you know, Brett Fountain, [21:33.440 --> 21:40.080] he was a listener, he was having issues, they were coming after him and he called in the show to [21:40.080 --> 21:46.240] find out what to do. And we gave him suggestions and he listened to what we told him and then he [21:46.240 --> 21:55.200] went and did his own homework and he got it. He went after him and he wound their clocks. Scott [21:55.200 --> 22:08.000] Richardson, Adam in South Texas, these guys are winding these public officials' clocks. If we could [22:08.000 --> 22:16.960] get one person in every county to really go after these guys, you have to know that every judge [22:18.000 --> 22:25.120] in Texas talks to almost every other judge in Texas. They have these monthly calls where they [22:25.120 --> 22:35.440] all get together and they talk about the things they've had to deal with. And when they get on [22:35.440 --> 22:41.920] there and tell about these ordinary individuals coming in and just winding their clocks, [22:43.360 --> 22:49.280] this spreads around very quickly. So we don't need everybody to stand up and take them on. [22:50.080 --> 22:57.600] Christopher, if you take these guys on with the tools that we offer, as far as I know, [22:57.600 --> 23:05.280] nobody's ever went to jail doing what we suggest they do. I am extremely careful about [23:05.280 --> 23:13.040] that. If they had filed criminal charges against and you were being prosecuted, I would be much, [23:13.040 --> 23:20.480] much more careful in what I suggested that you do. But they didn't charge you with anything. [23:22.080 --> 23:28.480] That left the door open for you to stick your boot up there behind big time. And this will [23:28.480 --> 23:36.640] essentially make sure that they never do charge you with anything. Once you file against them, [23:38.000 --> 23:47.360] it poisons their well. Anything they do, if the officer just says, oh, wow, you got to be careful, [23:47.920 --> 23:55.040] you could get in a lot of trouble. Retaliation, 3606 penal code. [23:55.040 --> 24:05.280] You poison their well, you put them in a very, very difficult situation. We need people like you, [24:05.280 --> 24:11.920] we need people to take them on. You don't have to do it. If it's not in your nature, [24:11.920 --> 24:18.000] if it's not what you, if you're not inclined that way, I'm not saying that you have some [24:18.000 --> 24:28.640] kind of moral duty. You don't have a moral duty. There are people out there who simply need some [24:28.640 --> 24:33.920] information that will allow them to do this and they'll take them on so everybody doesn't have to. [24:35.520 --> 24:42.080] Example, in 2017, 2018, the last year we have, I have good numbers for, [24:42.080 --> 24:50.720] there are approximately 9 million criminal prosecutions initiated in the state of Texas. [24:51.600 --> 25:02.800] 7 million were traffic. Of those 7 million, 73% just wrote a check and sent it to the jurisdiction. [25:02.800 --> 25:13.840] That means that 23% did not. We got 23% here who got a ticket and they are not happy about it. [25:14.800 --> 25:24.720] If we could get 1% of that group to stand up and take these guys on, we would shut down [25:24.720 --> 25:37.840] criminal traffic enforcement in the state of Texas 1% easily. Since they didn't charge you [25:37.840 --> 25:46.720] with anything, Chris, you go after them and they're not going to want anything to do with you in the [25:46.720 --> 25:56.400] future. If you get pulled over, first thing you do is call 911. I filed criminal charges [25:57.040 --> 26:02.320] and professional conduct complaints against these officers. Now they're harassing me. [26:02.320 --> 26:07.360] I got an officer pulling me over with a gun on his hip and I'm afraid he might shoot me, [26:07.360 --> 26:10.320] get someone out here to make sure he doesn't shoot me. [26:10.320 --> 26:17.680] What do they do? What does the 911 responder do? [26:20.080 --> 26:28.240] You just became the victim. He's there to protect you. But the other guy's his buddy. [26:29.600 --> 26:33.280] I have done this. I've lost count of how many times I've done this. [26:33.280 --> 26:44.000] There is a special phenomenon that occurs when you do this. I call it a chicken dance. [26:44.880 --> 26:50.720] You get to see this little chicken dance. You ever see a chicken when it's really agitated? [26:52.880 --> 26:58.240] What got me to think about this is I was coming out of Atlanta, Georgia one time and I got in [26:58.240 --> 27:05.520] behind a chicken truck and I had these cages of chickens stacked up and at the top it pyramided [27:05.520 --> 27:13.520] up up from the side and up from the back. So right at the very top there was one layer with [27:13.520 --> 27:19.680] two crates and then a layer of one crates in front of him and there was a chicken that got out and [27:19.680 --> 27:26.560] was standing on that layer. I bet I followed this guy 200 miles. That chicken was standing on that [27:26.560 --> 27:33.120] crate and he's all agitated and he's poking his head up over the top of the crate and I'm waiting [27:33.120 --> 27:38.800] for that chicken to try to jump up on the top of that crate because I'm going to get to see a [27:38.800 --> 27:45.280] chicken plucking at 60 miles an hour. It never occurred to me that the chicken would wind up in [27:45.280 --> 27:53.200] my windshield. But fortunately the chicken never actually jumped up on it but the chicken is standing [27:53.200 --> 27:58.880] there and he's shifted from one foot to the other and poking his head up and shifting back and forth. [28:00.000 --> 28:07.520] When you call 911 on a police officer and they send out an officer to respond to your 911 call [28:07.520 --> 28:16.320] because it's 911. They have to and you tell the 911 officer you got an officer out here who is [28:16.320 --> 28:23.040] agitated and he's wearing a pistol and you're afraid for your safety. What are they going to [28:23.040 --> 28:29.920] do? What happens if that officer were to shoot you and they had a 911 call they didn't respond to? [28:31.120 --> 28:43.280] Big problem. You just screwed everything up one big time. This 911 guy shows up [28:44.160 --> 28:50.240] and you ask him to arrest one of his buddies. You get to see that chicken dance. [28:50.240 --> 28:59.840] He'll start shifting from one foot to the other and, well, Mr. Kelton, I can't arrest him. I [28:59.840 --> 29:05.520] just sure can. Just throw the cuffs on him and drag him off the jail. The one thing you never [29:05.520 --> 29:15.040] want to do is seem agitated. When I deal with they, they have to, they're not sure if I'm joking [29:15.040 --> 29:22.480] or not because I'm grinning and smiling and having a great time and they're all agitated. [29:22.480 --> 29:28.000] They want me to be agitated. They want me to be angry and frustrated so they can call me agitated [29:28.000 --> 29:34.000] and that makes me dangerous. But I'm laughing and joking with them while I'm asking the guy to [29:34.000 --> 29:42.560] arrest his buddy. Makes them crazy. And once you've done that a time or two, they'll get the word. [29:42.560 --> 29:48.160] Do not pull this scoundrel over. Hang on. Not to go to our sponsors. I do need to finish off here. [29:48.160 --> 29:52.800] I'm getting a whole raft of callers. We'll be right back. [30:00.800 --> 30:05.840] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise but you might not know that the way you walk could [30:05.840 --> 30:10.320] predict how long you're going to live. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell [30:10.320 --> 30:16.720] you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you give [30:16.720 --> 30:21.520] up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [30:21.520 --> 30:27.440] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance [30:27.440 --> 30:33.200] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service [30:33.200 --> 30:38.480] announcement is brought to you by startpage.com. The private search engine alternative to Google, [30:38.480 --> 30:46.240] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with start page. New research shows how fast you walk could predict [30:46.240 --> 30:51.120] how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older [30:51.120 --> 30:56.800] adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. In case you're wondering, [30:56.800 --> 31:02.320] one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's age, gender and walking [31:02.320 --> 31:07.200] speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.200 --> 31:12.880] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:12.880 --> 31:17.680] It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. Researchers say it could help [31:17.680 --> 31:23.200] doctors identify older patients who need special care. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news [31:23.200 --> 31:32.720] and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. I lost my son. My uncle. My uncle. My son. [31:32.720 --> 31:38.720] On September 11, 2001, most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. World [31:38.720 --> 31:44.480] Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. Although the official explanation [31:44.480 --> 31:49.920] is that fire brought down Building 7. Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the [31:49.920 --> 31:54.720] evidence and believed there is more to the story. Bring justice to my son. My uncle. My nephew. [31:54.720 --> 32:00.160] My son. Go to building what.org. Why it fell. Why it matters. That's what you can do. [32:00.160 --> 32:06.640] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. Scripture Talk with [32:06.640 --> 32:13.200] Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8 from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. Our goal is in accord with [32:13.200 --> 32:19.520] Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify [32:19.520 --> 32:25.120] your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with [32:25.120 --> 32:31.040] a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible [32:31.040 --> 32:36.800] studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. Our verse by verse Bible studies will [32:36.800 --> 32:42.640] begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies [32:42.640 --> 32:47.840] will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [32:47.840 --> 32:55.280] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [32:55.280 --> 33:00.000] starting January 8 for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:00.000 --> 33:16.240] Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:30.000 --> 33:50.240] LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:50.880 --> 33:57.440] Look, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Falmon, we are live radio and we're talking to Chris in [33:57.440 --> 34:06.400] Texas. And Chris, I took advantage of you. I used you as an excuse to go through this basic [34:06.400 --> 34:12.640] information while at the same time I'm trying to give you this information. Does this sound like [34:12.640 --> 34:19.920] something you would be inclined to do? Oh yeah, absolutely. I mean they came and wasted my time [34:19.920 --> 34:25.440] so let's wait some other time. And one thing I have to warn you about when you start this. [34:25.440 --> 34:37.200] It can become addictive. It is so much fun. You spent your whole life dealing with these [34:37.200 --> 34:46.880] police and they used these abusive and aggressive techniques and they caused frustration and [34:46.880 --> 34:59.680] anxiety. It is so much fun to push it back on them. Especially when they know what you're doing to them. [35:01.600 --> 35:10.240] It's not anything they can do about it. And when you do this, what you're really trying to get [35:10.240 --> 35:18.960] them to do is you're trying to get someone to act like he's your buddy and give you fair warning. [35:19.920 --> 35:26.480] I filed criminal charges against the district attorney in Johnson County and took them to [35:26.480 --> 35:34.400] the grand jury myself. And a sergeant from the bailiffs there in the courthouse, I walked out [35:34.400 --> 35:40.960] of a courtroom while I was waiting for the grand jury to call me and he said, Mr. Kelton, [35:41.760 --> 35:47.120] you seem like a personable individual. I said, well I'll try to be. He said, you mind if I give [35:47.120 --> 35:53.840] you a little advice? I said, sure. He said, when you come down here poking the bear the way you do, [35:54.880 --> 36:03.680] you really need to be careful. Well, if I hadn't liked that guy, I could consider that [36:03.680 --> 36:09.760] and a threat in retaliation for me filing criminal charges against the prosecutor attorney [36:10.480 --> 36:15.200] and charge him with a violation of 3606 Texas Pen Code. [36:17.280 --> 36:24.400] But in this case, the guy really wasn't threatening me. He was genuinely feeling [36:24.400 --> 36:30.320] like he had to warn me. He said, when you come down here poking the bear, you have to be careful. [36:30.320 --> 36:36.000] I told him, oh, I'm always very careful. Besides, you don't understand, Sergeant, [36:36.800 --> 36:44.720] I am the bear. And he laughed and said, yes, Mr. Kelton, today you are the bear. [36:45.760 --> 36:54.080] If you go to Johnson County today or tomorrow and you file a complaint with the sheriff's [36:54.080 --> 37:02.480] department against the public official, they will be all over that complaint. They will not [37:02.480 --> 37:08.560] hesitate. I sent someone to Johnson County or he called me from Johnson County. He tried to file [37:08.560 --> 37:14.800] some documents in a foreclosure case and the clerk refused to accept him. He said, what should I do? [37:14.800 --> 37:18.240] He said, go to the sheriff's department and file a criminal against him. He went to the sheriff's [37:18.240 --> 37:24.400] department. They gave him the lieutenant. The lieutenant called the clerk and right in front [37:24.400 --> 37:30.000] of him and made an appointment with the clerk, said, don't go anywhere. I'll be right there. [37:30.000 --> 37:35.760] And then he told the guy, I'm going to go talk to the clerk right now. Someone will be calling [37:35.760 --> 37:41.600] you back eight o'clock the next morning. He got a call from the clerk asking him to please come [37:41.600 --> 37:49.440] down and file those documents. They made a mistake. The reason that happened is I filed criminal [37:49.440 --> 37:54.720] charges against the district attorney for shielding criminal complaints against public officials [37:54.720 --> 38:02.000] and the grand jury. And that had been about 10 years earlier. And the grand and the district [38:02.000 --> 38:12.800] attorney made sure to tell everybody else that's not going to happen to me again. It got that fixed. [38:12.800 --> 38:22.880] One guy, one time fixed it in Johnson County. We only need one guy in each county. [38:22.880 --> 38:30.480] We get somebody to take them on. It really gives their attention. So if you're inclined, [38:30.480 --> 38:36.720] don't do anything that frightens you. Don't do anything you're concerned about. But when you [38:36.720 --> 38:46.080] pick the fight, then they have nothing they can do. They don't dare even pull you over. The first [38:46.080 --> 38:54.080] time you get pulled over, even if it's legitimate or apparently legitimate, we won't talk about [38:54.080 --> 39:00.560] here about how the sheriff's deputies and municipal police officers don't have power to enforce [39:00.560 --> 39:07.920] the transportation code. But we're even avoiding that. If you get pulled over, you must always [39:07.920 --> 39:14.960] assume it is retaliation. If you get pulled over, the first thing you do is call 911. Tell them that [39:14.960 --> 39:19.760] you got a guy pulling you over, retaliating against you because you follow criminal charges against [39:19.760 --> 39:28.960] some of his buddies and you're afraid he might shoot you. Get someone out here. It ruins everything. [39:28.960 --> 39:36.960] Now, did you have any questions? I kind of butchwacked you and spent all this time talking about [39:36.960 --> 39:40.960] what I wanted to talk about. Do you have any questions that you want to ask? [39:40.960 --> 39:46.960] No, I'm certainly taking good, good records of everything we've been discussing tonight. My only [39:46.960 --> 39:52.960] question is, you did talk about sending in the letters and mentioning that they should be certified [39:52.960 --> 40:02.960] notarized stuff like that. Well, when you send letters of always certified mail return receipt [40:02.960 --> 40:10.960] requested. Now, depending on how much you want to screw with them, just regular information [40:10.960 --> 40:16.960] requests, that's generally not an issue. But when you file criminal charges against public [40:16.960 --> 40:22.960] officials with the district attorney or with a magistrate, then I always like to put in a [40:22.960 --> 40:32.960] stamp, self-addressed return envelope and a cover letter asking the magistrate or whoever I send [40:32.960 --> 40:40.960] this to, to initial this document and send it back to you in the stamp, self-addressed envelope [40:40.960 --> 40:46.960] so you can be sure he actually got it. And when you send it, you go to the post office and [40:46.960 --> 40:54.960] insure it for 500 bucks, cost about $5 to do that. And as a rule, they will completely ignore [40:54.960 --> 41:02.960] your filing. So when you don't get that cover letter back, oh my goodness, this must not [41:02.960 --> 41:12.960] have been mailed. You have reasonable probable cause to believe that the recipient did not [41:12.960 --> 41:18.960] receive your document. So you go to the postal inspectors and ask them to pay you 500 bucks [41:18.960 --> 41:26.960] because they didn't get this delivered. Well, they're not going to be happy campers because [41:26.960 --> 41:30.960] if they pay you 500 bucks, that's going to raise the bond rating. They don't care about [41:30.960 --> 41:35.960] the 500 bucks, they care about their bond rating because the insurance company is going to raise [41:35.960 --> 41:42.960] their bond. Just like if you buy a new card, somebody backs into your fender while you're [41:42.960 --> 41:47.960] in Walmart. You had nothing to do with it. You're not responsible. Your insurance company [41:47.960 --> 41:51.960] is going to come out and fix it and they're going to double your rates. It's your bad [41:51.960 --> 41:58.960] risk. Your fault, their fault, nobody's fault, they don't care. Same thing with bonding, [41:58.960 --> 42:10.960] it's insurance. So the most of the inspectors, they're not going to want to pay this 500 [42:10.960 --> 42:15.960] bucks because it'll cost them a whole lot more in bond rating. So they're going to want [42:15.960 --> 42:21.960] to go down there and talk to this judge and find out what happened to this document. Let's [42:21.960 --> 42:29.960] say you're a JP. I have a son-in-law who's a JP. He became JP and he knew nothing about [42:29.960 --> 42:40.960] law. JPs don't have to be lawyers. What would happen if my son-in-law got two federal postal [42:40.960 --> 42:47.960] inspectors coming down there questioning him about a document he was supposed to get? He's [42:47.960 --> 42:56.960] not going to be a happy camper. And then when the postal inspectors tell you that he actually [42:56.960 --> 43:05.960] got it, then you file criminal charges against him for not holding a examining trial. It's [43:05.960 --> 43:12.960] just, it's not about law. You never win your case because you have the law and the facts [43:12.960 --> 43:18.960] outside. It's all politics. You've got this local judge with federal officials crawling [43:18.960 --> 43:27.960] down his throat. He is not happy camper. Does that make sense, Chris? [43:27.960 --> 43:28.960] Yes. [43:28.960 --> 43:37.960] And I'm telling you, you just won't believe how much fun it is. I'm a comment veteran [43:37.960 --> 43:45.960] and I'm still addicted to adrenaline. I struggle with this. I just want to go down there and [43:45.960 --> 43:51.960] give them as much crapola as I can and I have to watch myself because I enjoy it too much. [43:51.960 --> 43:59.960] Hang on. Go into break. Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton, move on radio with you right back. [43:59.960 --> 44:05.960] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved except in the area of nutrition. [44:05.960 --> 44:10.960] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. [44:10.960 --> 44:16.960] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:16.960 --> 44:22.960] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [44:22.960 --> 44:27.960] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logo's radio network gets many requests to [44:27.960 --> 44:32.960] endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come to trust young Jevity [44:32.960 --> 44:39.960] so much. We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.960 --> 44:46.960] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality [44:46.960 --> 44:52.960] radio. As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, [44:52.960 --> 44:58.960] you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.960 --> 45:03.960] Order now. [45:28.960 --> 45:33.960] Logo is created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:33.960 --> 45:38.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:38.960 --> 45:44.960] principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, [45:44.960 --> 45:51.960] video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.960 --> 46:01.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:21.960 --> 46:50.960] Okay, we are back. Wendy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, and to Jerry [46:50.960 --> 46:57.960] Scott and Jeff, and I'm sorry for hanging you on so long, but I don't get to go over this [46:57.960 --> 47:02.960] very often, and this is actually the most important part of what we do on this show, [47:02.960 --> 47:09.960] so I do need to address this on occasion, and I kind of use Christopher as an excuse to [47:09.960 --> 47:15.960] go through this. Christopher, do you have any questions before we move on? [47:15.960 --> 47:20.960] You've given me more than enough information to start this ball roll in there. [47:20.960 --> 47:29.960] Okay, just leave with my warning. If you start this, it can be way too much fun and you can [47:29.960 --> 47:33.960] get addicted to it. [47:33.960 --> 47:38.960] Yes, sir. I definitely do understand that, and I'm going to go ahead and get off the [47:38.960 --> 47:40.960] phone here so you get somebody else. [47:40.960 --> 47:45.960] Okay, thank you, Christopher. Okay, now we're going to Jerry in Pennsylvania. [47:45.960 --> 47:51.960] Jerry, are you asleep in front of a beer joint today? [47:51.960 --> 48:00.960] Yeah, I'm sitting here nodding off. You have a sentence here for me, please. [48:00.960 --> 48:11.960] I've filed a U.S. court with a grand jury, a complaint against an FBI agent. [48:11.960 --> 48:14.960] I just want to run a body of real foot care. [48:14.960 --> 48:20.960] My name is Top, a criminal complaint against agent, FBI, and charge. [48:20.960 --> 48:29.960] To the former United States grand jury address, I'm filing criminal charges on FBI special [48:29.960 --> 48:31.960] charges in charge for a number of things. [48:31.960 --> 48:38.960] The address, Title 28535, seducing procedure, Title 18245. [48:38.960 --> 48:40.960] Wait a minute, hold on. [48:40.960 --> 48:44.960] 28545? [48:44.960 --> 48:53.960] Okay, that's the one that requires him to give notice to the attorney general? [48:53.960 --> 49:01.960] Okay, why are you looking that up? [49:01.960 --> 49:10.960] If I remember right, 2545, when a government officer. [49:10.960 --> 49:13.960] Okay, say that again. [49:13.960 --> 49:25.960] 535, investigation of crimes involved in government officers and employees' nominations. [49:25.960 --> 49:33.960] Okay, hold on. Let me clarify. That's 28 USC 535. [49:33.960 --> 49:43.960] Yes, Title 282S3 535. [49:43.960 --> 49:45.960] Go ahead, say what it is again. [49:45.960 --> 49:52.960] That's why I used that. Good idea. [49:52.960 --> 50:00.960] Wait, say that again. If I'm speaking and you speak, it pushes you down below me, so I don't always hear that you say something. [50:00.960 --> 50:04.960] So I need to shut my mouth and let you speak. [50:04.960 --> 50:11.960] So tell us what 535 goes to again. [50:11.960 --> 50:33.960] And just here, from Title 28, judicial and judicial procedure, federal bill of investigation, A, attorney general, federal bill of investigation may invest any violation of federal criminal law involving government officers and employees. [50:33.960 --> 50:51.960] Number two, notwithstanding any other provisions, number three, without filing the authority of investigation, any matter which can defer them on a department or an agency of the government. [50:51.960 --> 50:54.960] Okay, this is the one I thought it was. [50:54.960 --> 50:59.960] This appears to be a whistleblower statute. [50:59.960 --> 51:21.960] If you're a public official, you're a federal official, and you have it made known to you that another federal official has violated a law, going to your superiors can get you into a position where you seem like a title pay holder. [51:21.960 --> 51:25.960] You can put you in a position where you can be retaliated against. [51:25.960 --> 51:42.960] So what the Fed said, if you're a federal official and you have it made known to you that another federal official has violated a law, you must report that to the attorney general so you step outside of your chain of command. [51:42.960 --> 51:56.960] And that's why I kind of called it a whistleblower statute, because you don't have to risk being subjected to retaliation by your chain of command. [51:56.960 --> 52:03.960] You go past all of them to the attorney general. Does that sound correct, Jerry? [52:03.960 --> 52:14.960] Oh yeah, I agree with you on that, but the thing was that I was wondering, can I use this in the filing with a grand jury? [52:14.960 --> 52:16.960] Absolutely. [52:16.960 --> 52:22.960] This is a requirement. Okay, let's go to 18 U.S. Code 242. [52:22.960 --> 52:45.960] If a public official fails to perform a duty he is required to perform in the process of non-uniform free access to enjoy the right, you have a right to a reasonable expectation of equal protection of the laws. [52:45.960 --> 52:57.960] So this federal official, by not giving proper notice to the attorney general, denies you in the equal protection of the laws. That's the claim you can make. [52:57.960 --> 52:59.960] Does that make sense? [52:59.960 --> 53:06.960] I can file that in the grand jury complaint, right? [53:06.960 --> 53:09.960] Exactly. [53:09.960 --> 53:11.960] Okay. [53:11.960 --> 53:15.960] Can I file 241-2? [53:15.960 --> 53:17.960] It depends. [53:17.960 --> 53:36.960] 241 goes to one or more persons, if I remember right. I don't quote 241 often, but doesn't that go to one or more persons conspiring to deny rights? [53:36.960 --> 53:39.960] I haven't read that one in a long time. [53:39.960 --> 53:41.960] Yeah. [53:41.960 --> 53:44.960] Well, there's also 247-2. [53:44.960 --> 54:08.960] If they come to your property and they bust the gate or bust the door, and you have one of them little plaster parrots, make up a little plaster parrots cross, like for instance, and it falls on the ground of Boston 2, that 247 is defacing your religious artifact some state. [54:08.960 --> 54:13.960] You've got to put that in there. [54:13.960 --> 54:16.960] I really like that one. [54:16.960 --> 54:18.960] Put it on the gate. [54:18.960 --> 54:35.960] You need a plastic Jesus on your gate fence post that's just balanced up there so if they come in, it falls off. [54:35.960 --> 54:39.960] I like dirty rotten stuff. [54:39.960 --> 54:46.960] Well, the last time they were here, I was trying to close the gate and they were trying to get through the gate. [54:46.960 --> 54:49.960] So me and the cop was wrestling at the gate. [54:49.960 --> 54:58.960] So I got approval charges written up on him for, you know, assault with senior service and I don't know what else. [54:58.960 --> 55:01.960] Aggravated assault because he's wearing a pistol? [55:01.960 --> 55:04.960] Yeah. [55:04.960 --> 55:18.960] The threat to your life is exceptionally real from police officer who's wearing a pistol, especially with the latest events. [55:18.960 --> 55:26.960] Yeah, but that cross was hanging on the gate and I wouldn't make sure it fell on the ground and broke. [55:26.960 --> 55:35.960] I could charge him with, I could add that 247 to a grand jury. [55:35.960 --> 55:37.960] That's devious. [55:37.960 --> 55:39.960] That is devious. [55:39.960 --> 55:41.960] Aren't you ashamed of yourself? [55:41.960 --> 55:45.960] They don't cut me no slack. [55:45.960 --> 55:46.960] I like it. [55:46.960 --> 55:48.960] I like devious. [55:48.960 --> 56:05.960] I keep thinking of the Star Trek movie where a program where a guy held off the wharf and two or three others with this phaser that didn't work. [56:05.960 --> 56:11.960] And wharf told him, you held us off with a non functioning phaser. [56:11.960 --> 56:13.960] That took guile. [56:13.960 --> 56:18.960] And the guy said, oh, well, I'm sorry. And wharf said, oh, you don't understand. [56:18.960 --> 56:21.960] I like guile. [56:21.960 --> 56:26.960] So yes, setting them up. I like that. [56:26.960 --> 56:31.960] Let them let them argue the issues. You know, you didn't write those laws. [56:31.960 --> 56:34.960] The legislature wrote those laws. [56:34.960 --> 56:47.960] So the fact that this prosecutor may think those laws are insignificant. Well, he don't get to make that determination under the case law. [56:47.960 --> 56:52.960] It makes the severity of a crime is irrelevant. [56:52.960 --> 57:01.960] The duty of public officials to enforce law are equal across all the statues. [57:01.960 --> 57:06.960] Classy misdemeanor, first degree felony, first degree felony. [57:06.960 --> 57:11.960] As far as the prosecution is concerned, they're the same. [57:11.960 --> 57:17.960] You don't get to say, well, I don't want to enforce this law because it's not severe enough. [57:17.960 --> 57:20.960] You don't get to do that. [57:20.960 --> 57:25.960] You broke my religious artifact. [57:25.960 --> 57:29.960] How dare you the law forbid you to do that. [57:29.960 --> 57:33.960] And the prosecutor doesn't get to say, well, that's not very important. [57:33.960 --> 57:44.960] Maybe it's not important to you, but God's going to be mad at me for breaking, for allowing his icon to be damaged. [57:44.960 --> 57:48.960] So I really like the idea of taking them on those things. [57:48.960 --> 57:52.960] Because they never know which one's going to land on them like a ton of bricks. [57:52.960 --> 58:08.960] OK, so where are you? When you first answered, I was thinking you were the guy in Pennsylvania who was sleeping in his car in front of a beer joint and got arrested for DUI. [58:08.960 --> 58:10.960] But that wasn't you. [58:10.960 --> 58:14.960] Oh, no. Oh, no, that's what he's named over there on schoolkill. [58:14.960 --> 58:17.960] Yeah. [58:17.960 --> 58:20.960] Yeah, he was on there last week. [58:20.960 --> 58:23.960] Yeah. Yeah. [58:23.960 --> 58:27.960] That was that was my mistake. [58:27.960 --> 58:30.960] Yeah. OK. [58:30.960 --> 58:32.960] Good, good, good, good. [58:32.960 --> 58:34.960] OK, hang on. [58:34.960 --> 58:37.960] About to go to our sponsors. [58:37.960 --> 58:40.960] We're running out of time. [58:40.960 --> 58:43.960] We've got over one hour and about three calls. [58:43.960 --> 58:45.960] We've got one empty space on the board. [58:45.960 --> 58:49.960] Call it number 512646 1984. [58:49.960 --> 58:53.960] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.960 --> 59:00.960] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.960 --> 59:05.960] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.960 --> 59:12.960] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.960 --> 59:19.960] The free books are a three volume set called basic elements of the Christian life chapter by chapter. [59:19.960 --> 59:33.960] Basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation growing in Christ and how to build up the church to order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life. [59:33.960 --> 59:59.960] Call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:59.960 --> 01:00:04.960] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low and Starve Lowdown. [01:00:29.960 --> 01:00:45.960] $327.26 XRP Ripple $0.33 Litecoin $1.31 and Bitcoin Cash $324.10 A Crypto Coin. [01:00:45.960 --> 01:01:00.960] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:01:00.960 --> 01:01:23.960] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:23.960 --> 01:01:32.960] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:32.960 --> 01:01:50.960] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney. [01:01:50.960 --> 01:02:01.960] In El Paso, Kaima Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.960 --> 01:02:12.960] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:12.960 --> 01:02:21.960] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:21.960 --> 01:02:26.960] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [01:02:26.960 --> 01:02:38.960] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:38.960 --> 01:02:50.960] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.960 --> 01:03:08.960] This is Brook Roadie with the Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:21.960 --> 01:03:28.960] Okay, we are back. [01:03:28.960 --> 01:03:32.960] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Roodleville Radeo. [01:03:32.960 --> 01:03:36.960] We're talking to Jerry in Pennsylvania. [01:03:36.960 --> 01:03:39.960] Okay, Jerry. [01:03:39.960 --> 01:03:41.960] So where were we? [01:03:41.960 --> 01:03:49.960] You are filing under 28 US Code 535. [01:03:49.960 --> 01:03:55.960] Yeah, I am in the criminal complaint against the FBI agent. [01:03:55.960 --> 01:04:02.960] I got down here to the third one and that's title 18 criminal proteger section four. [01:04:02.960 --> 01:04:09.960] That would apply too to the grand jury, wasn't it? [01:04:09.960 --> 01:04:10.960] You were just talking. [01:04:10.960 --> 01:04:20.960] Is the complaint a felony? Because 18 US Code 4 misprison of felony only goes to felony. [01:04:20.960 --> 01:04:25.960] No, that was the thing that I was thinking about when you were saying that. [01:04:25.960 --> 01:04:31.960] He didn't commit a felony. [01:04:31.960 --> 01:04:46.960] Yeah, but he still had that duty to report it to the Attorney General and it's a class A misdemeanor on his part. [01:04:46.960 --> 01:04:48.960] Yeah. [01:04:48.960 --> 01:05:02.960] And what I, which reminds me I have never looked for the agency that licenses federal officials. [01:05:02.960 --> 01:05:20.960] So in this case, this guy is an FBI agent who I guess the FBI is the agency that licenses or certifies their own agents. [01:05:20.960 --> 01:05:39.960] I haven't looked at that, you know, in Texas, TECO is the agency that licenses peace officers like in Tennessee, it's post police officer certification and training in a number of states named post is the most common name. [01:05:39.960 --> 01:05:43.960] But there is an agency that licenses peace officers. [01:05:43.960 --> 01:05:49.960] The FBI is trained and licensed by the FBI. [01:05:49.960 --> 01:06:11.960] So I'm trying to figure where do we file the complaint so that it gets in the hands of the insurance agency, the bonding agency who bonds the FBI or is the FBI bonded by an outside agency or do they handle their own bonding? [01:06:11.960 --> 01:06:15.960] Not something I've researched. [01:06:15.960 --> 01:06:20.960] Well, these are federal wouldn't they fall under their own bonding? [01:06:20.960 --> 01:06:25.960] Most of that federal stuff is, isn't it? [01:06:25.960 --> 01:06:32.960] Probably, but it's not something I've looked into. [01:06:32.960 --> 01:06:49.960] Well, okay, and then the last two here was I put in black's law, outlaw, I remember you talking about being outlaw, and then the other one was official oppression. [01:06:49.960 --> 01:06:56.960] Oh, on that official oppression, is there a legal statute on that in the federal, in the Fed? [01:06:56.960 --> 01:07:09.960] Absolutely. Official oppression only Texas that I know of has official oppression as opposed to official misconduct. [01:07:09.960 --> 01:07:14.960] Most other states all call it official misconduct and so does the Fed. [01:07:14.960 --> 01:07:20.960] And in the Fed official misconduct is 18 US code 242. [01:07:20.960 --> 01:07:22.960] Oh, so 242 would cover that. [01:07:22.960 --> 01:07:24.960] Okay, I see how that works. [01:07:24.960 --> 01:07:26.960] Sure. [01:07:26.960 --> 01:07:32.960] But go ahead and file this. [01:07:32.960 --> 01:07:35.960] We missed that last part. [01:07:35.960 --> 01:07:40.960] Go ahead and file this with the United States grand jury at the courthouse. [01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:43.960] Absolutely. Absolutely. [01:07:43.960 --> 01:08:00.960] Make sure you put a cover letter on it asking the foreman to initial it. Please do not sign it as the US attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments. [01:08:00.960 --> 01:08:11.960] And we want to make sure that he does not rubber stamp this letter and send it back to us and thereby secret this complaint from the grand jury. [01:08:11.960 --> 01:08:22.960] Well, when the prosecutor gets it, even though you send it to the former of the grand jury, you send it to the prosecutors, the US attorney's address. [01:08:22.960 --> 01:08:28.960] The guy in the mailroom will sign for it even if you send it registered restricted. [01:08:28.960 --> 01:08:36.960] Prosecuting attorney will get it. He will open it and he'll see its address to the former of the grand jury. [01:08:36.960 --> 01:08:45.960] And if this is the second one, he's going to see that letter. [01:08:45.960 --> 01:08:56.960] And there is no way he's going to let the foreman of the grand jury see that because he doesn't want that guy to know that he's rubber stamping things other than... [01:08:56.960 --> 01:09:01.960] They make the foreman a rubber stamp so he doesn't have to sign all these indictments. [01:09:01.960 --> 01:09:10.960] He needs to stamp them. They do not want the foreman to know that the US attorney is using that same rubber stamp elsewhere. [01:09:10.960 --> 01:09:19.960] So he's going to make sure that the foreman does not see this letter and you're not going to get it back in the mail. [01:09:19.960 --> 01:09:27.960] And that gives you reasonable, probable cause to believe that the foreman never got it. [01:09:27.960 --> 01:09:33.960] If you have insured it for 500 bucks, you call the postal inspectors. [01:09:33.960 --> 01:09:44.960] When you don't receive this letter back in 10 or 15 days, you call the postal inspectors and you want your 500 bucks. [01:09:44.960 --> 01:09:52.960] And then they're going to go down there asking questions that the US attorney does not want to answer. [01:09:52.960 --> 01:09:55.960] Does all that make sense? [01:09:55.960 --> 01:10:01.960] Well, what I was going to do was do it full place. I was just going to drive over to the federal courthouse. [01:10:01.960 --> 01:10:11.960] I can walk to the marshals there. They've got a time stamp right there, a clock setting right in the corner and just time stamp the thing. [01:10:11.960 --> 01:10:17.960] And then there's a little drop-off. You can put your complaint in there. [01:10:17.960 --> 01:10:25.960] And I was hoping maybe the incident wouldn't go through the mail or it might just go right to the foreman of the grand jury. [01:10:25.960 --> 01:10:30.960] Because on the outside of the envelope, I wrote to the foreman of the grand jury. [01:10:30.960 --> 01:10:39.960] There is no way it will go to the foreman of the grand jury. I guarantee you it will go to the prosecuting attorney. [01:10:39.960 --> 01:10:42.960] That's why we set up the prosecuting attorney. [01:10:42.960 --> 01:10:55.960] The first one we give to the grand jury is against, like in your case, it will be against a special agent in charge. [01:10:55.960 --> 01:11:04.960] The second one will be against the prosecuting attorney for secreting the first one from the grand jury. [01:11:04.960 --> 01:11:15.960] Well, can I charge that attorney general there with jury tampering? [01:11:15.960 --> 01:11:20.960] Wouldn't that follow the jury tampering? [01:11:20.960 --> 01:11:37.960] Yes. If they're secreting, if they're tampering with government documents, by secreting those government documents from the person or office it's directed to, yes, that would fall under. [01:11:37.960 --> 01:11:41.960] And tampering with government records? [01:11:41.960 --> 01:11:57.960] Yes, tampering, because tampering is if you alter a government document or if you secret that government document from the person or agency it's directed to, that's tampering. [01:11:57.960 --> 01:12:00.960] And that's a felony. [01:12:00.960 --> 01:12:19.960] So if you send it to the grand jury and you put a cover letter in there asking the foreman to send it back to you and you don't get that cover letter back, you have reason to believe that the foreman never got it. [01:12:19.960 --> 01:12:33.960] And that's why I want to insure it so now you can send the postal inspectors in to find out what happened to that document and get the U.S. attorney answering to the postal inspectors. [01:12:33.960 --> 01:12:36.960] I want him to answer the bar. [01:12:36.960 --> 01:12:51.960] The good idea is I got a U.S. Department of Justice misconduct complaint here now that I'm going to file on the U.S. attorney at the Philadelphia office. [01:12:51.960 --> 01:12:56.960] I also put down the same thing that I went through with the FBI agent. [01:12:56.960 --> 01:13:06.960] Now, can I also add jury tampering and tampering with documents as soon as you send them up? [01:13:06.960 --> 01:13:07.960] Absolutely. [01:13:07.960 --> 01:13:08.960] Oh, okay. [01:13:08.960 --> 01:13:24.960] Well, then I'll retype this thing all up and I should move through to almost send complaints against that Philadelphia office and I'm going to send it to D.C. right down there to one of bars, Attorney General. [01:13:24.960 --> 01:13:28.960] Oh, great idea. [01:13:28.960 --> 01:13:40.960] Because the local U.S. attorney is going to wind up getting a call from the Attorney General's office and that's not going to make him happy at all. [01:13:40.960 --> 01:13:46.960] Oh, so this letter will work instead of a criminal app a day, but trying to get him indicted. [01:13:46.960 --> 01:13:52.960] I figured just a letter from a misconduct complaint might. [01:13:52.960 --> 01:14:01.960] Okay, I'm going to suggest that the letter should be in the form of a criminal accusation. [01:14:01.960 --> 01:14:02.960] Oh, okay. [01:14:02.960 --> 01:14:04.960] I'll send that along then. [01:14:04.960 --> 01:14:05.960] Yes. [01:14:05.960 --> 01:14:11.960] In the criminal complaint, that invokes a duty that a letter does not. [01:14:11.960 --> 01:14:12.960] Yes. [01:14:12.960 --> 01:14:16.960] You might put a dime in the envelope. [01:14:16.960 --> 01:14:27.960] I went to my prosecuting attorney, my district attorney in the county I live in and he called me in his office and I walked up and I put a dime on his desk. [01:14:27.960 --> 01:14:32.960] He looked down at it and he said, well, Mr. Kelkson, what is that for? [01:14:32.960 --> 01:14:38.960] I said, well, Greg, I'm come here to put you on the dime. [01:14:38.960 --> 01:14:43.960] The least I could do is bring my own dime. [01:14:43.960 --> 01:14:49.960] He did not buy that as funny as I did. [01:14:49.960 --> 01:14:57.960] Okay, Randy, I'll go ahead and retype this one up and then I'll see what the grand jury sends me back. [01:14:57.960 --> 01:15:00.960] Okay, listen, thank you very much, sir. [01:15:00.960 --> 01:15:01.960] Oh, and by the way. [01:15:01.960 --> 01:15:02.960] Okay. [01:15:02.960 --> 01:15:03.960] Restractor? [01:15:03.960 --> 01:15:04.960] Restractor? [01:15:04.960 --> 01:15:06.960] It's probably the oil for. [01:15:06.960 --> 01:15:07.960] It's leaking. [01:15:07.960 --> 01:15:09.960] The thing that caused it. [01:15:09.960 --> 01:15:10.960] No, no. [01:15:10.960 --> 01:15:20.960] This is a tractor and I didn't, he didn't tell me if it was a diesel or a gas, but I'm relatively certain it's a diesel tractor. [01:15:20.960 --> 01:15:32.960] It's possibly the oil cooler, but as small as this tractor is, it's almost certainly a head gasket, but I have some ways for him to check that beforehand. [01:15:32.960 --> 01:15:35.960] I only got one email and I haven't talked to him about it. [01:15:35.960 --> 01:15:50.960] When you get a layer of oil, that is a good point, Jerry, that it could well be the, since he's not, he showed me a video and I saw no bubbling in the radiator. [01:15:50.960 --> 01:16:00.960] So clearly he was not getting gas out of the combustion chamber back into the radiator or I would have had bubbles out of it. [01:16:00.960 --> 01:16:02.960] And the oil was black. [01:16:02.960 --> 01:16:04.960] It wasn't white. [01:16:04.960 --> 01:16:17.960] So that indicated that he had a head gasket leak on the low pressure side, not on the highest pressure, so not on the out of the cylinders out of the combustion chamber. [01:16:17.960 --> 01:16:18.960] Oh, you're right. [01:16:18.960 --> 01:16:22.960] It could be an oil cooler if he has one on it. [01:16:22.960 --> 01:16:30.960] That's, that's a simple place because the radiator, when it's cool, won't have any pressure at it. [01:16:30.960 --> 01:16:36.960] But when he fires that engine up, the oil pressure is going to build up immediately. [01:16:36.960 --> 01:16:40.960] The radiator pressure is going to be low. [01:16:40.960 --> 01:16:46.960] And if the oil cooler has a leak in it, the pressure will push back into the radiator. [01:16:46.960 --> 01:16:54.960] And that would give you pure oil, not quite, if it's white, if it's leaking out of the crankcase. [01:16:54.960 --> 01:16:59.960] If you got oil leaking into the radiator. [01:16:59.960 --> 01:17:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.960 --> 01:17:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris proven method. [01:17:08.960 --> 01:17:13.960] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:17:13.960 --> 01:17:20.960] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.960 --> 01:17:23.960] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [01:17:23.960 --> 01:17:25.960] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:17:25.960 --> 01:17:28.960] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:17:28.960 --> 01:17:33.960] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:17:33.960 --> 01:17:38.960] The Michael Mirris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.960 --> 01:17:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.960 --> 01:17:46.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, [01:17:46.960 --> 01:17:49.960] or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.960 --> 01:17:56.960] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.960 --> 01:17:59.960] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.960 --> 01:18:00.960] I love logos. [01:18:00.960 --> 01:18:04.960] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.960 --> 01:18:06.960] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:06.960 --> 01:18:07.960] I need my truth pick. [01:18:07.960 --> 01:18:12.960] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.960 --> 01:18:15.960] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:15.960 --> 01:18:19.960] and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:18:19.960 --> 01:18:21.960] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.960 --> 01:18:23.960] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.960 --> 01:18:26.960] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.960 --> 01:18:28.960] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.960 --> 01:18:30.960] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.960 --> 01:18:33.960] Now, go to logosradio network.com. [01:18:33.960 --> 01:18:36.960] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:36.960 --> 01:18:42.960] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.960 --> 01:18:43.960] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.960 --> 01:18:44.960] No. [01:18:44.960 --> 01:18:46.960] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.960 --> 01:18:47.960] No. [01:18:47.960 --> 01:18:48.960] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:18:48.960 --> 01:18:49.960] No. [01:18:49.960 --> 01:18:50.960] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.960 --> 01:18:53.960] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:53.960 --> 01:18:54.960] This is perfect. [01:18:54.960 --> 01:18:56.960] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.960 --> 01:18:57.960] We are logos. [01:18:57.960 --> 01:19:23.960] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:23.960 --> 01:19:27.960] Okay, we are back. [01:19:27.960 --> 01:19:33.960] And speaking of Brett Fountain, Jerry made a real good point. [01:19:33.960 --> 01:19:40.960] Brett sent me a video of black oil in the radiator. [01:19:40.960 --> 01:19:46.960] So I used to be a mechanic, and I've got this engine in my head that when I get a symptoms, [01:19:46.960 --> 01:19:50.960] I crank it up and see how I can produce those symptoms. [01:19:50.960 --> 01:20:02.960] If we had an oil leak from an oil passage into the radiator side that wasn't in the combustion chamber, [01:20:02.960 --> 01:20:07.960] if it was in the combustion chamber, you would get bubbling in the radiator, but I didn't see any bubbling. [01:20:07.960 --> 01:20:12.960] And also, the oil was black, not white. [01:20:12.960 --> 01:20:14.960] So, Jerry, how does that happen? [01:20:14.960 --> 01:20:25.960] If I'm leaking oil into the radiator, when you first crank it up, the oil pressure is higher than the pressure in the radiator. [01:20:25.960 --> 01:20:27.960] So oil will push into the radiator. [01:20:27.960 --> 01:20:35.960] But once it gets heated up, the radiator gets more pressure in it than oil pressure, which is 46 pounds. [01:20:35.960 --> 01:20:40.960] So it should push water back into the oil. [01:20:40.960 --> 01:20:46.960] And if you get water in the oil, when it drops down in the crankcase on its way back to the oil pump, [01:20:46.960 --> 01:20:56.960] the crank itself, stirring up the oil in the crankcase, should whip the water and the oil together and turn the oil white. [01:20:56.960 --> 01:20:59.960] But it wasn't white. [01:20:59.960 --> 01:21:12.960] But then again, a leak in the oil cooler should also have the same effect both ways that the oil in the crankcase should turn white. [01:21:12.960 --> 01:21:23.960] Jerry, how do we get black oil in the radiator without it turning white? [01:21:23.960 --> 01:21:31.960] That oil cooler is like a bundle of straws. It's a round thing. When you take it apart, it looks like a bundle of straws. [01:21:31.960 --> 01:21:36.960] Well, sometimes one of those straws will crack and it will start oozing. [01:21:36.960 --> 01:21:43.960] And a lot of times, the pressure on the coolant side won't be as high as the oil pressure. [01:21:43.960 --> 01:21:49.960] The oil pressure is right up there all the time. It's usually around 45, 50, 50, 5000 pressure. [01:21:49.960 --> 01:21:58.960] So that thing, if that crack constantly opens and closes, you'll get an oozing of the oil into your coolant, right? [01:21:58.960 --> 01:22:07.960] And not wind up with oil down in the crankcase so that the oil that comes into the radiator is not white. [01:22:07.960 --> 01:22:14.960] If it was in the crankcase, the stirring of the crank would mix the oil and water and turn it white. [01:22:14.960 --> 01:22:24.960] If it's not mixing, then you may have a good point. And I think Brad will be real glad to hear that this could well be the oil cooler and not a head gasket. [01:22:24.960 --> 01:22:32.960] Right, because I've seen a lot of guys taking in terrible parts and everything else and I asked the guy, you ever check the oil cooler? [01:22:32.960 --> 01:22:34.960] What's an oil cooler? Here it is. [01:22:34.960 --> 01:22:35.960] Good. [01:22:35.960 --> 01:22:45.960] You saved me from causing Brad a lot of extra work. [01:22:45.960 --> 01:22:50.960] Okay. Do you have anything else for us, Jerry? [01:22:50.960 --> 01:22:54.960] No, that was about it. Thanks, Randy. Bye. [01:22:54.960 --> 01:23:01.960] Okay. Thank you, Jerry. Now we're going to go to Scott in Michigan. Hello, Scott. [01:23:01.960 --> 01:23:03.960] Hey, Randy. How's it going? [01:23:03.960 --> 01:23:07.960] It's going good. What do you have for us today? [01:23:07.960 --> 01:23:15.960] Well, first of all, I just want to thank some of my favorite contributors. Thanks to Brett. Thanks to Scott from Texas. And thanks to Olivier. [01:23:15.960 --> 01:23:19.960] I'm jealous you got to see Olivier in person in court. I think that would be a lot of fun. [01:23:19.960 --> 01:23:27.960] Oh, I got to tell you about Olivier. Olivier is an interesting individual. [01:23:27.960 --> 01:23:34.960] He is very, very black. He's got red locks. [01:23:34.960 --> 01:23:49.960] As a white person, you see Olivier and you see your caricature of the classic ghetto black bad guy. [01:23:49.960 --> 01:24:01.960] And when he opens his mouth, holy moly, he is absolutely a study in contrast. [01:24:01.960 --> 01:24:07.960] He speaks elegantly and articulately. He is such a contrast. [01:24:07.960 --> 01:24:18.960] I was, I sat in that court and I was absolutely amazed. Very interesting guy. [01:24:18.960 --> 01:24:24.960] Well, I just received another traffic dismissal. So that makes 13 in a row. [01:24:24.960 --> 01:24:28.960] 13? That could be a record. [01:24:28.960 --> 01:24:31.960] Yeah. [01:24:31.960 --> 01:24:36.960] Have you been filing professional conduct complaints against the officers? [01:24:36.960 --> 01:24:49.960] See, I've had a run into kind of a brick wall with that because we don't have a, we don't have a T-close type setup here in Michigan with something called M-Colls. [01:24:49.960 --> 01:24:54.960] And all it seems to be is like a job referral service for cops looking for a new department to go to. [01:24:54.960 --> 01:25:14.960] Can you find out, try petitioning the department for, or better yet, go to the county tax assessor collector or the county comptroller public accounts, whatever you have there. [01:25:14.960 --> 01:25:29.960] And solicit, request copies of all disbursements to bonding or insurance agencies. [01:25:29.960 --> 01:25:35.960] They're the important ones. And if you have a complaint against an officer, send it to the bonding agency. [01:25:35.960 --> 01:25:42.960] If you can't find a, who certifies peace officers in Michigan? [01:25:42.960 --> 01:25:48.960] Well, like I said, I believe it's called M-Colls, Michigan commission on law enforcement. [01:25:48.960 --> 01:25:55.960] Okay, that's it. You filed it with them. And, you know, they're going to trash it. We know they're going to. [01:25:55.960 --> 01:26:05.960] But that's where the bonding agency will monitor complaints against their officials. Here's how it works. [01:26:05.960 --> 01:26:18.960] If you have any reason to believe that there could be a claim against one of your personnel, one of your insured parties, you must notify the insurance company. [01:26:18.960 --> 01:26:28.960] If you don't notify the insurance company, and there is subsequently a claim, you're not insured. [01:26:28.960 --> 01:26:37.960] That's what covers us. They have to notify their insurance carrier. So they do it for us. [01:26:37.960 --> 01:26:43.960] So if you're filing with that agency, you're doing what you need to do. [01:26:43.960 --> 01:26:51.960] They're very secretive about who their bonding agency is. I mean, I spent the better part of a week trying to go down that rabbit hole, going through all the records that are online. [01:26:51.960 --> 01:27:02.960] Go to the guy who pays the bills. When it comes to the money, that's always public. [01:27:02.960 --> 01:27:12.960] Who do you pay money to? Do you want to see all disbursements to any bonding or insuring agency? [01:27:12.960 --> 01:27:24.960] The Comptroller of Public Accounts or whatever they're called in Michigan, the guy who pays the bills, he's not going to care. [01:27:24.960 --> 01:27:33.960] He don't have a dog in that hunt. And he knows that the money is always public. That's how you can find them. [01:27:33.960 --> 01:27:43.960] Fair enough. And I'll have to restart that thread of research. [01:27:43.960 --> 01:27:57.960] And you'll be surprised when you get away from the policing agencies and you go to the county commissioner's courts and the Comptroller of Accounts or the name for the one. [01:27:57.960 --> 01:28:03.960] Whoever pays the bills, you want to know what agency pays the bills for the county. [01:28:03.960 --> 01:28:13.960] You go to them and they know that the money disbursement of any public agency is always public. [01:28:13.960 --> 01:28:20.960] And these guys, the accountants who pay the bills, they don't have a dog in this hunt. [01:28:20.960 --> 01:28:27.960] So they're generally pretty easy to get along with. [01:28:27.960 --> 01:28:34.960] Okay. Something you mentioned recently or mentioned a few times recently is the Michael Morton Act. [01:28:34.960 --> 01:28:45.960] It says that only applies to Texas. But it's very likely, now Michael Morton was the guy in Williamson County, Texas. [01:28:45.960 --> 01:28:51.960] Williamson County is the county immediately north of Travis County to see the government. [01:28:51.960 --> 01:28:56.960] Michael Morton was a doctor and his wife was killed. [01:28:56.960 --> 01:29:08.960] And the prosecuting attorney prosecuted Michael Morton, even though the prosecuting attorney had evidence to indicate that Michael Morton was not guilty. [01:29:08.960 --> 01:29:22.960] He did not disclose that evidence. And the Innocence Project, they read a DNA on him and found that he could not be the perpetrator. [01:29:22.960 --> 01:29:30.960] And subsequently, they discovered that the prosecuting attorney had exculpatory evidence he did not produce. [01:29:30.960 --> 01:29:34.960] After this guy spent 20 years in prison. [01:29:34.960 --> 01:29:39.960] The prosecuting attorney wound up going to jail for a little while and moved from office. [01:29:39.960 --> 01:29:45.960] And the legislature then passed the Michael Morton Act. [01:29:45.960 --> 01:29:51.960] So Michael Morton won't be appropriate to Michigan or any other state, it's specific to Texas. [01:29:51.960 --> 01:30:00.960] But you're going to have something concerning discovery in Michigan that's similar. [01:30:00.960 --> 01:30:04.960] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.960 --> 01:30:10.960] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:10.960 --> 01:30:15.960] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.960 --> 01:30:20.960] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.960 --> 01:30:25.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.960 --> 01:30:31.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.960 --> 01:30:33.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.960 --> 01:30:40.960] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:40.960 --> 01:30:44.960] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.960 --> 01:30:51.960] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:51.960 --> 01:30:58.960] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:58.960 --> 01:31:05.960] But cybersecurity expert David Choch says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:05.960 --> 01:31:07.960] hackers will have a field day. [01:31:07.960 --> 01:31:14.960] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.960 --> 01:31:18.960] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.960 --> 01:31:23.960] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.960 --> 01:31:30.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.960 --> 01:31:36.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.960 --> 01:31:38.960] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.960 --> 01:31:43.960] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.960 --> 01:31:48.960] 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:48.960 --> 01:31:50.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.960 --> 01:31:51.960] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.960 --> 01:31:52.960] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.960 --> 01:31:53.960] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.960 --> 01:31:55.960] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:55.960 --> 01:31:57.960] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.960 --> 01:32:25.960] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.960 --> 01:32:31.960] In conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.960 --> 01:32:35.960] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.960 --> 01:32:39.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:39.960 --> 01:32:41.960] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.960 --> 01:32:44.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.960 --> 01:32:48.960] The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.960 --> 01:32:51.960] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.960 --> 01:32:55.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.960 --> 01:33:01.960] Today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.960 --> 01:33:04.960] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:04.960 --> 01:33:11.960] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:11.960 --> 01:33:29.960] I see tools of engineering to use against the workers of iniquity. [01:33:29.960 --> 01:33:42.960] Tools of natural capability, they know what we're all eternity. [01:33:42.960 --> 01:34:00.960] Tools of rigidity, rebuild the credibility. And I say truth in nature must be justice, I believe. [01:34:00.960 --> 01:34:18.960] And though it's a daunting task, at least I got the decency to ask them all to just take off the silly mask. [01:34:18.960 --> 01:34:20.960] Okay, we are back. [01:34:20.960 --> 01:34:23.960] Brandy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:34:23.960 --> 01:34:29.960] And we're not going to talk about motors anymore. [01:34:29.960 --> 01:34:38.960] Scott, where were we, Scott? I had a really busy break there. [01:34:38.960 --> 01:34:44.960] Can I invoke the Michael Morton Act in Michigan under the full faith and credit clause? [01:34:44.960 --> 01:34:54.960] No, because in Michigan you will have statutes concerning discovery and criminal cases. [01:34:54.960 --> 01:35:07.960] The only time you can use full faith and credit is when the legislature of one state has addressed an issue that the legislature of another state has not addressed. [01:35:07.960 --> 01:35:15.960] The legislatures of all states respect the legislatures of all other states. [01:35:15.960 --> 01:35:30.960] So if the legislature of one state has addressed an issue and another state has not addressed it, under full faith and credit you can bring the legislature from the other state into the current state. [01:35:30.960 --> 01:35:53.960] For instance, in Texas, if a public official exerts an authority that doesn't have, if a public official commits simple assault while prominently is still playing a dead weapon, that's a first degree felony. [01:35:53.960 --> 01:36:11.960] I've never seen that in any other state. So let's say I'm in Pennsylvania or Michigan and a public official exerts an authority that does not express a have and in the process denies me in my right to freedom of movement. [01:36:11.960 --> 01:36:25.960] And that's an act of simple assault. And he's prominently displaying a dead weapon. Most states have not addressed that particular issue. [01:36:25.960 --> 01:36:44.960] They have addressed that that's 2202B2A. 2202B2B, all states almost have addressed it. If you commit simple assault against a public official while prominently displaying a dead weapon, that's a first degree felony, almost everywhere. [01:36:44.960 --> 01:36:55.960] But almost none of the other states have addressed when the public official commits simple assault while prominently displaying a dead weapon. [01:36:55.960 --> 01:37:08.960] Texas has, but I haven't seen any other state that has. So you can say, I'm in Michigan and this public official committed simple assault while prominently displaying a dead weapon. [01:37:08.960 --> 01:37:24.960] The state of Michigan has never addressed that specific issue. But the legislature for the state of Texas has, and they determined that that is a very serious crime, that it's a felony of the first degree. [01:37:24.960 --> 01:37:41.960] Therefore, under full faith and credit of the legislature of Texas, we bring this statute into Michigan as an advisory statute. [01:37:41.960 --> 01:37:57.960] It's not controlling, but it's advisory. This is how the courts should rule on this based on full faith and credit for the legislature of the state of Texas. Does that make sense? [01:37:57.960 --> 01:38:10.960] Yes, although I still think it would work if I said that, you know, Michigan has a wishy-washy standard on discovery and Texas has a more enlightened standard on discovery. I want the more enlightened version of due process. [01:38:10.960 --> 01:38:28.960] You can absolutely bring that. And what that's going to do is raise one of these issues that the prosecutor is never going to want to get to the Supreme Court. [01:38:28.960 --> 01:38:42.960] Because what if they get a negative ruling from the Supreme Court that's screwed? Every prosecutor in the state of Michigan is bound to that ruling. And these are the kind of issues you want to bring. [01:38:42.960 --> 01:38:51.960] You want to bring issues over which they do not want to risk a negative ruling. [01:38:51.960 --> 01:39:01.960] My example of that is Jazzanowski, Minnesota. On the last possible day, he filed a recision of a mortgage document. [01:39:01.960 --> 01:39:13.960] And under recision, the bank has to give you back everything it got from you, and then you have to give back the bank, everything you got from it. [01:39:13.960 --> 01:39:22.960] And the bank said, well, you have to tender first. You have to give us back the property. Then we'll give you back all the money you paid. [01:39:22.960 --> 01:39:33.960] And they appealed that all the way to the Supreme. And I thought, who in his right mind allowed that to get to the Supreme? [01:39:33.960 --> 01:39:57.960] Because the Supreme wiped the floor with Wells Fargo, with all the banks. And he got to the Supreme and the Supreme said, no, the bank has to give back all the money it received first, then the borrower has to return the property. [01:39:57.960 --> 01:40:04.960] It was absolutely the worst possible ruling the bank could have got. [01:40:04.960 --> 01:40:13.960] My question was, who is the moron who let that get to the Supreme? What were you thinking? [01:40:13.960 --> 01:40:25.960] You want to ask questions that at the end of the day someone will say, who is the moron that let this get to the appeals court? [01:40:25.960 --> 01:40:34.960] So you always want to ask either first plush for constitutional issue questions. Does that make sense? [01:40:34.960 --> 01:40:37.960] It does, yeah. [01:40:37.960 --> 01:40:48.960] Any time I'm developing a case, I'm always looking for the kinds of issues the other side is not going to want to address. [01:40:48.960 --> 01:40:49.960] Okay, go ahead. [01:40:49.960 --> 01:40:58.960] All right. Now, as far as lawsuits go the way I understand it is you don't even start by writing out a lawsuit. You start with a tort letter and see if they'll settle, right? [01:40:58.960 --> 01:41:03.960] Yes. And the tort letter, you actually write the lawsuit. [01:41:03.960 --> 01:41:27.960] And then instead of putting a court heading on it, you put a business letter head on it. You say, I've been harmed this way and you list all of the elements of a cause of action or you list the elements of a tort claim. [01:41:27.960 --> 01:41:36.960] And you write it just like you would write the lawsuit. Each one of these steps leads you to the next step. [01:41:36.960 --> 01:41:46.960] When the lawyers get this and he's written like a lawsuit, they say, this guy's not kidding. He's already written a suit and he's showing it to us. [01:41:46.960 --> 01:41:58.960] So you might want to make a deal with this guy. If they don't, then you've already got the first step in creating your lawsuit. And then you create the lawsuit. [01:41:58.960 --> 01:42:07.960] And then when the court rules against you, you file a motion for reconsideration, do trial or findings of fact conclusions. [01:42:07.960 --> 01:42:20.960] And you file since you have the same issue. And in that one, you argue what the facts are, what the law is, and why the judge should rule in your favor. [01:42:20.960 --> 01:42:25.960] That's your first step toward an appellate document. [01:42:25.960 --> 01:42:33.960] So when he denies it, then your next step is to take that document and upgrade it to a notice of appeal. [01:42:33.960 --> 01:42:42.960] And then the next step is to upgrade it again to an appeal. So you're not writing these documents from scratch. [01:42:42.960 --> 01:42:51.960] You start out with your very first document is the basics on which you will build the entire process. Does that make sense? [01:42:51.960 --> 01:42:55.960] It does, yes. [01:42:55.960 --> 01:43:10.960] I'll say how difficult it is to generate the appeal. Well, it's not if you've already been laying the groundwork for it and it streamlines this process and this procedure for the lawyer. [01:43:10.960 --> 01:43:20.960] Most lawyers don't seem to even follow this practice, but then they get paid for how much work they appear to do. [01:43:20.960 --> 01:43:28.960] Where per se is we don't get paid that way. So we want to make streamline the process as much as possible. [01:43:28.960 --> 01:43:37.960] Okay, we are about to run out of time. Let's see we have. Oh my, we only have one segment left. [01:43:37.960 --> 01:43:42.960] Do you have anything else, Scott? No, thanks, Randy. I'll let you go. [01:43:42.960 --> 01:43:50.960] Thank you, Scott. When we come back, we're going to go to Jeff in Pennsylvania. Shane, I don't know if we'll get to you. It just depends on how much time Jeff takes. [01:43:50.960 --> 01:43:59.960] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:43:59.960 --> 01:44:08.960] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:08.960 --> 01:44:16.960] And it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:16.960 --> 01:45:24.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.960 --> 01:45:35.960] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:35.960 --> 01:45:44.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.960 --> 01:45:54.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.960 --> 01:46:18.960] Visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.960 --> 01:46:42.960] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking. We're going to Jeff in Pennsylvania. Hello, Jeff. [01:46:42.960 --> 01:46:44.960] Hello, Randy. [01:46:44.960 --> 01:46:51.960] I'm trying to get you to unmute. There we go. Okay, what do you have for us, Jeff? [01:46:51.960 --> 01:47:07.960] A little issue with the district attorney's office in my county where I was taking a private criminal complaint and they would not accept it. [01:47:07.960 --> 01:47:22.960] They told me that I had to make an appointment. I could not get in contact with anyone in the beginning and then a detective came out. [01:47:22.960 --> 01:47:32.960] He told me I had to make an appointment and I was like, well, could I see the rule or the law stating that this is what I need to do? [01:47:32.960 --> 01:47:47.960] And he said this is our policy and I told him policy is not law. I want to drop this off today and the longer that I remain there, the more officers arrived. [01:47:47.960 --> 01:48:07.960] And my son was with me and as soon as I told him the video, it was magical. The amount of just disrespect. It was horrible. [01:48:07.960 --> 01:48:20.960] And this is in front of a young man who I just wanted to drop off a criminal complaint and get this ball rolling, which I had already given it to the magistrate. [01:48:20.960 --> 01:48:32.960] The magistrate gave me the ruling that it has to be taken to the district attorney and I could not get it in. [01:48:32.960 --> 01:48:48.960] And it took a lot of doing. I had to go down to the personitaries office. They actually called up and I was finally able to give it to them. [01:48:48.960 --> 01:49:04.960] But I was surrounded by four officers, each from a different branch, like a detective, a probation officer, a sheriff's deputy, [01:49:04.960 --> 01:49:21.960] and just a local police officer who were all, you know, the detectives started then, are you okay? Are you crazy? Do you need a psychological evaluation? [01:49:21.960 --> 01:49:25.960] Do you have all their names? [01:49:25.960 --> 01:49:42.960] I do. I got them. I wrote them all down. I wanted to, I immediately after this was over, called up each branch in that, you know, the probation office. [01:49:42.960 --> 01:49:56.960] I wanted to file charges, not charges, but I wanted to record this incident, file a complaint against these officers, and they hung up on me. [01:49:56.960 --> 01:50:11.960] I called the personitaries office who patched me through, actually to the probation office. I spoke with the woman. I heard her talk to her supervisor in the background saying, [01:50:11.960 --> 01:50:27.960] if he got on through a restricted line, and then they just hung up. The district attorney's office would not, it would go to voicemail every time. I was not able to get it. [01:50:27.960 --> 01:50:35.960] This sounds, this rings as Rico. [01:50:35.960 --> 01:50:42.960] I'm thinking not myself. [01:50:42.960 --> 01:51:06.960] Rico is defined as one or two or more persons engaged in, what is the term, engaged in predicate acts toward an ongoing criminal conspiracy. [01:51:06.960 --> 01:51:21.960] And Rico has been applied to the states. Federal Rico, this needs to get criminal charges filed with special agent charge of the FBI. Put him on the dime. [01:51:21.960 --> 01:51:36.960] That'll be fine. But I wanted to, like, I have no idea who has oversight of these detectives in this district. [01:51:36.960 --> 01:51:40.960] Oh, yes. This is due process. [01:51:40.960 --> 01:51:43.960] Correct. That's right. [01:51:43.960 --> 01:51:58.960] Due process rings in the state and in the Fed. The federal constitution grants you the right to a reasonable expectation that the laws will be followed. [01:51:58.960 --> 01:52:04.960] And that expectation applies to both federal law and state law. [01:52:04.960 --> 01:52:11.960] If a state fails to apply, properly apply state law. [01:52:11.960 --> 01:52:17.960] And that rings in due process and due process rings in the Fed. [01:52:17.960 --> 01:52:27.960] So you can take these public officials in the state for violating state law, shielding from prosecution and bring them into the Fed. [01:52:27.960 --> 01:52:39.960] So when you file with the special agent charge of the FBI, at the very least he's going to send a couple of suits down there to ask, okay, guys. [01:52:39.960 --> 01:52:49.960] He's telling me that you refused to even accept criminal complaints against public officials. Is this true? [01:52:49.960 --> 01:52:52.960] What do you think they're going to tell him? [01:52:52.960 --> 01:52:57.960] That you're a sovereign citizen of flake and all this other stuff. [01:52:57.960 --> 01:53:11.960] These FBI agents are just there to cover their behinds. But state officials, when they get questioned by FBI agents, they are not going to be happy campers. [01:53:11.960 --> 01:53:15.960] Now they feel a threat outside their control. [01:53:15.960 --> 01:53:19.960] That makes sense. [01:53:19.960 --> 01:53:38.960] I would also involve in a long engaged custody litigation, whatever, and it has gone past what they consider. [01:53:38.960 --> 01:53:47.960] Everything is done in the best interest of the children and they have a limit of 180 days to get this done. [01:53:47.960 --> 01:53:56.960] Even without the coronavirus, they delayed my case to 380 days. [01:53:56.960 --> 01:54:05.960] And now I'm looking at probably three times, well twice times the limit, before my case actually will come to trial. [01:54:05.960 --> 01:54:20.960] And the judge multiple times has violated the statute, but the civil procedure. [01:54:20.960 --> 01:54:24.960] Have you filed criminally against the judge? [01:54:24.960 --> 01:54:36.960] My attorney does not want me to do that until after the case. [01:54:36.960 --> 01:54:41.960] Of course your attorney doesn't want you to do that, because that will make life difficult for him. [01:54:41.960 --> 01:54:46.960] Do you care if you make your attorney's life difficult? [01:54:46.960 --> 01:54:47.960] No. [01:54:47.960 --> 01:54:55.960] You think he won't throw you under the bus at the drop of a hat? [01:54:55.960 --> 01:55:04.960] If you heard me talk about a foresighted chess board, when you go to court, it's like playing foresighted chess. [01:55:04.960 --> 01:55:13.960] You sit down at your table, your lawyer is to your right, opposing counsel is to your left, the judge is across from you. [01:55:13.960 --> 01:55:19.960] You have a relationship with your lawyer, your lawyer has a relationship with opposing counsel and with the judge. [01:55:19.960 --> 01:55:22.960] You're the odd man out. [01:55:22.960 --> 01:55:30.960] The way you in your case is you use the relationship your lawyer has with these other two. [01:55:30.960 --> 01:55:39.960] And the best way to do that is once you have the lawyer engaged, then you stick your professional boot right up his behind [01:55:39.960 --> 01:55:48.960] and get him to go to the judge and the other lawyer and say, guys, I got a difficult client here and you got to help me out. [01:55:48.960 --> 01:55:58.960] The last case I was in, Class A misdemeanor, the judge dismissed the case to protect my lawyer from me. [01:55:58.960 --> 01:56:05.960] In my opinion, the only value of a lawyer is to use his cannon fodder. [01:56:05.960 --> 01:56:14.960] Stick it to your own lawyer so that your own lawyer goes to the judge and tells the judge he owes you one. [01:56:14.960 --> 01:56:19.960] Help me out with this guy. I'll throw the next guy under the bus for you. [01:56:19.960 --> 01:56:23.960] So go after your lawyer. You don't care what your lawyer likes or doesn't like. [01:56:23.960 --> 01:56:28.960] Criminal has nothing to do with civil. [01:56:28.960 --> 01:56:31.960] They're totally separate. [01:56:31.960 --> 01:56:36.960] You have reason to believe that someone is committed a crime. You have a duty to report that crime. [01:56:36.960 --> 01:56:40.960] You don't care if your lawyer likes it or not. Not his business. [01:56:40.960 --> 01:56:44.960] The best way to do it is not talk to the lawyer about it. [01:56:44.960 --> 01:56:48.960] If he tries to talk to you about it, tell him it's not his business. [01:56:48.960 --> 01:56:58.960] And then the lawyer has plausible deniability to go to the judge and opposing counsel and say, I got a difficult client here. [01:56:58.960 --> 01:57:01.960] He won't talk to me about these criminal complaints. [01:57:01.960 --> 01:57:05.960] And he threatened to barge with me if I ask him about it. [01:57:05.960 --> 01:57:15.960] So help me. I can't control him, guys. He's going to do this to you unless you make him a deal that he's happy with. [01:57:15.960 --> 01:57:17.960] Does that make sense, Jeff? [01:57:17.960 --> 01:57:27.960] Well, it does. And I've already barged with the opposing counsel, I think probably around 30 times. [01:57:27.960 --> 01:57:34.960] 30? Only 30? [01:57:34.960 --> 01:57:38.960] Wow. I get tired of writing. [01:57:38.960 --> 01:57:42.960] Have you hammered the judge at all? [01:57:42.960 --> 01:57:58.960] I have not because I have taken, I don't know if that would be the wise thing to do being the situation that I am in. [01:57:58.960 --> 01:58:11.960] But then I can also go the other side of the coin and anything that is done to me after I file will be considered retaliatory. [01:58:11.960 --> 01:58:19.960] And I don't know, you know, I'm in between a rock and a hard place on that. [01:58:19.960 --> 01:58:27.960] Well, the thing about complaints against judges is it puts them between a rock and a hard place. [01:58:27.960 --> 01:58:33.960] Once you file against them, you have poisoned their well. [01:58:33.960 --> 01:58:47.960] Now, it depends on, you have to consider your relationship with this judge. Has the judge given the appearance of acting in the best interest of the child? [01:58:47.960 --> 01:58:49.960] At the end of the day, here. [01:58:49.960 --> 01:59:07.960] The Bible's for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:59:07.960 --> 01:59:19.960] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:19.960 --> 01:59:29.960] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.960 --> 01:59:40.960] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.960 --> 02:00:00.960] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.