[00:11.920 --> 00:21.000] an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [00:21.000 --> 00:29.240] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, bitcoin core $10,566.52, [00:29.240 --> 00:41.000] ethereum $227.26, xrp ripple $0.33, litecoin $100.31, and bitcoin cash $324.10 a crypto [00:41.000 --> 00:46.000] coin. [00:46.000 --> 00:52.400] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.400 --> 00:57.720] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day parade, killing [00:57.720 --> 01:04.720] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.720 --> 01:09.880] In recent news, since Gov. Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp in a Texas [01:09.880 --> 01:14.200] law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and [01:14.200 --> 01:18.800] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.800 --> 01:22.680] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.680 --> 01:24.680] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.680 --> 01:28.400] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.400 --> 01:33.320] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.320 --> 01:34.320] law. [01:34.320 --> 01:37.560] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.560 --> 01:42.040] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.040 --> 01:48.200] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.200 --> 01:54.440] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Jaime Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.440 --> 01:58.960] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:58.960 --> 02:01.680] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.680 --> 02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.720 --> 02:10.720] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.720 --> 02:13.440] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.440 --> 02:17.400] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.400 --> 02:22.560] charged with. [02:22.560 --> 02:27.200] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.200 --> 02:32.320] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.320 --> 02:37.640] shark ever captured or recorded, with the other one being found way back in 1979 in [02:37.640 --> 02:39.240] the East Pacific Ocean. [02:39.240 --> 02:43.760] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.760 --> 02:45.600] its front fins. [02:45.600 --> 02:53.800] For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [02:53.800 --> 03:22.680] This is Brooke Rode with your lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [03:22.680 --> 03:41.820] Thanks for [03:41.820 --> 03:46.360] To school and learn the golden rule So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.360 --> 03:50.540] If you get hot then you must get cool Bad boys Bad boys [03:50.540 --> 03:54.400] What you gonna do? Or what you gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.400 --> 03:55.740] Bad boys Bad boys [03:55.700 --> 04:00.080] What you gonna do? Or what you gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.080 --> 04:02.980] You chuck it on that one You chuck it on this one [04:02.980 --> 04:05.720] You chuck it on your mother And you chuck it on your father [04:05.720 --> 04:08.300] You chuck it on your brother And you chuck it on your sister [04:08.300 --> 04:11.180] You chuck it on that one And you chuck it on me [04:11.180 --> 04:12.300] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:12.860 --> 04:13.680] What you're gonna do? [04:14.220 --> 04:16.400] What you're gonna do when they come for you? [04:16.620 --> 04:17.780] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:18.360 --> 04:19.360] What you're gonna do? [04:19.580 --> 04:21.860] What you're gonna do when they come for you? [04:22.120 --> 04:23.420] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:23.820 --> 04:24.880] What you're gonna do? [04:25.180 --> 04:27.380] What you're gonna do when they come for you? [04:27.620 --> 04:28.820] Bad Boys, Bad Boys. [04:29.220 --> 04:30.220] What you're gonna do? [04:30.620 --> 04:32.780] What you're gonna do when they come for you? [04:33.300 --> 04:35.560] Nobody not giving no break. [04:35.980 --> 04:37.840] Police not giving no break. [04:38.300 --> 04:40.480] The soldier man not giving no break. [05:10.480 --> 05:20.160] Rule of La Radio on this Thursday, the ninth day of July 2020. [05:20.160 --> 05:26.680] And Brett, you have had some interesting things going on, I understand. [05:26.680 --> 05:33.060] You have another county that seems to want to dance with you. [05:33.060 --> 05:37.700] It wasn't their idea, I assure you. [05:37.700 --> 05:48.440] It was, well, you and I know somebody that ended up getting hassled by Polk County. [05:48.440 --> 05:56.460] And so I just started asking a little bit of questions, and boy, they're getting really [05:56.460 --> 05:58.460] on edge. [05:58.460 --> 06:03.320] And then we also got Kendall County. [06:03.320 --> 06:06.600] I started asking them for their training records. [06:06.600 --> 06:10.840] You know, they have to have mandatory training, the Attorney General says they need to know [06:10.840 --> 06:15.840] about public information requests and they need to know about open meetings and the people [06:15.840 --> 06:20.720] are allowed to see everything and attend everything and have recordings of everything. [06:20.720 --> 06:24.920] And you know, it makes sense if we're the masters of the people. [06:24.920 --> 06:30.060] I mean, the people are the masters of these servants we've created, the government. [06:30.060 --> 06:33.660] So it only makes sense that we would have access to all that, but they don't seem to [06:33.660 --> 06:34.660] think that way. [06:34.660 --> 06:42.520] And when you start asking for it, boy, they just say all kinds of ignorant things. [06:42.520 --> 06:47.480] So what's been going on with the latest that's gone on there? [06:47.480 --> 06:58.200] Well, Kendall County, I asked, first I asked the HR director for an org chart, a list of [06:58.200 --> 07:00.400] people that are on the payroll. [07:00.400 --> 07:04.040] That's usually a good place for me, that's a good place to start because I can kind of [07:04.040 --> 07:10.720] see the lay of the land and see who reports to whom and I can quickly pick out the heads [07:10.720 --> 07:16.020] of departments that are the ones that I might need to ask for things. [07:16.020 --> 07:25.420] And then I ask the IT director to give me the email addresses of the heads of departments [07:25.420 --> 07:32.880] and then we can go from there because typically they, I don't know, they don't do very well. [07:32.880 --> 07:38.040] You give them a fax or you give them, the mail works, but it takes too long and you [07:38.040 --> 07:46.000] have to buy postage and so, you know, I like to send an email. [07:46.000 --> 07:51.560] And once you get ahold of the email addresses of the different heads of departments, then [07:51.560 --> 07:57.880] you can go ahead and start asking them for things like, yeah, I'd like to see some certificates [07:57.880 --> 08:03.280] for the past three years, make sure you guys are all up on your training. [08:03.280 --> 08:12.120] And then the sparks start flying. [08:12.120 --> 08:16.440] They think you're trying to sneak in behind their thin blue line? [08:16.440 --> 08:22.980] Well, I don't, I don't know, I think it might have something to do with, you mentioned one [08:22.980 --> 08:28.520] time that the dirtier they are, the more they are afraid that you're going to find out what [08:28.520 --> 08:34.440] they've got stuck in their closet and they start imagining that somebody knows about [08:34.440 --> 08:35.440] it. [08:35.440 --> 08:44.600] Well, that's kind of what I was playing to when in Kendall County, after I wasn't getting [08:44.600 --> 08:49.580] very good responses and response times and I was starting to feel a little bit of pushback. [08:49.580 --> 08:57.520] So I immediately said, I reached out to several of them at once and I started a little campaign [08:57.520 --> 09:03.760] all this week they've been getting one records request a day, go during my lunch break and [09:03.760 --> 09:07.600] just space it out so it's just a little bit more than 24 hours. [09:07.600 --> 09:15.840] Just a little pro tip, if you put things together in a way that you don't space them out more [09:15.840 --> 09:25.100] than 24 hours, then they can lump them together and use the newer for a response time. [09:25.100 --> 09:29.320] So you spread it out just a little over 24 hours at least. [09:29.320 --> 09:36.360] And so this week I've been asking them for their training, I want to see their training. [09:36.360 --> 09:50.160] And the criminal district attorney lady, I don't know, I'll keep my mouth quiet about [09:50.160 --> 09:51.160] that. [09:51.160 --> 09:53.520] No, no, no. [09:53.520 --> 09:55.000] They don't have anonymity. [09:55.000 --> 09:59.920] Oh, no, I'm not talking about the name, Nicole Bishop. [09:59.920 --> 10:06.320] I was thinking in terms of the kinds of words that I don't need coming across my lips, [10:06.320 --> 10:12.400] but it just seems to fit anyway, but I'll leave those alone. [10:12.400 --> 10:25.440] But she's making a burrow of herself or shall I say a donkey of herself. [10:25.440 --> 10:27.040] She's inventing law. [10:27.040 --> 10:34.720] She's denying that the existence of law that's straight up, easy to read, not confusing, [10:34.720 --> 10:37.400] in your face, simple. [10:37.400 --> 10:44.440] She denies that it exists and she's inventing requirements. [10:44.440 --> 10:47.040] Like I can't give you electronic records. [10:47.040 --> 10:51.040] I can only print the electronic records and then you have to drive over here and pick [10:51.040 --> 10:53.840] them up. [10:53.840 --> 10:59.600] You have no authority to invent obstacles for access. [10:59.600 --> 11:03.500] She would very much like to get you in her county. [11:03.500 --> 11:04.880] She really did. [11:04.880 --> 11:10.440] She wanted me to drive over there and she wanted me to show identification to prove [11:10.440 --> 11:12.120] that I am the requester. [11:12.120 --> 11:16.520] Well, I'm sorry, that's not something you're allowed to require. [11:16.520 --> 11:19.840] You can ask if you want to, but I don't have to tell you anything, I don't have to show [11:19.840 --> 11:20.900] you anything. [11:20.900 --> 11:24.980] I can be John Q. Public. [11:24.980 --> 11:30.960] So she's really pushing for what she can invent and she says that it's going to be, oh my [11:30.960 --> 11:36.600] goodness, I tell you what, last night, I was hot last night, so I didn't hit send. [11:36.600 --> 11:37.600] I just wait. [11:37.600 --> 11:40.780] I wrote up a whole bunch of stuff and I said, you know what, I'm going to wait until she [11:40.780 --> 11:46.960] passes her 10 business days and it's too late for her to fix it. [11:46.960 --> 11:52.160] So I just sent her a very small and short note. [11:52.160 --> 11:58.980] Now she had written me, it was about six o'clock. [11:58.980 --> 12:10.800] So this morning, a little before eight, she got a note that, I called her antics last [12:10.800 --> 12:21.440] night, sounds like she's drunk drama, I forget how I called it, but it was really, really [12:21.440 --> 12:22.440] well done. [12:22.440 --> 12:23.440] I think. [12:23.440 --> 12:25.320] Let's see if I can pull it up for you. [12:25.320 --> 12:28.280] You'll enjoy this. [12:28.280 --> 12:35.960] I suspect, while you're doing that, I know this is kind of a rhetorical question, but [12:35.960 --> 12:39.060] have you bar grieved her? [12:39.060 --> 12:40.200] Not yet. [12:40.200 --> 12:44.300] She's earned a few of them by now, but no. [12:44.300 --> 12:45.760] Let's see here. [12:45.760 --> 12:51.960] Yeah, it started with a Bill Ballard over there who was budding in, so he's going to [12:51.960 --> 12:54.880] get the first bar grievance for Baratree. [12:54.880 --> 13:02.580] And he's also going to get stung for trying to violate the Open Meetings Act because he, [13:02.580 --> 13:08.120] I'm sure it wasn't an honest mistake, but he hit reply all when I started sending all [13:08.120 --> 13:15.000] these things and he tried to call a secret huddle and get all of the lawyers together [13:15.000 --> 13:19.660] and have a little closed meeting, which they're not allowed to have. [13:19.660 --> 13:26.320] And so I told him, I want you to record that for me, and a criminal district attorney jumped [13:26.320 --> 13:28.320] in and said, there will be no recordings of anything. [13:28.320 --> 13:29.320] We're not required to record. [13:29.320 --> 13:30.680] And I said, all right, invite me to the meeting. [13:30.680 --> 13:32.160] I want a meeting invitation. [13:32.160 --> 13:33.200] You're having a Zoom meeting. [13:33.200 --> 13:34.200] I want in. [13:34.200 --> 13:40.800] It got quiet. [13:40.800 --> 13:46.840] Let's see here. [13:46.840 --> 13:50.880] Did you get a professionally printed invitation? [13:50.880 --> 13:52.480] Hang on. [13:52.480 --> 13:54.480] We'll pick this up on the other side. [13:54.480 --> 13:55.480] Be right back. [13:55.480 --> 13:56.480] Oh, wait a minute. [13:56.480 --> 13:57.480] No, I'm reading that. [13:57.480 --> 13:59.480] I thought we had about three minutes left. [13:59.480 --> 14:00.480] That's three minutes. [14:00.480 --> 14:03.240] That's three minutes, not three seconds. [14:03.240 --> 14:06.440] I got to stretch my box out. [14:06.440 --> 14:07.880] Oh, there we go. [14:07.880 --> 14:09.800] Two minutes and 54 seconds. [14:09.800 --> 14:10.800] Okay. [14:10.800 --> 14:17.240] Now, Mr. Lipo, some random attorney that I don't know, jumped in there and said, we need [14:17.240 --> 14:18.240] to have a Zoom meeting. [14:18.240 --> 14:22.280] And I said, in the interest of transparency and full compliance with all your other legal [14:22.280 --> 14:25.960] obligations, please be sure that at least one of you meeting participants will record [14:25.960 --> 14:33.880] this and all related meetings in their entirety, because we will want access to review your [14:33.880 --> 14:38.800] decision-making processes. [14:38.800 --> 14:44.800] They're used to being prosecutors and all the stuff they do is privileged. [14:44.800 --> 14:49.560] And this is public records, it's not privileged. [14:49.560 --> 14:51.280] Surprise. [14:51.280 --> 15:01.160] So then the Miss Bishop, head honcho, says, you've already got what you need. [15:01.160 --> 15:03.400] And I said, no, I don't. [15:03.400 --> 15:10.960] In fact, you're asserting that I must send you my address and, no, I want you, this is [15:10.960 --> 15:14.960] a new records request, please produce for me all the records you have or can readily [15:14.960 --> 15:20.960] obtain in support of your assertion. [15:20.960 --> 15:26.280] So if she has any records that show any kind of a law or anything, but policy, I don't [15:26.280 --> 15:31.080] care, whatever they've got, what do you know, crickets, they've got nothing. [15:31.080 --> 15:38.080] There is nothing in support of her assertion that she can put all these obstacles in there. [15:38.080 --> 15:39.720] And she certainly knows that. [15:39.720 --> 15:40.720] Yes. [15:40.720 --> 15:46.920] Have they not figured out yet that they're out of their league? [15:46.920 --> 15:47.920] I don't know. [15:47.920 --> 15:52.640] I can't pretend to understand what's going on in their minds. [15:52.640 --> 15:58.800] But I did tell her this morning, let's see, we've got a minute left, I told her this morning, [15:58.800 --> 16:03.320] with all due respect, Miss Bishop, you're coming across with what seems like an arrogant [16:03.320 --> 16:06.200] and flippant tone that is inappropriate and uncalled for. [16:06.200 --> 16:09.320] Let's try again, shall we? [16:09.320 --> 16:13.380] Don't tell me you plan to conduct prohibited closed meetings. [16:13.380 --> 16:14.780] You know I am interested. [16:14.780 --> 16:18.720] Please make sure I get a link for meeting attendance before you organize or call or [16:18.720 --> 16:21.960] participate any kind of meeting with one or more people or attorneys. [16:21.960 --> 16:25.720] How did that on purpose, people or attorneys? [16:25.720 --> 16:31.720] It escapes me why you would act as if making a recording is somehow too onerous for you. [16:31.720 --> 16:34.600] Anyone can simply click the record button. [16:34.600 --> 16:40.080] Surely you could have responded in full with the requested information by now using only [16:40.080 --> 16:44.820] a fraction of the time you took to stir up all that drunk sounding drama and push back [16:44.820 --> 16:46.440] after hours last night. [16:46.440 --> 16:50.580] I'll tell you the rest after we come back from our sponsors. [16:50.580 --> 16:55.360] But this is the kind of thing that I'm sure they don't get to hear all the time. [16:55.360 --> 16:58.640] So it's fun to be able to present it to them. [16:58.640 --> 17:01.000] We'll be right back. [17:01.000 --> 17:09.560] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central [17:09.560 --> 17:10.560] Texas Gunworks. [17:10.560 --> 17:14.600] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [17:14.600 --> 17:16.220] Any amount is appreciated. [17:16.220 --> 17:18.240] Everything helps to keep us on the air. [17:18.240 --> 17:24.640] From Central Texas Gunworks, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [17:24.640 --> 17:27.200] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:27.200 --> 17:30.400] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:30.400 --> 17:35.960] When you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:35.960 --> 17:39.680] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [17:39.680 --> 17:44.240] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [17:44.240 --> 17:48.620] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [17:48.620 --> 17:51.520] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:51.520 --> 17:55.360] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:55.360 --> 18:01.200] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:01.200 --> 18:05.720] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [18:05.720 --> 18:11.960] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [18:11.960 --> 18:15.040] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5-16. [18:15.040 --> 18:20.060] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [18:20.060 --> 18:21.600] which is in heaven. [18:21.600 --> 18:26.720] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:26.720 --> 18:31.960] Join Nana and guests for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [18:31.960 --> 18:35.100] to provoke unto love and good works. [18:35.100 --> 18:39.480] Our verse-by-verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [18:39.480 --> 18:41.240] one chapter per week. [18:41.240 --> 18:46.320] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [18:46.320 --> 18:48.520] Christian character development. [18:48.520 --> 18:54.320] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to [18:54.320 --> 19:23.840] 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [19:24.320 --> 19:33.520] We ask the Christian, I wonder what they're hiding, they don't have the answers, how they're [19:33.520 --> 19:34.520] not abiding. [19:34.520 --> 19:43.520] We ask the Christian, look what we get, and they don't have the answers, I'm sloping, [19:43.520 --> 19:44.520] slipping, sliding. [19:44.520 --> 19:48.520] They may turn those tissues past me, Lord, how they want, wait and take it easy. [19:48.520 --> 19:55.040] They may talk way too politically and them getting mad and angry, but them not standing [19:55.040 --> 20:01.240] up and fighting, fight for their freedom and be free, and they like them love slavery and [20:01.240 --> 20:04.240] get handouts from the government. [20:04.240 --> 20:15.240] We ask the Christian, I wonder what they're hiding, they don't have the answers, how they're [20:15.240 --> 20:16.240] not abiding. [20:16.240 --> 20:20.000] Okay, we are back. [20:20.000 --> 20:26.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the ninth day of July [20:26.240 --> 20:29.240] 2020. [20:29.240 --> 20:40.720] And we're talking about just seeking open records from various counties and how the [20:40.720 --> 20:46.800] counties seem to feel like you're getting into their personal business and feel some [20:46.800 --> 20:52.580] pathological need to keep all of their records to themselves. [20:52.580 --> 21:02.520] And when we went out, you were talking about this lawyer in Kendall County. [21:02.520 --> 21:08.360] Seems like there were, you said, I think before the show started, you told me that they were, [21:08.360 --> 21:14.200] told you that you had to come to the county and pick these records up in person. [21:14.200 --> 21:16.320] Right. [21:16.320 --> 21:27.560] In government code 552.228, it says that if the requester asks for a certain medium, then [21:27.560 --> 21:36.420] the governmental body needs to answer in that medium, if at all possible, and if it doesn't [21:36.420 --> 21:43.720] require hardware and software they don't have or materials they don't have and so forth. [21:43.720 --> 21:50.320] So if I ask for file attachment on an email as the medium that they can answer me with, [21:50.320 --> 21:52.200] they've got everything they need. [21:52.200 --> 21:58.120] They don't need any additional clarification or they don't need any payment for the paper [21:58.120 --> 22:03.900] costs, you know, the page copy in cost, the Texas administrative code is really clear [22:03.900 --> 22:07.080] about that's only for the cost of materials. [22:07.080 --> 22:13.160] If there are no materials, there are no costs, they can't say, well, we had to copy that. [22:13.160 --> 22:15.200] It's a file, deal with it. [22:15.200 --> 22:17.600] It's a file. [22:17.600 --> 22:23.520] So there are no materials, there's no paper, there's no micro fish or micro film diskettes, [22:23.520 --> 22:24.520] nothing CDs. [22:24.520 --> 22:26.780] Yeah, they can charge you for those things. [22:26.780 --> 22:31.680] But if I request email, I want a file attachment. [22:31.680 --> 22:36.240] That is the requested medium and they need to comply with that if at all possible. [22:36.240 --> 22:42.840] Now, if they didn't have any electronic records, they only had paper and they didn't have a [22:42.840 --> 22:48.640] scanner, okay, then they could require me to either come down there or they're going [22:48.640 --> 22:50.880] to mail me Xerox copies. [22:50.880 --> 22:52.200] I get it. [22:52.200 --> 22:57.820] However, they do have a computer, they do have electronic records. [22:57.820 --> 22:59.840] And I asked for email. [22:59.840 --> 23:06.580] So she doesn't have any place to go off and inventing all kinds of obstacles to access. [23:06.580 --> 23:09.120] She needs to just put the PDF as a file attachment. [23:09.120 --> 23:14.000] Boy, Randy, I came really close to telling her, maybe you don't know how. [23:14.000 --> 23:21.240] Look at the top, there's a square at the top with a slanted paperclip, push that. [23:21.240 --> 23:24.200] I came close, Randy. [23:24.200 --> 23:28.480] But I held back, I maintained professionalism to a degree. [23:28.480 --> 23:34.800] I did tell her that she sounded drunk last night. [23:34.800 --> 23:37.800] She might have been. [23:37.800 --> 23:38.800] Who knows? [23:38.800 --> 23:44.080] Yeah, after getting several of these and getting all irritated and harried, who knows? [23:44.080 --> 23:47.240] She might have hit the brandy pretty quickly. [23:47.240 --> 23:54.680] But I did tell her, you could have responded in full using only a fraction of the time [23:54.680 --> 24:01.640] you took to stir up all that drunk sounding drama and pushback after hours last night. [24:01.640 --> 24:08.620] And Randy, she spent so much time in her voluminous email to me with all this pushback. [24:08.620 --> 24:14.240] She spent so much time trying to make herself sound important and busy, and this is beneath [24:14.240 --> 24:15.240] her. [24:15.240 --> 24:19.640] She has other daily activities to take care of, and she's going above and beyond and doing [24:19.640 --> 24:22.840] things she's not required to do. [24:22.840 --> 24:26.320] And she doesn't have to answer questions. [24:26.320 --> 24:30.580] So I told her, I can appreciate that maybe you felt like you were going above and beyond. [24:30.580 --> 24:31.580] That's nice. [24:31.580 --> 24:35.680] But I did not ask you to answer questions or give me any of that legal advice or establish [24:35.680 --> 24:42.320] your importance, only to produce the electronic records or else certify that there are none. [24:42.320 --> 24:43.560] Promptly. [24:43.560 --> 24:47.280] That's all I ask. [24:47.280 --> 25:01.640] So today, as I was hitting send on the fourth request of the week, she was hitting send [25:01.640 --> 25:09.160] to give me all of the records I had asked for, but she didn't include any file attachments. [25:09.160 --> 25:15.200] Instead, she told me that the request was completed and I can come to her office and [25:15.200 --> 25:22.040] pick them up in person. [25:22.040 --> 25:26.940] There's nothing like having a ringer coming after you. [25:26.940 --> 25:32.560] She really wants to be able to look at you and take your measure. [25:32.560 --> 25:37.640] Try to figure out who's coming after her. [25:37.640 --> 25:43.080] There's nothing like, oh, they hate that when they have no idea. [25:43.080 --> 25:48.640] I've helped a lot of people where I come in essentially as a ringer and they have no [25:48.640 --> 25:52.220] idea who I am. [25:52.220 --> 25:54.260] That's what happened in Williamson County. [25:54.260 --> 26:00.200] They had no idea who they were dealing with and it made them crazy. [26:00.200 --> 26:04.480] They finally decided that I was a fed. [26:04.480 --> 26:08.280] I never told them I was a fed, but they got that idea. [26:08.280 --> 26:11.040] How did they get that idea? [26:11.040 --> 26:17.820] Well, because the guy was going there to help, told them that he had a top secret clearance [26:17.820 --> 26:20.560] and they were going to screw it up. [26:20.560 --> 26:28.080] Now they think it's a fed down here doing investigation on his clearance. [26:28.080 --> 26:33.280] Uh-oh. [26:33.280 --> 26:37.640] When I told the county attorney, when he asked if there was anything I could do for him, [26:37.640 --> 26:39.280] I told him no. [26:39.280 --> 26:42.280] If I need you, I will summon you. [26:42.280 --> 26:44.720] You are dismissed. [26:44.720 --> 26:50.440] The look on his face was absolutely priceless. [26:50.440 --> 26:55.440] And that told him, whoever this guy is, is certainly not impressed with my power and [26:55.440 --> 26:58.120] my position. [26:58.120 --> 27:02.040] So he must be way up there somewhere. [27:02.040 --> 27:11.800] And then when, what was his name, I've been lost, his name has been so long ago. [27:11.800 --> 27:17.660] Steve Fritz is who he was with and I'm using a mnemonic, Doug Bell. [27:17.660 --> 27:23.360] When Doug told him that he had that top secret clearance, he said he looked at the guy and [27:23.360 --> 27:25.320] he looked like he swallowed his gum. [27:25.320 --> 27:31.660] But yeah, they're dealing with somebody they can't see, they can't talk to. [27:31.660 --> 27:39.360] And you're giving them reactions and responses that they are not accustomed to and they have [27:39.360 --> 27:43.560] no set way of dealing with it. [27:43.560 --> 27:47.440] You have clearly reversed roles on them. [27:47.440 --> 27:48.440] And one thing I- [27:48.440 --> 27:51.480] I think they're not super comfortable with this. [27:51.480 --> 27:54.560] Yeah, they don't know how to deal with it. [27:54.560 --> 27:57.220] You've got them out of their comfort zone and when you get them out of their comfort [27:57.220 --> 28:02.160] zone, they wind up doing really stupid stuff. [28:02.160 --> 28:05.160] What do you think about that, Scott? [28:05.160 --> 28:09.520] I think you're absolutely correct. [28:09.520 --> 28:17.560] And just by doing Brady requests on about 50 different district attorneys, pretty much [28:17.560 --> 28:26.040] already had them already set up several years ago for this whole takedown of, because I [28:26.040 --> 28:30.560] think you had a show a couple of weeks ago where you know, it's like, we should be going [28:30.560 --> 28:33.520] after the district attorneys instead of the cops. [28:33.520 --> 28:35.280] There's not quite so many of them. [28:35.280 --> 28:40.200] I was like, yep, that's what I've been saying for a long time. [28:40.200 --> 28:44.800] And the district attorney is required to train the police. [28:44.800 --> 28:49.200] The police are part of the prosecutorial team. [28:49.200 --> 28:57.680] So if the police are acting improperly and they are consistently acting improperly across [28:57.680 --> 29:06.000] a range of officers, it can't be presumed that all of these officers are jackbooted [29:06.000 --> 29:07.000] thugs. [29:07.000 --> 29:08.000] Right. [29:08.000 --> 29:11.040] They've got to be following policy. [29:11.040 --> 29:12.040] Prosecutor's fault. [29:12.040 --> 29:17.920] Well, they definitely go to their training or lack thereof. [29:17.920 --> 29:20.920] Exactly. [29:20.920 --> 29:27.240] So while we hold the response, the officer responsible for his behavior, we don't look [29:27.240 --> 29:31.360] to the officer as being the source of that behavior. [29:31.360 --> 29:38.400] Someone else is either enticing it or at least enabling it. [29:38.400 --> 29:43.200] Or willfully withholding it. [29:43.200 --> 29:47.520] That's the one we need to go after. [29:47.520 --> 29:55.000] If you go to Johnson County and you make a complaint against a public official, you just [29:55.000 --> 29:56.000] watch what happens. [29:56.000 --> 29:58.920] You will be surprised. [29:58.920 --> 30:01.920] They will get. [30:01.920 --> 30:06.200] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.200 --> 30:10.960] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.960 --> 30:11.960] secrets. [30:11.960 --> 30:16.120] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.120 --> 30:17.720] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.720 --> 30:21.320] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.320 --> 30:26.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.080 --> 30:31.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.680 --> 30:33.840] Privacy it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.840 --> 30:38.140] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.140 --> 30:41.680] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. 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[31:18.200 --> 31:21.320] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.320 --> 31:23.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.240 --> 31:31.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.000 --> 31:32.000] I lost my son. [31:32.000 --> 31:33.000] My nephew. [31:33.000 --> 31:34.000] My uncle. [31:34.000 --> 31:35.000] My son. [31:35.000 --> 31:36.000] On September 11th, 2001. [31:36.000 --> 31:39.160] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.160 --> 31:40.480] World Trade Center 7. [31:40.480 --> 31:43.400] A 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:43.400 --> 31:47.280] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [31:47.280 --> 31:52.120] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more [31:52.120 --> 31:53.120] to the story. [31:53.120 --> 31:54.520] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.520 --> 31:55.520] My uncle. [31:55.520 --> 31:56.520] My nephew. [31:56.520 --> 31:57.520] My son. [31:57.520 --> 31:58.520] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.520 --> 32:01.200] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.200 --> 32:05.440] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.440 --> 32:09.040] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever [32:09.040 --> 32:13.200] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.200 --> 32:16.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.400 --> 32:20.200] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.200 --> 32:24.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.280 --> 32:25.640] our rights through due process. 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[32:55.160 --> 33:03.080] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.080 --> 33:06.600] At Free Speech Radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:33.080 --> 33:45.480] Okay. [33:45.480 --> 33:46.480] We are back. [33:46.480 --> 33:51.640] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio and Scott, let me run off the cliff [33:51.640 --> 33:52.640] again. [33:52.640 --> 33:54.640] I'm getting better. [33:54.640 --> 34:02.320] Scott, that was clearly your fault because Randy was talking, right? [34:02.320 --> 34:03.320] Yeah. [34:03.320 --> 34:04.320] I'm getting better. [34:04.320 --> 34:09.240] You don't expect me to talk and think at the same time. [34:09.240 --> 34:10.240] I don't multitask. [34:10.240 --> 34:11.240] That's right. [34:11.240 --> 34:12.240] No. [34:12.240 --> 34:13.240] Okay. [34:13.240 --> 34:18.040] As we were going out, you were talking about they don't do that anymore. [34:18.040 --> 34:22.440] Now if you go try to get them to do what they need to, they will. [34:22.440 --> 34:26.240] In Johnson County, they absolutely will and that's because I presented the district [34:26.240 --> 34:31.520] attorney to the grand jury in Johnson County. [34:31.520 --> 34:35.360] And he don't want that to happen again. [34:35.360 --> 34:41.720] And when you start going after prosecutors for what the police are doing, the prosecutor [34:41.720 --> 34:48.220] is not going to want the public to come after them again, especially with all of this uproar [34:48.220 --> 34:50.720] over police behavior. [34:50.720 --> 34:55.160] Now is a really good time to hammer the prosecutors. [34:55.160 --> 35:02.160] Oh, I agree totally right now would be a perfect time. [35:02.160 --> 35:07.500] And any, you know, it's funny because Brett started talking about, you know, I want to [35:07.500 --> 35:12.200] start talking to those people at Polk County about Ojodi and Ojodi even called me today. [35:12.200 --> 35:16.000] And the first thing I was about, he goes, you know, people would just start following [35:16.000 --> 35:19.880] some information requests on their Brady material that gets them right then. [35:19.880 --> 35:21.880] I was like, I know that. [35:21.880 --> 35:24.080] I said, you know, it's a funny thing. [35:24.080 --> 35:30.360] It looks like, Oh, Brett wants to start sending them some information requests and kind of [35:30.360 --> 35:31.360] fire them up. [35:31.360 --> 35:34.840] I said, I told them all about it, you know, it was a couple of years ago and stuff. [35:34.840 --> 35:42.120] So anyhow, I'm glad for you, Brett, you know, it's, it's, this is good cause you, you got, [35:42.120 --> 35:48.400] you've improved on your information requests quite a dramatically. [35:48.400 --> 35:52.320] And I was even telling them Jody about, I was like, yeah, he's created some information [35:52.320 --> 35:54.680] requests where I'm like going, man, let me get a copy of that one. [35:54.680 --> 35:56.680] That's good stuff there. [35:56.680 --> 35:57.680] Yeah. [35:57.680 --> 36:04.080] I figured, you know, if they'd be hassling me like they're hassling him, I would hope [36:04.080 --> 36:08.820] he would turn around and do something like that or you, you know, we got to look out [36:08.820 --> 36:09.820] for each other. [36:09.820 --> 36:10.820] Well, sure. [36:10.820 --> 36:17.400] You know, I've done some information requests to them a while back, but you know, it's the [36:17.400 --> 36:24.720] thing is we have to have more people that will come to the aid kind of like, you know, [36:24.720 --> 36:31.000] how the city came to the aid to help what's his name and his case, you know, but if more [36:31.000 --> 36:37.880] people would file information requests when they hear about somebody like him, you know, [36:37.880 --> 36:45.360] hung up in Polk County jail for two years over, you know, basically suing the county [36:45.360 --> 36:53.440] and then, so he's gone through his third psych evaluation and they determined that he was [36:53.440 --> 37:03.240] delusional, thinking that the fed case that he was, that he had opened against the public [37:03.240 --> 37:07.040] officials over a state case that he could win. [37:07.040 --> 37:12.040] So it basically boils down, it sounds to like, well, I guess you think you're delusional [37:12.040 --> 37:18.200] that you're going to get justice and you know, to me, that's what it kind of started sounding [37:18.200 --> 37:23.000] like, you know, and I thought, Holy crap, you must be delusional if you think you're [37:23.000 --> 37:28.160] going to get justice and they'll prove it to you by throwing you in jail and then not [37:28.160 --> 37:34.460] having any to go with all kinds of ways to keep from having a court date. [37:34.460 --> 37:39.720] And that's what the bull did down to, and by using psych evaluations and, Oh, we got [37:39.720 --> 37:44.600] to have this talk about, and then, you know, they got all the COVID stuff and everything [37:44.600 --> 37:45.600] else. [37:45.600 --> 37:48.760] So yeah, it's ridiculous. [37:48.760 --> 37:55.800] But running these information requests on these guys will make them nervous, especially [37:55.800 --> 37:56.800] right now. [37:56.800 --> 38:08.160] Especially if you ask the right kinds of questions, like ask for the last two years of their jail [38:08.160 --> 38:13.440] inmate rosters, three, has he been in three years? [38:13.440 --> 38:20.280] No, I just always ask for three because they can't charge you extra unless you make them [38:20.280 --> 38:23.960] go looking in archives that are older than three years. [38:23.960 --> 38:27.800] Oh, okay. [38:27.800 --> 38:33.760] And then if you, then the only thing they can charge you for is if they have to go spend [38:33.760 --> 38:35.960] time seeking out the information. [38:35.960 --> 38:41.760] But if everything is in the computer, spend time seeking is their problem. [38:41.760 --> 38:43.440] They're the ones that organized it. [38:43.440 --> 38:44.760] It's my information. [38:44.760 --> 38:46.600] The records belong to me. [38:46.600 --> 38:51.800] What they can try to charge you for is if they have to manipulate the data, they call [38:51.800 --> 38:52.800] it manipulation. [38:52.800 --> 38:58.200] That just means like create a report for you because you asked to see all of the something, [38:58.200 --> 39:06.580] something that had red hair and you wanted every something that they don't naturally [39:06.580 --> 39:07.800] have a report for. [39:07.800 --> 39:10.760] If they have a report, then they just do it. [39:10.760 --> 39:16.940] When I really want to go after a county or when a county gives me a hard time, I send [39:16.940 --> 39:19.120] them my scope and content request. [39:19.120 --> 39:21.120] Have you seen that one, Brett? [39:21.120 --> 39:26.400] Yeah, I saw that in the government code in 552. [39:26.400 --> 39:30.160] I haven't seen your version of it, but I've seen it in there. [39:30.160 --> 39:39.160] If you look on jurisimprudence.website, look for in my motions and research or documents [39:39.160 --> 39:45.880] and research something and then blanks, you'll find scope and content. [39:45.880 --> 39:54.400] And what it asks for is it asks for no content at all. [39:54.400 --> 40:02.400] It asks for the names of all of the records that they keep, the substantive content of [40:02.400 --> 40:08.800] those records, the scope and substantive content of those records. [40:08.800 --> 40:14.160] And then it goes down through all of these requirements and that's taken directly out [40:14.160 --> 40:24.680] of the section of 552 that says these records are specifically made open for public inspection. [40:24.680 --> 40:30.200] And that's this for example, and it puts all these bullet points, you put them in there. [40:30.200 --> 40:34.360] I did that to Wise County a number of years ago. [40:34.360 --> 40:39.480] And Mark Autry, who was the captain on the Sheriff's Department at the time, who subsequently [40:39.480 --> 40:47.120] became a JP and he was the school board chairman when I called the sheriff and asked him to [40:47.120 --> 40:50.240] arrest the school board. [40:50.240 --> 40:56.740] He had to answer that request and I sat in his office for eight hours. [40:56.740 --> 41:02.300] He's showing me all of the records they keep, what they're called, how to make a request [41:02.300 --> 41:08.500] for those specific records and the substantive scope and content of those records. [41:08.500 --> 41:17.080] At one point he said, Mr. Kelton, if you could give me an idea of precisely what you're [41:17.080 --> 41:21.720] looking for, I could make this a lot simpler. [41:21.720 --> 41:25.080] I said, yes Mark, you could. [41:25.080 --> 41:32.000] But if you knew what records I was looking for and then I wind up not finding those records, [41:32.000 --> 41:38.040] he said, I understand I would be compromised exactly. [41:38.040 --> 41:42.000] They really wanted to know what I was after. [41:42.000 --> 41:52.360] And I was after the head, he wasn't a captain, a major or whatever. [41:52.360 --> 41:56.940] He was the guy under the sheriff, his name was Doug Whitehead. [41:56.940 --> 42:03.600] He was taking inmates out and having them work on properties for him and paying them [42:03.600 --> 42:05.720] in cigarettes. [42:05.720 --> 42:18.780] And I had people call me and tell me that the sheriff was selling materials that were [42:18.780 --> 42:23.760] intended to be used in building the new jail. [42:23.760 --> 42:31.720] So I couldn't give them an idea of what I was after and what I was looking for, I found. [42:31.720 --> 42:39.040] And when I went to the sheriff and told him that you got a guy in your jail who has brought [42:39.040 --> 42:45.160] me information I would rather not have, you know, I have issues that I'm going after [42:45.160 --> 42:50.080] but you're not one of them, you're not that important. [42:50.080 --> 42:57.000] But he brought me some really ugly information and I have since verified what he has told [42:57.000 --> 42:58.000] me. [42:58.000 --> 43:01.840] Well, if you're not going after me, why are you telling me this? [43:01.840 --> 43:06.560] Well I just want to make sure nothing happens to that person in this jail. [43:06.560 --> 43:12.160] And I want you to make sure nothing happens to him in this jail. [43:12.160 --> 43:18.280] The sheriff was furious, it was Phil Ryan, an ex Texas Ranger. [43:18.280 --> 43:27.080] Two days later this guy is in some other county, they got him out of there. [43:27.080 --> 43:34.200] But he ruined my investigation because I was afraid I'd get this guy killed if I pursued. [43:34.200 --> 43:37.720] Anyway, happens sometimes. [43:37.720 --> 43:42.560] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [43:42.560 --> 43:46.440] And we're about to go to our sponsors and now would be a good time to check out our [43:46.440 --> 43:53.200] sponsors and we have some good products to help you achieve the kinds of remedies we [43:53.200 --> 43:55.280] talk about on this show. [43:55.280 --> 44:00.320] So Monday Break is a good time to check them out, help us keep this on the air. [44:00.320 --> 44:01.440] I love logos. [44:01.440 --> 44:04.640] Without the shows on this network I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.640 --> 44:07.480] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.480 --> 44:08.480] I need my truth fixed. [44:08.480 --> 44:10.680] I'd be lost without logos. [44:10.680 --> 44:13.320] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.320 --> 44:17.160] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:17.160 --> 44:20.520] have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [44:20.520 --> 44:22.360] How can I help logos? [44:22.360 --> 44:24.080] Well I'm glad you asked. [44:24.080 --> 44:27.000] Whenever you order anything from Amazon you can help logos. [44:27.000 --> 44:29.440] You can order new supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.440 --> 44:31.560] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.560 --> 44:37.920] Now go to logosradionetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.920 --> 44:43.580] Now when you order anything from Amazon you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.580 --> 44:44.580] Do I pay extra? [44:44.580 --> 44:45.580] No. [44:45.580 --> 44:47.320] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.320 --> 44:48.320] No. [44:48.320 --> 44:49.320] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.320 --> 44:50.320] No. [44:50.320 --> 44:51.320] I mean yes. [44:51.320 --> 44:56.000] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [44:56.000 --> 44:57.000] Thank you so much. [44:57.000 --> 44:58.000] You're welcome. [44:58.000 --> 44:59.000] Happy holidays, logos. [44:59.000 --> 45:04.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.520 --> 45:11.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand 4CD course [45:11.240 --> 45:15.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.480 --> 45:23.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.120 --> 45:28.120] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:28.120 --> 45:34.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.680 --> 45:39.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.440 --> 45:43.680] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.680 --> 45:49.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.960 --> 45:52.520] pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.520 --> 46:14.760] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EASY. [46:14.760 --> 46:31.080] Okay, we are back. [46:31.080 --> 46:37.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 9th day of July [46:37.360 --> 46:42.640] 2020 and we're going to Scott in Texas. [46:42.640 --> 46:51.760] To kind of bushwhack you there, Scott, what was it you wanted to enlighten us on? [46:51.760 --> 46:52.760] That was it. [46:52.760 --> 46:54.240] I was just catching in with the conversation. [46:54.240 --> 47:00.240] I pretty much can get in on anything seems like right about now. [47:00.240 --> 47:09.600] Okay, then in that case, we got two people on the board and we got four segments left. [47:09.600 --> 47:15.280] About one hour, so I'm going to go ahead and go to David in Texas. [47:15.280 --> 47:19.440] David, what do you have for us today? [47:19.440 --> 47:23.240] Hello, David. [47:23.240 --> 47:26.960] David, are you there? [47:26.960 --> 47:30.800] We can't hear you. [47:30.800 --> 47:32.040] Did we put you to sleep? [47:32.040 --> 47:37.760] If you fell asleep during the last segment, it was Scott's fault because we don't take [47:37.760 --> 47:40.520] responsibility for anything. [47:40.520 --> 47:47.040] Okay, David must have dropped off or fell asleep or something. [47:47.040 --> 47:50.800] Okay, now we're going to go to Danny in Tennessee. [47:50.800 --> 47:52.840] Hello, Danny. [47:52.840 --> 47:54.560] What do you have for us today? [47:54.560 --> 48:02.760] Well, a few things you may have heard of it before, but in Tennessee, they've got this [48:02.760 --> 48:08.600] deal about suspending licenses that don't exist. [48:08.600 --> 48:16.160] This one certified driver record that I've got shows that they suspended a license with [48:16.160 --> 48:17.160] a Texas address. [48:17.160 --> 48:25.200] I don't know if they were suspending a Texas license or a Tennessee license that was issued [48:25.200 --> 48:29.000] to a Texas address. [48:29.000 --> 48:39.920] This thing is a problem, and it's even come up in a federal lawsuit that I found out about. [48:39.920 --> 48:45.440] That wasn't the main issue in there, but it was talking about suspending people's licenses [48:45.440 --> 48:55.920] for failing to pay some court costs and things, and without notice at times. [48:55.920 --> 49:02.880] And Brett, don't you know something about that? [49:02.880 --> 49:14.600] Well, the unfortunate experience of having a license that was expired get retroactively [49:14.600 --> 49:20.880] suspended, but no, this is a new one on me, a license that doesn't exist, and they put [49:20.880 --> 49:22.040] a suspension on it. [49:22.040 --> 49:23.040] Yeah, this is what- [49:23.040 --> 49:24.280] I don't see how that makes any sense. [49:24.280 --> 49:25.400] What is that, like a placeholder? [49:25.400 --> 49:28.160] If you ever try to get a license, it's gonna be suspended? [49:28.160 --> 49:35.800] Yes, if you don't have a license and you drive without a license, what they will do is create [49:35.800 --> 49:44.080] a license for you and then revoke that license. [49:44.080 --> 49:45.480] Scott's still listening. [49:45.480 --> 49:52.400] I think that's what happened to him, because I know he had his license revoked for non-payment [49:52.400 --> 49:55.120] of a fee, a fine or fee. [49:55.120 --> 49:58.840] That's what started his fight with him, was no license. [49:58.840 --> 50:00.840] Me too. [50:00.840 --> 50:03.440] This is a common thing. [50:03.440 --> 50:07.560] We finally got the MSB gone, though. [50:07.560 --> 50:13.440] MSB, Municipal Services Bureau, is a pile of about 400-something lawyers in Austin, [50:13.440 --> 50:23.020] and their job was to act as a collection agency when there would be false reports to the DPS, [50:23.020 --> 50:32.760] the state troopers, the Department of Public Safety, municipalities would report that there [50:32.760 --> 50:36.120] had been a final conviction on something, because then they can go ahead and start collecting [50:36.120 --> 50:37.820] those fees. [50:37.820 --> 50:43.480] Even if you hadn't been to court yet, they might not have even invited you to a court. [50:43.480 --> 50:45.520] CUMBE's doing that to me right now. [50:45.520 --> 50:51.040] They already did it to me, and I hit them hard for it. [50:51.040 --> 50:58.480] Before the last day to show up, or on the last day, I drove 600 miles from Tennessee [50:58.480 --> 51:08.720] to CUMBE, Texas, to file these motions and pleadings, and they refused to accept them. [51:08.720 --> 51:12.720] There was no judge at the time. [51:12.720 --> 51:16.600] They were missing a judge. [51:16.600 --> 51:17.600] The mayor was there. [51:17.600 --> 51:19.560] Oh, years. [51:19.560 --> 51:25.720] The mayor was there, so I asked her to take them, since she's officially a magistrate, [51:25.720 --> 51:28.640] and she wouldn't take them, and she said, well, I need to call the prosecutor. [51:28.640 --> 51:32.060] I said, well, I don't talk to prosecuting attorneys. [51:32.060 --> 51:33.280] They always get excited. [51:33.280 --> 51:35.040] Well, she's a real nice lady. [51:35.040 --> 51:36.040] Well, maybe. [51:36.040 --> 51:40.480] But if you insist I talk to the prosecuting attorney, I need security here. [51:40.480 --> 51:44.720] Well, Mr. Kelton, you don't have anything to worry about here. [51:44.720 --> 51:47.840] I said, oh, yes, I do. [51:47.840 --> 51:52.640] When I talk to prosecuting attorneys, they get real excited, and they have a tendency [51:52.640 --> 51:59.600] to violate law, and if the prosecutor violates the law, I'm going to need a security here [51:59.600 --> 52:04.840] so I can have her arrested, and she didn't like it, but she called in a policeman to [52:04.840 --> 52:11.000] act as a security, and while I'm waiting for him, I told her, I said, oh, you'll [52:11.000 --> 52:12.000] like this. [52:12.000 --> 52:13.680] This would be great fun. [52:13.680 --> 52:19.280] And I asked the bailiff to arrest the prosecuting attorney. [52:19.280 --> 52:20.700] Watch the bailiff. [52:20.700 --> 52:25.560] You get to watch him do this little chicken dance where he starts shifting from one foot [52:25.560 --> 52:26.560] to the other. [52:26.560 --> 52:29.440] Oh, it's so funny you won't believe it. [52:29.440 --> 52:35.520] So the prosecutor comes, and she was nice at first, and then she started to get huffy [52:35.520 --> 52:43.040] puffy with me, and I said, Mr. bailiff, I want you to arrest this prosecutor and the [52:43.040 --> 52:44.040] mayor. [52:44.040 --> 52:52.440] And the prosecutor, I mean, the bailiff, oh, well, Mr. Kelton, I can't arrest him. [52:52.440 --> 52:53.440] Sure you can. [52:53.440 --> 52:56.800] Just take out your cuffs, throw the cuffs on him, and drag him off to jail. [52:56.800 --> 52:57.800] That can be fun. [52:57.800 --> 53:01.720] You're just standing around here doing nothing anyway, and he's stuttering and [53:01.720 --> 53:06.860] stammering, and I looked over at the mayor, and I kind of cocked my head at him to look [53:06.860 --> 53:09.960] at him doing the chicken dance. [53:09.960 --> 53:13.240] Oh, she did not think that was a bit funny. [53:13.240 --> 53:15.720] Is that kind of like your wife? [53:15.720 --> 53:18.500] She doesn't find you as funny as you do? [53:18.500 --> 53:20.760] She never finds me as funny as I do. [53:20.760 --> 53:26.000] I think I'm hilarious. [53:26.000 --> 53:33.460] When they refused, I left and got in my car and called the sheriff's department and [53:33.460 --> 53:38.560] asked the sheriff to send somebody out to arrest the prosecutor, the mayor, and this [53:38.560 --> 53:40.240] police officer. [53:40.240 --> 53:46.680] And while I'm talking to the sheriff, this police officer pulls back up. [53:46.680 --> 53:53.120] He pulls right up to my car and gets out and walks over to the window and started to say [53:53.120 --> 53:54.120] something. [53:54.120 --> 53:57.340] And I said, hold on just a minute, I'm talking to the sheriff. [53:57.340 --> 54:03.640] And I went through this whole routine of how I wanted him to arrest the prosecutor and [54:03.640 --> 54:04.640] the mayor. [54:04.640 --> 54:06.560] And hey, you, what's your name? [54:06.560 --> 54:11.080] I mean, tell me his name, his name. [54:11.080 --> 54:14.160] Add him to the list of who gets arrested? [54:14.160 --> 54:21.440] Yes, and the prosecutor, I mean, the sheriff said, well, Mr. Kelton, why don't you call [54:21.440 --> 54:22.680] the Texas Ranger? [54:22.680 --> 54:27.080] Oh, no, no, no, I don't wanna call the Texas Ranger yet. [54:27.080 --> 54:34.840] I'll get to the Texas Ranger, but first I've got to get you to refuse to arrest these people [54:34.840 --> 54:37.400] or to even take my complaint against them. [54:37.400 --> 54:42.000] Then I'll file against you with the district attorney. [54:42.000 --> 54:47.680] And when the district attorney refuses to take my complaints against you, then I'll [54:47.680 --> 54:55.240] file against the district attorney with the Texas Ranger because the director of the Department [54:55.240 --> 55:00.920] of Public Safety has directed the ranger to ask the prosecutor's permission before he [55:00.920 --> 55:02.720] investigates someone. [55:02.720 --> 55:11.800] So I want the ranger to ask the prosecutor for permission to investigate the prosecutor. [55:11.800 --> 55:16.760] And then I'll file against the ranger and the director of the Department of Public Safety [55:16.760 --> 55:21.360] for criminal conspiracy to shield from prosecution. [55:21.360 --> 55:24.840] And this cop is standing here listening to this. [55:24.840 --> 55:27.440] Oh, that was so much fun. [55:27.440 --> 55:29.840] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, I can't arrest him. [55:29.840 --> 55:31.320] I said, that's okay. [55:31.320 --> 55:35.800] I needed to ask, you need to refuse, I will be in touch. [55:35.800 --> 55:41.360] And then I hung up and I turned to the cop, can I help you? [55:41.360 --> 55:46.640] And I know what he's gonna ask, he's gonna ask if I have any more business, if I don't, [55:46.640 --> 55:49.360] he's gonna tell me I have to leave. [55:49.360 --> 55:54.440] And so before he said anything, I said, by the way, how do I get out of here and back [55:54.440 --> 55:55.440] to the highway? [55:55.440 --> 56:04.360] And you could just see him, pressure come off, because he was relieved. [56:04.360 --> 56:09.200] He knew when he told me I'd have to leave that it wasn't gonna be pretty. [56:09.200 --> 56:11.120] But that was all the fight I needed to have. [56:11.120 --> 56:12.960] I didn't need to have any more. [56:12.960 --> 56:18.720] I could have had him for retaliation, but I had enough. [56:18.720 --> 56:24.320] I've got no, I'd learn when I've had, I got all I need. [56:24.320 --> 56:28.600] But now they've convicted me in absentia. [56:28.600 --> 56:33.880] I've never received any notice from them, until a week or two ago, I got a notice from [56:33.880 --> 56:39.380] them to pay this bill or a warrant would be issued. [56:39.380 --> 56:43.840] So now I'm gonna bar grieve that lawyer for sending me that threat that they're gonna [56:43.840 --> 56:50.920] issue a warrant when I know now that they're forbidden to issue that warrant. [56:50.920 --> 56:53.000] See how that works for them. [56:53.000 --> 57:02.760] So, when I get time to get after it, then I'm gonna go back to Combi and go in and [57:02.760 --> 57:04.000] dig through all their records. [57:04.000 --> 57:06.840] I want to see how many of these kind of warrants have been issued. [57:06.840 --> 57:10.320] You said something about how long they've been without a judge? [57:10.320 --> 57:14.520] Well, it was a few years. [57:14.520 --> 57:16.680] They didn't have a judge when they were messing with me. [57:16.680 --> 57:20.840] And then you had a similar experience, what, a couple of years afterwards? [57:20.840 --> 57:25.360] Is that the same, you were saying that's the same thing that happened with Danny? [57:25.360 --> 57:26.360] Danny? [57:26.360 --> 57:27.360] Tom? [57:27.360 --> 57:31.440] No, it's not exactly what happened with Danny. [57:31.440 --> 57:37.880] What happened with you that, that started all this stuff? [57:37.880 --> 57:38.880] Oh. [57:38.880 --> 57:44.280] Okay, well, this was a court case back in 2011. [57:44.280 --> 57:50.840] And I was living in Tennessee then, come up to visit parents, and got stuck with a number [57:50.840 --> 57:56.400] of things, and ended up doing a plea bargain. [57:56.400 --> 58:03.160] And they dropped the driver license thing, and the traders show financial responsibility [58:03.160 --> 58:05.880] and registration, I think. [58:05.880 --> 58:15.640] Well, it turns out that after a year or so, if we haven't shown the documents for insurance [58:15.640 --> 58:19.840] and such things to the court, but I wasn't in Tennessee back by then, I was back down [58:19.840 --> 58:30.360] in Texas, then they sent a thing in to, to the, uh, wait, wait, hang on, let's pick this [58:30.360 --> 58:32.640] up on the other side. [58:32.640 --> 58:42.160] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [58:42.160 --> 58:47.120] We'll be taking, well, we've got three on the board, so we've only got one slot left. [58:47.120 --> 58:50.480] We'll be right back. [58:50.480 --> 58:55.940] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.940 --> 58:58.700] because they struggle to understand it. 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[59:53.160 --> 01:00:00.880] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.880 --> 01:00:06.960] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.960 --> 01:00:12.280] Markets for Monday, the 22nd of July, 2019, open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 [01:00:12.280 --> 01:00:20.280] an ounce, silver, $16.45 an ounce, copper, $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude, $55.63 a [01:00:20.280 --> 01:00:26.040] barrel, Brent crude, $62.47 a barrel, and crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin [01:00:26.040 --> 01:00:37.760] Core, $10,566.52, Ethereum, $227.26, XRP, Ripple, $0.33, Litecoin, $100.31, and Bitcoin [01:00:37.760 --> 01:00:43.000] Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:43.000 --> 01:00:52.560] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [01:00:52.560 --> 01:00:57.880] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day parade, killing [01:00:57.880 --> 01:00:59.880] 10 and injuring 40. [01:00:59.880 --> 01:01:04.880] Today in history. [01:01:04.880 --> 01:01:09.520] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, legalizing hemp in [01:01:09.520 --> 01:01:14.120] a Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:01:14.120 --> 01:01:18.200] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:01:18.200 --> 01:01:22.840] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:01:22.840 --> 01:01:24.920] to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.920 --> 01:01:28.560] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:01:28.560 --> 01:01:33.160] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:01:33.160 --> 01:01:34.160] law. [01:01:34.160 --> 01:01:37.720] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.720 --> 01:01:42.220] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:01:42.220 --> 01:01:48.360] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works. [01:01:48.360 --> 01:01:54.600] As well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:01:54.600 --> 01:01:59.080] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:01:59.080 --> 01:02:01.840] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.840 --> 01:02:06.880] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.880 --> 01:02:11.360] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [01:02:11.360 --> 01:02:13.600] illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.600 --> 01:02:17.560] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [01:02:17.560 --> 01:02:22.720] charged with. [01:02:22.720 --> 01:02:27.360] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [01:02:27.360 --> 01:02:32.480] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [01:02:32.480 --> 01:02:38.120] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [01:02:38.120 --> 01:02:39.400] Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.400 --> 01:02:43.920] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [01:02:43.920 --> 01:02:45.760] its front fins. [01:02:45.760 --> 01:02:50.880] For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.880 --> 01:03:06.240] This is Rook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:03:06.240 --> 01:03:35.760] This is Rook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:03:35.760 --> 01:04:01.120] This is Rook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:04:01.120 --> 01:04:12.160] OK, we are back. [01:04:12.160 --> 01:04:16.400] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Roovelaw Radio, and we're talking to Danny in Tennessee. [01:04:16.400 --> 01:04:23.360] OK, Danny, you were telling us how you got how this started with you. [01:04:23.360 --> 01:04:28.600] You were in back in Texas after getting some tickets in Tennessee. [01:04:28.600 --> 01:04:29.600] What happened? [01:04:29.600 --> 01:04:30.600] OK. [01:04:30.600 --> 01:04:36.280] Well, he had a, you know, went back for court and everything, and ended up, you know, it [01:04:36.280 --> 01:04:42.040] turned out to be a mistake now, but ended up plea bargain deal. [01:04:42.040 --> 01:04:54.120] He dropped the driver license charge because he didn't have one up there, and went on with [01:04:54.120 --> 01:05:02.320] the violation of financial responsibility and that expired registration. [01:05:02.320 --> 01:05:04.640] And well, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:05:04.640 --> 01:05:07.120] Did you have Tennessee plates on? [01:05:07.120 --> 01:05:08.120] No. [01:05:08.120 --> 01:05:09.720] Wait a minute. [01:05:09.720 --> 01:05:13.680] They charged you in Tennessee for violating a Texas law? [01:05:13.680 --> 01:05:23.320] Well, no, they referred to Tennessee, Tennessee Code 55-5-114. [01:05:23.320 --> 01:05:28.600] This is something about Tennessee registration. [01:05:28.600 --> 01:05:32.160] You have to have Tennessee registration current? [01:05:32.160 --> 01:05:34.040] Well. [01:05:34.040 --> 01:05:40.120] That's what they tried to pull on me in Texas. [01:05:40.120 --> 01:05:50.360] They said, out of Pennsylvania, I've got Pennsylvania plates on the truck, and they said that it's [01:05:50.360 --> 01:05:54.080] expired and, well, sure enough, it is. [01:05:54.080 --> 01:05:55.840] Yeah, that was 2014. [01:05:55.840 --> 01:05:56.840] It was expired. [01:05:56.840 --> 01:05:59.600] You're right. [01:05:59.600 --> 01:06:04.640] Are you authorized to enforce Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Code? [01:06:04.640 --> 01:06:09.640] Yeah, I had one in Illinois that way. [01:06:09.640 --> 01:06:13.320] When I first come down here, it was expired for two years. [01:06:13.320 --> 01:06:14.320] He said, isn't that expired? [01:06:14.320 --> 01:06:19.920] I said, yeah, it is, but as far as I understand, you can't cite me for violating Illinois [01:06:19.920 --> 01:06:20.920] law. [01:06:20.920 --> 01:06:22.840] And this was the Highway Patrol. [01:06:22.840 --> 01:06:26.040] And he said, that's right, Mr. Kelton, I can't. [01:06:26.040 --> 01:06:32.640] But if I see that truck again, then I can cite you for violating Texas law. [01:06:32.640 --> 01:06:33.640] Good point. [01:06:33.640 --> 01:06:35.800] I'll take care of it. [01:06:35.800 --> 01:06:38.980] But he didn't cite me. [01:06:38.980 --> 01:06:43.840] How long did he ask you how long you had been in Tennessee at that time? [01:06:43.840 --> 01:06:47.720] Not that I remember. [01:06:47.720 --> 01:06:50.840] I was just up visiting my parents. [01:06:50.840 --> 01:06:53.200] Usually they do. [01:06:53.200 --> 01:06:57.960] Usually they try to get you to incriminate yourself that way. [01:06:57.960 --> 01:06:59.680] What does the statute say? [01:06:59.680 --> 01:07:07.280] Well, I'd have to pull it up right now to say it wouldn't take too long to get it. [01:07:07.280 --> 01:07:13.480] Yeah, because I can't see how that's one they wouldn't have authority to write. [01:07:13.480 --> 01:07:20.680] If you're from Texas and you're visiting Tennessee, then you're still under Texas law as far as [01:07:20.680 --> 01:07:22.560] registration goes. [01:07:22.560 --> 01:07:29.560] Yeah, I would have thought so. [01:07:29.560 --> 01:07:34.280] But let's see. [01:07:34.280 --> 01:07:36.360] Both Brett and I both have had that. [01:07:36.360 --> 01:07:44.760] When the cops stopped you, did he cite you for having expired Pennsylvania plates? [01:07:44.760 --> 01:07:48.560] He sure did. [01:07:48.560 --> 01:07:58.940] And it ended up as being it was held up in court in the municipal court. [01:07:58.940 --> 01:08:09.480] This is the guy that after all of my experiences, having somebody pull up behind me and then [01:08:09.480 --> 01:08:15.520] I have this feeling in my stomach like, okay, get ready. [01:08:15.520 --> 01:08:19.260] Somebody's about to hassle me, get my recorder ready. [01:08:19.260 --> 01:08:23.600] And then they just, whoa, back off really fast or turn off into some parking lot, go [01:08:23.600 --> 01:08:24.600] somewhere. [01:08:24.600 --> 01:08:26.240] And I had that happen seven times. [01:08:26.240 --> 01:08:30.440] And I said, that's a pattern, something's different now. [01:08:30.440 --> 01:08:31.440] They're treating me different. [01:08:31.440 --> 01:08:37.120] And this guy got me. [01:08:37.120 --> 01:08:44.000] I had my tailgate down and he couldn't see my plates, or I guess he was so close that [01:08:44.000 --> 01:08:49.440] he couldn't, he would have had to back off 50 feet or something because the tailgate's [01:08:49.440 --> 01:08:51.800] sticking out. [01:08:51.800 --> 01:08:53.400] And he wasn't backing off. [01:08:53.400 --> 01:09:00.560] He was riding my bumper and then he complained that the tailgate was obstructing the license [01:09:00.560 --> 01:09:03.120] plate. [01:09:03.120 --> 01:09:04.460] And he was upset with me. [01:09:04.460 --> 01:09:11.840] But by then he already had seven cop cars all around and they had stirred up all kinds [01:09:11.840 --> 01:09:18.120] of trouble and he was blocking the hospital entrance and I'm a first responder. [01:09:18.120 --> 01:09:27.200] So he had all kinds of problem after that, but the fact of the matter is, I think the [01:09:27.200 --> 01:09:32.320] only reason he pulled me over is because he couldn't see the license plate. [01:09:32.320 --> 01:09:37.580] Now granted, he should have been able to back off and see it, but he was right up on me. [01:09:37.580 --> 01:09:43.280] If he had seen it, he probably would have been number eight that distanced himself and [01:09:43.280 --> 01:09:45.720] left me alone. [01:09:45.720 --> 01:09:48.920] That's my theory anyway. [01:09:48.920 --> 01:09:54.880] So if he would have gotten that report that says, do not detain. [01:09:54.880 --> 01:09:55.880] I don't know. [01:09:55.880 --> 01:10:00.660] I don't know how to verify that that actually exists, but I was seeing a pattern of behavior. [01:10:00.660 --> 01:10:02.600] So I can only imagine. [01:10:02.600 --> 01:10:05.000] Yeah, they really don't like it when you fight them. [01:10:05.000 --> 01:10:06.000] Okay. [01:10:06.000 --> 01:10:07.000] Did you find that Danny? [01:10:07.000 --> 01:10:08.000] Well, I think so. [01:10:08.000 --> 01:10:13.960] This is kind of a long one, but I think I found the particular paragraph here. [01:10:13.960 --> 01:10:20.600] It says, no vehicle required to be registered under chapters one through four of this chapter [01:10:20.600 --> 01:10:26.920] and chapter six of this title shall be operated upon any highway unless there is a catch thereto [01:10:26.920 --> 01:10:35.360] and it is displayed there on when and as required by chapters one through four, this chapter [01:10:35.360 --> 01:10:42.480] and chapter six of this title, a valid and outstanding registration plate or plates issued [01:10:42.480 --> 01:10:48.760] therefore to the owner thereof for the current registration year or a registration player [01:10:48.760 --> 01:10:55.080] plates issued to the owner thereof with the proper tab, sticker and other device attached [01:10:55.080 --> 01:10:59.800] or fixed there to indicating a valid renewal of the registration. [01:10:59.800 --> 01:11:00.800] Okay. [01:11:00.800 --> 01:11:01.800] Okay. [01:11:01.800 --> 01:11:02.800] Hold on. [01:11:02.800 --> 01:11:03.800] Back up. [01:11:03.800 --> 01:11:04.800] Required. [01:11:04.800 --> 01:11:09.200] Yeah, that's way too many words for most of the cops. [01:11:09.200 --> 01:11:17.040] Under what circumstances is someone with foreign plates required to register in Tennessee? [01:11:17.040 --> 01:11:21.760] Well, yeah. [01:11:21.760 --> 01:11:34.600] So if I drive out of Kentucky into Tennessee, am I immediately subject to citation? [01:11:34.600 --> 01:11:39.280] The way I read the law, I remember looking into this when I was in Tennessee and the [01:11:39.280 --> 01:11:43.200] way the law says, yes, you are. [01:11:43.200 --> 01:11:49.760] Anybody who drives into the state is subject to be excited for not having a Tennessee plate. [01:11:49.760 --> 01:11:56.960] And Tennessee says they can do that because they're not part of the driver's compact. [01:11:56.960 --> 01:12:02.720] So they don't have to honor plates from other states. [01:12:02.720 --> 01:12:10.440] They generally do, but under their statute, they don't have to. [01:12:10.440 --> 01:12:14.800] That needs to be fixed and you might be the right one to fix it. [01:12:14.800 --> 01:12:24.000] I'm looking for that, but I kind of got to stay loose walking around to make paperwork [01:12:24.000 --> 01:12:25.000] and stuff to do things. [01:12:25.000 --> 01:12:34.280] We've got this trial coming up in about four weeks. [01:12:34.280 --> 01:12:35.280] Is this the trial? [01:12:35.280 --> 01:12:37.720] Are you having your pretrial hearing? [01:12:37.720 --> 01:12:45.840] Do they hear your motions or this is jury trial? [01:12:45.840 --> 01:12:47.960] Have you already had your pretrial hearing? [01:12:47.960 --> 01:12:48.960] Yes. [01:12:48.960 --> 01:12:59.720] Except after we had the pretrial hearing, they did a new indictment and so changed one [01:12:59.720 --> 01:13:14.160] of them from, I don't know what it was exactly, but changed it to driving with a suspended [01:13:14.160 --> 01:13:15.160] license. [01:13:15.160 --> 01:13:17.160] A new indictment? [01:13:17.160 --> 01:13:18.160] Yes. [01:13:18.160 --> 01:13:25.120] After you've already been preparing to defend yourself for one thing, they're switching [01:13:25.120 --> 01:13:26.120] the charges? [01:13:26.120 --> 01:13:27.120] Yeah. [01:13:27.120 --> 01:13:28.120] Well, one. [01:13:28.120 --> 01:13:30.920] The other two are still the same, but that one changed. [01:13:30.920 --> 01:13:31.920] Okay. [01:13:31.920 --> 01:13:34.040] Did it change or did they add one? [01:13:34.040 --> 01:13:37.920] Well, there was three and there's still three. [01:13:37.920 --> 01:13:40.440] They just replaced one. [01:13:40.440 --> 01:13:45.520] So they dismissed one and charged you with a third and another one? [01:13:45.520 --> 01:13:49.440] They don't get to trade and play shell games like that. [01:13:49.440 --> 01:13:52.240] They charge you with something and that's the charges. [01:13:52.240 --> 01:13:56.640] They can't just come later and make up more stuff and different stuff. [01:13:56.640 --> 01:13:58.520] Was one dismissed? [01:13:58.520 --> 01:13:59.680] No. [01:13:59.680 --> 01:14:06.080] I don't remember members saying anything about being dismissed and I don't remember. [01:14:06.080 --> 01:14:10.800] I looked through the file a little while back and didn't remember anything like that. [01:14:10.800 --> 01:14:12.840] What was the charge that disappeared? [01:14:12.840 --> 01:14:20.720] Hmm, I'd have to go back and look a little bit, but it had to be to do with a license [01:14:20.720 --> 01:14:28.240] because it changed from whatever it was with a license to a suspended license. [01:14:28.240 --> 01:14:29.240] Okay. [01:14:29.240 --> 01:14:41.440] I hope you've challenged that as unconstitutional, that you were originally charged with a specific [01:14:41.440 --> 01:14:43.040] crime. [01:14:43.040 --> 01:14:46.000] They don't get to change that crime in the middle. [01:14:46.000 --> 01:14:50.680] If they want to charge you with something different based on the same circumstance, [01:14:50.680 --> 01:14:56.400] they have to dismiss one and then re-initiate a prosecution on the other. [01:14:56.400 --> 01:15:01.720] Well, that is about what they did. [01:15:01.720 --> 01:15:13.440] I might be wrong about the dismissal not being official, but what's that first hearing before [01:15:13.440 --> 01:15:17.240] the judge where you put a plea in? [01:15:17.240 --> 01:15:19.800] The arraignment hearing is what they generally call it. [01:15:19.800 --> 01:15:23.680] They do another arraignment under the new indictment. [01:15:23.680 --> 01:15:26.840] Did they do that? [01:15:26.840 --> 01:15:27.840] The new arraignment? [01:15:27.840 --> 01:15:28.840] Yeah. [01:15:28.840 --> 01:15:29.840] Yes. [01:15:29.840 --> 01:15:36.640] Did they give you notice that the original one was dismissed? [01:15:36.640 --> 01:15:38.840] No. [01:15:38.840 --> 01:15:43.640] So now you have a charge, you have four charges against you. [01:15:43.640 --> 01:15:49.840] No, the new indictment just shows three, both the superseding indictment. [01:15:49.840 --> 01:15:54.440] Okay, superseding indictment. [01:15:54.440 --> 01:15:58.440] What does Tennessee call a superseding indictment? [01:15:58.440 --> 01:16:05.440] Well, when they take the original indictment and then change something, go back to the [01:16:05.440 --> 01:16:12.720] grand jury supposedly, and do another one. [01:16:12.720 --> 01:16:17.240] Okay, because the Fed does something similar. [01:16:17.240 --> 01:16:21.560] That's too complicated, there's a big problem with that. [01:16:21.560 --> 01:16:26.000] We'll talk about that another time, about how the Fed's used superseding indictments [01:16:26.000 --> 01:16:31.640] and used a rubber stamp to rubber stamp the indictments in place of the grand jury. [01:16:31.640 --> 01:16:36.160] Well, in Texas, we might need to look and see what it is in Tennessee, but in Texas [01:16:36.160 --> 01:16:44.560] we have Code of Criminal Procedure 2810 subsection C, and I'll tell you some more about it after [01:16:44.560 --> 01:16:51.520] the sponsors, but it's saying that they can't change the charges over the defendant's objection [01:16:51.520 --> 01:17:00.720] as to former substance if they're charging something different, and we'll be right back. [01:17:00.720 --> 01:17:05.720] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [01:17:05.720 --> 01:17:11.680] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [01:17:11.680 --> 01:17:14.760] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. [01:17:14.760 --> 01:17:19.800] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [01:17:19.800 --> 01:17:21.340] which is in heaven. [01:17:21.340 --> 01:17:26.160] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:26.160 --> 01:17:31.700] Join Nana and guests for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [01:17:31.700 --> 01:17:34.840] to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.840 --> 01:17:39.200] Our verse-by-verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [01:17:39.200 --> 01:17:40.980] one chapter per week. [01:17:40.980 --> 01:17:46.160] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [01:17:46.160 --> 01:17:48.280] Christian character development. [01:17:48.280 --> 01:17:54.080] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to [01:17:54.080 --> 01:18:04.560] 10 p.m. starting January 8th, for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [01:18:04.560 --> 01:18:10.480] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway, sponsored by Central Texas [01:18:10.480 --> 01:18:11.480] Gunworks. [01:18:11.480 --> 01:18:15.120] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:15.120 --> 01:18:18.760] Any amount is appreciated, everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.760 --> 01:18:25.180] From Central Texas Gunworks, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:25.180 --> 01:18:27.740] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:18:27.740 --> 01:18:30.940] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.940 --> 01:18:36.520] When you purchase Randy Kelton's eBook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.520 --> 01:18:40.240] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:40.240 --> 01:18:44.800] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [01:18:44.800 --> 01:18:49.160] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [01:18:49.160 --> 01:18:55.220] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, and remember, every $25 donation is a chance [01:18:55.220 --> 01:18:56.220] to win. [01:18:56.220 --> 01:19:22.840] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:26.220 --> 01:19:50.620] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Danny [01:19:50.620 --> 01:19:51.620] and Tennessee. [01:19:51.620 --> 01:19:53.380] We need to move this kind of quickly. [01:19:53.380 --> 01:19:57.100] We've got three more segments, two more callers. [01:19:57.100 --> 01:20:02.540] Danny, Brett is looking up superseding indictment in Tennessee. [01:20:02.540 --> 01:20:11.500] Yeah, I've found here where it says in Rule 7, indictments, presentments, and information, [01:20:11.500 --> 01:20:19.140] and under subsection B and subsection 2 of that, it says, well, B says amending indictments, [01:20:19.140 --> 01:20:20.420] presentments, and information. [01:20:20.420 --> 01:20:26.580] So the amendments are the changes, and they've got subsection 1 is with defendant's consent, [01:20:26.580 --> 01:20:29.140] subsection 2 is without. [01:20:29.140 --> 01:20:36.160] Without defendant's consent and before jeopardy attaches, the court may permit such an amendment [01:20:36.160 --> 01:20:42.540] if no additional or different offense is charged and no substantial right of the defendant [01:20:42.540 --> 01:20:46.540] is prejudiced. [01:20:46.540 --> 01:20:51.500] Did they have your permission? [01:20:51.500 --> 01:20:52.900] Now they have to ask your permission. [01:20:52.900 --> 01:20:58.500] This doesn't say, this says with permission. [01:20:58.500 --> 01:21:04.420] With defendant's consent, well, they might say that he tacitly consented, implied consent [01:21:04.420 --> 01:21:05.780] because he didn't object, right? [01:21:05.780 --> 01:21:08.780] They could make up whatever they want. [01:21:08.780 --> 01:21:14.900] I would suggest be very clear, loud and clear, I do not consent and go ahead and put an objection [01:21:14.900 --> 01:21:19.460] in there so they can't play any games about that. [01:21:19.460 --> 01:21:25.500] Okay, but that was a while back when- It doesn't matter. [01:21:25.500 --> 01:21:28.500] When does jeopardy attach in Tennessee? [01:21:28.500 --> 01:21:34.620] Yeah, it does have additional jeopardy, a good bit. [01:21:34.620 --> 01:21:39.380] No, this has to, that said it had to be done before jeopardy attached. [01:21:39.380 --> 01:21:40.380] Right. [01:21:40.380 --> 01:21:46.300] Once you're arrested, I would think jeopardy attached is at that point. [01:21:46.300 --> 01:21:51.620] You need to look up, when does jeopardy attach in Tennessee? [01:21:51.620 --> 01:21:56.820] In Texas, it's only when the first witness is sworn in. [01:21:56.820 --> 01:22:01.340] So they're up there ready to, or the first evidence is presented. [01:22:01.340 --> 01:22:04.820] So that's in the courtroom. [01:22:04.820 --> 01:22:09.620] That's at the time of, you've already been hassled and hassled and hassled and then they [01:22:09.620 --> 01:22:12.780] finally say, okay, now jeopardy attaches. [01:22:12.780 --> 01:22:24.780] Okay, do you really need to look that up, Danny, about what they mean by with the accused [01:22:24.780 --> 01:22:28.100] consent and how they can imply consent? [01:22:28.100 --> 01:22:34.180] Yeah, well, I didn't know ahead of time, I knew there was a hearing and the hearing turned [01:22:34.180 --> 01:22:42.020] out to be arraignment, a new arraignment that I wasn't really told was what it was. [01:22:42.020 --> 01:22:50.260] Okay, so if they arraigned you, then they had already done the superseding indictment. [01:22:50.260 --> 01:22:54.500] They can't arraign you on a charge if the charge hasn't already been made. [01:22:54.500 --> 01:22:59.580] So they didn't give you opportunity to object, they didn't seek your consent. [01:22:59.580 --> 01:23:01.700] So you couldn't have waived consent. [01:23:01.700 --> 01:23:05.380] You should challenge that and move to dismiss. [01:23:05.380 --> 01:23:06.380] Yeah. [01:23:06.380 --> 01:23:11.940] Look that up, that should be an affirmative defense. [01:23:11.940 --> 01:23:19.060] I got a hearing in a couple of weeks, but also did a challenge to jurisdiction and instead [01:23:19.060 --> 01:23:25.220] of doing it the way I think it's supposed to be done, the judge effectively converted [01:23:25.220 --> 01:23:31.620] it into a defendant's motion to disprove jurisdiction and then denied it, but no written [01:23:31.620 --> 01:23:32.620] order. [01:23:32.620 --> 01:23:36.340] Okay, well, that's a good matter for appeal. [01:23:36.340 --> 01:23:42.420] Well, that's what I was thinking, that's an interlocutory appeal too, huh? [01:23:42.420 --> 01:23:46.140] That would be, it should already have an interlocutory appeal. [01:23:46.140 --> 01:23:51.700] Okay, but could do that anytime? [01:23:51.700 --> 01:23:56.780] Yes, that's a point of an interlocutory appeal. [01:23:56.780 --> 01:23:58.580] File it before trial. [01:23:58.580 --> 01:23:59.740] Right. [01:23:59.740 --> 01:24:03.420] You probably want to watch out for 10 days before trial. [01:24:03.420 --> 01:24:09.180] If you said it's a couple of weeks, then you might be right there on that line if you want [01:24:09.180 --> 01:24:10.180] to send them something tonight. [01:24:10.180 --> 01:24:14.620] The hearing is four weeks to the trial date. [01:24:14.620 --> 01:24:17.500] Wait, say that again, Danny. [01:24:17.500 --> 01:24:23.380] I said it's a little less than two weeks to the next hearing and about four weeks to the [01:24:23.380 --> 01:24:24.380] trial date. [01:24:24.380 --> 01:24:26.980] Oh, four weeks, you've got time. [01:24:26.980 --> 01:24:27.980] Okay. [01:24:27.980 --> 01:24:34.980] So get a petition for interlocutory appeal and a motion to stay trial, because if you [01:24:34.980 --> 01:24:39.860] win the interlocutory appeal, trial goes away. [01:24:39.860 --> 01:24:41.540] Yeah. [01:24:41.540 --> 01:24:47.460] So definitely do an interlocutory. [01:24:47.460 --> 01:24:51.180] That'll slow them up anyway. [01:24:51.180 --> 01:24:52.660] Yeah. [01:24:52.660 --> 01:24:58.260] And have you filed professional conduct complaints against the officer? [01:24:58.260 --> 01:24:59.260] Well no, not the officer. [01:24:59.260 --> 01:25:05.500] I was planning on doing it against a lot of their trainers, like the whole academy. [01:25:05.500 --> 01:25:12.420] Well, if you do it against the officer, the officer may resign and hit the road. [01:25:12.420 --> 01:25:13.780] Okay. [01:25:13.780 --> 01:25:22.300] Because that goes on his record and he gets six of those, he can't be a police officer [01:25:22.300 --> 01:25:27.940] anymore, because he can't be insured. [01:25:27.940 --> 01:25:29.380] Scott can tell you about that. [01:25:29.380 --> 01:25:30.940] He said a couple of those. [01:25:30.940 --> 01:25:32.980] We do need to move along. [01:25:32.980 --> 01:25:36.540] Now we've got three callers on the board and we're running out of time. [01:25:36.540 --> 01:25:39.220] Yeah, so if I call them back tomorrow? [01:25:39.220 --> 01:25:41.820] I won't be here tomorrow. [01:25:41.820 --> 01:25:44.060] It's my son's birthday party tomorrow. [01:25:44.060 --> 01:25:48.100] The whole family is going to congregate at my house, so I won't be here. [01:25:48.100 --> 01:25:52.060] So it's going to be a live show? [01:25:52.060 --> 01:25:53.060] No. [01:25:53.060 --> 01:25:54.060] Okay. [01:25:54.060 --> 01:25:55.060] All right. [01:25:55.060 --> 01:25:56.060] Okay. [01:25:56.060 --> 01:26:00.060] We'll get you next week. [01:26:00.060 --> 01:26:01.220] Yeah. [01:26:01.220 --> 01:26:02.420] Okay. [01:26:02.420 --> 01:26:05.380] You can call me in between if you have questions about the interlocutory. [01:26:05.380 --> 01:26:09.820] Well, if you have one handy, I wouldn't mind. [01:26:09.820 --> 01:26:14.060] I do have one handy, but it's for Texas. [01:26:14.060 --> 01:26:21.980] The biggest thing about interlocutory is the formatting and the details. [01:26:21.980 --> 01:26:23.820] So call me tomorrow. [01:26:23.820 --> 01:26:27.220] We can talk about it. [01:26:27.220 --> 01:26:28.220] No, not tomorrow. [01:26:28.220 --> 01:26:29.220] Tomorrow will be real busy. [01:26:29.220 --> 01:26:30.220] Call me Saturday. [01:26:30.220 --> 01:26:31.220] Okay. [01:26:31.220 --> 01:26:32.220] Okay. [01:26:32.220 --> 01:26:35.220] Thank you, Danny. [01:26:35.220 --> 01:26:40.180] Now we have someone from Corona, California. [01:26:40.180 --> 01:26:44.180] You're not in our database, so I'm going to assume you're a first-time caller. [01:26:44.180 --> 01:26:45.180] Hello? [01:26:45.180 --> 01:26:46.180] Hello. [01:26:46.180 --> 01:26:47.180] Oh, okay. [01:26:47.180 --> 01:26:51.180] I didn't know where I was on. [01:26:51.180 --> 01:26:52.180] Yes. [01:26:52.180 --> 01:26:55.180] My name is Melody and I'm from the area. [01:26:55.180 --> 01:26:56.180] Hello, Melody. [01:26:56.180 --> 01:26:59.460] Are you a first-time caller? [01:26:59.460 --> 01:27:00.460] I am. [01:27:00.460 --> 01:27:02.660] I am a first-time caller. [01:27:02.660 --> 01:27:03.660] Good. [01:27:03.660 --> 01:27:05.940] What do you have for us today? [01:27:05.940 --> 01:27:12.860] Well, I was falsely arrested on inauguration day for mentioning President Trump in a positive [01:27:12.860 --> 01:27:13.980] manner. [01:27:13.980 --> 01:27:16.540] I was at court for a choice litigation hearing. [01:27:16.540 --> 01:27:19.460] It's a really long story. [01:27:19.460 --> 01:27:24.100] But the person at the metal detector area, I guess she must have called the sheriff and [01:27:24.100 --> 01:27:27.740] I was going to talk to someone and tell them the wonderful things I thought he was going [01:27:27.740 --> 01:27:30.140] to do for minority. [01:27:30.140 --> 01:27:34.380] And I asked her if she wanted to go into the open courtyard and she would start walking. [01:27:34.380 --> 01:27:39.820] All of a sudden I saw sheriff coming toward me and this one female officer was like, leave [01:27:39.820 --> 01:27:40.820] the courthouse now. [01:27:40.820 --> 01:27:42.820] I was looking around because I didn't do anything. [01:27:42.820 --> 01:27:46.260] I didn't know if she was talking to me, but she got closer. [01:27:46.260 --> 01:27:48.260] She said, leave the courthouse now. [01:27:48.260 --> 01:27:52.660] So, at that point, I asked to speak to a watch commander and she looked at me with rage and [01:27:52.660 --> 01:27:57.340] said, you are under arrest, and violently took my arm behind my back and pushed me back [01:27:57.340 --> 01:27:59.460] in the metal detector area. [01:27:59.460 --> 01:28:02.380] And then she started, she proceeded to ask me my name, I said, I'm no longer talking [01:28:02.380 --> 01:28:03.380] to you. [01:28:03.380 --> 01:28:04.380] You're out of control. [01:28:04.380 --> 01:28:08.100] When the watch commander comes down, I will give him my name. [01:28:08.100 --> 01:28:11.060] And when the watch commander came down, he let her stay in control, so they dragged me [01:28:11.060 --> 01:28:12.060] through the courthouse. [01:28:12.060 --> 01:28:15.540] I had to pass the people, my adversaries, for the choice litigation hearing. [01:28:15.540 --> 01:28:20.820] They took me into a basement, interrogated me for like an hour and a half. [01:28:20.820 --> 01:28:25.020] A sergeant came down, took the handcuffs off of me and told me I wasn't under arrest. [01:28:25.020 --> 01:28:26.100] I said I was under arrest. [01:28:26.100 --> 01:28:27.100] She had handcuffs on me. [01:28:27.100 --> 01:28:28.100] She said, you're not under arrest. [01:28:28.100 --> 01:28:30.100] As long as you talk to us, you know, it'll be okay. [01:28:30.100 --> 01:28:34.300] I said, I'm not going to talk to you if I'm under arrest. [01:28:34.300 --> 01:28:38.180] I will call, I will go and I will call my attorney, but I'm not going to speak to you. [01:28:38.180 --> 01:28:39.500] No, no, you're not under arrest. [01:28:39.500 --> 01:28:45.020] But after all of that, they called the courtroom and told them they had me in custody. [01:28:45.020 --> 01:28:48.980] And then I said, I said, it's going to get very expensive for you if I don't get up to [01:28:48.980 --> 01:28:53.780] the hearing because I'm just going to be my family in this trust litigation hearing. [01:28:53.780 --> 01:28:56.860] And they, you know, kept talking to me or whatever. [01:28:56.860 --> 01:28:59.060] And then they said, okay, we're going to give you a citation. [01:28:59.060 --> 01:29:03.820] I said, you said that you weren't, nothing was going to come of this if I spoke to you. [01:29:03.820 --> 01:29:04.820] And he said, we're going to give you a citation. [01:29:04.820 --> 01:29:09.260] So I thought it was a citation and nothing, and it was two misdemeanor charges. [01:29:09.260 --> 01:29:10.260] Okay. [01:29:10.260 --> 01:29:13.500] What was the nature of the citation? [01:29:13.500 --> 01:29:17.420] It was 148, I believe, disorderly conduct. [01:29:17.420 --> 01:29:23.340] And I think resisting arrest or something to that effect. [01:29:23.340 --> 01:29:28.260] Did you skin the officer's knuckles with your face? [01:29:28.260 --> 01:29:32.620] No, not at all. [01:29:32.620 --> 01:29:37.540] But listen, when I went up, when the officer took me up in the elevator, I went one way [01:29:37.540 --> 01:29:39.540] and the officer went another. [01:29:39.540 --> 01:29:40.540] Okay. [01:29:40.540 --> 01:29:41.540] Wait, wait, wait, hold on. [01:29:41.540 --> 01:29:43.820] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:29:43.820 --> 01:29:47.500] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio. [01:29:47.500 --> 01:29:52.020] I'm not going to give out the call-in number, which we have a full board of callers. [01:29:52.020 --> 01:29:54.780] So stay with us. [01:29:54.780 --> 01:29:57.180] We'll be right back. [01:29:57.180 --> 01:29:59.620] That tripped over my tongue there. [01:29:59.620 --> 01:30:09.060] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:30:09.060 --> 01:30:10.060] on growing. [01:30:10.060 --> 01:30:13.180] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.180 --> 01:30:17.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:17.300 --> 01:30:19.020] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.020 --> 01:30:22.620] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.620 --> 01:30:27.620] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.620 --> 01:30:33.260] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.260 --> 01:30:35.380] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:35.380 --> 01:30:41.020] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:41.020 --> 01:30:42.740] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.740 --> 01:30:44.660] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.660 --> 01:30:48.900] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.900 --> 01:30:53.900] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again. [01:30:53.900 --> 01:30:56.820] All that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.820 --> 01:31:01.440] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.440 --> 01:31:05.000] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:05.000 --> 01:31:08.940] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:31:08.940 --> 01:31:11.220] in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:11.220 --> 01:31:16.380] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.380 --> 01:31:18.620] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.620 --> 01:31:21.780] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.780 --> 01:31:31.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.660 --> 01:31:37.060] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:37.060 --> 01:31:39.060] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.060 --> 01:31:44.100] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.100 --> 01:31:48.100] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:48.100 --> 01:31:49.540] first responders are dying. [01:31:49.540 --> 01:31:50.940] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.940 --> 01:31:51.940] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.940 --> 01:31:53.380] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.380 --> 01:31:54.380] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.380 --> 01:31:56.060] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:56.060 --> 01:31:58.660] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.660 --> 01:32:03.220] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:03.220 --> 01:32:06.020] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.020 --> 01:32:09.860] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [01:32:09.860 --> 01:32:13.820] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.820 --> 01:32:17.020] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:17.020 --> 01:32:20.740] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.740 --> 01:32:24.900] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.900 --> 01:32:26.260] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.260 --> 01:32:30.220] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:30.220 --> 01:32:33.980] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.980 --> 01:32:36.380] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.380 --> 01:32:40.380] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com and [01:32:40.380 --> 01:32:41.380] ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.380 --> 01:32:44.860] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.860 --> 01:32:49.460] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [01:32:49.460 --> 01:32:51.780] documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.780 --> 01:32:54.940] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleOfLawRadio.com. [01:32:54.940 --> 01:33:01.940] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.940 --> 01:33:31.820] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:31.940 --> 01:33:37.860] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Melody [01:33:37.860 --> 01:33:40.260] in California. [01:33:40.260 --> 01:33:47.940] And Melody, you are sitting on a good case. [01:33:47.940 --> 01:33:52.900] So you said something nice about the president in California. [01:33:52.900 --> 01:33:53.900] I thought that... [01:33:53.900 --> 01:33:54.900] You should have known better. [01:33:54.900 --> 01:34:00.780] Yeah, I thought that was a capsule offense in California. [01:34:00.780 --> 01:34:11.740] Have you called the president's office and talked to any of his aides? [01:34:11.740 --> 01:34:12.740] Are you there? [01:34:12.740 --> 01:34:13.740] Oh, wait a minute. [01:34:13.740 --> 01:34:15.460] You unmuted somebody else. [01:34:15.460 --> 01:34:17.300] I unmuted the wrong one. [01:34:17.300 --> 01:34:18.300] Okay. [01:34:18.300 --> 01:34:20.100] I'm sorry, Melody. [01:34:20.100 --> 01:34:21.100] Okay. [01:34:21.100 --> 01:34:23.380] Have you called the president's office? [01:34:23.380 --> 01:34:29.420] I tried after this happened three times and I didn't get any traction. [01:34:29.420 --> 01:34:32.780] I really couldn't get through to anyone. [01:34:32.780 --> 01:34:37.260] But listen, somebody came out to tell me, we all saw the video and we saw you did nothing [01:34:37.260 --> 01:34:38.260] wrong. [01:34:38.260 --> 01:34:40.180] So they all saw a video and they... [01:34:40.180 --> 01:34:41.460] Oh, wait a minute. [01:34:41.460 --> 01:34:42.460] You have a video? [01:34:42.460 --> 01:34:43.460] Beautiful. [01:34:43.460 --> 01:34:45.060] Oh my goodness. [01:34:45.060 --> 01:34:46.060] Okay. [01:34:46.060 --> 01:34:47.060] Have you listened to this... [01:34:47.060 --> 01:34:48.060] Gold. [01:34:48.060 --> 01:34:49.860] Have you listened to this show much? [01:34:49.860 --> 01:34:53.780] This is my first time actually ever listening. [01:34:53.780 --> 01:34:54.780] Okay. [01:34:54.780 --> 01:35:01.580] So we are really, really radical. [01:35:01.580 --> 01:35:12.300] What we do on this show is we actually follow law as close to the letter as possible. [01:35:12.300 --> 01:35:17.580] The radical part is that we expect our public officials to follow the law. [01:35:17.580 --> 01:35:18.580] Okay. [01:35:18.580 --> 01:35:24.640] But I do have to tell you some things that we have come to understand about the law over [01:35:24.640 --> 01:35:25.640] time. [01:35:25.640 --> 01:35:31.780] This is called Rule of Law Radio and I tell people on a regular basis that I am a creature [01:35:31.780 --> 01:35:33.500] of statute. [01:35:33.500 --> 01:35:37.240] I don't do Patriot mythology. [01:35:37.240 --> 01:35:41.040] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:35:41.040 --> 01:35:44.780] Say you have to do something, tell me what law says you have to do something. [01:35:44.780 --> 01:35:45.780] Okay. [01:35:45.780 --> 01:35:47.480] I'm a real stickler on law. [01:35:47.480 --> 01:35:56.100] But at the end of the day, you can never expect to win your case simply because you have the [01:35:56.100 --> 01:35:59.540] law and the facts on your side. [01:35:59.540 --> 01:36:02.100] To think so is naive. [01:36:02.100 --> 01:36:04.880] It is not that way now. [01:36:04.880 --> 01:36:10.820] Never has been that way so long as we have had human beings as judges. [01:36:10.820 --> 01:36:17.580] You can expect to win your case if you have the politics on your side and all politics [01:36:17.580 --> 01:36:19.520] is local. [01:36:19.520 --> 01:36:22.220] Now that is not a bad thing. [01:36:22.220 --> 01:36:27.660] It's only a bad thing if you don't understand that's how it works. [01:36:27.660 --> 01:36:34.900] Once you understand that's how it works, then you begin to realize the difference between [01:36:34.900 --> 01:36:39.340] a democracy and a republic. [01:36:39.340 --> 01:36:46.060] In a democracy, all power flows from the people as a collective. [01:36:46.060 --> 01:36:52.420] In a republic, all power flows from the individual. [01:36:52.420 --> 01:36:55.580] Rights are not granted to the public. [01:36:55.580 --> 01:37:00.460] Rights are granted to the individual and you have standing under those rights. [01:37:00.460 --> 01:37:06.580] I tell people, when you walk into a courthouse, you are the baddest motor scooter in a building. [01:37:06.580 --> 01:37:11.900] Now there's only one reason you're the baddest motor scooter in a building. [01:37:11.900 --> 01:37:16.980] You're not a judge, you're not a prosecutor, a bailiff, a clerk. [01:37:16.980 --> 01:37:19.900] They're all public servants. [01:37:19.900 --> 01:37:23.000] They're the servants, you're the master. [01:37:23.000 --> 01:37:30.740] They forget that at their perils and we will show you how to take them on. [01:37:30.740 --> 01:37:34.700] The thing I'd like to do most is set them up. [01:37:34.700 --> 01:37:42.780] If I can get them to do to me what they did to you, my goodness, boy, here's where the [01:37:42.780 --> 01:37:43.780] fun starts. [01:37:43.780 --> 01:37:50.180] The DA, because I got a defense attorney and the DA sent the charges out, he didn't bring [01:37:50.180 --> 01:37:51.180] charges. [01:37:51.180 --> 01:37:54.340] I sent out a civil suit and they painted the evidence. [01:37:54.340 --> 01:37:56.700] They changed the video. [01:37:56.700 --> 01:37:59.900] Oh, wonderful, yes. [01:37:59.900 --> 01:38:04.940] Do you have, did anybody else video what happened? [01:38:04.940 --> 01:38:09.180] No because my son was trying to and they told him he couldn't video inside. [01:38:09.180 --> 01:38:15.060] But I think it's pretty obvious because she puts my hands behind my back, but then there's [01:38:15.060 --> 01:38:19.100] like three officers that you can't see her put their hands up on me, that she pushes [01:38:19.100 --> 01:38:23.620] me back in the metal detector area and my hands are going crazy. [01:38:23.620 --> 01:38:28.500] So she's trying to stipulate that she had probable cause that she didn't arrest me at [01:38:28.500 --> 01:38:29.500] that point. [01:38:29.500 --> 01:38:30.500] She's arrested me. [01:38:30.500 --> 01:38:34.900] When I first saw it, it totally freaked me out, you know, but I had memorialized what [01:38:34.900 --> 01:38:38.140] happened with the district attorney, with the district attorney. [01:38:38.140 --> 01:38:41.820] I was the state attorney general with the FBI. [01:38:41.820 --> 01:38:47.860] I called everybody after this happened and they took a long time to give me the, go ahead. [01:38:47.860 --> 01:38:52.820] Have you written a complete statement? [01:38:52.820 --> 01:38:53.820] Of the incident? [01:38:53.820 --> 01:38:54.820] Yes. [01:38:54.820 --> 01:38:55.820] Many times. [01:38:55.820 --> 01:38:56.820] Okay. [01:38:56.820 --> 01:38:59.540] That's the first thing I'd want to see. [01:38:59.540 --> 01:39:04.740] When I look at these statements, I'm looking at it based on code. [01:39:04.740 --> 01:39:10.340] If I can find a place where a public official has violated a law relating to his office [01:39:10.340 --> 01:39:16.020] and in the process denied a citizen full free access to her enjoyment right, I don't care [01:39:16.020 --> 01:39:21.780] how guilty that citizen might be, that's irrelevant. [01:39:21.780 --> 01:39:24.620] Public officials don't get to violate law. [01:39:24.620 --> 01:39:29.660] My favorite stories about asking a judge if he had accommodation for the hearing impaired. [01:39:29.660 --> 01:39:31.740] He said, no, I do not. [01:39:31.740 --> 01:39:34.500] I said, well, you have a sound system here. [01:39:34.500 --> 01:39:35.500] You turn it up. [01:39:35.500 --> 01:39:36.500] No, I will not. [01:39:36.500 --> 01:39:39.780] Well, then will you speak up? [01:39:39.780 --> 01:39:40.780] He did. [01:39:40.780 --> 01:39:44.180] He told the bailiff, I didn't say shut up. [01:39:44.180 --> 01:39:45.700] He's to throw me out of the courtroom. [01:39:45.700 --> 01:39:50.540] Well, after the hearing, when I was leaving the courtroom, I pointed to bailiff, you come [01:39:50.540 --> 01:39:51.540] with me. [01:39:51.540 --> 01:39:53.300] I stormed out of the courtroom. [01:39:53.300 --> 01:39:56.980] The bailiff come out and he said, oh, Mr. Kelton, what can I do for you? [01:39:56.980 --> 01:39:59.980] I need you to arrest the judge. [01:39:59.980 --> 01:40:01.940] Why would I arrest a judge? [01:40:01.940 --> 01:40:09.820] First degree felony, I'm sorry, Class A misdemeanor, official oppression, criminal violation, [01:40:09.820 --> 01:40:15.700] 39.03 Texas Penal Code in that he failed to perform a duty he was required to perform [01:40:15.700 --> 01:40:19.700] and in the process denied being the full free access to her enjoyment right. [01:40:19.700 --> 01:40:23.000] Well, Mr. Kelton, what right did he deny you in? [01:40:23.000 --> 01:40:27.500] He denied me in my right to accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:40:27.500 --> 01:40:34.620] Well, I had told the judge that, I told him I had a hearing deficiency and he said, well, [01:40:34.620 --> 01:40:36.060] Mr. Kelton, what's wrong with your hearing? [01:40:36.060 --> 01:40:41.780] Oh, judge, I was down in Mexico the other day and I drank too much of that cheap tequila [01:40:41.780 --> 01:40:43.460] and I lost my hearing aid. [01:40:43.460 --> 01:40:47.980] Well, I was lying to him, I had it in my pocket. [01:40:47.980 --> 01:40:48.980] Why are you telling me this? [01:40:48.980 --> 01:40:51.860] And that's when I asked him to turn the sound up. [01:40:51.860 --> 01:40:57.820] So I told him that he denied me an access to my right to accommodation under the Americans [01:40:57.820 --> 01:41:01.220] with Disabilities Act and the bailiff said, well, Mr. Kelton, why didn't you tell the [01:41:01.220 --> 01:41:04.580] judge about the Americans with Disabilities Act? [01:41:04.580 --> 01:41:13.780] Well, heck, if I'd have done that, he might have turned the sound up. [01:41:13.780 --> 01:41:17.140] This is what we do. [01:41:17.140 --> 01:41:21.980] Say Mr. Judge, Mr. Prosecutor, you wanna have yourself an attitude? [01:41:21.980 --> 01:41:24.340] I see if I can't adjust it for you. [01:41:24.340 --> 01:41:26.460] I have a rule. [01:41:26.460 --> 01:41:37.860] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do because you never [01:41:37.860 --> 01:41:45.400] ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do. [01:41:45.400 --> 01:41:53.380] Every state has a statute that reflects the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871. [01:41:53.380 --> 01:41:59.660] The first section of the Ku Klux Klan Act has been codified into federal law under 18 [01:41:59.660 --> 01:42:04.580] US Code 242 and it says if a public official acting under the color or pretense of his [01:42:04.580 --> 01:42:11.960] authority denies a citizen full and free access to or enjoyment of rights, ask a Class A misdemeanor. [01:42:11.960 --> 01:42:15.620] And every state has a statute reflecting that. [01:42:15.620 --> 01:42:20.980] Melody, that's our catch-all. [01:42:20.980 --> 01:42:27.820] Any law violating any right, you can get 100 a day. [01:42:27.820 --> 01:42:29.860] So these guys wanna prosecute me? [01:42:29.860 --> 01:42:32.580] We'll see how that works out for you. [01:42:32.580 --> 01:42:36.060] And that's why I'd like to see your statement. [01:42:36.060 --> 01:42:40.280] I'll walk down that statement and mark out the places where they violate law. [01:42:40.280 --> 01:42:45.660] Are you familiar with Tina in California who calls into my show? [01:42:45.660 --> 01:42:47.300] No. [01:42:47.300 --> 01:42:51.220] Good, talk to her. [01:42:51.220 --> 01:42:55.220] You have a good authority there to help you. [01:42:55.220 --> 01:43:01.840] And before you do things, back up, make a plan. [01:43:01.840 --> 01:43:08.700] Look at what you want to do and try to anticipate what they're gonna do in response to what [01:43:08.700 --> 01:43:09.700] you do. [01:43:09.700 --> 01:43:16.580] Yeah, like one possibility, Randi was talking about reaching out to Trump's aides. [01:43:16.580 --> 01:43:23.100] So that would be an example of something that you could aim for what you want to happen [01:43:23.100 --> 01:43:26.580] as the result. [01:43:26.580 --> 01:43:30.940] Yeah, we'll talk about that. [01:43:30.940 --> 01:43:34.340] Can you email me your statement? [01:43:34.340 --> 01:43:35.340] Yeah. [01:43:35.340 --> 01:43:40.420] Go to Randi at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:43:40.420 --> 01:43:43.420] You can get that from Tina. [01:43:43.420 --> 01:43:46.660] And I don't just go out and do these things. [01:43:46.660 --> 01:43:49.560] We do a lot of preparation before we start in. [01:43:49.560 --> 01:43:51.700] We wanna set them up. [01:43:51.700 --> 01:43:52.700] Hang on. [01:43:52.700 --> 01:43:57.660] About to go to our sponsors, Randi Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:57.660 --> 01:44:00.540] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.540 --> 01:44:05.660] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[01:44:41.340 --> 01:44:46.860] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meris banner [01:44:46.860 --> 01:44:49.860] or email michaelmeris at yahoo.com. [01:44:49.860 --> 01:44:59.400] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [01:44:59.400 --> 01:45:00.400] now. [01:45:00.400 --> 01:45:04.700] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.700 --> 01:45:11.420] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [01:45:11.420 --> 01:45:14.620] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.620 --> 01:45:19.660] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.660 --> 01:45:23.300] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.300 --> 01:45:29.180] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.180 --> 01:45:34.860] It was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.860 --> 01:45:39.780] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.780 --> 01:45:43.860] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.860 --> 01:45:50.100] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.100 --> 01:45:52.900] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.900 --> 01:45:59.900] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner, or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.900 --> 01:46:29.900] Thank you. [01:46:52.900 --> 01:47:22.300] Okay. [01:47:22.300 --> 01:47:23.300] We are back. [01:47:23.300 --> 01:47:28.940] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Melody in California. [01:47:28.940 --> 01:47:29.940] Okay. [01:47:29.940 --> 01:47:33.820] We have a whole procedure. [01:47:33.820 --> 01:47:37.460] Did they prosecute you, or did they dismiss all of it? [01:47:37.460 --> 01:47:39.460] The DA didn't file the charges. [01:47:39.460 --> 01:47:45.020] I hired a defense attorney, and he said before, it took them five months to send over the [01:47:45.020 --> 01:47:50.500] information, and they also changed my arrest date, and it took some lying to my defense. [01:47:50.500 --> 01:47:51.500] Yeah. [01:47:51.500 --> 01:47:58.820] He told me to watch the video before moving forward, and so he didn't file charges. [01:47:58.820 --> 01:47:59.820] Okay. [01:47:59.820 --> 01:48:04.540] The best fight to have is the fight you picked. [01:48:04.540 --> 01:48:09.180] Since they have dismissed the charges against you, now you get to go pick the fight. [01:48:09.180 --> 01:48:12.380] Well, I filed a civil suit against them. [01:48:12.380 --> 01:48:18.580] Yeah, I filed a civil suit, and through discovery, I finally got the video the day before discovery [01:48:18.580 --> 01:48:19.580] closed. [01:48:19.580 --> 01:48:22.900] They sent me stuff that I couldn't open, and they changed the video. [01:48:22.900 --> 01:48:24.180] The video has been altered. [01:48:24.180 --> 01:48:26.980] Oh, that is wonderful. [01:48:26.980 --> 01:48:27.980] Do you... Okay. [01:48:27.980 --> 01:48:30.460] Are you computer literate? [01:48:30.460 --> 01:48:32.020] Yes. [01:48:32.020 --> 01:48:37.900] Go... Do you have any video editing software? [01:48:37.900 --> 01:48:39.500] I don't. [01:48:39.500 --> 01:48:44.260] Go to... Write down Audacity 2. [01:48:44.260 --> 01:48:47.760] That is a free software. [01:48:47.760 --> 01:48:52.140] If you send me the video, I have some more sophisticated video software that... What [01:48:52.140 --> 01:48:58.660] you want to do is when you bring up the trace, you want to see the sound trace and look at [01:48:58.660 --> 01:48:59.660] it. [01:48:59.660 --> 01:49:07.380] For the most part, when these guys cut and paste, they don't go in and actually master [01:49:07.380 --> 01:49:09.580] these tapes. [01:49:09.580 --> 01:49:16.460] So hidden... Take someone more sophisticated than me, and possibly Debra can do that. [01:49:16.460 --> 01:49:23.180] There are timed tracks on the recordings. [01:49:23.180 --> 01:49:26.820] This is hidden in the metadata in the recordings. [01:49:26.820 --> 01:49:31.620] If you cut and paste that thing, then you have gaps in the timeline, but you can bring [01:49:31.620 --> 01:49:32.620] it up. [01:49:32.620 --> 01:49:38.640] You bring up the soundtrack and look at it and listen to it and look at the soundtrack [01:49:38.640 --> 01:49:44.340] as you're going through it, because we're speaking right now. [01:49:44.340 --> 01:49:52.460] And between... Each time I have to take a breath, there'll be a flat line on the screen. [01:49:52.460 --> 01:49:57.940] There'll be a little bit of a flat, completely flat spot, then there'll be a little bump. [01:49:57.940 --> 01:50:03.380] That's where I... Take a breath, and then there'll be a tiny flat spot and then sound [01:50:03.380 --> 01:50:05.060] to start again. [01:50:05.060 --> 01:50:12.200] And when we master tapes, we find these natural breaks and we cut it there and bring these [01:50:12.200 --> 01:50:18.660] things together, and it leaves no gaps or jumps in the tapes. [01:50:18.660 --> 01:50:26.740] There's a commercial that I do on some of the breaks, and you'll hear me do that. [01:50:26.740 --> 01:50:35.000] Debra says that in that whole thing, there's not two words I said consecutively. [01:50:35.000 --> 01:50:41.100] My takes were so bad that she had to cut it word for word and stitch them together to [01:50:41.100 --> 01:50:43.960] get it to sound right. [01:50:43.960 --> 01:50:45.300] But that's how you have to do it. [01:50:45.300 --> 01:50:53.220] But the point is, they may not have done such a professional job at cutting it and stitching [01:50:53.220 --> 01:50:57.420] it, and you might be able to just visually see where they... [01:50:57.420 --> 01:51:02.980] You'll have a word half said, and then it switches to another word in the middle. [01:51:02.980 --> 01:51:06.600] It'd be obvious that they cut and pasted. [01:51:06.600 --> 01:51:07.900] That's tampering with government documents. [01:51:07.900 --> 01:51:13.180] The video has no sound, the video has no sound on it. [01:51:13.180 --> 01:51:15.180] It's from the- [01:51:15.180 --> 01:51:17.340] Wait a minute, is this from the body cam? [01:51:17.340 --> 01:51:21.500] Yeah, it's from the metal detector area. [01:51:21.500 --> 01:51:24.060] How many officers were there? [01:51:24.060 --> 01:51:27.660] It was about six involved. [01:51:27.660 --> 01:51:30.860] Did you get videos from all six? [01:51:30.860 --> 01:51:36.180] No, I don't think they have body cams. [01:51:36.180 --> 01:51:37.180] I asked for everything. [01:51:37.180 --> 01:51:40.820] The only thing I received was this one video, and I asked for it from all angles. [01:51:40.820 --> 01:51:45.420] And it's a really poor video of me, and it's just bizarre. [01:51:45.420 --> 01:51:47.660] It just really put me back on it. [01:51:47.660 --> 01:51:48.660] Okay. [01:51:48.660 --> 01:51:49.660] Then back up. [01:51:49.660 --> 01:51:50.660] Yeah. [01:51:50.660 --> 01:51:53.860] And better to get Tina to go in and do this. [01:51:53.860 --> 01:51:55.260] Okay. [01:51:55.260 --> 01:51:57.980] There's nothing like having a ringer. [01:51:57.980 --> 01:52:11.960] You pick a day or a span, and you do an information request for all body cams over this time span. [01:52:11.960 --> 01:52:16.300] You don't want them to know what you're looking for. [01:52:16.300 --> 01:52:20.300] And if it's a third party ringer, there's nothing worse than having a third party ringer [01:52:20.300 --> 01:52:22.020] come in after you. [01:52:22.020 --> 01:52:25.220] Were you listening to the beginning of the show? [01:52:25.220 --> 01:52:26.760] Yes. [01:52:26.760 --> 01:52:29.340] About Brett and what he's doing to these counties? [01:52:29.340 --> 01:52:31.140] Yes, I did. [01:52:31.140 --> 01:52:32.140] Yeah. [01:52:32.140 --> 01:52:34.820] I found that quite interesting, yes. [01:52:34.820 --> 01:52:42.340] I warn people who call into the show about what we do is, once you get this, once you [01:52:42.340 --> 01:52:50.340] start doing this, you have to really be careful because this can become way too much fun. [01:52:50.340 --> 01:52:57.180] When you see these public officials doing this little chicken dance, trying to get out [01:52:57.180 --> 01:53:01.020] from under what you're putting on them makes them crazy. [01:53:01.020 --> 01:53:11.820] And the best way to win your suit is to give them a suit that when they look at it, they [01:53:11.820 --> 01:53:16.980] know that it's going to cost them a lot, a lot of money, a lot of time to fight you [01:53:16.980 --> 01:53:19.420] in the suit. [01:53:19.420 --> 01:53:23.100] And that's why we spend a lot of time setting them up before we go in. [01:53:23.100 --> 01:53:31.200] And then you ask the court to order mediation. [01:53:31.200 --> 01:53:36.500] That gives the other side an opportunity to come to the table and then they do a calculation. [01:53:36.500 --> 01:53:42.780] How much is it going to cost us to fight this person, even if we win? [01:53:42.780 --> 01:53:48.860] And since you're suing public officials, they can almost never get attorney fees. [01:53:48.860 --> 01:53:50.420] The officer has been missing in action. [01:53:50.420 --> 01:53:52.420] This has been going on for a year and a half now. [01:53:52.420 --> 01:53:55.460] And so I was getting to the point where I was getting my default judgment against the [01:53:55.460 --> 01:53:56.460] officer. [01:53:56.460 --> 01:54:01.980] So low and behold, she has come forward with the defense, has come forward. [01:54:01.980 --> 01:54:07.660] And they're trying to go to a summary judgment without me even able to dispose her anything. [01:54:07.660 --> 01:54:12.100] And if they're supposed to file an answer or a motion to dismiss, they're trying to [01:54:12.100 --> 01:54:17.300] get to a summary judgment and a summary of the pleadings just to totally, she doesn't [01:54:17.300 --> 01:54:18.300] have to deal with anything. [01:54:18.300 --> 01:54:22.140] And I was trying to tell the judge, this isn't right. [01:54:22.140 --> 01:54:28.140] This is the way that they're supposed to answer my publication is by answer or by a motion [01:54:28.140 --> 01:54:30.140] to dismiss, not to join her. [01:54:30.140 --> 01:54:35.340] He's trying to do a joinder for her to be in the suit with the other sheriffs that she's [01:54:35.340 --> 01:54:36.340] been missing. [01:54:36.340 --> 01:54:38.340] And I was able to serve them. [01:54:38.340 --> 01:54:44.540] And I was like, this is, and then I can't have access to the personnel files. [01:54:44.540 --> 01:54:48.900] I got tainted evidence and now the judge is allowing them to go through the personnel [01:54:48.900 --> 01:54:53.260] files and basically give me what they think I should have. [01:54:53.260 --> 01:54:55.060] It's just really bad. [01:54:55.060 --> 01:54:56.660] It's really bad. [01:54:56.660 --> 01:54:57.660] Okay. [01:54:57.660 --> 01:54:59.260] Set them up for a federal suit. [01:54:59.260 --> 01:55:02.340] Yeah, this is a federal suit. [01:55:02.340 --> 01:55:03.340] Okay. [01:55:03.340 --> 01:55:05.020] Here's a rule. [01:55:05.020 --> 01:55:09.420] Never expect to win in the trial court. [01:55:09.420 --> 01:55:17.000] Your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [01:55:17.000 --> 01:55:22.520] What they will do, the judge will rule against you at every turn. [01:55:22.520 --> 01:55:26.960] And they know that you have an expectation of good faith and fair dealing from your public [01:55:26.960 --> 01:55:28.860] officials. [01:55:28.860 --> 01:55:37.260] And you have been raised to believe that the system is fair and it will protect you. [01:55:37.260 --> 01:55:41.920] And what they do is they betray that expectation. [01:55:41.920 --> 01:55:48.900] I'm a Vietnam veteran and I'm very familiar with the devastating effect of betrayal. [01:55:48.900 --> 01:55:53.500] When you feel betrayed by those closest to you, that's about the worst thing that can [01:55:53.500 --> 01:55:56.260] happen and they know this. [01:55:56.260 --> 01:56:05.500] So they just blow everything off and they know that at first it infuriates you and then [01:56:05.500 --> 01:56:07.740] it frightens you. [01:56:07.740 --> 01:56:10.960] And then it gets harder and harder to fight them. [01:56:10.960 --> 01:56:13.380] They do this on purpose. [01:56:13.380 --> 01:56:18.580] What they're not used to is someone who comes in for no other reason than to set the [01:56:18.580 --> 01:56:21.420] record for appeal. [01:56:21.420 --> 01:56:22.420] So you're just setting the record. [01:56:22.420 --> 01:56:24.980] You don't care what the heck they rule. [01:56:24.980 --> 01:56:25.980] You're just setting the record. [01:56:25.980 --> 01:56:30.100] When they realize that you don't care what they do, you're just setting the record, [01:56:30.100 --> 01:56:32.060] then they back up and do a different calculation. [01:56:32.060 --> 01:56:36.780] How many bar grievances have you filed against the lawyers? [01:56:36.780 --> 01:56:38.540] I haven't, but I haven't prepared. [01:56:38.540 --> 01:56:43.900] I contacted them to tell them, because he's always slandering or libel. [01:56:43.900 --> 01:56:49.740] I called just, oh, and the deposition, he was trying to get my strategy, my work. [01:56:49.740 --> 01:56:50.740] Okay. [01:56:50.740 --> 01:56:51.740] Hold on. [01:56:51.740 --> 01:56:54.140] Let me explain about bar grievances. [01:56:54.140 --> 01:57:00.100] If you file a bar grievance against a lawyer in the state of California, the State Bar [01:57:00.100 --> 01:57:05.500] Association will get that grievance and they'll throw it in the trash. [01:57:05.500 --> 01:57:06.500] I know. [01:57:06.500 --> 01:57:07.500] Yeah. [01:57:07.500 --> 01:57:10.560] And that's a good thing. [01:57:10.560 --> 01:57:15.340] Reason it's a good thing is their insurance carrier knows they'll throw it in the trash. [01:57:15.340 --> 01:57:17.780] So how do they gauge their level of risk? [01:57:17.780 --> 01:57:18.780] By valid bar grievances? [01:57:18.780 --> 01:57:21.960] Heck, they throw them all in the trash. [01:57:21.960 --> 01:57:24.100] By the numbers. [01:57:24.100 --> 01:57:30.180] One bar grievance, your first year in practice, they cancel immediately. [01:57:30.180 --> 01:57:32.900] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they cancel. [01:57:32.900 --> 01:57:36.220] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [01:57:36.220 --> 01:57:42.180] And Brett can tell you the experience he's had with attorneys when he starts bar grieving [01:57:42.180 --> 01:57:43.180] them. [01:57:43.180 --> 01:57:45.380] They start disappearing. [01:57:45.380 --> 01:57:47.680] So you bar grieve at every opportunity. [01:57:47.680 --> 01:57:54.080] If you bar grieve a lawyer and he says anything to you about it or anything to the judge about [01:57:54.080 --> 01:57:57.780] it, you bar grieve him for that. [01:57:57.780 --> 01:58:02.220] Every time the judge renders a ruling that you think does not properly apply the law [01:58:02.220 --> 01:58:07.020] to the facts, you file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge. [01:58:07.020 --> 01:58:10.740] Well, state commission on judicial conduct is going to trash it as well. [01:58:10.740 --> 01:58:16.980] But that puts a mark on his record that raises his bond rating. [01:58:16.980 --> 01:58:21.460] You'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:58:21.460 --> 01:58:24.740] You'll win it if you have the politics on your side. [01:58:24.740 --> 01:58:29.340] And we will show you how to generate more politics than they've ever seen. [01:58:29.340 --> 01:58:30.340] Hang on. [01:58:30.340 --> 01:58:34.480] We're about out of time and Robert, I'm sorry we didn't get to you and we won't be here [01:58:34.480 --> 01:58:35.480] tomorrow night. [01:58:35.480 --> 01:58:38.860] I have a big family gathering, so we'll be back next week. [01:58:38.860 --> 01:58:41.740] I apologize for not getting to you, Robert, if you call back. [01:58:41.740 --> 01:58:43.460] We'll take you first. [01:58:43.460 --> 01:58:46.900] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:46.900 --> 01:58:48.900] Thank you so much. [01:58:48.900 --> 01:58:50.460] Thank you. [01:58:50.460 --> 01:58:56.260] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New [01:58:56.260 --> 01:58:58.020] Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.020 --> 01:59:02.980] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.980 --> 01:59:08.540] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.540 --> 01:59:11.940] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.940 --> 01:59:20.920] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.920 --> 01:59:26.460] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus [01:59:26.460 --> 01:59:30.460] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.460 --> 01:59:33.020] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:33.020 --> 01:59:41.340] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.340 --> 01:59:59.700] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.