[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals Gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.440] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.840] $62.47 a barrel, and Cryptos in order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $200.00 [00:29.840 --> 00:41.440] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:45.920 --> 00:52.640] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on [00:52.640 --> 00:58.240] Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing 10 and [00:58.240 --> 01:07.440] entering 40. Today in history, and recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:07.440 --> 01:12.640] 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:12.640 --> 01:17.120] including Houston, Austin and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and [01:17.120 --> 01:21.440] even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:21.440 --> 01:26.720] or the laboratory equipment to test the earth for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:26.720 --> 01:31.120] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery [01:31.120 --> 01:36.320] of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the attorney [01:36.320 --> 01:40.800] general, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana [01:40.800 --> 01:45.680] has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:45.680 --> 01:52.320] of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso, [01:52.320 --> 01:57.280] Kaima Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.280 --> 02:02.720] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [02:02.720 --> 02:07.520] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [02:07.520 --> 02:11.920] who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [02:11.920 --> 02:16.480] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test [02:16.480 --> 02:25.440] matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half [02:25.440 --> 02:31.040] inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being [02:31.040 --> 02:36.160] only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way [02:36.160 --> 02:41.760] back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the shark secretes a [02:41.760 --> 02:48.080] luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins. For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and [02:48.080 --> 03:16.400] prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Ruth Brody with the lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:16.400 --> 03:26.560] Well, I received my remedy today. Came in the box just like the state. I accepted it for value [03:26.560 --> 03:37.040] right away. It's not true. Not later. We are originators and the pathway seems to get straighter [03:37.040 --> 03:49.360] every day. And I can take anything that belongs to me as good or too good to use. [03:49.360 --> 03:56.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rula Radio on this the second of October, [03:57.360 --> 04:05.040] Friday, Friday the second of October. I'll get that right in a minute. 2020. And we're going back [04:05.040 --> 04:10.400] to Tina. Tina, did you have some more for us? We keep running away from you. [04:11.440 --> 04:17.280] No, that's okay. Learning a lot just wanted to encourage everybody to keep trying no matter [04:17.280 --> 04:24.000] what everyone says and how many attorneys they throw under the bus like Neil Gottfield and Gary [04:24.000 --> 04:29.840] Dubin and Mark Stopper. They don't want the homeowners to win though. As Michael says, [04:29.840 --> 04:35.360] they throw everybody under the bus and just reading some more stuff about it. In fact, [04:35.360 --> 04:38.480] I'm just sending you something, Randy, where someone talks about you too. [04:40.160 --> 04:46.160] Anyway, hopefully someone else has some good questions out there for you and Michael. And [04:46.160 --> 04:52.080] thanks as usual. Well, Tina, before you go, let me just ask you a quick question about that. [04:52.080 --> 05:01.200] Some of these things happened so long ago that they have run into a statute of limitations [05:01.200 --> 05:07.680] and we can't pursue those and we just barely got this one in right before it was too late. [05:08.560 --> 05:14.800] But with what I'm understanding from Michael right now, and Michael, please correct me if [05:14.800 --> 05:22.960] I'm misunderstanding, but it sounds like we would be able to go and find from that same lawyer the [05:22.960 --> 05:31.360] sand mistake or actually crime that has happened in other people's situations that's exactly the same [05:32.160 --> 05:37.760] where Tina's is a little too old to deal with certain crime. But you could say it also happened [05:37.760 --> 05:46.880] in these other 50 situations that are within the statute of limitations. Does that seem like [05:46.880 --> 05:54.240] that's feasible? First of all, it's never too late. It doesn't matter how long ago it occurred [05:55.520 --> 06:02.320] for many reasons. First of all, you can reopen a bankruptcy at any time, [06:02.320 --> 06:10.240] even decades after it's been closed. And it's automatically granted. You just file a document [06:10.240 --> 06:18.480] with the court. And bankruptcy courts are courts of equity is the bottom line. They're supposed to [06:18.480 --> 06:25.760] do what's fair. So they don't have to follow the strict time limits. And a lot of times they don't. [06:25.760 --> 06:34.560] So you can always reopen a bankruptcy. Second of all, statute of limitations run [06:35.520 --> 06:45.520] from when you know or should have known you had a claim. And many people don't know. In fact, [06:45.520 --> 06:51.520] they don't know until they get a loan audit. And the loan audit sets forth all the illegal [06:51.520 --> 06:58.640] things that were wrong with the loan. The statute doesn't run until they got the loan audit, [06:58.640 --> 07:08.240] which was recently. Another way around the statute of limitations is if the other party, [07:08.240 --> 07:17.440] the bad guys concealed their conduct and hid it from you, the statute of limitations doesn't run. [07:17.440 --> 07:27.120] It's called equitable stop. They're stopped. Because you didn't know you had a claim against [07:27.120 --> 07:33.360] them because they hid the information from you. There are many ways. Statue of limitations are [07:33.360 --> 07:41.280] one of the most complicated areas of the law. And there are many, many exceptions. If you're out of [07:41.280 --> 07:49.280] the state, the statute of limitations is told. It temporarily stops. Paused. Paused because you're [07:49.280 --> 07:58.480] out of the state. If you're in jail, it's paused while you're in jail. There are hundreds of [07:58.480 --> 08:05.280] exceptions to the statute of limitations. And everybody should know that statute of limitations [08:05.280 --> 08:13.280] is not a bar. It doesn't block you from filing. Statue of limitations is an affirmative defense [08:13.280 --> 08:21.040] that must be pled. So like Tina's case where it looks like it's too old, that doesn't stop her [08:21.040 --> 08:27.360] from filing the case. The other side has to come in. If they claim statute of limitations, [08:27.360 --> 08:33.520] they have to prove it up. So the door gets open for you. That's right. The burden of proof is on [08:33.520 --> 08:40.560] them to prove the statute of limitations. And again, it's common sense. If you have any good [08:40.560 --> 08:47.600] reason, and it has to be a pretty good reason, but if you have any reason you didn't bring a claim, [08:49.440 --> 08:53.280] if you were in a mental institution, if you were emotionally distraught and you were seeing a [08:53.280 --> 08:59.680] psychiatrist, if you had a lawyer that didn't do their job right, there are a million excuses. And [08:59.680 --> 09:05.200] as long as you have a good excuse and it's reasonable, the statute of limitations isn't [09:05.200 --> 09:13.040] going to be a bar. What will tell the statute of limitations on my practice? [09:15.920 --> 09:23.280] Well, if you didn't know that you had a claim, the statute of limitations hasn't run. And when [09:23.280 --> 09:30.800] you had a lawyer who didn't tell you, he had a duty to tell you that you had certain claims, [09:31.520 --> 09:36.720] and he hid that or he concealed it, that's even more reason the statute doesn't run. [09:39.200 --> 09:46.960] Oh, that's perfect. And that's the law. That's the law in all 50 states. The statute of limitations [09:46.960 --> 09:54.320] doesn't run. It doesn't start to run until you know or you should have known you had a claim. So [09:54.320 --> 09:58.480] if the statute of limitations in California, I think it's three years for malpractice. [10:00.720 --> 10:08.160] So when you find out in a loan audit that your loan was illegal and your lawyer didn't tell you, [10:08.160 --> 10:12.800] you have three years from the day you get that loan audit to file your lawsuit. [10:12.800 --> 10:25.360] The statute doesn't even start to run until you know that you have a claim. [10:27.120 --> 10:32.080] Michael, would you say that's some information that should be included in the initial filing [10:32.080 --> 10:37.200] of the claim, just to say, just to kind of preclude that kind of argument from coming up? [10:37.200 --> 10:46.800] No. You could, but you don't really need to. Every lawyer knows this, and they're going to [10:46.800 --> 10:53.760] be so scared to death when you're talking about them being involved in a crime and them being [10:53.760 --> 10:58.880] involved in losing their law license. The last thing they're going to be worried about is there's [10:58.880 --> 11:06.160] no statute of limitations on losing your law license. The statute of limitations on criminal [11:06.160 --> 11:11.920] fraud is really long, usually at least 10 years, and it can be extended depending on the kind of [11:11.920 --> 11:17.920] crime it is. They're not going to be thinking, gee, maybe I can get out of this because of the [11:17.920 --> 11:23.120] statute of limitations. They're not even going to think about that. [11:26.160 --> 11:34.160] That's great. They're going to be going to their insurance company going, get rid of this now. [11:34.160 --> 11:41.040] Before this lawsuit is filed, and it becomes public, and I lose my license, and I go to jail. [11:47.760 --> 11:48.240] This is... [11:48.240 --> 11:50.320] Does that sound like something you're interested in doing? [11:53.600 --> 11:54.000] Pardon? [11:55.120 --> 11:57.680] Does that sound like something you're interested in pursuing? [11:58.960 --> 12:01.840] I'm always interested in pursuing the bad guys. [12:01.840 --> 12:14.960] Tina, if you get the director of the treasury indicted, you will be the elephant in the corner. [12:19.040 --> 12:24.800] Yeah, Aura's one attorney a few years ago said, be very careful when you go after these people. [12:24.800 --> 12:32.560] These big guys, he said, they have guns and they know how to use them. [12:32.560 --> 12:40.720] Actually, the most dangerous place that I have found are the policemen on the streets. [12:42.240 --> 12:46.640] When you get up to these higher level officials, the last thing they want to do [12:46.640 --> 12:56.960] is have anybody even frown at you. Menukian, when he finds out that this is going on, [12:56.960 --> 13:04.720] you become protected because if anybody says anything that you can in any way [13:05.680 --> 13:10.800] take as a threat, you blame Menukian for sending them. Poisons as well. [13:10.800 --> 13:19.920] Well, this brings me to one point, though. Ken, what Michael is saying here, would it help [13:20.480 --> 13:27.840] and would they listen if other people who have had this kind of fraud wrote a letter and said, [13:27.840 --> 13:34.720] I will be a witness for the grantee. This happened to me. Is that something I think... [13:34.720 --> 13:37.680] It would be of tremendous help. [13:37.680 --> 13:46.720] Because right now, you're just one person and you could be lying through your teeth. [13:48.160 --> 13:52.240] But when you get a string of people, especially if you can get people from other states [13:53.520 --> 13:57.840] and other locations around the country, all telling this grand jury, this guy screwed us, [13:57.840 --> 14:07.040] he screwed us, you got a grand jury of 12 ordinary people. And one of the best things [14:07.040 --> 14:12.800] I ever heard, I have a district attorney in the county I live in and it is my opinion, [14:12.800 --> 14:18.160] if there is a prosecuting attorney in the United States who will [14:19.520 --> 14:26.000] has his moral center in the right place, it's Greg Lowry. I walked into his office one day [14:26.000 --> 14:31.520] and he's sitting with his head in his hand and I said, what's the matter, Greg? He looked up at me [14:31.520 --> 14:41.520] and he said, those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're gonna do. I lifted both hands [14:41.520 --> 14:48.960] above my head and looked up at the ceiling and said, there is a God. I could not have heard [14:48.960 --> 14:56.320] anything better. I get people saying, well, they packed the grand jury, they controlled the grand [14:56.320 --> 15:04.960] jury, they don't do any such thing. In fact, you never know what they're gonna do. So just making [15:04.960 --> 15:11.200] grand jury noises terrifies everybody. And if you've got 12 people on there and if any one of [15:11.200 --> 15:18.400] those people knows someone who lost their house to one of these banks, this is gonna terrify all of [15:18.400 --> 15:26.480] them because grand jury is ordinary people. That is, in my opinion, that was the fourth branch [15:26.480 --> 15:32.320] of government and the smartest thing our founders did. They understood that three branches of [15:32.320 --> 15:38.240] government wasn't enough. They needed a fourth and we created that in the grand jury and it [15:38.240 --> 15:47.440] absolutely is the most powerful tool we have. So file quick and file often. But yeah, if you have [15:47.440 --> 15:58.160] other people, absolutely get them to. Michael, what do you think about that? About what? About [15:58.160 --> 16:04.320] getting a bunch of people? Yeah, she's saying that she has other people who's had the same thing happen [16:04.320 --> 16:12.000] to them and send affidavits to the grand jury that supports Tina's complaint. [16:12.000 --> 16:19.600] Well, that would be a great idea. The grand jury is a very powerful tool, as you know. [16:21.280 --> 16:28.160] And grand juries and district attorneys definitely respond to numbers. There's power in numbers. [16:29.040 --> 16:32.560] And if you get a whole bunch of people complaining, maybe you can get somewhere. [16:34.480 --> 16:39.440] Would all these different people need to be making their own complaints or would they [16:39.440 --> 16:46.640] be appropriate or more effective? Hold on, we're about to go to our sponsors. [16:47.440 --> 16:54.640] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [16:55.440 --> 16:58.720] Carl, I'll see you there. We'll get to you. We'll be right back. [17:00.000 --> 17:04.480] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:04.480 --> 17:10.720] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. Michael Meares has won six cases [17:10.720 --> 17:15.520] in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. You'll get step-by-step [17:15.520 --> 17:20.560] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [17:20.560 --> 17:26.240] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [17:26.240 --> 17:30.880] how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the financial tables on them [17:30.880 --> 17:36.880] and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how [17:36.880 --> 17:41.920] to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, [17:41.920 --> 17:47.520] please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner or email Michael [17:47.520 --> 17:57.040] Meares at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:57.040 --> 18:03.840] to learn how to stop debt collectors next. Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law [18:03.840 --> 18:07.760] traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people [18:07.760 --> 18:12.240] are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.240 --> 18:15.920] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own [18:15.920 --> 18:20.320] private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us [18:20.320 --> 18:25.040] the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:25.040 --> 18:28.800] Former sheriff's deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with rule of law radio, has put together the [18:28.800 --> 18:32.880] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [18:32.880 --> 18:37.040] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by [18:37.040 --> 18:41.600] going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy [18:41.600 --> 18:45.680] of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the [18:45.680 --> 18:50.080] original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.080 --> 18:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.000 --> 18:58.080] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.000 --> 19:28.080] You know what I mean? My friend, Nala Jackson. [19:54.000 --> 19:58.080] Everything is everything to me. That's what I call him. [19:58.080 --> 20:02.080] He's the only one. [20:02.080 --> 20:06.080] Because he's the only one could answer him. They're not business. What we can man say in. [20:06.080 --> 20:10.080] Mankind, you know, is the speed in this. [20:10.080 --> 20:14.080] Tell me your problem, then. [20:14.080 --> 20:18.080] I'll be the one to blame. [20:18.080 --> 20:22.080] When I call you, you will be. [20:22.080 --> 20:26.080] I'll be the one to blame. [20:26.080 --> 20:30.080] Tell me your problem, then. [20:30.080 --> 20:34.080] I'll be the one to blame. [20:34.080 --> 20:38.080] When I call you, you will be. [20:38.080 --> 20:42.080] I'll be the one to blame. [20:42.080 --> 20:46.080] When I call you, you will be. [20:46.080 --> 20:50.080] I'll be the one to blame. [20:50.080 --> 20:54.080] Mr. Michael Pines, we're talking to Tina. [20:54.080 --> 20:58.080] We talked about this over the break. [20:58.080 --> 21:02.080] Affidavits and anything that's sent to the grand jury needs to be [21:02.080 --> 21:06.080] in the form of an affidavit and needs to be verified by notary. [21:06.080 --> 21:10.080] But that would be great. [21:10.080 --> 21:14.080] And the question I was asking for clarification is whether people [21:14.080 --> 21:18.080] should join on to Tina's bandwagon or whether they should [21:18.080 --> 21:22.080] all be filing about their own individual situations [21:22.080 --> 21:26.080] because they all have similar things going on. [21:26.080 --> 21:30.080] They can do both. [21:30.080 --> 21:34.080] That's great. [21:34.080 --> 21:38.080] Which does bring an idea. [21:38.080 --> 21:42.080] If someone has had this happen in a different jurisdiction, [21:42.080 --> 21:46.080] if they were to [21:46.080 --> 21:50.080] get a copy of your email from [21:50.080 --> 21:54.080] the Travis County District Attorney, since it is the seat [21:54.080 --> 21:58.080] of government in Texas, and send [21:58.080 --> 22:02.080] a copy of that with their complaint to [22:02.080 --> 22:06.080] other district attorneys to demonstrate that [22:06.080 --> 22:10.080] if this district attorney decides to stand up and [22:10.080 --> 22:14.080] do the right thing, that it won't be alone. [22:14.080 --> 22:18.080] You think that would help, Michael? [22:18.080 --> 22:22.080] It would help. I'll tell you what I'm focused on right now, which is kind of interesting. [22:22.080 --> 22:26.080] As I said, people [22:26.080 --> 22:30.080] get in gun battles with the cops all the time, and I have one of these right now [22:30.080 --> 22:34.080] when the cops come to evict them. The cops get shot [22:34.080 --> 22:38.080] and I'm going to try to bring to the attention [22:38.080 --> 22:42.080] of the police that they never should have been doing this eviction [22:42.080 --> 22:46.080] in the first place, because it was totally illegal, [22:46.080 --> 22:50.080] and nobody should have been shot, and the homeowner shouldn't be killed. [22:50.080 --> 22:54.080] The police officers get horribly traumatized when they kill people, [22:54.080 --> 22:58.080] contrary to public opinion. [22:58.080 --> 23:02.080] And this is horrible, and it's all of a bank's fault. [23:02.080 --> 23:06.080] And so you go to the [23:06.080 --> 23:10.080] district attorney, and you demand to do a criminal [23:10.080 --> 23:14.080] investigation, and the district attorney will probably do it [23:14.080 --> 23:18.080] because it's probably been in the press [23:18.080 --> 23:22.080] to investigate. You go to the sheriff's department, [23:22.080 --> 23:26.080] or whoever had gotten the gun battle, the city police or the county [23:26.080 --> 23:30.080] sheriff or whatever, and you tell them that they have valid [23:30.080 --> 23:34.080] legal claims, probably worth a ton of money against [23:34.080 --> 23:38.080] the banks, because the banks never should have sent them out there [23:38.080 --> 23:42.080] to do their dirty work in the first place. [23:42.080 --> 23:46.080] And the foreclosure was completely illegal, and by the way, we're sure you've probably [23:46.080 --> 23:50.080] heard of some of the bad things the banks did, like [23:50.080 --> 23:54.080] signing or whatever, and they have to investigate [23:54.080 --> 23:58.080] those claims. If somebody [23:58.080 --> 24:02.080] files information about a crime that's been committed, [24:02.080 --> 24:06.080] the police and the district attorney have an [24:06.080 --> 24:10.080] obligation to investigate it. [24:10.080 --> 24:14.080] You can give them a ton of information. [24:14.080 --> 24:18.080] Oh, that is excellent. [24:18.080 --> 24:22.080] And this is serious stuff, because people were killed. [24:22.080 --> 24:26.080] Cops were shot. The case I have right now in North Carolina, [24:26.080 --> 24:30.080] the guy shot one cop in the mouth, shot the other one in the arm, [24:30.080 --> 24:34.080] and then the police put 18 bullets in him to kill him after a 10-hour [24:34.080 --> 24:38.080] standoff. So it's been all over the news. [24:38.080 --> 24:42.080] So I wrote a letter to the [24:42.080 --> 24:46.080] sheriff and said, I just want to let you know they had [24:46.080 --> 24:50.080] no idea the foreclosure was illegal until somebody tells them. [24:50.080 --> 24:54.080] So I wrote a letter to the captain [24:54.080 --> 24:58.080] of the police department, the sheriff, and [24:58.080 --> 25:02.080] said, I just want to let you know that the [25:02.080 --> 25:06.080] two police officers that were shot have very good legal claims. [25:06.080 --> 25:10.080] The county has very good legal claims. [25:10.080 --> 25:14.080] And by sending you this email, [25:14.080 --> 25:18.080] I am officially reporting a crime that was committed by [25:18.080 --> 25:22.080] the banks because they lied to you and said this foreclosure was illegal [25:22.080 --> 25:26.080] and got you to go out there and do their dirty work when it was completely illegal. [25:26.080 --> 25:30.080] And here's a list of federal and [25:30.080 --> 25:34.080] state criminal laws that the banks violated. [25:34.080 --> 25:38.080] All you have to do is google criminal [25:38.080 --> 25:42.080] violations of the law by the big banks on the internet and you'll get a ton of [25:42.080 --> 25:46.080] his. So it's very easy to [25:46.080 --> 25:50.080] list all the criminal federal and state statutes. [25:50.080 --> 25:54.080] And you have a duty to investigate this [25:54.080 --> 25:58.080] and you should investigate it. The articles in the [25:58.080 --> 26:02.080] press about this particular case in North Carolina, [26:02.080 --> 26:06.080] the police said they felt horrible. [26:06.080 --> 26:10.080] They didn't want to go out there and kill somebody and evict somebody out of [26:10.080 --> 26:14.080] their house and I reminded them, I gave them links on the internet [26:14.080 --> 26:18.080] where during the height of the 2008 foreclosure crisis [26:18.080 --> 26:22.080] some sheriffs refused to do evictions. They just [26:22.080 --> 26:26.080] stopped. [26:26.080 --> 26:30.080] And that's pretty drastic [26:30.080 --> 26:34.080] because a lot of these were judicial foreclosure states [26:34.080 --> 26:38.080] and some judge didn't ask the sheriff to go out. [26:38.080 --> 26:42.080] They ordered the sheriff to go out and evict somebody. [26:42.080 --> 26:46.080] So here you have the police refusing to enforce [26:46.080 --> 26:50.080] a court order. Pretty serious stuff. [26:50.080 --> 26:56.080] It's not me. [26:56.080 --> 27:00.080] Someone has a lot of background noise. [27:00.080 --> 27:04.080] It's not me. I'm all... [27:04.080 --> 27:08.080] It was Tina. I muted her. [27:08.080 --> 27:12.080] Okay, that is a great idea. [27:12.080 --> 27:16.080] Because I know a lot of policemen. [27:16.080 --> 27:20.080] I don't know a single policeman who became a policeman [27:20.080 --> 27:24.080] so that he could be a Jack Broody duck. [27:24.080 --> 27:28.080] And having to throw people out in the street [27:28.080 --> 27:32.080] it's just gotta be horrible. [27:32.080 --> 27:36.080] Well they get PTSD and all the police departments have psychologists now [27:36.080 --> 27:40.080] so they can have counseling and when they kill somebody [27:40.080 --> 27:44.080] I think the counseling is usually mandatory. [27:44.080 --> 27:48.080] It's traumatic. They don't want to go throw somebody out of their house [27:48.080 --> 27:52.080] and kill them or show up and see two dead bodies of the [27:52.080 --> 27:56.080] committed suicide because they were going to get thrown out of their house. [27:56.080 --> 28:00.080] That's a traumatic experience for a cop. [28:00.080 --> 28:04.080] Even if they don't kill somebody, to pick up an old woman [28:04.080 --> 28:08.080] and set her out in the street from a house she's been [28:08.080 --> 28:12.080] in for most of her life, that's gotta be a horrible thing [28:12.080 --> 28:14.080] to do. [28:14.080 --> 28:18.080] It's a policeman. I can't think of much of anything worse [28:18.080 --> 28:22.080] than other than having to shoot somebody. [28:22.080 --> 28:26.080] When Newton had one of them for 27 cents [28:26.080 --> 28:30.080] this old woman got ousted from her house. [28:30.080 --> 28:34.080] 27 cents. So the cops will probably be on your side [28:34.080 --> 28:38.080] if you educate them. That's exactly what I was thinking. [28:38.080 --> 28:42.080] We may get more support [28:42.080 --> 28:46.080] and the thing about that is, [28:46.080 --> 28:50.080] is the cops expect the prosecuting attorney [28:50.080 --> 28:54.080] to support them and protect them. [28:54.080 --> 28:58.080] So we give them tools they can take back to the prosecutor. [28:58.080 --> 29:02.080] Now the prosecutor's standing on this dime [29:02.080 --> 29:06.080] that's just behind this thin blue line. [29:06.080 --> 29:10.080] They protect his officers, his officers aren't going to trust him. [29:10.080 --> 29:14.080] Politicians. So all politics. [29:14.080 --> 29:18.080] This is a great political maneuver. [29:18.080 --> 29:22.080] And you guys know all about the fact these foreclosures [29:22.080 --> 29:26.080] were illegal. You can say, hey, just go [29:26.080 --> 29:30.080] to Neil Garfield's site, LivingLies.me [29:30.080 --> 29:34.080] or whatever it is, and there's a ton of information [29:34.080 --> 29:38.080] about all the illegal conduct of the banks. [29:38.080 --> 29:42.080] And all these loans are completely illegal. All these foreclosures are completely illegal. [29:42.080 --> 29:46.080] And Neil does a good job. His website's [29:46.080 --> 29:50.080] a little too sophisticated. I think he doesn't break things down [29:50.080 --> 29:54.080] simply enough, but it's all there. Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break. [29:54.080 --> 29:58.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Real Raw Radio, we'll be right back. [29:58.080 --> 30:02.080] Everyone knows that walking [30:02.080 --> 30:06.080] is great exercise, but you might know that the way you walk [30:06.080 --> 30:10.080] could predict how long you're going to live. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [30:10.080 --> 30:14.080] and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.080 --> 30:18.080] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself [30:18.080 --> 30:22.080] you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone [30:22.080 --> 30:26.080] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. [30:26.080 --> 30:30.080] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.080 --> 30:34.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought [30:34.080 --> 30:38.080] to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative [30:38.080 --> 30:42.080] to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [30:42.080 --> 30:46.080] New research shows how fast you walk could predict [30:46.080 --> 30:50.080] how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association [30:50.080 --> 30:54.080] reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster [30:54.080 --> 30:58.080] live longer than expected. In case you're wondering, one meter per second [30:58.080 --> 31:02.080] is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's age, gender, [31:02.080 --> 31:06.080] and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional [31:06.080 --> 31:10.080] statistical measures. Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.080 --> 31:14.080] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch [31:14.080 --> 31:18.080] some space to walk in a few minutes. Researchers say it could help doctors [31:18.080 --> 31:22.080] identify older patients who need special care. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [31:22.080 --> 31:28.080] more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:52.080 --> 31:56.080] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to [31:56.080 --> 32:22.080] buildingwatch.org. Why it's health, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:26.080 --> 32:30.080] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies [32:30.080 --> 32:34.080] and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.080 --> 32:38.080] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew [32:38.080 --> 32:42.080] where we will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies [32:42.080 --> 32:46.080] will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [32:46.080 --> 32:50.080] Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us [32:50.080 --> 32:56.080] live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting [32:56.080 --> 33:02.080] January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:02.080 --> 33:22.080] Live free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:32.080 --> 33:42.080] LogosRadioNetwork.com [34:02.080 --> 34:08.080] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Lula Law Radio. [34:08.080 --> 34:14.080] And Tina, I think we're done with you. I had to mute you because [34:14.080 --> 34:18.080] you had a lot of background noise. Tina, do you have anything else [34:18.080 --> 34:24.080] for us? No, no. I've got everything and I'm going to move forward [34:24.080 --> 34:29.080] and I'll be in touch with you all as usual and hopefully someone else [34:29.080 --> 34:33.080] has got some great questions coming up. Okay, keep us in touch. [34:33.080 --> 34:39.080] Let us know what happens and send me some information on [34:39.080 --> 34:47.080] your, the bank Manukin worked for and kind of the specifics [34:47.080 --> 34:52.080] so that anybody, you know, then we'll put out what was the bank name? [34:52.080 --> 34:59.080] On West Bank and Manukin was known as the foreclosure king and he doesn't [34:59.080 --> 35:03.080] like that name one little bit. He gets very upset when you call him that. [35:03.080 --> 35:09.080] Good. That was in his criminal complaint. Also known as foreclosure king [35:09.080 --> 35:14.080] or foreclosure monster and hearing after known as kingpin. [35:14.080 --> 35:18.080] Good. And it just went on from there. [35:18.080 --> 35:23.080] If you wrote that complaint in your style, the grand jury is going to [35:23.080 --> 35:29.080] have fun with it. But anyone who has used One West or been foreclosed [35:29.080 --> 35:35.080] by One West and you want Tina's information or information on how to [35:35.080 --> 35:39.080] prepare and file an affidavit, send me an email. I'll get that to you. [35:39.080 --> 35:45.080] Okay. I want to go back to what we were talking about when we came out. [35:45.080 --> 35:51.080] We talked about this over the break. The idea of notifying these officers [35:51.080 --> 36:00.080] who are doing these foreclosures that what they're doing is just wrongful. [36:00.080 --> 36:06.080] I know a lot of policemen. I don't know a single policeman who became [36:06.080 --> 36:10.080] a policeman so that he could be a jackbooty thug. [36:10.080 --> 36:16.080] Every policeman I know became a policeman so he could be the good guy. [36:16.080 --> 36:21.080] You wanted to help people. He got into this business and it turned out [36:21.080 --> 36:27.080] it wasn't what he thought he was. I doubt that any of these officers [36:27.080 --> 36:32.080] who became policemen imagined themselves picking up little old ladies [36:32.080 --> 36:38.080] and setting them out in the street and taking people's homes away from them [36:38.080 --> 36:42.080] and take everything they own and dump it out on the street. [36:42.080 --> 36:50.080] I can't imagine a policeman other than a true psychopath having anything [36:50.080 --> 36:58.080] but trauma over something like that. This idea, Michael, is just great [36:58.080 --> 37:03.080] because we've got these prosecutors up here and the police expect [37:03.080 --> 37:08.080] the prosecutors to protect them. [37:08.080 --> 37:18.080] The police department has a problem with an eviction gone wrong [37:18.080 --> 37:22.080] and they're going to expect prosecutors to help them out. [37:22.080 --> 37:27.080] If we give the prosecutor something we can use, we may actually get prosecutors [37:27.080 --> 37:35.080] raising issues against the banks for getting the police in this trouble. [37:35.080 --> 37:44.080] Man, I would have never thought about that. Michael, that's incredible. [37:44.080 --> 37:48.080] Well, good. I hope I can come up with a few good ideas. [37:48.080 --> 37:53.080] Oh, that was great. On the show, we look for politics. [37:53.080 --> 38:04.080] We look for the tricks and traps, bar grievances for police, professional conduct complaint. [38:04.080 --> 38:07.080] Two bar grievances, they count in your malpractice insurance. [38:07.080 --> 38:12.080] Six professional conduct complaints against the police officer. [38:12.080 --> 38:17.080] Valid, invalid. The bond carrier doesn't care. [38:17.080 --> 38:23.080] It's his job to charge his client as much as possible and avoid any claims. [38:23.080 --> 38:29.080] So he's sitting there looking for a reason to raise the bond rating on the department. [38:29.080 --> 38:33.080] So he gets an officer with six professional conduct complaints. [38:33.080 --> 38:39.080] He goes to the chief of police or the sheriff and says, hey, you got this guy here. [38:39.080 --> 38:42.080] He is an unacceptable risk. [38:42.080 --> 38:46.080] If you keep him, we're raising the bond rating for your entire department. [38:46.080 --> 38:51.080] What do you think is going to happen to Joe Jackboot? [38:51.080 --> 38:55.080] And he won't have any recourse. [38:55.080 --> 39:01.080] Not only will he lose this job, but nobody else will hire him. [39:01.080 --> 39:06.080] So we file T-Cole complaints. In Texas, it's called T-Cole. [39:06.080 --> 39:14.080] Most states call it post. Police officer certification training, I think is what it is. [39:14.080 --> 39:18.080] So you file a post complaint against them and it stings their insurance. [39:18.080 --> 39:21.080] It puts a mark on their chart that never goes away. [39:21.080 --> 39:27.080] Judicial conduct complaints. I love filing judicial conduct complaints against judges. [39:27.080 --> 39:30.080] Most people think the judge has got to be on your side. [39:30.080 --> 39:33.080] Now you don't have to be any such thing. [39:33.080 --> 39:38.080] His duty to determine the facts and the court's rules of evidence, [39:38.080 --> 39:41.080] apply the laws, comes to him, facts and the case. [39:41.080 --> 39:44.080] If he fails to do that, I sting him. [39:44.080 --> 39:50.080] Because generally, at one point, I'm going to go get a lawyer to pull this dirty rotten, no good, pro se, [39:50.080 --> 39:58.080] off the poor, mistreated, judging process and lawyer and make a deal and we all go home. [39:58.080 --> 40:00.080] Okay, that's my tirade. I won't go on that. [40:00.080 --> 40:10.080] But I really like this idea of giving notice to the sheriff of the wrongful nature of what these guys are doing. [40:10.080 --> 40:15.080] We won't beat the banks at the top, but we may make some headway at the bottom. [40:15.080 --> 40:21.080] And if you start with the cases where there were suicides or shootouts or something, [40:21.080 --> 40:25.080] that's going to really get their attention. [40:25.080 --> 40:29.080] Perhaps especially if a policeman died. [40:29.080 --> 40:33.080] Yes, and there have been cops died. [40:33.080 --> 40:37.080] And that will really be safe. [40:37.080 --> 40:43.080] And the families of those estates, can you imagine they have claims worth millions of dollars? [40:43.080 --> 40:52.080] Linton Samoniak got 18 million dollars and nobody got killed over her house. [40:52.080 --> 40:58.080] Yeah, when I have people calling me, I have an investor I was talking to and he was saying, [40:58.080 --> 41:02.080] do you have any way of stopping an eviction? [41:02.080 --> 41:08.080] I said, yeah, just send them a QRW to send them anything. [41:08.080 --> 41:09.080] QWR. [41:09.080 --> 41:11.080] QWR, I'm sorry. [41:11.080 --> 41:18.080] QWR, just send them a tort letter, file a simple petition with your client or a judgment. [41:18.080 --> 41:22.080] You do anything to indicate that you're going to resist this foreclosure. [41:22.080 --> 41:25.080] They take you off the top and put you on the bottom. [41:25.080 --> 41:29.080] The last thing they want to do is throw you out in the street [41:29.080 --> 41:34.080] and wind up getting any kind of ruling against them [41:34.080 --> 41:39.080] because their liability goes through the roof. [41:39.080 --> 41:44.080] So for me to stop an eviction piece of cake, just file some against them. [41:44.080 --> 41:49.080] If they sell the property, you should see the guy who bought it [41:49.080 --> 41:53.080] for conspiring with the bank to cheat you out of your home. [41:53.080 --> 41:55.080] And he's going to say, why? I didn't do a thing. [41:55.080 --> 41:59.080] He got my house and it's illegal for you to have my house. So I'll tell you what, [41:59.080 --> 42:02.080] you may not have known that the bank cheated. [42:02.080 --> 42:04.080] So I'll tell you what I'll do. [42:04.080 --> 42:06.080] You help me sue the bank. [42:06.080 --> 42:10.080] You sue the bank as well and I'll drop my claim against you. [42:10.080 --> 42:14.080] You take the buyer and sick them on the bank. [42:14.080 --> 42:20.080] In my experience, I've had one bank move ahead after refiling action. [42:20.080 --> 42:25.080] That was in Colorado. The guy foreclosing on the house was the guy [42:25.080 --> 42:29.080] who had bought it at auction previously and sold it to this guy. [42:29.080 --> 42:33.080] And the guy had taken pictures of his girlfriend's 16-year-old girl [42:33.080 --> 42:36.080] in the shower and he was going to prison. [42:36.080 --> 42:38.080] So he knew this one was an easy mark. [42:38.080 --> 42:40.080] He wouldn't get any fight. [42:40.080 --> 42:44.080] That was the only one in some 700 cases. [42:44.080 --> 42:50.080] So the banks are afraid not so much for the house but of other liability [42:50.080 --> 42:53.080] they can create. [42:53.080 --> 42:56.080] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [42:56.080 --> 43:02.080] Randy, you should start a site that's specially for police. [43:02.080 --> 43:12.080] A site that specializes in educating police about foreclosures. [43:12.080 --> 43:15.080] We could do that. [43:15.080 --> 43:19.080] Not only foreclosures but other issues the police have to deal with [43:19.080 --> 43:24.080] from a legal perspective. [43:24.080 --> 43:29.080] We might even get prosecutors to participate. [43:29.080 --> 43:33.080] Could be. [43:33.080 --> 43:37.080] But make it appealing to the police. [43:37.080 --> 43:42.080] We're going to do that. [43:42.080 --> 43:45.080] Hang on, we're about to go to our sponsors. [43:45.080 --> 43:52.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruella Radio are calling number 512-646-1984. [43:52.080 --> 43:55.080] Carl, I'll see you there. We'll get to you. [43:55.080 --> 44:00.080] We'll be right back. [44:00.080 --> 44:04.080] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved [44:04.080 --> 44:09.080] except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves [44:09.080 --> 44:11.080] and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.080 --> 44:17.080] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.080 --> 44:22.080] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, [44:22.080 --> 44:25.080] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.080 --> 44:31.080] Logo's radio network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.080 --> 44:34.080] We have come to trust young Jevity so much. [44:34.080 --> 44:39.080] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. [44:39.080 --> 44:47.080] When you order from Logo's Radio Network.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.080 --> 44:51.080] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.080 --> 44:56.080] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, [44:56.080 --> 45:01.080] and increase your income. Order now. [45:26.080 --> 45:28.080] And now you can too. [45:28.080 --> 45:34.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.080 --> 45:39.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.080 --> 45:43.080] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.080 --> 45:50.080] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:50.080 --> 45:57.080] daily tactics and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:57.080 --> 46:23.080] Go free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:23.080 --> 46:30.080] I'm always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:30.080 --> 46:35.080] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm wishing for. [46:35.080 --> 46:41.080] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no blood. [46:41.080 --> 46:47.080] I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons. [46:47.080 --> 46:53.080] I give my message out to anyone in the shout and distance. [46:53.080 --> 46:58.080] I'm called for bravery and against slavery to show resistance. [46:58.080 --> 47:03.080] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I'm starting strutting. [47:03.080 --> 47:05.080] Okay, we are back. [47:05.080 --> 47:09.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton, rule of law radio. [47:09.080 --> 47:16.080] On this Friday, the second day of October 2020 with our special guest Michael Pines. [47:16.080 --> 47:18.080] And we have a caller on the board. [47:18.080 --> 47:20.080] I'm going to go ahead and go to Carl. [47:20.080 --> 47:22.080] He's been holding on a while. [47:22.080 --> 47:26.080] Carl, what do you have for us today? [47:26.080 --> 47:29.080] Randy. [47:29.080 --> 47:35.080] By hearing that you were interested in what the toothless raider had to say. [47:35.080 --> 47:39.080] Yes, I was. [47:39.080 --> 47:44.080] Did you say truth raider or toothless raider? [47:44.080 --> 47:48.080] Having a little distortion on the mic. [47:48.080 --> 47:52.080] Okay, what do you have to say today? [47:52.080 --> 47:54.080] Check this out. [47:54.080 --> 48:01.080] Unalienable God-given rights matter. [48:01.080 --> 48:04.080] Wait, say that again? [48:04.080 --> 48:10.080] Unalienable God-given rights matter. [48:10.080 --> 48:15.080] What rights do we have that are God-given? [48:15.080 --> 48:20.080] The right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness with private property, [48:20.080 --> 48:24.080] the right of liberty through locomotion, the right of worship. [48:24.080 --> 48:26.080] No, no, no. Wait, wait, wait. Those aren't God-given. [48:26.080 --> 48:34.080] Those are given by our founders through our Constitution. [48:34.080 --> 48:41.080] Our Constitution is the document for those in government to follow as if they are the Ten Commandments written in stone. [48:41.080 --> 48:46.080] They must follow and not violate those rules. [48:46.080 --> 48:49.080] But God doesn't come into court. [48:49.080 --> 48:52.080] God told us to render unto Caesar. [48:52.080 --> 48:54.080] You guys made those laws up. [48:54.080 --> 49:00.080] You guys got to deal with them. Don't get me in the middle of it. [49:00.080 --> 49:05.080] I have guys doing that. [49:05.080 --> 49:11.080] It says to the court that I'm a prosa and I'm not very sophisticated. [49:11.080 --> 49:18.080] And even if the judge is not otherwise disposed against a prosa, that will annoy him. [49:18.080 --> 49:27.080] And he's likely to be disposed against you even when he didn't want to be. [49:27.080 --> 49:31.080] Michael, do you have any insight? [49:31.080 --> 49:33.080] You've been before judges. [49:33.080 --> 49:39.080] How should we deal with the judges when we get in front of them? [49:39.080 --> 49:42.080] Well, I'm not sure what you mean by deal with them. [49:42.080 --> 49:48.080] But like I said, the important thing is to keep it simple and quick. [49:48.080 --> 49:51.080] Because they have way too many cases on their docket. [49:51.080 --> 49:55.080] They want to get rid of cases as quick as they can. [49:55.080 --> 49:59.080] They often know nothing about this. [49:59.080 --> 50:03.080] And they hear, OK, this person didn't pay their loan. [50:03.080 --> 50:05.080] That's all I need to hear. You lose. [50:05.080 --> 50:10.080] Goodbye. End of story. [50:10.080 --> 50:17.080] I sat as a mock judge in a mock trial in Massachusetts once. [50:17.080 --> 50:25.080] And I was really surprised at the difference. [50:25.080 --> 50:30.080] You know, I sit here and think about a judge and I have this one opinion. [50:30.080 --> 50:35.080] But when I set up there pretending to be a judge, it was totally different. [50:35.080 --> 50:41.080] I had one of these guys who was doing the patriot mythology stuff. [50:41.080 --> 50:46.080] And he got up in front of us and they had picked a mock jury off the street who didn't know any of us. [50:46.080 --> 50:51.080] And this was one of us. This guy was on our side. [50:51.080 --> 50:55.080] And we're trying to help him with a case he's going to have in Pennsylvania. [50:55.080 --> 51:01.080] And he's given me all this patriot mythology stuff and I finally called a recess. [51:01.080 --> 51:07.080] And he had a guy helping him that was really the one that seemed to have prodded him into this. [51:07.080 --> 51:12.080] And I told him, this guy here who's helping you, he's not helping you. [51:12.080 --> 51:17.080] If he gets up and opens his mouth again, you have my permission to shoot him. [51:17.080 --> 51:21.080] He's going to get you put in jail. [51:21.080 --> 51:24.080] I'm sitting here as a judge in the case. [51:24.080 --> 51:32.080] The only thing I can hear are the facts and the laws apply as it applies to the facts. [51:32.080 --> 51:42.080] Your personal opinions, these diatribes about how horrible the system is means nothing. [51:42.080 --> 51:47.080] I could not get this guy to shift gears. [51:47.080 --> 51:50.080] This mock jury found him guilty. [51:50.080 --> 51:55.080] They held a second mock trial later on that jury found him guilty. [51:55.080 --> 51:59.080] He went to Pennsylvania and got two years in prison. [51:59.080 --> 52:07.080] How do we get people to understand where this judge lives, what he needs to hear. [52:07.080 --> 52:11.080] It's bad enough if you're coming for a judge's pro se. [52:11.080 --> 52:20.080] How do we conduct ourselves so that we don't make it worse than what it always is? [52:20.080 --> 52:24.080] I mean beyond, we need to make this as simple as possible. [52:24.080 --> 52:25.080] Yeah. [52:25.080 --> 52:29.080] For one thing, I think homeowners should take some responsibility. [52:29.080 --> 52:31.080] There's plenty of blame to go around. [52:31.080 --> 52:39.080] A lot of the homeowners got loans they knew they couldn't afford or should have known they couldn't afford. [52:39.080 --> 52:46.080] They did refinances and pulled all the equity out of their house because they thought the housing market would go up forever. [52:46.080 --> 52:59.080] But compared to what the banks have done, they did nothing and the banks are the ones that tempted them giving a loan to anybody [52:59.080 --> 53:10.080] and giving them, offering them free money and playing on the fact they thought home prices would go up forever. [53:10.080 --> 53:18.080] But they should take a little responsibility plus what I point to homeowners out is look, you're great at fighting with the bank [53:18.080 --> 53:26.080] and you've been living for free now for years, five years, ten years, however long it's been. [53:26.080 --> 53:32.080] And there's an argument that you should have either been paying rent to live in a house or making payments on a mortgage [53:32.080 --> 53:34.080] so you already won. [53:34.080 --> 53:36.080] Be grateful. [53:36.080 --> 53:49.080] If your payment was $2,000 a month, that's $24,000 a year times ten years, that's $240,000 you've got because they did this. [53:49.080 --> 53:53.080] Look at the good side. [53:53.080 --> 53:56.080] Yes, and that's an issue I find with people. [53:56.080 --> 54:12.080] When someone comes to me for help with a foreclosure or even with a criminal or other kind of issue, if they have been in the fight for a long time, [54:12.080 --> 54:23.080] I find the biggest problem they have is not the legal situation, but the anger and emotional load they have built up. [54:23.080 --> 54:29.080] It stops being about the foreclosure and becomes about the fight. [54:29.080 --> 54:40.080] I had a friend who helped people with tax issues and she was at a friend of hers and the friend told her that the woman next to the couple next door [54:40.080 --> 54:48.080] had been fighting the IRS for a long time and asked if you could come over and look at their tax bill or look at their taxes. [54:48.080 --> 54:51.080] They had a lien they were trying to get rid of. [54:51.080 --> 54:58.080] So she went over and they gave her the lien and she looked at it and it had expired a year ago. [54:58.080 --> 55:01.080] And the IRS didn't renew it. [55:01.080 --> 55:03.080] And she said, do you want to get rid of this lien? [55:03.080 --> 55:05.080] And they said, yes, we do. [55:05.080 --> 55:07.080] And she ripped it up through the trash. [55:07.080 --> 55:09.080] Said, okay, it's gone. [55:09.080 --> 55:13.080] The IRS didn't renew it. [55:13.080 --> 55:15.080] They said, what? [55:15.080 --> 55:18.080] They were irate. [55:18.080 --> 55:23.080] They sent an irate scathing letter to the IRS. [55:23.080 --> 55:27.080] The IRS came back and renewed the lien. [55:27.080 --> 55:32.080] Guys, get your focus straight. [55:32.080 --> 55:38.080] They were so angry at the IRS, they lost sight of the prize. [55:38.080 --> 55:47.080] Now, when I take on somebody, the first thing I want to know for you at the end of the day, [55:47.080 --> 55:56.080] what would be the least thing you could accept as a win? [55:56.080 --> 55:59.080] We need to know where we're going. [55:59.080 --> 56:03.080] We need to know when we got there. [56:03.080 --> 56:12.080] When we get there, then we can decide if we want to try for more or cut this thing off and go home. [56:12.080 --> 56:16.080] First, you got to know where you're going and it is a struggle for people to do this. [56:16.080 --> 56:19.080] But it's different than to hear the question. [56:19.080 --> 56:21.080] It's an ongoing process. [56:21.080 --> 56:35.080] Every time the bank offers something, you have to weigh whatever they're offering against the cost, including the emotional cost of fighting some more. [56:35.080 --> 56:47.080] If you're paying a lawyer, you've got to decide is it worth paying more lawyer's fees and lawyers always want to get paid, whether it's a contingency fee or hourly or whatever. [56:47.080 --> 56:59.080] If somebody gets a loan modification and they're happy with that, even though it's illegal as hell, but if they're happy with that, great. [56:59.080 --> 57:01.080] If that's all they want. [57:01.080 --> 57:09.080] Not everybody wants to fight for years and years and try to get millions of dollars. [57:09.080 --> 57:18.080] And unfortunately, in my case, it took me a while to understand the wisdom of that. [57:18.080 --> 57:26.080] I've been fighting the system for 30 years and I like a good fight. [57:26.080 --> 57:31.080] But in these fights, I didn't have a dog in that hunt. [57:31.080 --> 57:39.080] And then I defended myself in Cherokee County and the jury through the book at me. [57:39.080 --> 57:45.080] I wound up getting thrown out when I filed criminal charges against the judge in the prosecutor. [57:45.080 --> 57:48.080] Two days later, I was out. [57:48.080 --> 57:57.080] But after that one, I understood the emotional toll it took. [57:57.080 --> 58:03.080] I sat down to write documents and just had to fight with myself to write the documents. [58:03.080 --> 58:06.080] It was so incredibly difficult. [58:06.080 --> 58:11.080] We try to help people with mortgage issues and we got all these great ideas. [58:11.080 --> 58:24.080] Well, they may be great for us, they may not be great for the other person, so I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what can people, what kind of remedy can we actually make available to people. [58:24.080 --> 58:26.080] Sometimes, Randy... [58:26.080 --> 58:29.080] Hold on, we're about to go to our sponsors. [58:29.080 --> 58:36.080] Randy O'Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rua Radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. [58:36.080 --> 58:38.080] We've got another hour. [58:38.080 --> 58:40.080] We'll be taking your calls all night. [58:40.080 --> 58:43.080] As I see you there, we'll get to you. [58:43.080 --> 59:12.080] We'll be right back. [59:13.080 --> 59:18.080] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.080 --> 59:27.080] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.080 --> 59:44.080] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. [59:44.080 --> 01:00:00.080] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:00.080 --> 01:00:26.080] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:26.080 --> 01:00:46.080] For $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [01:00:46.080 --> 01:01:00.080] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:01:00.080 --> 01:01:05.080] Today in history. [01:01:05.080 --> 01:01:24.080] News. Since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.080 --> 01:01:33.080] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.080 --> 01:01:52.080] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso. [01:01:52.080 --> 01:02:13.080] Kyna Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.080 --> 01:02:18.080] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:18.080 --> 01:02:39.080] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.080 --> 01:02:51.080] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:51.080 --> 01:03:10.080] This was Brooke Rody with the Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:21.080 --> 01:03:45.080] Okay, we are back. [01:03:45.080 --> 01:04:00.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on this Friday, the second day of October, 2020, and we're talking to Carl Toothless Raider and are you in Oregon? [01:04:00.080 --> 01:04:02.080] I still be there. [01:04:02.080 --> 01:04:04.080] Okay. [01:04:04.080 --> 01:04:10.080] Did you have a question or a comment on foreclosure? [01:04:10.080 --> 01:04:15.080] No, I don't, but I have two questions for you, though, real quick. [01:04:15.080 --> 01:04:16.080] Okay. [01:04:16.080 --> 01:04:24.080] Just to add about general law, and the first one is I was going to wrap up what people were talking about in the court. [01:04:24.080 --> 01:04:35.080] When the judge reads what your rights are in this courtroom versus this is a municipal court, this is like an administrative court, so it's not really truly a court of law. [01:04:35.080 --> 01:04:47.080] There's this idea of me asking, or the thing you're asking, what are my unenviable human rights are, or do I have unable rights in this courtroom? [01:04:47.080 --> 01:04:50.080] Okay, point. [01:04:50.080 --> 01:04:51.080] What's your point? [01:04:51.080 --> 01:04:54.080] That's to see what they're going to say. [01:04:54.080 --> 01:04:55.080] What's the point? [01:04:55.080 --> 01:04:58.080] What difference does it make if he tells you or not? [01:04:58.080 --> 01:05:06.080] Well, that we don't know what we're dealing with, and I don't have, that I truly, that they say no, that I don't have any rights. [01:05:06.080 --> 01:05:12.080] What duty does he have to answer that question? [01:05:12.080 --> 01:05:25.080] Since I'm a defendant in the case, that's just me in a position to be able to have the right to ask those questions. [01:05:25.080 --> 01:05:26.080] I don't know. [01:05:26.080 --> 01:05:30.080] I don't know any reason why he would need to tell. [01:05:30.080 --> 01:05:39.080] There are certain things that are codified that a judge is required to inform the party this or that, but those are specific things. [01:05:39.080 --> 01:05:44.080] It's not that a judge always has to make sure that everybody knows their rights. [01:05:44.080 --> 01:05:58.080] Pretty much somebody who's trying to defend themselves or trying to present a claim against someone else, they should know their own rights. [01:05:58.080 --> 01:06:04.080] You're presumed to already know your rights, so what would be the point of that question? [01:06:04.080 --> 01:06:09.080] Are you trying to set up the judge so that you can call him a liar later? [01:06:09.080 --> 01:06:18.080] Well, it doesn't look that he or she, in a deception, where he or she is saying that you do have these rights that we don't have with you, [01:06:18.080 --> 01:06:28.080] but they really don't apply it, or anything other than what, based upon what the case is and what the preponderance of the individual, [01:06:28.080 --> 01:06:31.080] they're really at two rooms in that court. [01:06:31.080 --> 01:06:33.080] Okay, okay, hold on, Truth. [01:06:33.080 --> 01:06:40.080] Back your mouth a little away from the mic, you're overloading the mic and you're distorted. [01:06:40.080 --> 01:06:43.080] Okay, sorry, that's better. [01:06:43.080 --> 01:06:45.080] Yeah, that's better. [01:06:45.080 --> 01:06:49.080] Okay. [01:06:49.080 --> 01:06:59.080] Okay, now the other question I have, I realize that we don't have a right to work, but we have the privilege to work. [01:06:59.080 --> 01:07:05.080] Let it be because of this situation going on with this medical, whatever phenomenon. [01:07:05.080 --> 01:07:10.080] Wait a minute, wait a minute, you said we don't have a right to work. [01:07:10.080 --> 01:07:14.080] Why would you say that? [01:07:14.080 --> 01:07:24.080] Because the employer or the employers have the right to choose, to choose us as one of their workers, [01:07:24.080 --> 01:07:27.080] and that becomes a privilege to us. [01:07:27.080 --> 01:07:32.080] Oh, okay, Texas, some states have a right to work states, [01:07:32.080 --> 01:07:40.080] and generally if you have a state that has strong unions, like I was in Illinois, that's a right to work state. [01:07:40.080 --> 01:07:44.080] Texas is not a right to work state, and they can fire you at their leisure, [01:07:44.080 --> 01:07:47.080] and that's why I asked the question, I wasn't sure where you're going. [01:07:47.080 --> 01:07:52.080] So you're going to an employee-employer relationship. [01:07:52.080 --> 01:08:00.080] Right, well I'm a contractor and a worker's a sports official, and it's to be specific. [01:08:00.080 --> 01:08:08.080] And they didn't like me asking questions about, at this particular club, if they've had anybody that's gone in there, [01:08:08.080 --> 01:08:14.080] in the club, in the club, with a fever, and they said no, anybody has suffered from this illness, [01:08:14.080 --> 01:08:20.080] and they don't know anybody who has, and had nobody that has tested positive for a fever going into this. [01:08:20.080 --> 01:08:23.080] It was necessarily why I worked at. [01:08:23.080 --> 01:08:28.080] Now, I asked the young man that was taking the temperature and checking people into the club, [01:08:28.080 --> 01:08:31.080] have you had any of those cases of anybody having a fever or illness at all? [01:08:31.080 --> 01:08:34.080] And he said no. [01:08:34.080 --> 01:08:40.080] So they decided, well, he told the director, some of them, the assistant director, [01:08:40.080 --> 01:08:46.080] and the director got upset with me and said, well, enough of asking questions or making jokes about this, [01:08:46.080 --> 01:08:50.080] you know, we don't like going to ask them, but it's inappropriate for you to ask these questions and such. [01:08:50.080 --> 01:08:54.080] I said, well, I think this is political, I think this is an agenda that's going on. [01:08:54.080 --> 01:09:01.080] Okay, were you in, is this something where you said you were a contractor? [01:09:01.080 --> 01:09:06.080] Yes, a sports official, tennis to be exact. [01:09:06.080 --> 01:09:10.080] Okay, I didn't understand that. Did you say sports official? [01:09:10.080 --> 01:09:14.080] Yes, tennis empire. [01:09:14.080 --> 01:09:20.080] Okay, so you had a contract with this entity? [01:09:20.080 --> 01:09:30.080] Yes, for that, that particular weekend to assist in officiating and enforcing the, you know, the code of the rules of the game of tennis, [01:09:30.080 --> 01:09:34.080] and to be able to watch into the matches and make decisions if I needed to make those. [01:09:34.080 --> 01:09:36.080] Oh, okay. [01:09:36.080 --> 01:09:44.080] That's, and really might vary the, a signer who was signed with another sort of umpire contacted me and said, well, [01:09:44.080 --> 01:09:48.080] they know the request if they don't want you to ever come back to them as early again. [01:09:48.080 --> 01:09:55.080] Okay, so why, why should they not be able to do that? [01:09:55.080 --> 01:09:59.080] I'm not saying they shouldn't, but if it affects me adversely, [01:09:59.080 --> 01:10:07.080] if that gets around where I can't work at other facilities, where it has an impact on me, do I have any legal recourse? [01:10:07.080 --> 01:10:18.080] If they, they said something to another facility and that facility refused to contract with you, [01:10:18.080 --> 01:10:25.080] you could possibly liable or interfere with a contract. [01:10:25.080 --> 01:10:29.080] Michael, do you have an opinion on that? [01:10:29.080 --> 01:10:31.080] Nope. [01:10:31.080 --> 01:10:34.080] I'm not really sure I totally understand. [01:10:34.080 --> 01:10:43.080] Yeah, he's, he's a referee or an umpire at the tennis match and he asked questions that the place didn't like, [01:10:43.080 --> 01:10:52.080] so he goes to another job and if that other job doesn't want him in because of the first one, [01:10:52.080 --> 01:10:56.080] maybe liable, maybe interference with the private contract. [01:10:56.080 --> 01:11:01.080] If you already had a contract with this other place and the contract's interfered with because the other person said something, [01:11:01.080 --> 01:11:10.080] you could certainly take that to a court, but it would be a stretch. [01:11:10.080 --> 01:11:21.080] The judge would probably say, man up and learn how to deal with your employer. [01:11:21.080 --> 01:11:24.080] You could fight that fight, but it would cost you more. [01:11:24.080 --> 01:11:28.080] Probably you'd fight it and the likely of winning would be really small. [01:11:28.080 --> 01:11:31.080] Picture fights, real careful. [01:11:31.080 --> 01:11:36.080] Alright, I guess we're one day after this couple things to make that statement and just say, [01:11:36.080 --> 01:11:41.080] hey, you haven't talked to me for a long time. [01:11:41.080 --> 01:11:43.080] Okay, well nice to hear from you. [01:11:43.080 --> 01:11:45.080] Take care of yourself. [01:11:45.080 --> 01:11:48.080] Now we're going to skies. [01:11:48.080 --> 01:11:52.080] I don't have a Sykes. [01:11:52.080 --> 01:11:54.080] I got the SK. [01:11:54.080 --> 01:11:55.080] Is that Louisiana? [01:11:55.080 --> 01:11:56.080] It has an L. [01:11:56.080 --> 01:11:58.080] I just have an L maybe. [01:11:58.080 --> 01:12:04.080] Sykes, are you a coon-ass or red bone? [01:12:04.080 --> 01:12:07.080] Hello Sykes, are you there? [01:12:07.080 --> 01:12:08.080] Yeah, who's Sykes? [01:12:08.080 --> 01:12:10.080] Yep, and New Hampshire. [01:12:10.080 --> 01:12:14.080] Oh, New Hampshire, so you know what a coon-ass or red bone is? [01:12:14.080 --> 01:12:17.080] No, I'm not. [01:12:17.080 --> 01:12:21.080] You'd have to be in Louisiana for that. [01:12:21.080 --> 01:12:25.080] We've got Sykes also, it doesn't tell us what state. [01:12:25.080 --> 01:12:29.080] Okay, what do you have for us today? [01:12:29.080 --> 01:12:38.080] I got a question about your legal earth program. [01:12:38.080 --> 01:12:41.080] Have you looked at the website? [01:12:41.080 --> 01:12:44.080] Yep, I did. [01:12:44.080 --> 01:12:49.080] Can that help with removing the fraudulent documents from the registry, [01:12:49.080 --> 01:12:52.080] the county recorder of deeds? [01:12:52.080 --> 01:12:59.080] Well, okay, let's say that again. [01:12:59.080 --> 01:13:05.080] Can your legal earth program help with removing the fraudulent documents [01:13:05.080 --> 01:13:11.080] from the registry or the county recorder of deeds all over the nation? [01:13:11.080 --> 01:13:13.080] No. [01:13:13.080 --> 01:13:19.080] And even if there is a methodology for doing that, [01:13:19.080 --> 01:13:23.080] and that would be a petition to declare to a judgment [01:13:23.080 --> 01:13:29.080] and ask the court to rule that a document was somehow filed [01:13:29.080 --> 01:13:34.080] and not in accordance with the rules of the particular county, [01:13:34.080 --> 01:13:39.080] but each county clerk is an elected official. [01:13:39.080 --> 01:13:44.080] And those records are hers to manage, [01:13:44.080 --> 01:13:51.080] and you would have to take your claim to every clerk individually. [01:13:51.080 --> 01:13:58.080] For every document, or can I submit a document or fraudulent? [01:13:58.080 --> 01:14:04.080] You would have to prove that each document was fraudulent separately. [01:14:04.080 --> 01:14:11.080] Michael, do you agree with that? [01:14:11.080 --> 01:14:14.080] Well, I'm not sure how your program works, [01:14:14.080 --> 01:14:23.080] but yes, you have to go in and prove each document is fraudulent one at a time. [01:14:23.080 --> 01:14:25.080] You can't systematize that. [01:14:25.080 --> 01:14:31.080] Yeah, and my program for legal earth doesn't do anything like that. [01:14:31.080 --> 01:14:34.080] People have to use it. [01:14:34.080 --> 01:14:39.080] What this tool does in areas that I have mapped out, [01:14:39.080 --> 01:14:43.080] it will give you an audit of your position. [01:14:43.080 --> 01:14:49.080] I'm actually working on a audit tool that will audit these documents [01:14:49.080 --> 01:14:52.080] that are in the county recorder's office. [01:14:52.080 --> 01:14:57.080] It will ask you if it has a signature, [01:14:57.080 --> 01:15:03.080] and is there a document in the record showing that this person has [01:15:03.080 --> 01:15:09.080] the power of attorney to file a document in the public record [01:15:09.080 --> 01:15:12.080] affecting this property? [01:15:12.080 --> 01:15:18.080] It will look at the verification [01:15:18.080 --> 01:15:24.080] and look at the credentials on the notary, [01:15:24.080 --> 01:15:29.080] and if you can ask for the notary ledger, [01:15:29.080 --> 01:15:32.080] it will give you a document where you can send it to the notary [01:15:32.080 --> 01:15:39.080] and request a copy of the notary ledger reflecting this verification. [01:15:39.080 --> 01:15:43.080] It will ask if there's anything, [01:15:43.080 --> 01:15:50.080] if this person claims to be an agent assigned as an assignee [01:15:50.080 --> 01:15:55.080] for a particular mortgage and the entity that made the assignment, [01:15:55.080 --> 01:15:59.080] is there anything in the record that shows that that entity has power to make the assignment? [01:15:59.080 --> 01:16:01.080] It will tell you those kind of things, [01:16:01.080 --> 01:16:06.080] and then it will spit you out documents that you can file with the court [01:16:06.080 --> 01:16:12.080] to address those issues, but it doesn't do anything automatically, [01:16:12.080 --> 01:16:15.080] as far as filing with the courts and such. [01:16:15.080 --> 01:16:22.080] But I can write up the detail of why the document is fraudulent [01:16:22.080 --> 01:16:27.080] and attach it to this form, and then I can submit that to the court? [01:16:27.080 --> 01:16:31.080] Yeah, and the way to do that is a petition to declare to our judgment. [01:16:31.080 --> 01:16:36.080] You're not asking for any harm, you're not asking for attorney fees, [01:16:36.080 --> 01:16:40.080] you're asking the judge to rule on a point of law, [01:16:40.080 --> 01:16:42.080] and that's pretty simple. [01:16:42.080 --> 01:16:45.080] Hang on, we'll pick this up on the other side. [01:16:45.080 --> 01:16:48.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruvila Radio. [01:16:48.080 --> 01:16:52.080] A call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:52.080 --> 01:17:21.080] We'll be right back. [01:17:22.080 --> 01:17:49.080] We'll be right back. [01:17:52.080 --> 01:18:21.080] We'll be right back. [01:18:22.080 --> 01:18:24.080] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:52.080 --> 01:19:14.080] Oh, come on. [01:19:22.080 --> 01:19:51.080] We'll be right back. [01:19:51.080 --> 01:20:16.080] Okay, we are back. [01:20:16.080 --> 01:20:19.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruvila Radio. [01:20:19.080 --> 01:20:22.080] And we're talking to Lou in New Jersey. [01:20:22.080 --> 01:20:23.080] Was it New Jersey? [01:20:23.080 --> 01:20:25.080] New Hampshire. [01:20:25.080 --> 01:20:28.080] New Hampshire, okay. [01:20:28.080 --> 01:20:32.080] And we're talking about removing fraudulent records from the document. [01:20:32.080 --> 01:20:36.080] I certainly wish we had something. [01:20:36.080 --> 01:20:38.080] No, I don't. [01:20:38.080 --> 01:20:41.080] We want those fraudulent documents in the record. [01:20:41.080 --> 01:20:44.080] Let's say you have a foreclosure, [01:20:44.080 --> 01:20:48.080] and the bank has filed fraudulent records in the document. [01:20:48.080 --> 01:20:53.080] And the bank has filed fraudulent documents in the record. [01:20:53.080 --> 01:20:55.080] It's getting late. [01:20:55.080 --> 01:21:01.080] And first thing you do is, you know, I do a mortgage analysis, [01:21:01.080 --> 01:21:07.080] where I analyze all of the documents filed in the county record. [01:21:07.080 --> 01:21:09.080] I look at what's there. [01:21:09.080 --> 01:21:12.080] I look at what should be there, what's missing. [01:21:12.080 --> 01:21:16.080] I look at every document and look at the details on it. [01:21:16.080 --> 01:21:20.080] Who filed it? What standing did they have to file it? [01:21:20.080 --> 01:21:22.080] What did they claim in the document? [01:21:22.080 --> 01:21:25.080] Did they have the standing to make the claim in the document? Everything. [01:21:25.080 --> 01:21:29.080] If I find a problem with one of those documents, [01:21:29.080 --> 01:21:36.080] where the document does not meet the filing requirements, [01:21:36.080 --> 01:21:39.080] then I want to file a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:21:39.080 --> 01:21:43.080] That's a relatively simple suit. [01:21:43.080 --> 01:21:49.080] You don't have any causes of action, so you can't get it kicked out of court [01:21:49.080 --> 01:21:54.080] on a Rule 12 motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. [01:21:54.080 --> 01:22:08.080] So you ask the judge to verify that this document filed in the county record [01:22:08.080 --> 01:22:14.080] does not meet the statutory filing requirements of the particular county [01:22:14.080 --> 01:22:16.080] or state that it's filed in. [01:22:16.080 --> 01:22:18.080] And that's all you're asking. [01:22:18.080 --> 01:22:21.080] You don't ask him to remove it. [01:22:21.080 --> 01:22:27.080] You just ask him to rule on the validity of the filing of the document. [01:22:27.080 --> 01:22:31.080] And if he looks at it, it's a real simple form. [01:22:31.080 --> 01:22:35.080] If he rules in your favor, you take that ruling to the clerk [01:22:35.080 --> 01:22:41.080] and ask the clerk to remove that fraudulent document from the record. [01:22:41.080 --> 01:22:45.080] Now, the person who filed it, if the clerk wants to, [01:22:45.080 --> 01:22:47.080] the clerk can notify the person. [01:22:47.080 --> 01:22:49.080] They don't have a duty to, but they can. [01:22:49.080 --> 01:22:53.080] They can notify the person that this document has been removed from the record [01:22:53.080 --> 01:22:55.080] for whatever reason. [01:22:55.080 --> 01:22:59.080] And they can certainly refile the document. [01:22:59.080 --> 01:23:07.080] However, the authority of the document when it's removed goes away. [01:23:07.080 --> 01:23:14.080] So if there are documents filed later that were filed based on the authority [01:23:14.080 --> 01:23:18.080] of this document, they go away as well. [01:23:18.080 --> 01:23:23.080] Well, they don't have to leave the record. [01:23:23.080 --> 01:23:27.080] But now you can show in court that although this is filed in the public record, [01:23:27.080 --> 01:23:32.080] and it may be filed in accordance with the rules of filing, [01:23:32.080 --> 01:23:36.080] it has no legal import. [01:23:36.080 --> 01:23:43.080] And it wouldn't affect the title search, would it? [01:23:43.080 --> 01:23:49.080] No, I don't understand how the question, it wouldn't affect a title search. [01:23:49.080 --> 01:23:56.080] If you have a title search, the title search says what's in the record on this day at this time. [01:23:56.080 --> 01:24:01.080] But later, if there's another title search, it won't find that document. [01:24:01.080 --> 01:24:08.080] Unless they've refiled it, it'll find the document with a new filing date. [01:24:08.080 --> 01:24:12.080] So if you have a document filed with this new filing date, [01:24:12.080 --> 01:24:18.080] and you have another document on a later date, [01:24:18.080 --> 01:24:22.080] I'm sorry, an earlier date that relies on this document, [01:24:22.080 --> 01:24:29.080] then the document that relies on the one that's not filed yet, it becomes for it. [01:24:29.080 --> 01:24:35.080] Then you can go to the bank and say, guys, you got a problem. [01:24:35.080 --> 01:24:45.080] I think it would be pretty rare to find a document that doesn't meet the technical legal requirements [01:24:45.080 --> 01:24:48.080] for filing or recording a document. [01:24:48.080 --> 01:24:56.080] The works are pretty darn good at making sure that before they record a document, [01:24:56.080 --> 01:25:04.080] it meets the minimum requirement for a document to be filed. [01:25:04.080 --> 01:25:07.080] So I'm not exactly sure... [01:25:07.080 --> 01:25:11.080] Here's how I get there. [01:25:11.080 --> 01:25:16.080] I have a signature on this document. [01:25:16.080 --> 01:25:18.080] It's an assignment. [01:25:18.080 --> 01:25:30.080] And the assignment of search that One West Bank is assigning the mortgage to Bank of America. [01:25:30.080 --> 01:25:40.080] But when I move back in time, I don't find anything assigning the property to One West Bank. [01:25:40.080 --> 01:25:48.080] Or I find One West Bank is the originator and an assignment from One West Bank to Wells Fargo. [01:25:48.080 --> 01:25:52.080] And then I find an assignment from One West Bank to Bank of America. [01:25:52.080 --> 01:25:55.080] I found that a number of times. [01:25:55.080 --> 01:25:59.080] Yeah, but that's not a problem with meeting the record. [01:25:59.080 --> 01:26:12.080] The county recorder has to accept any document that's given to them by anybody that conforms with the requirements [01:26:12.080 --> 01:26:20.080] in the form that is necessary to have a document recorded. [01:26:20.080 --> 01:26:26.080] The clerk is not going to do anything about breaks in the chain of title. [01:26:26.080 --> 01:26:29.080] The clerk doesn't do that. It's not her job. [01:26:29.080 --> 01:26:34.080] But when I look at it, I look at this document and this document is fraudulent. [01:26:34.080 --> 01:26:43.080] It claims to assign a mortgage from one entity to another entity, [01:26:43.080 --> 01:26:48.080] but the filer has no standing to make this transfer. [01:26:48.080 --> 01:26:58.080] So I ask the court to rule that the document is fraudulent on its face and does not affect title. [01:26:58.080 --> 01:27:03.080] And that's the court. That's not a decision that a clerk could make. [01:27:03.080 --> 01:27:05.080] She has no standing to make that. [01:27:05.080 --> 01:27:10.080] But if I make it and bring it to the court's decision, court's attention, [01:27:10.080 --> 01:27:16.080] the court can determine that the filer lacks standing to file the document. [01:27:16.080 --> 01:27:20.080] Get it jerked out of there. [01:27:20.080 --> 01:27:22.080] Well, you're basically talking about... [01:27:22.080 --> 01:27:27.080] It's invalid and void and no legal presence. [01:27:27.080 --> 01:27:28.080] Yes. [01:27:28.080 --> 01:27:32.080] Or just remove it from the registry. [01:27:32.080 --> 01:27:39.080] Right. You're talking about cancellation of an instrument or quiet title? [01:27:39.080 --> 01:27:42.080] No, not quiet title. [01:27:42.080 --> 01:27:49.080] Up above, there's another assignment to Wells Fargo and now they try to... [01:27:49.080 --> 01:27:51.080] The same bank tries to assign it to somebody else. [01:27:51.080 --> 01:27:54.080] Well, I already signed it away and I find this all the time. [01:27:54.080 --> 01:28:02.080] This is a common thing to come across, especially between 2003 and 2007. [01:28:02.080 --> 01:28:04.080] There are so many mistakes. [01:28:04.080 --> 01:28:07.080] After 2007 and 2008, they began to get better. [01:28:07.080 --> 01:28:14.080] By 2011-12, the banks pretty well got it right and I don't find any problems. [01:28:14.080 --> 01:28:17.080] But back in those times, it is just a horrible mess. [01:28:17.080 --> 01:28:26.080] I find banks making a transfer of a mortgage from this bank to another bank [01:28:26.080 --> 01:28:30.080] and it's never been transferred to the first bank. [01:28:30.080 --> 01:28:33.080] I don't know where they came from. [01:28:33.080 --> 01:28:36.080] So I go to the courts. Who he's got? [01:28:36.080 --> 01:28:39.080] They don't have any authority to affect title. [01:28:39.080 --> 01:28:46.080] So this damages the court record and they asked the court to remove it [01:28:46.080 --> 01:28:51.080] because the guy didn't have standing in the first place. [01:28:51.080 --> 01:28:55.080] That puts a real kink in the foreclosure. [01:28:55.080 --> 01:29:00.080] Now they got something stumbled over that they can't fix. [01:29:00.080 --> 01:29:03.080] I look for a lot of little pieces like that. [01:29:03.080 --> 01:29:06.080] It's not that you're going to win these in court. [01:29:06.080 --> 01:29:14.080] It's just that you're up in the stakes for the bank when you come to the table to make a deal. [01:29:14.080 --> 01:29:19.080] That's something they could eventually fix and probably get over your issue. [01:29:19.080 --> 01:29:21.080] But it's all about the money. [01:29:21.080 --> 01:29:23.080] At the end of the day, everything's about the money. [01:29:23.080 --> 01:29:30.080] But to answer your question, no, it's not automatic and you'd have to go to each one individual. [01:29:30.080 --> 01:29:33.080] We do need you to move on. We've got a couple more calls. [01:29:33.080 --> 01:29:35.080] Do you have any more questions? [01:29:35.080 --> 01:29:37.080] No, that's it. Thank you. [01:29:37.080 --> 01:29:41.080] Okay. Thank you. Now we're going to go to Shane in New York. [01:29:41.080 --> 01:29:48.080] Tell me you're going to talk about foreclosure for a change. [01:29:48.080 --> 01:29:50.080] How did you talk? [01:29:50.080 --> 01:29:54.080] Psychic. Have you been listening to the program? [01:29:54.080 --> 01:29:57.080] Yes. [01:29:57.080 --> 01:30:01.080] How's the music, Freddie? [01:30:01.080 --> 01:30:05.080] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:05.080 --> 01:30:11.080] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.080 --> 01:30:16.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:16.080 --> 01:30:21.080] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.080 --> 01:30:26.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.080 --> 01:30:31.080] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.080 --> 01:30:34.080] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.080 --> 01:30:41.080] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.080 --> 01:30:45.080] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.080 --> 01:30:52.080] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.080 --> 01:30:59.080] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.080 --> 01:31:06.080] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:06.080 --> 01:31:12.080] hackers will have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:12.080 --> 01:31:15.080] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.080 --> 01:31:19.080] I'd want to pose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:19.080 --> 01:31:24.080] Are there catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:24.080 --> 01:31:31.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.080 --> 01:31:37.080] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:37.080 --> 01:31:39.080] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.080 --> 01:31:44.080] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.080 --> 01:31:49.080] 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:49.080 --> 01:31:51.080] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.080 --> 01:31:52.080] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.080 --> 01:31:53.080] I'm a New York City correctional officer. [01:31:53.080 --> 01:31:54.080] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.080 --> 01:31:55.080] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.080 --> 01:31:58.080] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.080 --> 01:32:26.080] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.080 --> 01:32:29.080] In conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.080 --> 01:32:32.080] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.080 --> 01:32:34.080] that will help you understand what the new process is [01:32:34.080 --> 01:32:36.080] and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.080 --> 01:32:38.080] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.080 --> 01:32:41.080] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.080 --> 01:32:43.080] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.080 --> 01:32:46.080] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:46.080 --> 01:32:48.080] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.080 --> 01:32:51.080] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.080 --> 01:32:55.080] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.080 --> 01:33:02.080] Order your copy today, and together we can have pre-society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.080 --> 01:33:05.080] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:05.080 --> 01:33:31.080] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:31.080 --> 01:33:59.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:33:59.080 --> 01:34:24.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:34:24.080 --> 01:34:50.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:34:50.080 --> 01:35:16.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:35:16.080 --> 01:35:44.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:35:44.080 --> 01:36:10.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:36:10.080 --> 01:36:17.080] And I'm going to go ahead and disallow the arbitration award as a bogus arbitration form. [01:36:17.080 --> 01:36:22.080] And what was interesting about it... [01:36:22.080 --> 01:36:25.080] Did you listen to... [01:36:25.080 --> 01:36:26.080] Go ahead. [01:36:26.080 --> 01:36:30.080] Did you listen to the first part of the show? [01:36:30.080 --> 01:36:40.080] Go back and listen to the archive. [01:36:40.080 --> 01:36:41.080] You might want to talk to Michael. [01:36:41.080 --> 01:36:47.080] Michael, would you want to talk to him off the show? [01:36:47.080 --> 01:36:48.080] Sure. [01:36:48.080 --> 01:36:50.080] Just shoot me an email. [01:36:50.080 --> 01:36:53.080] He has been in this fight a long time. [01:36:53.080 --> 01:37:07.080] Actually, the best thing to do is to go to the website. [01:37:07.080 --> 01:37:09.080] To fraudstoppers? [01:37:09.080 --> 01:37:13.080] Yeah, go to fraudstoppers.org. [01:37:13.080 --> 01:37:17.080] If you want to join, that would be great. [01:37:17.080 --> 01:37:22.080] It's only a couple hundred dollars. [01:37:22.080 --> 01:37:24.080] 295. [01:37:24.080 --> 01:37:29.080] 295, 300 dollars, I guess. [01:37:29.080 --> 01:37:33.080] And you can click on Ask for Help. [01:37:33.080 --> 01:37:37.080] Or you can send me an email. [01:37:37.080 --> 01:37:46.080] Okay, Shane, the point of that was, the first part of the show, we talked about malpractice suit against lawyers. [01:37:46.080 --> 01:37:51.080] Not just your lawyer, but opposing counsel. [01:37:51.080 --> 01:37:54.080] You need to hear that. [01:37:54.080 --> 01:37:59.080] Okay. [01:37:59.080 --> 01:38:02.080] If I could just finish up my story really quick. [01:38:02.080 --> 01:38:07.080] I want to tell you what happened here is, I filed a... [01:38:07.080 --> 01:38:20.080] In the federal bankruptcy court, Randy, actually, which was filed yesterday, a motion for re-hearing to be re-heard on the arbitration award. [01:38:20.080 --> 01:38:24.080] And have proper findings, facts, and conclusions of law. [01:38:24.080 --> 01:38:26.080] So I know what I'm appealing. [01:38:26.080 --> 01:38:28.080] And I'm not sure you were telling me to file a mandamus. [01:38:28.080 --> 01:38:30.080] Instead of filing... [01:38:30.080 --> 01:38:35.080] Instead of filing a mandamus, I went back in as a re-hearing. [01:38:35.080 --> 01:38:42.080] And it was very thorough, way too long to talk about all the details in cases I found with the clearly state. [01:38:42.080 --> 01:38:44.080] You just can't walk into the court. [01:38:44.080 --> 01:38:52.080] I'm sorry, the judges can't just walk into your arbitration and say, oh, it's fraud. Throw it out of focus with no information. [01:38:52.080 --> 01:38:56.080] The attorney for the opposing party didn't even file anything in the motion. [01:38:56.080 --> 01:38:58.080] He just asked, oh, by the way, judge, can you... [01:38:58.080 --> 01:39:05.080] Along with saying you want to have his arbitration award ruled as unenforceable. [01:39:05.080 --> 01:39:11.080] With no evidence, no proof of fraud, no nothing in the motion, nothing. [01:39:11.080 --> 01:39:14.080] And the judge goes, oh, sure, no problem. [01:39:14.080 --> 01:39:17.080] Okay, arbitration award is hereby unenforceable. [01:39:17.080 --> 01:39:18.080] Nothing. [01:39:18.080 --> 01:39:20.080] I mean, like, are you kidding me? [01:39:20.080 --> 01:39:25.080] So I got the re-hearing file that's going to be heard on the 26th of October. [01:39:25.080 --> 01:39:30.080] And I also did that with Nation Star along with Key Bank. [01:39:30.080 --> 01:39:34.080] And I'm going to have both motions heard on that very same day at 10 o'clock. [01:39:34.080 --> 01:39:37.080] So doing the mandamus, I went back... [01:39:37.080 --> 01:39:40.080] I'm going back to the court and I did it within that 14-day time period. [01:39:40.080 --> 01:39:43.080] It says you can follow re-hearing with pursuant to the bankruptcy rules. [01:39:43.080 --> 01:39:45.080] You have 14 days. [01:39:45.080 --> 01:39:51.080] But that time does not start until they issue out the notice of entry with the order. [01:39:51.080 --> 01:39:55.080] And the 14 days expired and I got it in on day 14. [01:39:55.080 --> 01:39:58.080] So I want to let you know I did follow through on that. [01:39:58.080 --> 01:39:59.080] I wasn't going to do a mandamus. [01:39:59.080 --> 01:40:00.080] I said, well, why should I do that? [01:40:00.080 --> 01:40:02.080] I was going back in for re-hearing. [01:40:02.080 --> 01:40:04.080] Put it back on a record and we'll see what happens. [01:40:04.080 --> 01:40:05.080] Okay. [01:40:05.080 --> 01:40:08.080] You did ask for findings, effect, and conclusions at law. [01:40:08.080 --> 01:40:09.080] Yep. [01:40:09.080 --> 01:40:22.080] So what does federal law say about the duty of the judge to file findings, effect, and [01:40:22.080 --> 01:40:23.080] conclusions at law? [01:40:23.080 --> 01:40:30.080] Normally you should have an order and a judgment. [01:40:30.080 --> 01:40:36.080] Michael, do you know anything about judgments in bankruptcy? [01:40:36.080 --> 01:40:41.080] They have to file a judgment with your order. [01:40:41.080 --> 01:40:43.080] I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. [01:40:43.080 --> 01:40:44.080] So you're in bankruptcy. [01:40:44.080 --> 01:40:46.080] He's in bankruptcy, right? [01:40:46.080 --> 01:40:47.080] Yes. [01:40:47.080 --> 01:40:49.080] I'm in bankruptcy court. [01:40:49.080 --> 01:40:53.080] And what happened was is there was some of the property. [01:40:53.080 --> 01:40:55.080] They gave me no notice, no nothing. [01:40:55.080 --> 01:41:00.080] And somehow I found out about it like two weeks before I was in the house. [01:41:00.080 --> 01:41:04.080] And I ran into the federal bankruptcy court and followed bankruptcy because the house [01:41:04.080 --> 01:41:07.080] originally was in my mom's name back in 2014. [01:41:07.080 --> 01:41:10.080] And we did a quick claim back in 2017. [01:41:10.080 --> 01:41:17.080] And we gave notice to the other side and gave notice to the state court and the county [01:41:17.080 --> 01:41:19.080] court and they just ignored it. [01:41:19.080 --> 01:41:24.080] And we followed the motion to be brought in as a joiner and that was denied as not done [01:41:24.080 --> 01:41:26.080] timely, whatever that means. [01:41:26.080 --> 01:41:28.080] They would not let me enter the case. [01:41:28.080 --> 01:41:30.080] They would not let me file anything. [01:41:30.080 --> 01:41:31.080] So I followed bankruptcy. [01:41:31.080 --> 01:41:32.080] That worked. [01:41:32.080 --> 01:41:35.080] That stopped the sale of the property. [01:41:35.080 --> 01:41:38.080] And I've owned the property down to one on three years. [01:41:38.080 --> 01:41:43.080] In the meantime, I've appealed every order. [01:41:43.080 --> 01:41:48.080] And as we speak right now, I have a total already of six appeals at the district court [01:41:48.080 --> 01:41:49.080] from the bankruptcy court. [01:41:49.080 --> 01:41:53.080] And we have just under 400 filings in this bankruptcy case. [01:41:53.080 --> 01:41:54.080] I mean, it's mine. [01:41:54.080 --> 01:41:59.080] My mom, she has like 350 filings, but her case is done because she went from 13 to seven [01:41:59.080 --> 01:42:03.080] and she's discharging all of her taxes because she has no property anymore. [01:42:03.080 --> 01:42:05.080] I own the property. [01:42:05.080 --> 01:42:06.080] So that's where we're at. [01:42:06.080 --> 01:42:11.080] That's a total of almost 700 filings in federal court, leaving the side of all the filings [01:42:11.080 --> 01:42:13.080] in state and county court. [01:42:13.080 --> 01:42:17.080] That's another whole new can of worms. [01:42:17.080 --> 01:42:23.080] And so I'll stop right there, but there is a lot of history here in the attorney representing [01:42:23.080 --> 01:42:30.080] Keybank City, but they've already spent twice double the amount of what allegedly is owed [01:42:30.080 --> 01:42:31.080] to the property. [01:42:31.080 --> 01:42:34.080] They spent double the amount, Randy. [01:42:34.080 --> 01:42:41.080] Did they spend more than the mediation? [01:42:41.080 --> 01:42:43.080] There was no mediation. [01:42:43.080 --> 01:42:46.080] Well, the arbitration award. [01:42:46.080 --> 01:42:48.080] How much was the arbitration award? [01:42:48.080 --> 01:42:56.080] Oh, arbitration award, you know, I don't know, five million or something like that, five [01:42:56.080 --> 01:42:57.080] or six million. [01:42:57.080 --> 01:42:58.080] Oh, okay. [01:42:58.080 --> 01:42:59.080] They didn't go past that. [01:42:59.080 --> 01:43:00.080] Michael? [01:43:00.080 --> 01:43:02.080] No, they didn't go past that. [01:43:02.080 --> 01:43:10.080] What I'm trying to say is that allegedly Keybank, my mom owes Keybank like 60,000, which we've [01:43:10.080 --> 01:43:15.280] disputed several times over again, leaving the side to have no documents to even prove [01:43:15.280 --> 01:43:16.800] that she owes anything. [01:43:16.800 --> 01:43:23.360] But they've already spent well over 100 plus thousand in attorney fees, along with county [01:43:23.360 --> 01:43:24.680] and federal court. [01:43:24.680 --> 01:43:26.600] It's probably a lot more than that. [01:43:26.600 --> 01:43:31.760] But he made a point of that way back to December around Christmas time of 2019. [01:43:31.760 --> 01:43:35.360] And I'm sure it's even a hell of a lot more right now. [01:43:35.360 --> 01:43:37.800] So I hear the music. [01:43:37.800 --> 01:43:38.800] Okay. [01:43:38.800 --> 01:43:39.800] Hang on. [01:43:39.800 --> 01:43:40.800] Randy Kelton. [01:43:40.800 --> 01:43:41.800] Brett Fountain. [01:43:41.800 --> 01:43:42.800] Rue LaRidio. [01:43:42.800 --> 01:43:47.800] I'm not going to give out the call in number of going to the last segment. [01:43:47.800 --> 01:43:52.200] We hope we can finish up on the other side, Shane, because I really want to get Robert. [01:43:52.200 --> 01:43:53.800] He has way too much fun. [01:43:53.800 --> 01:43:54.800] Hang on. [01:43:54.800 --> 01:43:56.800] We'll be right back. 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[01:45:24.800 --> 01:45:29.800] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.800 --> 01:45:36.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:36.800 --> 01:45:41.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:41.800 --> 01:45:45.800] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.800 --> 01:45:51.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:51.800 --> 01:45:54.800] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.800 --> 01:46:02.800] Visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.800 --> 01:46:49.800] Okay, we are back. [01:46:49.800 --> 01:46:55.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Rule of Law Radio here with a special guest who's hanging on [01:46:55.800 --> 01:46:58.800] for a long show, Michael Pines. [01:46:58.800 --> 01:47:01.800] Thank you for hanging in there with us, Michael. [01:47:01.800 --> 01:47:02.800] Sure. [01:47:02.800 --> 01:47:07.800] Okay, Shane, let me get you unmuted here. [01:47:07.800 --> 01:47:12.800] You missed the first part of the show, and what I was talking about is going after these [01:47:12.800 --> 01:47:14.800] lawyers for malpractice. [01:47:14.800 --> 01:47:22.800] And how, when you do, their insurance carrier will, especially if you make criminal charges [01:47:22.800 --> 01:47:28.800] against these lawyers, the lawyers will push the insurance carrier just to pay you off to [01:47:28.800 --> 01:47:34.800] keep them from having to face the criminal charges and misconduct potentially with the [01:47:34.800 --> 01:47:35.800] bar. [01:47:35.800 --> 01:47:41.800] So you may have some really low hanging fruit you can go after. [01:47:41.800 --> 01:47:50.800] What I was going to ask you is, Michael, I guess I can speak to him through email. [01:47:50.800 --> 01:47:53.800] But what I was trying, I was giving an introduction. [01:47:53.800 --> 01:48:00.800] I want to move forward and file a state action against the law from and the attorneys and [01:48:00.800 --> 01:48:02.800] on behalf of myself. [01:48:02.800 --> 01:48:12.800] I was wondering that is there forms and documents that you can purchase from your website regarding [01:48:12.800 --> 01:48:13.800] that? [01:48:13.800 --> 01:48:15.800] I already have all the body of the document. [01:48:15.800 --> 01:48:16.800] I have the whole story. [01:48:16.800 --> 01:48:18.800] I have the body all done. [01:48:18.800 --> 01:48:23.800] Do they sell that on the website? [01:48:23.800 --> 01:48:29.800] I don't know if there's anything being sold or not yet. [01:48:29.800 --> 01:48:30.800] But you're in New York. [01:48:30.800 --> 01:48:31.800] You're really lucky. [01:48:31.800 --> 01:48:34.800] The judges there are really hip to this stuff. [01:48:34.800 --> 01:48:37.800] You had Judge Shrek, for example, who was an activist. [01:48:37.800 --> 01:48:39.800] He's dead now. [01:48:39.800 --> 01:48:43.800] But the judges in New York really know what's going on. [01:48:43.800 --> 01:48:49.800] You reckon he's one of these vampires? [01:48:49.800 --> 01:48:50.800] What? [01:48:50.800 --> 01:48:55.800] Judge Shrek was the one that accused these banks of rising up from the dead. [01:48:55.800 --> 01:48:57.800] He called them Vampire Linda. [01:48:57.800 --> 01:48:58.800] Oh, yeah. [01:48:58.800 --> 01:49:00.800] You really like that guy. [01:49:00.800 --> 01:49:01.800] Yeah. [01:49:01.800 --> 01:49:05.800] I've printed his order many times and attached it to my documents. [01:49:05.800 --> 01:49:12.800] In fact, the law firm that was coming after our family house is exactly the same judge [01:49:12.800 --> 01:49:17.800] that talked about that law firm on all the fraud they're committing. [01:49:17.800 --> 01:49:22.800] I think he passed away back in 2014. [01:49:22.800 --> 01:49:28.800] Shane, what was the law firm that got indicted? [01:49:28.800 --> 01:49:32.800] Well, Zickie and Rose Zickie, Thomas and Cynthia Rose Zickie. [01:49:32.800 --> 01:49:36.800] Thomas used to be former FBI in New York City. [01:49:36.800 --> 01:49:46.800] His videos on YouTube are really scammed out of Franny and Freddie for millions of millions [01:49:46.800 --> 01:49:47.800] of dollars. [01:49:47.800 --> 01:49:50.800] He would be using their name to foreclose on their properties. [01:49:50.800 --> 01:49:54.800] He was really highly connected to the FBI and higher ups. [01:49:54.800 --> 01:49:55.800] They left them alone. [01:49:55.800 --> 01:49:59.800] They got almost 10 years out of it with all the money they collected. [01:49:59.800 --> 01:50:05.800] They bought land and wine vineyards from New Jersey along Long Island. [01:50:05.800 --> 01:50:10.800] It's all on the internet, but they scammed them. [01:50:10.800 --> 01:50:12.800] It's in the millions. [01:50:12.800 --> 01:50:16.800] They only had to pay $7 million to the federal government. [01:50:16.800 --> 01:50:18.800] Shortly thereafter, they got shut down. [01:50:18.800 --> 01:50:23.800] Two weeks before they were going to sell the property, all this stuff came out and they [01:50:23.800 --> 01:50:27.800] stopped to sell the property because of this, because of Rose Zickie and Rose Zickie. [01:50:27.800 --> 01:50:33.800] They handed everything off to Key Bank, which Key Bank is the key lock, home equity line [01:50:33.800 --> 01:50:37.800] of credit for remodeling the house from 20 years ago. [01:50:37.800 --> 01:50:42.800] There really wasn't much left that was owed, but you know how they throw in all their fees, [01:50:42.800 --> 01:50:46.800] attorney fees and everything, and it shot up to about $60,000. [01:50:46.800 --> 01:50:51.800] The first lean holder is not moving forward with the sale of the property. [01:50:51.800 --> 01:50:56.800] They're using Key Bank, which is the key lock, home equity line of credit, which that's in [01:50:56.800 --> 01:50:57.800] my mom's name. [01:50:57.800 --> 01:51:04.800] It's almost 15, 16, 17-year-old home equity line of credit, just a regular, like a credit [01:51:04.800 --> 01:51:08.800] card, like the line of credit. [01:51:08.800 --> 01:51:15.800] The first lean holder is not moving forward with the sale of the property. [01:51:15.800 --> 01:51:25.800] I've prepared a complaint that I'm recommending people use now, which I can send you a sample [01:51:25.800 --> 01:51:34.800] of, and I'm taking a very unique approach. [01:51:34.800 --> 01:51:36.800] They have some really good complaints. [01:51:36.800 --> 01:51:43.800] In fact, if you join for $295 or whatever it is, you get a sample complaint. [01:51:43.800 --> 01:51:51.800] I think it's under the Ficker Debt Collection, this is Act, and you get documents like a [01:51:51.800 --> 01:52:02.800] QWR and other documents you can use, but we're really switching over to using this complaint [01:52:02.800 --> 01:52:04.800] that I have. [01:52:04.800 --> 01:52:09.800] Do you have a securitization audit by any chance? [01:52:09.800 --> 01:52:22.800] No, the only thing we've ever done so far is getting some affidavits regarding the establishing [01:52:22.800 --> 01:52:28.800] where the note was at, and the note has been long gone and lost for years. [01:52:28.800 --> 01:52:33.800] The notes get thrown away. [01:52:33.800 --> 01:52:35.800] Right, yes. [01:52:35.800 --> 01:52:42.800] What's interesting about my issue is that my name is not on any of the documents, and [01:52:42.800 --> 01:52:43.800] they're using my mom. [01:52:43.800 --> 01:52:52.800] Of course, she had a judgment for closure sale back in April 2018, and I stopped it with [01:52:52.800 --> 01:52:59.800] my bankruptcy case, and there's about, like I was saying earlier, six appeals going on [01:52:59.800 --> 01:53:05.800] with the stay and denying my evidentiary hearing for sure the bankruptcy rule 9014. [01:53:05.800 --> 01:53:09.800] I want to be able to see these documents, because I told the judge quite frankly that [01:53:09.800 --> 01:53:14.800] if there's something old to anybody, I'll whip a check out right now, but I want to [01:53:14.800 --> 01:53:19.800] see the original documents and accounting, everything, not just copies of copies and [01:53:19.800 --> 01:53:22.800] everybody just guessing what we owe. [01:53:22.800 --> 01:53:24.800] I mean, the numbers are absolutely... [01:53:24.800 --> 01:53:29.800] Hold on, Shane, this is really complex. [01:53:29.800 --> 01:53:31.800] You're going to run us off the end of the show. [01:53:31.800 --> 01:53:34.800] Send me an email for an introduction to Michael. [01:53:34.800 --> 01:53:35.800] I'll get it to him. [01:53:35.800 --> 01:53:38.800] Get you two guys together. [01:53:38.800 --> 01:53:42.800] Yours is a long story. [01:53:42.800 --> 01:53:47.800] Yes, it is, but I just want to tell Michael that they've already spent, Keybanks already [01:53:47.800 --> 01:53:54.800] spent well over, from what I was told, $130,000, maybe $140,000 on an alleged $60,000 line [01:53:54.800 --> 01:53:55.800] of credit. [01:53:55.800 --> 01:53:57.800] I mean, how much more are they going to spend? [01:53:57.800 --> 01:54:03.800] So it doesn't make any sense, but they spent, well, I think that's doubly, that's doubly [01:54:03.800 --> 01:54:10.800] amount of what's owed, and they're still right on top of it. [01:54:10.800 --> 01:54:11.800] Okay, thanks, Randy. [01:54:11.800 --> 01:54:12.800] I'll go ahead and check it out. [01:54:12.800 --> 01:54:13.800] Okay. [01:54:13.800 --> 01:54:14.800] I'll go over to you. [01:54:14.800 --> 01:54:15.800] Okay. [01:54:15.800 --> 01:54:16.800] Thank you, Shane. [01:54:16.800 --> 01:54:19.800] I don't mean to push you off, but we've been wanting to get to Robert. [01:54:19.800 --> 01:54:21.800] He is so much fun. [01:54:21.800 --> 01:54:23.800] Thank you, Shane. [01:54:23.800 --> 01:54:25.800] Okay, we're going to Robert in California. [01:54:25.800 --> 01:54:29.800] Robert, what have you been up to? [01:54:29.800 --> 01:54:38.800] We don't have time, but I wanted to, one other time I had called you about a second deed [01:54:38.800 --> 01:54:39.800] of trust I had. [01:54:39.800 --> 01:54:47.000] This was probably in 2005 when I first found rule of law. [01:54:47.000 --> 01:54:53.040] I've always thought that, because mine was, I used to lend purchase money down payments [01:54:53.040 --> 01:55:01.840] to people, and the banks start when 2007 came around, I wiped me out on some of those seconds, [01:55:01.840 --> 01:55:07.440] but I've always thought that I had the only legal note on the property, and I still feel [01:55:07.440 --> 01:55:16.840] that way, and after listening to Michael, I got about 12 of these things that I'm interested [01:55:16.840 --> 01:55:26.520] in going back on, and I'm hoping I can go back as far as the 2000 and, I mean, 1990. [01:55:26.520 --> 01:55:29.440] So that's my question to Michael. [01:55:29.440 --> 01:55:36.680] Well, that's a complicated question, but basically the answer is yes. [01:55:36.680 --> 01:55:39.960] There's usually a way to go back. [01:55:39.960 --> 01:55:42.400] It doesn't matter how long ago. [01:55:42.400 --> 01:55:48.480] Okay, well, that's what I gathered from what you were talking about, but then I wanted [01:55:48.480 --> 01:55:52.120] to tell you I had trouble entering in Placer County, California. [01:55:52.120 --> 01:55:58.240] I had trouble entering things into the county recorder, no matter what it was. [01:55:58.240 --> 01:56:05.520] Well, so what I started doing is opening up a small claims case against the banks and [01:56:05.520 --> 01:56:11.800] entering my evidence into the small claims court to get it on the record, and I think [01:56:11.800 --> 01:56:20.600] maybe that might come in handy if I start to open up these cans of worms, because they [01:56:20.600 --> 01:56:23.240] didn't let me in, or what's that? [01:56:23.240 --> 01:56:28.280] How did they interfere with you filing documents with the county recorder? [01:56:28.280 --> 01:56:29.600] I mean, no, that's county recorder. [01:56:29.600 --> 01:56:34.160] And I brought some laws, and the county recorder said, we don't care, we're not going to file [01:56:34.160 --> 01:56:40.920] it, and mostly what I was trying to record were a preservation of rights, you know, to [01:56:40.920 --> 01:56:41.920] preserve. [01:56:41.920 --> 01:56:47.480] Okay, Michael, that's in California law, isn't it? [01:56:47.480 --> 01:56:48.480] Yes. [01:56:48.480 --> 01:56:52.440] Did you call 9-1-1 and ask them to arrest the court? [01:56:52.440 --> 01:56:54.440] I would have, no. [01:56:54.440 --> 01:56:56.800] Oh, I do that all the time. [01:56:56.800 --> 01:56:58.280] It is great fun. [01:56:58.280 --> 01:56:59.280] Yeah. [01:56:59.280 --> 01:57:01.800] Well, it is great fun. [01:57:01.800 --> 01:57:07.600] But anyway, that was just a few things I wanted to, I'm looking forward to your show. [01:57:07.600 --> 01:57:09.960] And when do you start the show? [01:57:09.960 --> 01:57:18.160] It's going to be on Mondays at 6 p.m. central, just before Eddie's show. [01:57:18.160 --> 01:57:21.760] Yeah, what day is that going to start? [01:57:21.760 --> 01:57:23.320] Oh, November 2nd. [01:57:23.320 --> 01:57:29.480] Okay, I'm looking forward to it, because I'm sure I got a lot of questions there. [01:57:29.480 --> 01:57:33.920] And it's good because we're ahead of Eddie's show, so we get to really chomp Eddie before [01:57:33.920 --> 01:57:35.600] he comes on the air. [01:57:35.600 --> 01:57:44.880] Yeah, when I first heard you say that on Eddie's show, you said from 6 to 8, and I go, shit, [01:57:44.880 --> 01:57:45.880] what's happening to Eddie? [01:57:45.880 --> 01:57:51.040] Well, I was thinking California time, not Texas time. [01:57:51.040 --> 01:57:52.040] Yeah. [01:57:52.040 --> 01:57:57.840] Anyway, all right, well, time's up, I guess. [01:57:57.840 --> 01:58:03.360] Okay, if you want to contact Michael, send me an email, ask for an introduction, I'll [01:58:03.360 --> 01:58:04.360] get to it. [01:58:04.360 --> 01:58:05.360] Okay, thank you. [01:58:05.360 --> 01:58:06.360] Bye. [01:58:06.360 --> 01:58:08.360] Thank you, Robert. [01:58:08.360 --> 01:58:11.680] Okay, thank you all for listening. [01:58:11.680 --> 01:58:18.080] We will be back next week at our regular time, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and thank you [01:58:18.080 --> 01:58:19.080] very much, Michael. [01:58:19.080 --> 01:58:27.080] I was hoping to give you an outro, and we wound up using all the time with our callers. [01:58:27.080 --> 01:58:50.600] Thank you all for listening, and good night. [01:58:50.600 --> 01:58:56.680] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.680 --> 01:58:57.880] Recovery Version. 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