[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 Open with Precious Metals Gold $1,429 an ounce [00:13.040 --> 00:17.760] Silver $16.45 an ounce Copper $2.75 an ounce [00:17.760 --> 00:20.960] Oil Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel [00:20.960 --> 00:25.480] Brent Crude $62.47 a barrel Crypto is an order of market cap [00:25.480 --> 00:32.200] Bitcoin Core $10,566.52 Ethereum $227.26 [00:32.200 --> 00:37.240] XRP Ripple $0.33 Light Coin $100.31 [00:37.240 --> 00:41.560] Bitcoin Cash $324.10 Crypto Coin [00:41.560 --> 00:52.480] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a tying suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.480 --> 00:57.800] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Prepared-to-Stay Parade, killing [00:57.800 --> 01:04.800] 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.800 --> 01:09.440] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hempett [01:09.440 --> 01:14.120] attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin [01:14.120 --> 01:18.120] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.120 --> 01:22.760] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.760 --> 01:24.840] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.840 --> 01:28.480] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.480 --> 01:33.080] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.080 --> 01:34.080] law. [01:34.080 --> 01:37.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.640 --> 01:42.160] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.160 --> 01:48.320] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.320 --> 01:54.560] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Caima Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.560 --> 01:59.040] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.040 --> 02:01.800] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.800 --> 02:06.800] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.800 --> 02:10.800] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.800 --> 02:13.520] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.520 --> 02:17.400] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.400 --> 02:22.640] charged with. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.280] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.280 --> 02:32.400] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.400 --> 02:38.040] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.040 --> 02:39.540] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.540 --> 02:44.240] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its [02:44.240 --> 02:50.840] front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [02:50.840 --> 03:10.840] This is Luke Brody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:10.840 --> 03:35.800] Hello, my name is Luke Brody. [03:35.800 --> 03:38.360] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.360 --> 03:41.080] When you were eight and you had bad traits [03:41.080 --> 03:43.880] You go to school and earn the gold and lose [03:43.880 --> 03:46.600] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.600 --> 03:49.160] It's your game, and your monster's cool [03:49.160 --> 03:50.840] Bad boys, bad boys [03:50.840 --> 03:53.240] What you gonna do, or what you gonna do [03:53.240 --> 03:54.600] When they come for you? [03:54.600 --> 03:56.360] Bad boys, bad boys [03:56.360 --> 03:58.680] What you gonna do, or what you gonna do [03:58.680 --> 04:00.280] When they come for you? [04:00.280 --> 04:01.720] You choke it on that one [04:01.720 --> 04:03.080] You choke it on this one [04:03.080 --> 04:04.280] You choke it on your mother [04:04.280 --> 04:05.800] And you choke it on your father [04:05.800 --> 04:07.000] You choke it on your brother [04:07.000 --> 04:08.520] And you choke it on your sister [04:08.520 --> 04:09.720] You choke it on that one [04:09.720 --> 04:11.080] And you choke it on me [04:11.080 --> 04:12.840] Bad boys, bad boys [04:12.840 --> 04:15.160] What you gonna do, what you gonna do [04:15.160 --> 04:16.600] When they come for you? [04:16.600 --> 04:18.440] Okay, howdy howdy [04:18.440 --> 04:20.920] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain [04:21.560 --> 04:25.000] beautiful radio on this Thursday [04:26.040 --> 04:31.000] The fifth day of November 2020 [04:31.000 --> 04:34.200] And we're gonna start out talking about [04:34.200 --> 04:36.600] what we've been doing to Wise County [04:37.640 --> 04:40.280] I told last week that they had arrested me [04:41.800 --> 04:44.040] Now I've been leaving Wise County alone [04:45.400 --> 04:46.360] County I live in [04:47.480 --> 04:51.640] And for the most part they'd been doing pretty good [04:51.640 --> 04:54.040] But it appeared that way because [04:54.760 --> 04:56.280] I hadn't had any problem with them [04:57.560 --> 04:59.400] But they still kind of stood clear of me [04:59.400 --> 05:01.240] And I'd left them be [05:01.240 --> 05:02.760] But I was doing this [05:05.000 --> 05:06.520] Complaint against the governor [05:07.880 --> 05:11.160] And I was using the complaint against the governor [05:11.720 --> 05:15.320] To get me a shot at the two highest courts in Texas [05:16.600 --> 05:19.080] Since I filed a criminal charge against [05:19.880 --> 05:23.480] The highest officer of the executive [05:24.680 --> 05:28.360] It was appropriate that I filed the complaint [05:28.360 --> 05:33.080] With the highest officer of the judicial [05:33.080 --> 05:36.200] And that would be the chief justice of the Supreme [05:36.200 --> 05:38.200] Justice Hatch [05:39.080 --> 05:40.680] So I filed it with Justice Hatch [05:40.680 --> 05:42.120] And he didn't respond [05:42.120 --> 05:44.520] I asked him to either hold an examining trial [05:44.520 --> 05:46.120] Or petition for a court of inquiry [05:46.120 --> 05:46.920] He didn't either [05:48.200 --> 05:50.920] So then I filed a criminal complaint [05:50.920 --> 05:53.320] Against Judge Justice Hatch [05:53.960 --> 05:55.160] With Judge Keller [05:55.160 --> 05:58.440] The presiding judge of the court of criminal appeals [06:00.280 --> 06:01.400] Asking them to [06:04.200 --> 06:05.720] Hold an examining trial [06:06.280 --> 06:10.360] On my complaint against Judge Justice Hatch [06:11.480 --> 06:14.120] For failing to hold an examining trial [06:15.320 --> 06:17.000] On the complaint against the governor [06:18.680 --> 06:20.520] So I'm sure they will see [06:21.240 --> 06:23.320] That it's kind of being set up [06:23.320 --> 06:26.600] Well, to follow up on that [06:26.600 --> 06:28.440] My primary issue here [06:28.440 --> 06:30.600] It is my contention [06:31.400 --> 06:35.720] That this mass incarceration problem stems from a single [06:37.800 --> 06:39.080] Finite source [06:40.920 --> 06:46.200] When the police stopped taking arrested people [06:46.200 --> 06:48.040] Directly to the magistrate [06:49.000 --> 06:51.480] As required by law [06:51.480 --> 06:57.000] And as has been in law for these 700 [06:57.000 --> 06:58.840] I'm sorry, 800 years [07:00.040 --> 07:02.280] It served us well for 800 years [07:02.840 --> 07:04.040] And all of a sudden [07:05.240 --> 07:07.720] The courts decided they didn't have to do that anymore [07:09.400 --> 07:10.680] They didn't have to bother with it [07:10.680 --> 07:15.640] That they would just start taking them straight to jail [07:15.640 --> 07:18.120] Well, that was pretty [07:18.120 --> 07:19.960] That provision was put into law [07:19.960 --> 07:24.680] Very specifically to keep them from doing exactly what they're doing [07:27.240 --> 07:29.880] So, how do we get it back? [07:31.160 --> 07:34.680] How do we demonstrate to them what the problem is? [07:34.680 --> 07:39.800] So this is the argument I made to the court of criminal appeals [07:40.680 --> 07:46.360] I alleged that the Justice Chief Justice Hatch [07:46.360 --> 07:49.240] Denied the governor in due process [07:50.440 --> 07:52.760] By denying him an examining trial [07:52.760 --> 07:54.440] Because at an examining trial [07:55.240 --> 07:57.960] The governor would get opportunity [07:57.960 --> 08:00.040] To present exculpatory evidence [08:00.040 --> 08:01.880] That the grand jury would then see [08:03.160 --> 08:06.360] As it is, he was denied that opportunity [08:06.360 --> 08:09.160] And now he'll have to face a grand jury [08:09.160 --> 08:10.760] With no exculpatory evidence [08:11.560 --> 08:14.040] And that's exactly what happens to everybody else [08:14.040 --> 08:19.800] And because nobody has an examining trial [08:21.400 --> 08:26.920] Then nobody gets to introduce exculpatory evidence [08:29.880 --> 08:31.800] So, I'm trying to make the point [08:31.800 --> 08:33.880] I made the point in the complaint [08:33.880 --> 08:35.160] To the court of criminal appeals [08:35.800 --> 08:37.480] That in 2008 [08:37.480 --> 08:42.520] When I got all of those judges put in front of a grand jury [08:44.520 --> 08:50.360] Chief criminal district judge Bob Perkins [08:51.560 --> 08:53.720] Did not hold an examining trial [08:53.720 --> 08:55.160] On the complaints I filed [08:55.720 --> 08:59.560] Against all of the judges of the court of criminal appeals [09:00.280 --> 09:02.920] So they didn't remember the results of that [09:03.640 --> 09:04.200] Good chance [09:04.200 --> 09:05.320] Remember how that felt [09:05.320 --> 09:07.880] A good chance they do [09:08.680 --> 09:10.120] The grand jury got the [09:11.080 --> 09:13.080] Presentment on their first day in office [09:13.640 --> 09:15.880] And held it to their last day in office [09:16.760 --> 09:17.800] Before no billing [09:19.560 --> 09:22.120] So all of these judges sat there for three months [09:22.120 --> 09:24.200] Wondered if their career was going to end tomorrow [09:24.200 --> 09:25.800] And the issue I complained about [09:26.520 --> 09:28.200] Well, they don't do that anymore [09:28.200 --> 09:29.640] They stopped that immediately [09:30.760 --> 09:31.400] But now [09:32.680 --> 09:33.960] We have the governor ending [09:33.960 --> 09:36.360] Coming up in the exact same position [09:37.560 --> 09:40.040] And now I was able to make the point to him [09:40.040 --> 09:41.720] Well, to support that [09:41.720 --> 09:43.400] I wanted to be able to show [09:43.960 --> 09:47.080] When I get to a grand jury on the court of criminal appeals [09:47.080 --> 09:50.280] That it's not just the supreme court [09:50.280 --> 09:51.640] And the court of criminal appeals [09:52.520 --> 09:54.760] Under 2.09 who are magistrates [09:55.320 --> 09:57.320] First one court of criminal [09:57.320 --> 09:58.440] The supreme court [09:59.240 --> 10:01.720] Second one court of criminal appeals [10:01.720 --> 10:06.360] So if we have the highest level magistrates [10:06.360 --> 10:08.280] In the state committing these crimes [10:09.640 --> 10:12.520] We'll have everybody in the state committing these crimes [10:12.520 --> 10:14.280] And that's exactly what's happening [10:14.920 --> 10:16.440] So I went to the [10:17.640 --> 10:19.400] Wise County district court [10:20.680 --> 10:26.120] And I was going to go in and they said I had to have a mask [10:27.240 --> 10:28.040] And I said no [10:29.080 --> 10:30.680] Oh, you can't come in without a mask [10:30.680 --> 10:32.040] Because you sure can [10:32.040 --> 10:33.160] There's no law against it [10:33.160 --> 10:36.040] Well, we have the governor's order [10:36.760 --> 10:39.240] I said why do I care about the governor's order? [10:39.240 --> 10:41.320] Governor don't have any power over me [10:41.960 --> 10:43.320] Well, we're requiring it [10:44.280 --> 10:45.720] Who told you to do that? [10:47.160 --> 10:48.840] Did the judge tell you to do that? [10:49.400 --> 10:51.400] And they kind of looked at each other like [10:51.400 --> 10:55.480] This guy's trying to get us to throw somebody under the bus [10:56.360 --> 10:58.360] And they wouldn't throw anybody under the bus [10:58.360 --> 10:59.640] They blame you on the governor [10:59.640 --> 11:01.640] Well, that works [11:01.640 --> 11:04.120] Because I just filed criminal charges against the governor [11:04.120 --> 11:05.880] For issuing those orders [11:05.880 --> 11:12.360] And Brett, you sent me an email about the governor in California [11:13.240 --> 11:15.240] The most blue state on the planet [11:16.440 --> 11:19.640] It indicates something that's happening [11:20.760 --> 11:22.920] It indicates something we have talked about [11:23.480 --> 11:25.080] That we hoped would happen [11:25.080 --> 11:31.320] It looked as though if this pandemic was engineered [11:32.600 --> 11:35.240] That it was used as an excuse to [11:36.520 --> 11:40.680] Grab power from the legislature and the courts [11:41.560 --> 11:43.640] And focus it on the executive [11:43.640 --> 11:47.160] Which was the primary fear of our founders [11:47.160 --> 11:49.720] They were primarily afraid that would occur [11:49.720 --> 11:55.000] And they put pieces in place to prevent it [11:55.000 --> 11:58.440] Well, these guys, they tried to get past all that [11:58.440 --> 12:01.720] And they got these governors to issue all of these orders [12:01.720 --> 12:05.480] And now we have the state of California just rule [12:05.480 --> 12:08.840] That all of these executive orders by the governor [12:08.840 --> 12:13.320] Are unconstitutional and have rendered them all [12:13.320 --> 12:15.080] Boyd of no force in effect [12:15.080 --> 12:19.880] The state of Pennsylvania has a court ruling [12:19.880 --> 12:21.640] But not an appellate court ruling yet [12:22.440 --> 12:25.000] That said that all of the executive orders [12:25.000 --> 12:28.520] By the governor of the state of Pennsylvania [12:29.320 --> 12:31.000] Were unconstitutional [12:32.760 --> 12:34.840] And I'm saying that the executive orders [12:34.840 --> 12:36.920] By the governor of the state of Texas [12:36.920 --> 12:39.480] Are not just unconstitutional [12:40.360 --> 12:43.160] They are a criminal violation of law [12:43.160 --> 12:46.840] And if it follows that if the governor of California [12:47.880 --> 12:50.680] Issued orders that affected the people [12:51.720 --> 12:53.960] And he had no power to do that [12:54.760 --> 12:57.880] That's official misconduct in every state [12:58.680 --> 12:59.640] That is a crime [13:00.840 --> 13:04.360] And he should be petitioned to every grand jury in the state [13:05.320 --> 13:07.080] And as a matter of fact, the governor [13:07.640 --> 13:09.240] Is subject to being petitioned [13:09.240 --> 13:14.280] To every grand jury in the state of Texas [13:14.280 --> 13:16.680] Because his orders affected every single one [13:18.360 --> 13:20.680] The dominoes are beginning to fall [13:20.680 --> 13:23.800] Okay, what I was doing was setting this up [13:25.400 --> 13:29.560] I got these guys to tell me that if I tried to enter that courtroom [13:30.120 --> 13:30.760] I'm sorry that [13:31.960 --> 13:35.160] I got them to tell me that if I tried to enter the courthouse [13:35.880 --> 13:37.400] Without a mask [13:37.400 --> 13:39.400] That they were prepared to use force [13:40.120 --> 13:43.320] And they were even prepared to use those loaded pistols on their hips [13:44.440 --> 13:45.960] So I come back the next day [13:47.000 --> 13:49.640] Well, after they told me that I put my mask on went on in [13:50.360 --> 13:53.240] So I come back the next day with criminal charges against [13:54.200 --> 13:56.760] These deputies first degree phony aggravated assault [13:57.800 --> 14:00.200] And took them to the county judge [14:01.320 --> 14:02.280] Put them in his hand [14:03.640 --> 14:06.280] Asked him to verify them for me [14:06.280 --> 14:07.880] And verified my signature on them [14:08.440 --> 14:11.640] And got Kirk the bailiff to go give me a couple copies [14:12.840 --> 14:18.280] And then I told the judge that these are not just here for you to verify [14:18.920 --> 14:23.160] I am filing those with you in your capacity as a magistrate in state of Texas [14:24.120 --> 14:25.640] Well, he didn't act on those [14:27.480 --> 14:31.400] So I waited a couple weeks and I come back with criminal charges against him [14:31.400 --> 14:35.400] That I intended to file with the district district judge [14:36.040 --> 14:38.920] So I could get the district judge to refuse to act [14:39.320 --> 14:42.520] And now I can demonstrate that everyone up the line [14:43.720 --> 14:48.200] Is will block criminal complaints from public officials [14:48.680 --> 14:51.240] And nobody will hold an examining trial [14:52.680 --> 14:56.440] So that leads up to some information requests [14:56.440 --> 15:00.280] Brett and I have been sending out some information requests [15:00.280 --> 15:02.040] Brett primarily [15:02.840 --> 15:07.000] Before I was out of jail, he was already hammering them [15:07.000 --> 15:14.920] Will you tell us what the first couple of requests that you sent were? [15:16.120 --> 15:20.120] Well, I started out with by reaching out to the sheriff [15:20.120 --> 15:24.760] Because I understood that they had you in custody [15:24.760 --> 15:28.760] And so I started out by asking for all the body cams [15:30.760 --> 15:32.760] Any kind of dash cams [15:32.760 --> 15:34.760] Body cams [15:34.760 --> 15:36.760] Any kind of camera they had, jail cams [15:36.760 --> 15:38.760] Whatever that they could show me [15:38.760 --> 15:40.760] Video and audio [15:42.760 --> 15:46.760] And, you know, what they tend to like to do is give those kinds of requests [15:46.760 --> 15:48.760] Just for everybody to understand [15:48.760 --> 15:50.760] They tend to take that kind of request [15:50.760 --> 15:54.760] Sit on it for two weeks and at the very end of two weeks [15:54.760 --> 16:00.760] You'll hear from an attorney who says, oh, you didn't specify when [16:00.760 --> 16:02.760] Or you didn't specify where [16:02.760 --> 16:06.760] Or you didn't specify who was in the recording [16:06.760 --> 16:10.760] So you always got to make sure you put those three pieces in there [16:10.760 --> 16:12.760] I did close as I could [16:12.760 --> 16:14.760] That was my first request [16:14.760 --> 16:18.760] Then I asked, right after that, my second request was also to the sheriff [16:18.760 --> 16:22.760] And I asked for all of the reports [16:22.760 --> 16:28.760] I want to know incident report, dispatch report [16:28.760 --> 16:32.760] Arrest report, whatever they've got [16:32.760 --> 16:38.760] Any other reports that any of the officers involved with the arrest of Randy Kelly [16:38.760 --> 16:44.760] And that way we get some details about what do they say is going on [16:44.760 --> 16:48.760] And from there we went to some other [16:48.760 --> 16:50.760] I asked a lot of other people, a lot of things [16:50.760 --> 16:52.760] I think we're up to 50 now [16:52.760 --> 16:56.760] Requests that I have put in [16:56.760 --> 17:18.760] But we'll get to that on the other side [17:26.760 --> 17:30.760] Every $25 donation is a chance to win [17:30.760 --> 17:34.760] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win [17:34.760 --> 17:38.760] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win [17:38.760 --> 17:42.760] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser [17:42.760 --> 17:48.760] So we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on Talk Radio today [17:48.760 --> 17:50.760] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies [17:50.760 --> 17:54.760] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win [17:54.760 --> 17:58.760] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today [17:58.760 --> 18:04.760] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year [18:04.760 --> 18:08.760] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th [18:08.760 --> 18:10.760] From 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [18:10.760 --> 18:14.760] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516 [18:14.760 --> 18:18.760] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works [18:18.760 --> 18:20.760] And glorify your Father which is in heaven [18:20.760 --> 18:25.760] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [18:25.760 --> 18:29.760] Join Nana and guests for both verse-by-verse Bible studies [18:29.760 --> 18:34.760] And topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works [18:34.760 --> 18:37.760] Our verse-by-verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew [18:37.760 --> 18:40.760] Where we will discuss one chapter per week [18:40.760 --> 18:43.760] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week [18:43.760 --> 18:47.760] And we'll explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development [18:47.760 --> 18:52.760] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [18:52.760 --> 18:56.760] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th [18:56.760 --> 19:22.760] For an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures [19:22.760 --> 19:37.760] We are back [19:37.760 --> 19:40.760] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain [19:40.760 --> 19:44.760] And we are talking about records requests [19:44.760 --> 19:49.760] We're talking about what's been going on in Wise County [19:49.760 --> 19:57.760] They arrested Randy. Apparently one of the bailiffs didn't like being told to mind his own business or something like that [19:57.760 --> 20:01.760] And so obviously that's arrest material [20:01.760 --> 20:09.760] And when I found out that they did that, I started asking them questions in the form of records requests [20:09.760 --> 20:15.760] So like I said, I was sending in some things to the sheriff and asking to see... [20:15.760 --> 20:20.760] The recordings, the video and audio, I want to see a arrest report, incident report [20:20.760 --> 20:29.760] You know, who complained, show me the affidavits of the complaint, the crime that was complained of and so forth [20:29.760 --> 20:34.760] But I also reached out to quite a few others [20:34.760 --> 20:46.760] At one point, finally, the sheriff responded to me saying that Mr. Kelton has that information about which JP [20:46.760 --> 20:50.760] And I said, well, okay, I don't have that information [20:50.760 --> 20:56.760] And thank you for telling me that it's a JP, but there are four of them, which one? [20:56.760 --> 21:01.760] And he still hasn't answered me to this day [21:01.760 --> 21:04.760] That right there is a criminal violation [21:04.760 --> 21:11.760] I don't know if he realizes it, he keeps saying he's following the law, but apparently he doesn't know the law [21:11.760 --> 21:17.760] We had one of the justice of the piece, I reached out to all four of them because I couldn't find out which one [21:17.760 --> 21:23.760] So I just started sending some requests to all four of them [21:23.760 --> 21:30.760] And they have a variety of ways they try to push back and not answer the request [21:30.760 --> 21:37.760] And I'll tell you, Randy, you've probably noticed this too, they're not really that creative [21:37.760 --> 21:47.760] There is a variety of things that they try to do to push back and the custodian of the records or the one who's responsible to give you the records [21:47.760 --> 21:56.760] They have a certain, seems like a small list of cards that they go through [21:56.760 --> 22:01.760] Well, I'll pull this card and I'll give this excuse of why I can't answer [22:01.760 --> 22:05.760] But they have a pretty limited set of cards [22:05.760 --> 22:17.760] So we have one of these justices of the piece that says that they need to see a photo ID from me [22:17.760 --> 22:30.760] And they need to have me fill out their open records request form and they say that I'm going to have to pay a dollar for the first page [22:30.760 --> 22:33.760] 25 cents for each additional page [22:33.760 --> 22:41.760] They say that I need to send them the copy fees before they're going to send me the responsive information [22:41.760 --> 22:52.760] All of these things, it's pretty simple, you just read it slowly and you take it apart and you say, huh, they're demanding that I use their form instead of [22:52.760 --> 23:02.760] I just simply said what it is, I was specific, they know what I want, they didn't ask for clarification, they knew exactly what I want but they went on their form [23:02.760 --> 23:08.760] Well, no, why should I have to put it on their form? [23:08.760 --> 23:16.760] So I turned it around to them to create, based on their pushback, I created another records request [23:16.760 --> 23:24.760] And I say, please note there's no such thing as an official form for records requests that requesters are required to use [23:24.760 --> 23:37.760] So the second request I have for you is for your records or documents, memos, policy manuals or any such thing that would indicate you're having authority to impose a condition of me filling out a certain form [23:37.760 --> 23:49.760] And we went on down the line, everything that she said that I had to do a certain way, I asked, you know, impose a condition on me providing you a copy of my photo ID [23:49.760 --> 23:58.760] There's no requirement for a requester to respond to identity related questions, you could be as anonymous as you want to [23:58.760 --> 24:07.760] She wants to ask the question and turn it into a condition of her doing her duty [24:07.760 --> 24:13.760] So I ask for all the records that she has that would indicate she has authority to do so [24:13.760 --> 24:20.760] Well guess what, she doesn't, she can't, there are no records responsive to that request [24:20.760 --> 24:31.760] And so forth, charging you per page copy fees when there are no materials, I'm asking for email or electronic access in the URL [24:31.760 --> 24:41.760] Show me where do I log on to see this material, I want to inspect it remotely, I don't want to pay for paper copies [24:41.760 --> 24:51.760] And so they have no authority to charge copy fees when there are no materials and so forth, we just went on down the line [24:51.760 --> 25:06.760] At some point, I went ahead and pitched her a request for her office's compliance with the mandatory training for records requests [25:06.760 --> 25:13.760] Obviously, she hasn't been through it or she wouldn't be putting all of these roadblocks in the way [25:13.760 --> 25:20.760] She's required to have mandatory training once a year, so I asked to see those certificates [25:20.760 --> 25:30.760] What do you think she's going to be feeling about now, Randy? Do you think she'll be ready to show me her certificates? [25:30.760 --> 25:39.760] Well, I think she's beginning to realize that this is a meat grinder and you're holding the crank [25:39.760 --> 25:50.760] That you set them up and walked them into it, and just from the responses you've been sending me, the responses you're getting [25:50.760 --> 26:02.760] It's clear from what I'm seeing that they've realized that you're setting them up, that they're trying to pull their little shenanigans [26:02.760 --> 26:10.760] And it's clear every time they try one that you're ahead of that one, not your first rodeo [26:10.760 --> 26:21.760] And now they're in this position where it's like the bully who just got smacked upside the jaw. What does he do now? [26:21.760 --> 26:28.760] How does he maintain face with this two-bit pro se who's annoying him? [26:28.760 --> 26:41.760] You've already bar-greased that one attorney, so shiny teeth, and you've got to tell them about that one [26:41.760 --> 26:52.760] Well, apparently one of these records requests got diverted over to an attorney. I don't know why [26:52.760 --> 26:58.760] It had nothing to do with anything that's potentially confidential or maybe shouldn't be released [26:58.760 --> 27:13.760] This is just plain very simple public information. I think that one might have been for, I think I was asking for orders that were issued by the commissioners court [27:13.760 --> 27:19.760] So there's nothing private about that. It's an order from the commissioners court, super public [27:19.760 --> 27:27.760] These are the orders that went to the terms for the county judges? [27:27.760 --> 27:37.760] Correct. And so there's nothing private about that. It is absolutely public information [27:37.760 --> 27:43.760] But they sent this request over to an attorney who wants to get in the way and throw up obstacles [27:43.760 --> 27:52.760] And I sent him away basically telling him I don't know who he is. I don't recognize him. I'm not dealing with third parties [27:52.760 --> 28:03.760] And I don't know why you're talking to me but out. So, you know, he was basically impersonating a public official [28:03.760 --> 28:07.760] He might be a public official. I don't know, but he's not that one I was addressing [28:07.760 --> 28:16.760] And what he did amounts to baritry. Straight up, if you read the Texas Penal Code 3812, that's exactly what he was doing [28:16.760 --> 28:26.760] He's not allowed to do that. And he's violating a number of the rules of Texas disciplinary rules of professional conduct for lawyers [28:26.760 --> 28:34.760] A number of them. And he's giving me this unsolicited legal advice trying to deprive me of my rights [28:34.760 --> 28:42.760] And he's lying and I didn't ask him to represent me. He's just button in. So, I barred him [28:42.760 --> 28:47.760] And then I replied to his message and told him to go away [28:47.760 --> 28:59.760] Well, later I got a reply from one of the, I believe it was the county judge who was telling me how this man is such a wonderful man [28:59.760 --> 29:04.760] This attorney is so great and he serves the community and all this [29:04.760 --> 29:10.760] And so I think this is the one you're talking about, Randy, is where I said, well, you know, it's okay [29:10.760 --> 29:18.760] This one where they said that you were being hoped you wouldn't continue to be unprofessional [29:18.760 --> 29:33.760] Yeah, so I responded back and told him that well, you know, he might very well just be a fine man [29:33.760 --> 29:37.760] He might have sparkling teeth and odorless armpits [29:37.760 --> 29:49.760] But I still expect him to follow the law [29:49.760 --> 30:14.760] Well, we'll be right back [30:14.760 --> 30:20.760] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [30:20.760 --> 30:25.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [30:25.760 --> 30:30.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [30:30.760 --> 30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [30:33.760 --> 30:36.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com [30:36.760 --> 30:40.760] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing [30:40.760 --> 30:44.760] Start over with StartPage [30:44.760 --> 30:46.760] Data privacy is a big deal [30:46.760 --> 30:51.760] So nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information [30:51.760 --> 30:53.760] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:53.760 --> 30:55.760] It's not an idle question [30:55.760 --> 31:03.760] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year [31:03.760 --> 31:07.760] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com [31:07.760 --> 31:11.760] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you [31:11.760 --> 31:15.760] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see [31:15.760 --> 31:17.760] The cupboard would be bare [31:17.760 --> 31:20.760] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way [31:20.760 --> 31:22.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [31:22.760 --> 31:30.760] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [31:30.760 --> 31:31.760] I lost my son [31:31.760 --> 31:32.760] My uncle [31:32.760 --> 31:33.760] My uncle [31:33.760 --> 31:35.760] On September 11, 2001 [31:35.760 --> 31:38.760] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11 [31:38.760 --> 31:42.760] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane [31:42.760 --> 31:46.760] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7 [31:46.760 --> 31:50.760] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.760 --> 31:52.760] And believed there is more to the story [31:52.760 --> 31:53.760] Bring justice to my son [31:53.760 --> 31:54.760] My uncle [31:54.760 --> 31:55.760] My nephew [31:55.760 --> 31:56.760] My son [31:56.760 --> 31:57.760] Go to BuildingWhat.org [31:57.760 --> 32:00.760] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do [32:00.760 --> 32:05.760] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar [32:05.760 --> 32:07.760] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [32:07.760 --> 32:09.760] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society [32:09.760 --> 32:12.760] Then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights [32:12.760 --> 32:15.760] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [32:15.760 --> 32:17.760] The right to act in our own private capacity [32:17.760 --> 32:19.760] And most importantly, the right to due process of law [32:19.760 --> 32:25.760] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [32:25.760 --> 32:30.760] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:30.760 --> 32:34.760] That will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law [32:34.760 --> 32:40.760] You can get your own copy of this valuable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today [32:40.760 --> 32:44.760] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [32:44.760 --> 32:47.760] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [32:47.760 --> 32:50.760] Hundreds of research documents and further useful resource material [32:50.760 --> 32:54.760] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com [32:54.760 --> 32:59.760] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve [32:59.760 --> 33:22.760] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:29.760 --> 33:34.760] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:59.760 --> 34:09.760] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com [34:29.760 --> 34:41.760] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com [34:41.760 --> 34:47.760] Okay, we are back, this is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain [34:47.760 --> 34:52.760] And we're talking about records requests in Wise County [34:52.760 --> 35:02.760] Records requests that are specifically start up and triggered by the unresponsiveness to prior records requests [35:02.760 --> 35:13.760] It's like I mentioned to the sheriff this afternoon, I said, you know, I've got these five outstanding records requests [35:13.760 --> 35:21.760] Where is it six to him now? I don't remember, but there were only two originally and because he was unresponsive, I had to keep coming back with more [35:21.760 --> 35:28.760] And the same thing for JP1, we got up to I think six record requests with her [35:28.760 --> 35:38.760] I started out just asking something simple, I want to see all the proceedings that you presided over in the last three days [35:38.760 --> 35:46.760] I want, you know, basic stuff, I want to see names of the accused or defendant, what type of proceeding it was [35:46.760 --> 35:55.760] I'm not asking for, this is not rocket science, they should be able to do this, you know, their secretary ought to be able to come up with a response within the minute [35:55.760 --> 36:00.760] Not about a week later, they're still pushing back [36:00.760 --> 36:11.760] So she's sitting on six requests, she finally responded to me and gave me the first request after she realized that this was just going to continue escalating [36:11.760 --> 36:23.760] The more obstacles she put up, I gave her another records request that goes to that obstacle and asks for the records showing her authority to put that obstacle in there [36:23.760 --> 36:29.760] And I think she finally figured out when we got up to number six, she realized that was just going to continue [36:29.760 --> 36:31.760] I suspect [36:31.760 --> 36:33.760] She stopped [36:33.760 --> 36:42.760] I suspect that the county attorney, see, he's getting all of the requests both from you and from me [36:42.760 --> 36:49.760] He's looking at this saying that these guys are setting us up, we've got to stop screwing with them [36:49.760 --> 37:00.760] I sent a request to the county, to the county clerk and the district clerk and a couple of the JPs [37:00.760 --> 37:11.760] Asking them for all the records collected, symbol maintained by the departments that are specifically referenced by article 17.30, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure [37:11.760 --> 37:26.760] Then I asked for 16 points, all records containing orders as referenced by 16.17 and 16.20 [37:26.760 --> 37:34.760] 16.17 is the order the judge issues after an examining trial [37:34.760 --> 37:40.760] And 16.20 is a warrant that the magistrate's required to produce [37:40.760 --> 37:47.760] And I just got a response from the county saying they have no records responsive to my request [37:47.760 --> 37:52.760] But I was pretty dignified to the county [37:52.760 --> 38:00.760] I got a response back saying that all of their records were online and I could come down to their office and use a computer terminal there [38:00.760 --> 38:03.760] Well, I had already done that [38:03.760 --> 38:09.760] And I made the woman in the office, I didn't get her name [38:09.760 --> 38:18.760] Verified to me that every record they had was on this computer [38:18.760 --> 38:24.760] And I questioned about it, now if I ask for a record that I don't see here [38:24.760 --> 38:29.760] Is it going to later magically appear? [38:29.760 --> 38:36.760] Or are there no records that aren't on the computer? She said if they're not on the computer we don't have them [38:36.760 --> 38:47.760] So I told her that the reason I'm being so specific this way is I'm looking for a record I don't expect to find [38:47.760 --> 38:53.760] So when I don't find it I need to know that it doesn't exist [38:53.760 --> 38:57.760] And she said if it's not in that file it doesn't exist [38:57.760 --> 39:02.760] So I sent her a request for the record that wasn't in the file [39:02.760 --> 39:09.760] The warrant, the 16.17 order [39:09.760 --> 39:15.760] And they sent me a response saying they have no records responsive to my request [39:15.760 --> 39:19.760] That's what I asked them to do, if you don't have it just say so [39:19.760 --> 39:24.760] There is a due process issue here, but it's not your issue [39:24.760 --> 39:33.760] You are only the clerk, you only take the record you get and tell me what record you have and you're out of this [39:33.760 --> 39:42.760] And I think the county attorney told them don't mess with him, send him what he asked for [39:42.760 --> 39:46.760] But I also think they don't understand what they sent me [39:46.760 --> 39:55.760] They sent me verification that all of their criminal prosecutions are illegal [39:55.760 --> 40:00.760] Every single one [40:00.760 --> 40:07.760] Yeah, and we knew that already, but it's good to have them say so [40:07.760 --> 40:14.760] Yeah, I needed them to say so, so that's not an issue that comes up later [40:14.760 --> 40:21.760] Have you been holding examining trials? They can't say well blah blah blah [40:21.760 --> 40:28.760] I have in front of me right now eight pages of indictments [40:28.760 --> 40:41.760] I went down to the clerk's office and looked in the record and found no evidence of examining trials [40:41.760 --> 41:00.760] I have sent a request to the county clerk for 1620 and 16.17 orders and haven't received a response yet, but I know what I'm going to get [41:00.760 --> 41:13.760] Because didn't you ask some magistrates for all the records of any examining trials that they had and you got a response that they have no record response if you request [41:13.760 --> 41:18.760] I don't think I've asked that [41:18.760 --> 41:39.760] I asked to see all the proceedings that they've had in the past 72 hours and obviously that should include an examining trial for everybody that was brought in there that didn't have a case already going [41:39.760 --> 41:53.760] Well, I asked for 1620 records. The purpose of the 1620 record, that's the warrant, the magistrate issues after examining trial [41:53.760 --> 42:03.760] In order for the court to have jurisdiction when a complaint is made, the complaint is intended to be presented to some magistrate [42:03.760 --> 42:14.760] The magistrate has jurisdiction to hear a criminal complaint from a credible person, a credible person so you want to over the age of 18 never been convicted of a felony [42:14.760 --> 42:19.760] Okay, I met those requirements [42:19.760 --> 42:27.760] I gave complaints to magistrates, they are required to take those complaints, that is their only job [42:27.760 --> 42:42.760] Make a determination of probable cause, then once if they've determined that probable cause exists they issue an order under 16.17, they issue a warrant under 16.20 [42:42.760 --> 42:51.760] They seal all the documents had in the hearing in an envelope and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction under 17.30 [42:51.760 --> 42:57.760] That moves jurisdiction from the magistrate to the court [42:57.760 --> 43:12.760] Without it, the court cannot have jurisdiction. Whether you have a right to a misdemeanor or not is irrelevant [43:12.760 --> 43:22.760] In order for the court to have jurisdiction according to law, there must be one [43:22.760 --> 43:36.760] There's no way, when they say you don't have a right to examine a trial in a misdemeanor, then all of this law that amounts to due process gets bypassed [43:36.760 --> 43:42.760] And while we may not have a right to examine a trial, we do have a right to due process [43:42.760 --> 43:59.760] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Ruva Radio, on this Thursday, the 5th day of November, 2020, hang on, we'll be right back [43:59.760 --> 44:09.760] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without logos [44:09.760 --> 44:19.760] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements [44:19.760 --> 44:21.760] How can I help logos? [44:21.760 --> 44:34.760] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com [44:34.760 --> 44:42.760] Get on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos [44:42.760 --> 44:43.760] Do I pay extra? [44:43.760 --> 44:44.760] No [44:44.760 --> 44:46.760] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.760 --> 44:47.760] No [44:47.760 --> 44:48.760] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:48.760 --> 44:49.760] No [44:49.760 --> 44:50.760] I mean, yes [44:50.760 --> 44:56.760] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much [44:56.760 --> 44:57.760] We are logos [44:57.760 --> 45:21.760] Happy Holidays Logos! [45:27.760 --> 45:33.760] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience [45:33.760 --> 45:42.760] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts [45:42.760 --> 45:51.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more [45:51.760 --> 46:01.760] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ [46:21.760 --> 46:50.760] Okay, we are back [46:50.760 --> 46:59.760] Randy Kelf and Brett Fout in rule of law radio and we kind of need to spend some time on this public records issue [46:59.760 --> 47:11.760] But it is a great tool that we have and this is going to set things up for pre-litigation discovery [47:11.760 --> 47:23.760] Since we've hammered on a whole bunch on open records and where they drag their feet, well right now I actually have admissions [47:23.760 --> 47:42.760] And I expect to get those admissions from the district court as well as the county court and I don't think they understood what the importance of the records I was asking for is [47:42.760 --> 47:55.760] Without these records that can't have jurisdiction, without jurisdiction, everything they've done is illegal and I'm preparing a firestorm for them [47:55.760 --> 48:12.760] Once I get past all this preliminary stuff, now that I have an admission, at least in the county court, that there have been zero examining trials, zero orders, zero warrants [48:12.760 --> 48:31.760] Now I can claim zero jurisdiction and for every single arrest where the person was not taken directly to a magistrate, I'll file a TECO complaint against the officer [48:31.760 --> 48:43.760] And the officers are going to get apoplexy because their insurance carrier is also going to get apoplexy and he's going to give them apoplexy [48:43.760 --> 48:52.760] If he doesn't raise the bond rating so high they can't pay it, he's likely to cancel the bond [48:52.760 --> 49:03.760] We start professional conduct complaints against every single officer, so you want to follow the sheriff's practice and procedure, we say that works out for you [49:03.760 --> 49:14.760] I've been a long time trying to get them to do the right thing for the right reason because it was and they just absolutely refuse [49:14.760 --> 49:25.760] This has been 30 years at least that I've talked to them about this, so now since they've used the gauntlet down, now they get the object lesson [49:25.760 --> 49:37.760] We'll use Wise County to show every other county, don't be like these clowns or you'll wind up in the spot there and that's what we're trying to do with it [49:37.760 --> 49:46.760] So we're just going through the steps, digging out all the information that will set up our claims before we get to the claims [49:46.760 --> 49:55.760] And right now what you're telling me, Brett, is you've got records of people being arrested in the jail after I was arrested in the jail [49:55.760 --> 50:03.760] But you don't have records of me being arrested in the jail, is that correct? [50:03.760 --> 50:20.760] I thought that was pretty interesting. Yeah, one of them was trying to get me to use their in response, instead of just responding to my request to say what were the proceedings that this particular magistrate presided over [50:20.760 --> 50:35.760] Instead of just answering that question, they gave me just a general search facility online and so I went there and it doesn't really have the kinds of searching that to answer the question I asked [50:35.760 --> 50:49.760] However, I was able to get some lists out of it and you're not in there. There's people on the same day, there's other people after that but you're not in there [50:49.760 --> 51:00.760] So I was wondering, are they just pulling you from the list, they don't want it to look like you were ever there? [51:00.760 --> 51:08.760] I don't know. That would be tampering with a governmental record, that would be bearing the availability of the record [51:08.760 --> 51:20.760] I don't see how they could even imagine they could do that because they arrested me in the district attorney's office [51:20.760 --> 51:30.760] Like they found you around back or something? Yeah, my son-in-law is a JP, he was in the jail while I was in the jail [51:30.760 --> 51:37.760] So he absolutely knew I was there. There's no way they can hide it [51:37.760 --> 51:49.760] So what the prosecutor may be doing is not filing the case and that's what I hear they do a lot if the prosecutor is not sure he wants to prosecute, they don't file the case [51:49.760 --> 51:58.760] Well, that'll be interesting. We'll see how that works out for them. That denies me due process [51:58.760 --> 52:07.760] I don't have a case I can reference. I can't file a child and subject matter jurisdiction because there is no case [52:07.760 --> 52:19.760] I had put in a written request to the Sheriff's Office the day after I was arrested requesting all the records of my arrest [52:19.760 --> 52:29.760] I put that in a writing and told them that it was important that I get these quickly because there is time-sensitive information in there [52:29.760 --> 52:39.760] Oh yeah, we get to it quickly. Well, that was a while back and they haven't gotten to it [52:39.760 --> 52:53.760] So they may be holding this, the prosecutor is deciding whether or not he wants to prosecute and if he doesn't want to prosecute he won't file it with the magistrate [52:53.760 --> 53:00.760] Okay, what if that happens Fred? I get arrested, I get put in jail [53:00.760 --> 53:05.760] It doesn't change what I'm doing. I'm just asking questions [53:05.760 --> 53:14.760] It doesn't change the fact that I still want to know what's going on. Do they really have officers who are trained to break the law every day, day in, day out, 24-7? [53:14.760 --> 53:20.760] They're trained to break the law? Is that really what they're doing over there? I want to know [53:20.760 --> 53:23.760] I think that's the case. That's what it looks like [53:23.760 --> 53:31.760] And so whoever it is that's responsible to train these guys, these guys are supposed to be on our side. They're supposed to be on the side of peace [53:31.760 --> 53:40.760] They call themselves peace officers. Are they training them to break the law all the time as the norm? I'm asking the questions [53:40.760 --> 53:48.760] It doesn't really change what specifically whether they decide to prosecute you or not. They've already done the deed [53:48.760 --> 54:10.760] Well, this created an issue. I've been arrested. I have a right to be charged. I have a right to see the claims against me. Nature and cause. I have a right to nature and cause. I can find any of that [54:10.760 --> 54:29.760] I want to see the statement by the officer. If the prosecutor decides not to prosecute, is that statement going to disappear? Because I think that statement will be very useful to me when I get to a civil court [54:29.760 --> 54:49.760] Well, and to be more specific, it's not necessarily the statement of the officer that's important unless the officer is the one who's claiming he was harmed. It's a criminal complaint or a sworn affidavit from someone who says that you did a crime, right? [54:49.760 --> 54:51.760] That's what has to be done. [54:51.760 --> 54:56.760] The statement of the officer is their common substitute for that [54:56.760 --> 55:02.760] This was an on-site offense, so the officer himself is the complainant [55:02.760 --> 55:04.760] Right [55:04.760 --> 55:06.760] So he would be the one [55:06.760 --> 55:09.760] The peace officer can't have his peace breached? [55:09.760 --> 55:25.760] No, he cannot. I can stand and look him in. I call him everything I want to. As a peace officer, he's got to stand there and take it [55:25.760 --> 55:32.760] He didn't like being told to butt out, so that was disturbing the peace, right? [55:32.760 --> 55:45.760] Yeah, that was... I told him that you can't breach an officer's peace, so butt out. I guess I said breach of the peace, so he used that. [55:45.760 --> 55:58.760] He's probably thinking of some reason to arrest me, and maybe if I hadn't said that, he wouldn't have thought of what he did, but the problem with that is that you can only breach peace in public. [55:58.760 --> 56:04.760] So it's obvious that the arrest was bogus. [56:04.760 --> 56:19.760] So if the record disappeared, there's no actual record that I have was ever charged with anything. I was just arrested and thrown in jail. [56:19.760 --> 56:28.760] So I'm thinking, it won't hurt me, it'll be even better than I was obviously arrested and thrown in jail for no cause. [56:28.760 --> 56:46.760] Let me ask you something. When they decided that you needed to be held to bond, they wouldn't let you have bail, but they decided that you needed to pay bond in order to be let loose from their ransom. [56:46.760 --> 57:00.760] Well then, was there a case number involved? Because you're promising to reappear for some proceeding that they're going to have, or else forfeit your bond, right? [57:00.760 --> 57:04.760] So do they have a case number? [57:04.760 --> 57:29.760] I don't have it. Oh, maybe I do. I have a document. I doubt that it has a case number, but let me open it. Now, this was the sheet that the J.P. used when she did the, I don't want to say arraignment, that's not correct. [57:29.760 --> 57:48.760] She did something. But it definitely was not an arraignment. I'm digging through my documents here. I don't have them organized quite as good as I should be. I'll locate it, but I definitely have it. [57:48.760 --> 58:04.760] It was the cover sheet. I went to the J.P.'s office and got it from the J.P. And that was all that she had was that one piece of paper. [58:04.760 --> 58:21.760] Hang on. Go into our sponsors. When we come back, we'll go ahead and go to our callers. We have Tina and David. We'll pitch you up. When we come back on the other side, this is Randy Kelkin, Brett Fountain, Roodleville Radio. [58:21.760 --> 58:32.760] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be taking your calls for the rest of the night. So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [58:32.760 --> 58:39.760] You've got to say that a little bit more slowly. 512-646-1984. [58:39.760 --> 58:49.760] He just did that because I was going out too soon and had to fill in these extra seconds. Hang on. Nice work, Brett. We'll be right back. [58:49.760 --> 59:06.760] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.760 --> 59:27.760] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.760 --> 59:50.760] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102, or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.760 --> 59:59.760] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.760 --> 01:00:23.760] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:23.760 --> 01:00:45.760] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:45.760 --> 01:01:00.760] 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 entering 40. [01:01:00.760 --> 01:01:24.760] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hempett attacks his 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. [01:01:24.760 --> 01:01:33.760] 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. [01:01:33.760 --> 01:01:51.760] 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, [01:01:51.760 --> 01:02:12.760] Kyma 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. [01:02:12.760 --> 01:02:21.760] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:21.760 --> 01:02:38.760] 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. [01:02:38.760 --> 01:02:50.760] According to the university paper, the sharks creates a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.760 --> 01:03:09.760] This was Book Roadie with a lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:09.760 --> 01:03:32.940] A document from a 30-meter round on the [01:03:32.940 --> 01:04:02.540] Okay, we are back. [01:04:02.540 --> 01:04:12.700] We are going to go to our callers, on the break I did find the document I was looking [01:04:12.700 --> 01:04:20.300] for where they bonded me out and there is a bunch of documents here, but there is no [01:04:20.300 --> 01:04:25.900] cost number on any of it, so apparently I still don't have one yet. [01:04:25.900 --> 01:04:32.780] Okay, so they had you promised to appear and they get cash from you to end your promise [01:04:32.780 --> 01:04:37.100] to show up in a case that doesn't exist yet? [01:04:37.100 --> 01:04:40.100] Apparently. [01:04:40.100 --> 01:04:41.100] There is no... [01:04:41.100 --> 01:04:42.100] Interesting. [01:04:42.100 --> 01:04:48.260] There is a document here that says Noah Bowman's presence, a whole firmly bond. [01:04:48.260 --> 01:04:55.660] This is the bond document that I'm held on bond and I promised to appear before. [01:04:55.660 --> 01:05:04.940] J.P. municipal court to court at Law Wise County, but there is no case number. [01:05:04.940 --> 01:05:10.220] That's the same thing they did to me over in Wood County and they're still sitting on [01:05:10.220 --> 01:05:11.220] my cash. [01:05:11.220 --> 01:05:17.180] Well, that's two years later, two and a half now. [01:05:17.180 --> 01:05:25.100] That should get a suit for the cash and you should, okay, I will be building a suit for [01:05:25.100 --> 01:05:26.100] this issue. [01:05:26.100 --> 01:05:31.020] It's before the Texas Supreme right now. [01:05:31.020 --> 01:05:33.620] You have yours is? [01:05:33.620 --> 01:05:37.300] Yeah, mine is. [01:05:37.300 --> 01:05:43.380] Oh, what is before the Texas Supreme since it's criminal? [01:05:43.380 --> 01:05:50.740] It's a mandamus that was, so it was a long story. [01:05:50.740 --> 01:05:56.180] They can go ahead and go to callers, but it was the administrative process of the disqualification [01:05:56.180 --> 01:05:59.580] was handled improperly all the way up the chain. [01:05:59.580 --> 01:06:00.580] Oh, okay. [01:06:00.580 --> 01:06:04.860] So I'm asking the Supreme Court to sort that out. [01:06:04.860 --> 01:06:06.100] Oh, good. [01:06:06.100 --> 01:06:07.580] So they haven't rejected it? [01:06:07.580 --> 01:06:09.420] No, they haven't. [01:06:09.420 --> 01:06:16.180] And along with that, they got my criminal complaints against the senior justice who was [01:06:16.180 --> 01:06:17.820] supposed to oversee that. [01:06:17.820 --> 01:06:24.500] Oh, good, so you might want to file with the Court of Criminal Appeals as well. [01:06:24.500 --> 01:06:25.500] Okay. [01:06:25.500 --> 01:06:26.500] Tina. [01:06:26.500 --> 01:06:27.500] Hello. [01:06:27.500 --> 01:06:28.500] Hello. [01:06:28.500 --> 01:06:29.500] Okay. [01:06:29.500 --> 01:06:35.500] Tell us about your progress toward Manukin. [01:06:35.500 --> 01:06:43.860] Well, I actually have a couple of interesting things here, one happened today. [01:06:43.860 --> 01:06:56.180] I know you have seen the letter that I got from John O'Brien who's in charge of the Essex [01:06:56.180 --> 01:07:04.940] County Recorder's Office in Massachusetts who has been documenting fraud for a long time [01:07:04.940 --> 01:07:15.660] and do the whistle on this when he found 39,000, I think it was, you know, instances of robo [01:07:15.660 --> 01:07:17.860] signing fraudulent documents. [01:07:17.860 --> 01:07:25.740] And he refuses to record any document that has a known robo sign on it. [01:07:25.740 --> 01:07:31.140] You should specify 59,000 in his county alone. [01:07:31.140 --> 01:07:32.140] Alone. [01:07:32.140 --> 01:07:33.140] Yes. [01:07:33.140 --> 01:07:35.140] Yes. [01:07:35.140 --> 01:07:41.140] And he wrote a very nice letter. [01:07:41.140 --> 01:07:46.180] Oh, I've heard of him for years. [01:07:46.180 --> 01:07:49.700] He has been after him big time. [01:07:49.700 --> 01:07:55.140] So it was great to get a letter from him because he has a lot of stature in this area. [01:07:55.140 --> 01:07:56.140] That's right. [01:07:56.140 --> 01:08:00.860] And it's on his letterhead, which is very formal. [01:08:00.860 --> 01:08:05.700] You know, it just carries a lot of weight. [01:08:05.700 --> 01:08:15.340] What I did today is I converted his letter into a PDF and emailed it to the lady because [01:08:15.340 --> 01:08:19.980] we are having a lot of mail issues where the mail isn't getting through. [01:08:19.980 --> 01:08:26.820] Obviously, you know, we're having that for many reasons, but especially the voting. [01:08:26.820 --> 01:08:31.700] So I thought I said to her, you know, he is supposed to be overnighting a copy to you [01:08:31.700 --> 01:08:32.700] with attachments. [01:08:32.700 --> 01:08:39.620] I just wanted to make sure you've got this in case the letter doesn't arrive on time. [01:08:39.620 --> 01:08:45.460] And you know, the sad thing about what he emailed me, which people need to know is he [01:08:45.460 --> 01:08:53.140] tried to get as a public official to join in support and write and he could not get [01:08:53.140 --> 01:08:54.700] one. [01:08:54.700 --> 01:09:01.180] He said it's just bought by the banks. [01:09:01.180 --> 01:09:08.100] Did you talk to the clerk in Pennsylvania, Brenda, something? [01:09:08.100 --> 01:09:11.860] No, I wanted to try to do that tomorrow. [01:09:11.860 --> 01:09:15.980] Now I wanted to find out more about who this clerk was, what the situation was. [01:09:15.980 --> 01:09:21.180] I did email that grandma about this, but I hadn't had a response from her. [01:09:21.180 --> 01:09:24.900] Yes, we haven't had heard from her a while. [01:09:24.900 --> 01:09:25.900] Yeah. [01:09:25.900 --> 01:09:29.780] Don't have to get a hold of her to see what the deal is. [01:09:29.780 --> 01:09:38.940] But she helped this clerk in Pennsylvania go after MERS for filing fraudulent documents [01:09:38.940 --> 01:09:43.500] in the court record. [01:09:43.500 --> 01:09:49.140] So if you can get a letter from two clerks, that should go a long way toward convincing [01:09:49.140 --> 01:09:51.300] the grand jury. [01:09:51.300 --> 01:09:55.180] I will try calling her and emailing her tomorrow. [01:09:55.180 --> 01:10:02.740] Now, when he said it was very sad that he couldn't get other public officials, I said [01:10:02.740 --> 01:10:08.900] it's not just sad, it's disgusting because it shows the level of how much they've been [01:10:08.900 --> 01:10:16.100] bought and paid for and how they're not working for us, the public, they're working for themselves, [01:10:16.100 --> 01:10:18.220] the banks, the corporations. [01:10:18.220 --> 01:10:24.180] And that's not what they were elected to do, self-service is no service. [01:10:24.180 --> 01:10:30.260] And then I find out tonight that another person who's the former prosecutor for Midwest [01:10:30.260 --> 01:10:37.060] Commission has been retired many years, but she's experienced this fraud of minutiae. [01:10:37.060 --> 01:10:38.500] She's well versed in it. [01:10:38.500 --> 01:10:41.460] She has lived and breathed it. [01:10:41.460 --> 01:10:51.580] And she sent a letter of support with some backup information and her credentials. [01:10:51.580 --> 01:10:56.020] And she mailed it priority mail on October the 23rd. [01:10:56.020 --> 01:10:58.020] They still do not have it. [01:10:58.020 --> 01:11:04.820] I found out tonight that it's coming back to her because no one would sign for it. [01:11:04.820 --> 01:11:09.580] She put signature required and no one would sign. [01:11:09.580 --> 01:11:18.020] Now that makes me a little nervous about this whole process if no one would sign for that [01:11:18.020 --> 01:11:26.940] priority mail at the, you know, wherever it went to, the PO box or nobody picked it up. [01:11:26.940 --> 01:11:28.900] What would you see in that? [01:11:28.900 --> 01:11:31.900] What does that mean to you? [01:11:31.900 --> 01:11:38.780] It sounds like they may figure out what we're doing to them. [01:11:38.780 --> 01:11:42.180] They don't want to take responsibility in receiving these documents. [01:11:42.180 --> 01:11:43.660] That doesn't sound right. [01:11:43.660 --> 01:11:50.740] This is a prosecutor and these are documents that would be to the prosecution's benefit. [01:11:50.740 --> 01:11:53.860] This is going to be a mail room issue. [01:11:53.860 --> 01:12:02.580] Well, I did translate her letter to a PDF and emailed it to. [01:12:02.580 --> 01:12:09.820] I thought I would call this, you know, this person who had told me that it was going to [01:12:09.820 --> 01:12:14.980] them, you know, this Erica or whatever her name is, I thought I would call her tomorrow [01:12:14.980 --> 01:12:21.180] see if I could get hold of her and just mention that, you know, generally no one signed for [01:12:21.180 --> 01:12:22.180] this document. [01:12:22.180 --> 01:12:27.260] So it's going back, but this is, you know, good evidence for your prosecution. [01:12:27.260 --> 01:12:30.740] What do you suggest we do? [01:12:30.740 --> 01:12:31.740] That's what I was thinking. [01:12:31.740 --> 01:12:33.660] And that's a great idea. [01:12:33.660 --> 01:12:40.500] And the fact that you've already emailed it to her, that takes care of her getting it. [01:12:40.500 --> 01:12:44.380] And good thing about email is email is immutable. [01:12:44.380 --> 01:12:49.460] You not only have tracks on your computer, you have tracks on their computer. [01:12:49.460 --> 01:12:55.220] And I guess Brett can probably tell us about a lot in between. [01:12:55.220 --> 01:13:02.940] Yep, they leave traces on all the servers that they get, that they hop to as well. [01:13:02.940 --> 01:13:03.940] Yeah. [01:13:03.940 --> 01:13:04.940] Okay. [01:13:04.940 --> 01:13:13.260] Descending server, the receiving server, then hops in between. [01:13:13.260 --> 01:13:16.740] So every push and pop you can find? [01:13:16.740 --> 01:13:18.740] Yes. [01:13:18.740 --> 01:13:19.740] Okay. [01:13:19.740 --> 01:13:26.580] So I will keep you informed, I will call tomorrow and if I get any information back, I will [01:13:26.580 --> 01:13:28.780] let you know on the call tomorrow night. [01:13:28.780 --> 01:13:38.020] And then I wanted to let people know, I know I've emailed you and Brett this just yesterday. [01:13:38.020 --> 01:13:44.580] And it was from 2016, the CBS 60-minute hidden camera records lawyer bragging that lawyers [01:13:44.580 --> 01:13:48.220] are immune from criminal prosecution. [01:13:48.220 --> 01:13:51.740] And just so everyone knows, they can search for it. [01:13:51.740 --> 01:13:55.940] They don't send the lawyers to jail because we run the country. [01:13:55.940 --> 01:14:00.300] We're members of a privileged class in this country. [01:14:00.300 --> 01:14:05.980] We make the laws and when we do so, we make them in a way that is advantageous to the [01:14:05.980 --> 01:14:06.980] lawyer. [01:14:06.980 --> 01:14:12.140] Attorney Mark Coplick explains on hidden video in his 60-minute broadcast clip. [01:14:12.140 --> 01:14:13.140] Yeah. [01:14:13.140 --> 01:14:17.940] I heard that years ago when it occurred and I thought to myself, yeah, but I don't know [01:14:17.940 --> 01:14:22.100] where, but that's a lot of wishful thinking. [01:14:22.100 --> 01:14:28.020] What they have is the public in a position where they don't understand the power that [01:14:28.020 --> 01:14:29.020] they have. [01:14:29.020 --> 01:14:36.300] I'm going to bet, Tina, there's not a single lawyer who deals, has dealt with you that [01:14:36.300 --> 01:14:44.220] believes that immune nonsense because you have pounded them and there was no way for [01:14:44.220 --> 01:14:48.020] them to protect themselves. [01:14:48.020 --> 01:14:49.020] Go ahead. [01:14:49.020 --> 01:14:50.020] I do have one that thinks is immune. [01:14:50.020 --> 01:14:55.900] I have one that thinks is immune and I have to get criminal complaints filed somehow against [01:14:55.900 --> 01:15:01.780] this particular one who has violated the law in Texas and California and he said on the [01:15:01.780 --> 01:15:05.980] phone, I heard him say, well, you go ahead and file a complaint, see what the last ones [01:15:05.980 --> 01:15:07.220] did. [01:15:07.220 --> 01:15:08.220] And he has been immune. [01:15:08.220 --> 01:15:18.540] I've been refused access to his written responses, you know, his complaints went nowhere. [01:15:18.540 --> 01:15:24.820] So far he's been immune, but I keep him on him. [01:15:24.820 --> 01:15:29.740] I think it has to go criminally now. [01:15:29.740 --> 01:15:33.500] Is he included in the complaints in Texas? [01:15:33.500 --> 01:15:34.500] No. [01:15:34.500 --> 01:15:39.100] I don't know, but I just do one in Texas. [01:15:39.100 --> 01:15:44.460] Is he the one that received the false documents? [01:15:44.460 --> 01:15:48.540] He, no, that's another one. [01:15:48.540 --> 01:15:55.380] He helped submit them into court, but he is the one that told the Texas motorists that [01:15:55.380 --> 01:16:01.380] they were not going to respond to my records request for their ledgers. [01:16:01.380 --> 01:16:05.860] He should, he should get criminal charges in Texas. [01:16:05.860 --> 01:16:06.860] He should. [01:16:06.860 --> 01:16:10.300] I just don't think I had a right, the right one. [01:16:10.300 --> 01:16:11.540] That's minimum standards. [01:16:11.540 --> 01:16:18.340] He's got enough minimum contacts under international shoe to bring him into Texas. [01:16:18.340 --> 01:16:25.380] He's in California conspiring with a notary in Texas to commit a criminal act. [01:16:25.380 --> 01:16:27.380] He's culpable in Texas. [01:16:27.380 --> 01:16:28.380] He's notary. [01:16:28.380 --> 01:16:29.380] Yeah. [01:16:29.380 --> 01:16:35.380] He feels like he's immune in California, so let's see how immune he feels in Texas. [01:16:35.380 --> 01:16:38.380] That would be good. [01:16:38.380 --> 01:16:39.380] Hang on. [01:16:39.380 --> 01:16:45.180] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Law Radio, if you don't have anything else, we'll move [01:16:45.180 --> 01:16:46.180] on. [01:16:46.180 --> 01:16:47.180] Do you have any more? [01:16:47.180 --> 01:16:48.180] Gina? [01:16:48.180 --> 01:16:49.180] Move on to the next one. [01:16:49.180 --> 01:16:50.180] Yeah. [01:16:50.180 --> 01:16:51.180] Please move on to the next caller. [01:16:51.180 --> 01:16:52.180] Okay. [01:16:52.180 --> 01:16:53.180] Thank you. [01:16:53.180 --> 01:16:54.180] Thank you, Tina. [01:16:54.180 --> 01:17:05.620] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [01:17:05.620 --> 01:17:11.620] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. central time. [01:17:11.620 --> 01:17:14.700] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. [01:17:14.700 --> 01:17:19.740] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [01:17:19.740 --> 01:17:21.260] which is in heaven. [01:17:21.260 --> 01:17:26.380] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:26.380 --> 01:17:31.620] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [01:17:31.620 --> 01:17:34.740] to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.740 --> 01:17:39.140] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [01:17:39.140 --> 01:17:40.900] one chapter per week. [01:17:40.900 --> 01:17:45.980] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [01:17:45.980 --> 01:17:48.180] Christian character development. [01:17:48.180 --> 01:17:55.820] So market calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January [01:17:55.820 --> 01:18:01.500] 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [01:18:01.500 --> 01:18:10.380] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas [01:18:10.380 --> 01:18:11.380] Gun Works. [01:18:11.380 --> 01:18:15.020] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:15.020 --> 01:18:18.620] Any amount is appreciated, everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.620 --> 01:18:25.060] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:25.060 --> 01:18:27.620] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:18:27.620 --> 01:18:30.820] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.820 --> 01:18:36.420] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.420 --> 01:18:40.140] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:40.140 --> 01:18:44.700] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [01:18:44.700 --> 01:18:49.060] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [01:18:49.060 --> 01:18:55.140] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and remember, every $25 donation is a chance [01:18:55.140 --> 01:18:56.140] to win. [01:18:56.140 --> 01:19:22.140] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:26.140 --> 01:19:55.660] Okay, we are back, this is the rule of law radio, Randy Kelton. [01:19:55.660 --> 01:20:03.100] I'm Brad Fountain on this the fifth day of November 2020 and we're going to go next to [01:20:03.100 --> 01:20:04.100] our caller David. [01:20:04.100 --> 01:20:12.700] Let's see, we've got David, I believe in Texas, let's see here, yes, David in Texas. [01:20:12.700 --> 01:20:15.220] Hey David, thanks for calling tonight. [01:20:15.220 --> 01:20:18.220] Yeah, this is Pennsylvania here. [01:20:18.220 --> 01:20:28.260] This federal judge that I, while criminal charges on, and judicial conduct and Bart [01:20:28.260 --> 01:20:35.740] Reeve them, also Bart Reeve your husband too, I think he's in on this conspiracy here that [01:20:35.740 --> 01:20:38.260] got against me. [01:20:38.260 --> 01:20:45.100] Would that taint these other cases that I have in the federal court or not? [01:20:45.100 --> 01:20:48.540] Would it taint the cases in the federal court? [01:20:48.540 --> 01:20:54.740] You just judge compromise now that I follow federal charges against or you don't have to [01:20:54.740 --> 01:20:57.620] wait until I play it out? [01:20:57.620 --> 01:21:02.380] I'll be inclined, what is Randy had to say, I'd be inclined to say that you're safe from [01:21:02.380 --> 01:21:05.580] your perspective but he's not safe. [01:21:05.580 --> 01:21:13.060] He would not be okay to preside over your case because he can't be fair and impartial. [01:21:13.060 --> 01:21:20.820] The criminal charges have nothing to do with civil, they're totally different things. [01:21:20.820 --> 01:21:25.940] So the only effect it could have is to disqualify the judge. [01:21:25.940 --> 01:21:33.260] Oh, okay, so the cases are still pending? [01:21:33.260 --> 01:21:38.740] The cases, oh, okay, hold on, I'm not sure what cases you're talking about. [01:21:38.740 --> 01:21:43.740] You're talking about a criminal prosecution? [01:21:43.740 --> 01:21:47.420] No, they're civil, I'm still on a public official. [01:21:47.420 --> 01:21:53.300] Oh, okay, and have you filed criminal charges against that same public official? [01:21:53.300 --> 01:21:58.540] No, I can't file criminal charges yet in Pennsylvania. [01:21:58.540 --> 01:22:04.900] Okay, I'm not sure how you're referencing criminal charges that would affect your civil [01:22:04.900 --> 01:22:06.900] case. [01:22:06.900 --> 01:22:09.860] Who did you file the criminal charges against? [01:22:09.860 --> 01:22:15.060] I filed the criminal charges against the judge because the judge wrote an amendment to me [01:22:15.060 --> 01:22:23.060] telling me that I don't have any privileges to file anything and then they threw an injunction [01:22:23.060 --> 01:22:24.060] at me. [01:22:24.060 --> 01:22:31.460] So I filed criminal charges because under First Amendment I have a right to file and they [01:22:31.460 --> 01:22:34.340] cancelled an injunction against me, right? [01:22:34.340 --> 01:22:43.140] An injunction, wow, telling you that you are prohibited from filing? [01:22:43.140 --> 01:22:45.140] That's about what it's saying. [01:22:45.140 --> 01:22:46.140] Wow. [01:22:46.140 --> 01:22:54.140] Okay, filing what, motions and pleadings in your case or criminal charges? [01:22:54.140 --> 01:23:00.580] Any more civil cases in this particular case? [01:23:00.580 --> 01:23:10.700] Like I said, preventing access to the courts, can't have any redress of grievances. [01:23:10.700 --> 01:23:14.940] That's exactly the way I would read that and that's what you filed, is that what you filed [01:23:14.940 --> 01:23:16.940] against him for? [01:23:16.940 --> 01:23:24.780] Yeah, I filed it up in the circuit though because of the problem I was having in the [01:23:24.780 --> 01:23:27.100] district federal court. [01:23:27.100 --> 01:23:28.980] Well, that's good. [01:23:28.980 --> 01:23:40.740] The only effect it would have on the current proceeding is to disqualify the judge. [01:23:40.740 --> 01:23:43.860] I like to do that. [01:23:43.860 --> 01:23:51.020] We had a judge not produce findings, effect and conclusions at law when the statute says [01:23:51.020 --> 01:23:57.140] the judge shall produce findings, effect and conclusions at law. [01:23:57.140 --> 01:24:02.180] It says if he doesn't produce it, he shall produce it within 20 days, but if he doesn't, [01:24:02.180 --> 01:24:06.500] you can file a notice of late filing and he gets another 10 days. [01:24:06.500 --> 01:24:12.020] But what I read was, is it said he shall produce them in 20 days. [01:24:12.020 --> 01:24:16.660] He didn't produce them in 20 days, he failed to perform a duty he is required to perform, [01:24:16.660 --> 01:24:20.820] then processed, not a citizen's phone free access to enjoy him at a right, that's crime [01:24:20.820 --> 01:24:24.940] in Texas the way I read it, whether he's got 10 more days or not. [01:24:24.940 --> 01:24:27.380] Then we filed criminal charges with grand jury. [01:24:27.380 --> 01:24:31.660] Oh, that was fun. [01:24:31.660 --> 01:24:37.140] So yeah, the two are separate. [01:24:37.140 --> 01:24:42.220] If you have knowledge that a felon has been committed and you don't give notice of that, [01:24:42.220 --> 01:24:54.140] you can be prosecuted, or at least in Texas, and under 18 U.S. Code 4, not 18 U.S. Code [01:24:54.140 --> 01:25:01.580] 39, 26 or something, way down there in the back, but four and three has been repealed. [01:25:01.580 --> 01:25:05.860] It's called misprison of felony. [01:25:05.860 --> 01:25:10.460] In the Fed, it is a crime not to report a felony. [01:25:10.460 --> 01:25:23.900] So if it can be a crime not to report a crime, you cannot be liable for reporting a crime. [01:25:23.900 --> 01:25:26.500] Does that sound contradictory or convoluted? [01:25:26.500 --> 01:25:33.900] Oh, yeah, no, I use that for quite a few times there. [01:25:33.900 --> 01:25:43.980] So one thing is just, I filed criminal charges against the opposing party, and they filed [01:25:43.980 --> 01:25:46.980] a motion to strike. [01:25:46.980 --> 01:25:54.340] Wait a minute, they filed a motion to strike criminal charges? [01:25:54.340 --> 01:26:01.940] Yeah, well, what they did is the attorney, I guess, got together with the Code enforcement [01:26:01.940 --> 01:26:15.980] officer, and they cooked up a paper that said the response to the trouble-clang. [01:26:15.980 --> 01:26:24.100] And on it, it sounded like crazy, so I told the trial- [01:26:24.100 --> 01:26:31.860] Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait, you said it was a motion to strike, a motion to strike [01:26:31.860 --> 01:26:32.860] what? [01:26:32.860 --> 01:26:41.740] I think that's what he's just about to get to, that he wrote up an opposition to all [01:26:41.740 --> 01:26:46.740] of their nonsense, and they're trying to strike his opposition. [01:26:46.740 --> 01:26:48.540] Yeah, it was a declaratory. [01:26:48.540 --> 01:26:56.900] You know how you fill out a declaratory and you swear that everything that you said is [01:26:56.900 --> 01:26:57.900] true? [01:26:57.900 --> 01:27:00.260] Well, there was five statements of it. [01:27:00.260 --> 01:27:02.620] Okay, hold on, hold on, that's an affidavit. [01:27:02.620 --> 01:27:04.620] We're wrong. [01:27:04.620 --> 01:27:08.980] Okay, wait a minute, we're confusing things here. [01:27:08.980 --> 01:27:16.020] If you were speaking to an affidavit, will you file a statement and swear that that statement [01:27:16.020 --> 01:27:17.020] is true? [01:27:17.020 --> 01:27:26.420] You know, what the Court of the Code enforcement officer did is, just here, an employee of [01:27:26.420 --> 01:27:33.460] the township make this declaration based on my personal molly, and then they sign it. [01:27:33.460 --> 01:27:38.620] They made four paragraphs here, and all of them were untrue, and I took them all apart [01:27:38.620 --> 01:27:45.740] and whatever there was, the criminal charges on it, but the civil case, I don't know whether [01:27:45.740 --> 01:27:46.740] they'll do anything. [01:27:46.740 --> 01:28:00.540] I mean, I mailed a copy to the FBI, I mailed a copy to the general down there, the attorney [01:28:00.540 --> 01:28:01.540] general. [01:28:01.540 --> 01:28:02.540] The attorney general. [01:28:02.540 --> 01:28:03.540] Yeah. [01:28:03.540 --> 01:28:14.140] And that's when they put it in record, as soon as they hit the record, within 30 days, [01:28:14.140 --> 01:28:20.500] the attorney wrote a motion to strike and filed it in... [01:28:20.500 --> 01:28:26.100] Okay, a motion to strike what specifically? [01:28:26.100 --> 01:28:30.100] My motion, all my motion and my charges. [01:28:30.100 --> 01:28:31.100] Okay. [01:28:31.100 --> 01:28:36.980] Okay, see, there's a problem here, I think we have a misunderstanding. [01:28:36.980 --> 01:28:46.540] He can file a motion to strike your motion, but can't strike criminal charges because [01:28:46.540 --> 01:28:54.580] if you filed criminal charges in this court, then that's a whole different cause. [01:28:54.580 --> 01:28:58.620] Maybe he doesn't realize that. [01:28:58.620 --> 01:29:04.180] Maybe that attorney filing this motion to strike doesn't realize that. [01:29:04.180 --> 01:29:10.740] Okay, you got criminal, you got civil, they're two different things. [01:29:10.740 --> 01:29:16.380] So he's filing in a civil case to strike a criminal complaint. [01:29:16.380 --> 01:29:21.580] The judge in the civil case would only have jurisdiction over the civil case. [01:29:21.580 --> 01:29:28.300] Now, he might have jurisdiction over the criminal case, but that's a separate jurisdiction. [01:29:28.300 --> 01:29:34.700] He would have to file a motion in the criminal to dismiss the criminal complaint. [01:29:34.700 --> 01:29:38.300] I was a little confused here of how these pieces are fitting together. [01:29:38.300 --> 01:29:44.660] David, do you realize that you might just, it's barely possible that you might be embarrassing [01:29:44.660 --> 01:29:49.100] these guys when you take apart all of their lies and you show it for everyone to see? [01:29:49.100 --> 01:29:52.660] Don't you know that might be a little bit embarrassing to them? [01:29:52.660 --> 01:29:53.660] Aren't you ashamed? [01:29:53.660 --> 01:29:54.660] Hang on. [01:29:54.660 --> 01:30:01.660] We'll be right back on the other side and give you a red face of chance to go away. [01:30:01.660 --> 01:30:09.020] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:30:09.020 --> 01:30:10.020] on growing. [01:30:10.020 --> 01:30:13.180] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.180 --> 01:30:14.540] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.540 --> 01:30:17.260] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:17.260 --> 01:30:18.980] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.980 --> 01:30:22.580] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.580 --> 01:30:27.580] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.580 --> 01:30:32.820] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.820 --> 01:30:35.340] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.340 --> 01:30:40.940] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:40.940 --> 01:30:42.660] Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:42.660 --> 01:30:44.900] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.900 --> 01:30:49.260] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.260 --> 01:30:54.580] So you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again, all that stress [01:30:54.580 --> 01:30:56.820] might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.820 --> 01:31:01.420] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.420 --> 01:31:04.980] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.980 --> 01:31:09.820] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed-out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal [01:31:09.820 --> 01:31:10.820] cortex. [01:31:10.820 --> 01:31:16.380] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.380 --> 01:31:18.380] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.380 --> 01:31:21.260] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.260 --> 01:31:31.580] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.580 --> 01:31:36.940] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.940 --> 01:31:38.980] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.980 --> 01:31:43.980] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.980 --> 01:31:46.740] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.740 --> 01:31:49.420] 5,000 of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.420 --> 01:31:50.820] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.820 --> 01:31:51.820] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.820 --> 01:31:53.220] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.220 --> 01:31:54.220] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.220 --> 01:31:55.820] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.820 --> 01:31:58.500] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.500 --> 01:32:01.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.500 --> 01:32:06.020] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.020 --> 01:32:08.300] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.300 --> 01:32:11.620] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [01:32:11.620 --> 01:32:13.620] stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.620 --> 01:32:16.260] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [01:32:16.260 --> 01:32:20.060] The right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process [01:32:20.060 --> 01:32:21.060] of law. [01:32:21.060 --> 01:32:24.860] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.860 --> 01:32:26.660] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.660 --> 01:32:30.180] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:30.180 --> 01:32:33.940] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.940 --> 01:32:36.340] is and how to hold your courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.340 --> 01:32:40.300] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:32:40.300 --> 01:32:41.660] ordering your copy today. 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[01:33:07.460 --> 01:33:17.460] Yeah, and who you want to cheat, who you take me for, free toilet, who you want to cheat, [01:33:17.460 --> 01:33:23.460] men of free toilet, you can't cheat me, I'm sick, don't let them chip you in the morning, [01:33:23.460 --> 01:33:29.460] chip you in the evening, put a chip in your body, and anyway you go computer reading, [01:33:29.460 --> 01:33:33.700] you can't hide me safe from nobody, what me say, chip chip in your mom, chip in your [01:33:33.700 --> 01:33:39.700] body, chip in your grandpa, I'm the grammy, chip in your me, chip in your baby, chip in [01:33:39.700 --> 01:33:45.140] your family, world family, chip in your dad, I'm the caretaker on me, chip in your family. [01:33:45.140 --> 01:33:52.740] Okay, we are back, Wendy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law on this fifth day of November [01:33:52.740 --> 01:34:01.540] 2020, Thursday the fifth day of November, and we're talking to David in Pennsylvania, I [01:34:01.540 --> 01:34:10.980] know he's embarrassed that you embarrassed those poor mistreated lawyers, aren't you [01:34:10.980 --> 01:34:12.980] ashamed, David? [01:34:12.980 --> 01:34:25.140] Oh, no, not really, so anyway, they committed this while on this case, on this civil case, [01:34:25.140 --> 01:34:30.700] they committed this criminal offense. [01:34:30.700 --> 01:34:35.740] No, it doesn't matter, they're still separate issues, they don't get to time together. [01:34:35.740 --> 01:34:41.740] Yeah, you have to file with the attorney general, because it's federal. [01:34:41.740 --> 01:34:51.420] No, women, that was confusing, so you're saying you have to file the criminal charge with [01:34:51.420 --> 01:35:00.260] the attorney general, no, you're in Pennsylvania, huh, you're in Pennsylvania, in Pennsylvania [01:35:00.260 --> 01:35:09.500] you file criminal complaints with the prosecutor, the prosecutor has original jurisdiction. [01:35:09.500 --> 01:35:16.180] Oh, so in other words, the prosecutor in Philadelphia would have to handle that? [01:35:16.180 --> 01:35:18.940] Yes, and what he's going to do is trash it. [01:35:18.940 --> 01:35:20.820] What's the source in Philadelphia? [01:35:20.820 --> 01:35:26.900] Well, it depends on the jurisdiction, are you in Philadelphia? [01:35:26.900 --> 01:35:35.460] Yeah, the jurisdiction is one county over, according to the Code Enforcement Office, [01:35:35.460 --> 01:35:40.980] but I filed federally at the federal building in the city. [01:35:40.980 --> 01:35:50.300] Oh, wait a minute, the criminal charges were federal or the civil suit was federal? [01:35:50.300 --> 01:36:03.820] Now, the lawsuit is at a federal court, and the criminal charges or what they, the thing [01:36:03.820 --> 01:36:10.740] that they broke was at the lawyer's office in the city, which is down the street from [01:36:10.740 --> 01:36:15.620] the federal courthouse, so it would be in Philadelphia. [01:36:15.620 --> 01:36:23.700] The criminal complaints, depending on what they are, would be either federal or state. [01:36:23.700 --> 01:36:29.580] Just because you're in a federal case or you're even in a federal courthouse, if a crime is [01:36:29.580 --> 01:36:38.460] committed in the courthouse, then it's not necessarily a federal crime because the courthouse [01:36:38.460 --> 01:36:42.300] does not belong to the federal government. [01:36:42.300 --> 01:36:48.860] The courthouse belongs to the state and is the least to the federal government. [01:36:48.860 --> 01:36:57.060] If the courthouse, like post offices, post offices are ceded to the federal government, [01:36:57.060 --> 01:37:03.940] they belong to the federal government, and the federal government has criminal jurisdiction [01:37:03.940 --> 01:37:08.260] in a post office. [01:37:08.260 --> 01:37:13.340] In a courthouse, if, say, somebody shoots somebody else in the courthouse, the feds [01:37:13.340 --> 01:37:16.300] don't investigate that. [01:37:16.300 --> 01:37:25.620] That's a state issue because the federal court is on state property. [01:37:25.620 --> 01:37:32.460] If you had a federal prison, federal prisons are all ceded to the federal government. [01:37:32.460 --> 01:37:41.340] That means while it's surrounded by the state, it is a federal enclave, and the state has [01:37:41.340 --> 01:37:43.300] no jurisdiction in that enclave. [01:37:43.300 --> 01:37:48.620] Well, the federal courts are not that way, so if you could file criminal charges against [01:37:48.620 --> 01:37:55.740] these guys in the state or in the fed, depending on the nature of the complaints. [01:37:55.740 --> 01:37:59.260] With that said, what was the nature of the complaints? [01:37:59.260 --> 01:38:02.860] Were they due process violations? [01:38:02.860 --> 01:38:05.500] Because it's a word that can be filed in either. [01:38:05.500 --> 01:38:18.020] Yeah, there were due process violations, and then I added 18 U.S.C. 242 to a tow. [01:38:18.020 --> 01:38:20.460] That's what you use for due process, exactly. [01:38:20.460 --> 01:38:25.660] So that would definitely be filed with the feds. [01:38:25.660 --> 01:38:31.140] Would you file it with the special agent charge of the local bureau, FBI? [01:38:31.140 --> 01:38:38.580] Yeah, I filed a couple things over there with the FBI, and they didn't act on it. [01:38:38.580 --> 01:38:40.980] So that's why I went to the attorney general. [01:38:40.980 --> 01:38:46.340] He tried across the street, I filed with him, never heard nothing back from him, so then [01:38:46.340 --> 01:38:51.420] I filed with DC down at the attorney general. [01:38:51.420 --> 01:38:57.900] So I was trying to get a lawyer on the phone, so I could either bar grieve him or do something. [01:38:57.900 --> 01:39:03.620] Could I bar grieve that general attorney, Barr? [01:39:03.620 --> 01:39:05.060] Wait to say that again? [01:39:05.060 --> 01:39:06.060] Barr grieve what? [01:39:06.060 --> 01:39:07.060] The attorney general. [01:39:07.060 --> 01:39:08.060] Barr, Barr, William Barr. [01:39:08.060 --> 01:39:14.780] Oh yeah, he's got a bar card. [01:39:14.780 --> 01:39:17.060] I could bar grieve him over this? [01:39:17.060 --> 01:39:18.060] Oh yeah. [01:39:18.060 --> 01:39:26.140] Yeah, because I sent, like, with Colonel Lapa Davis, about three of them down to DC now, [01:39:26.140 --> 01:39:31.180] because the attorney general in Philadelphia here doesn't want to do anything, hadn't heard [01:39:31.180 --> 01:39:37.020] back from him, and the FBI doesn't want to do nothing either. [01:39:37.020 --> 01:39:38.100] Nobody wants to do anything. [01:39:38.100 --> 01:39:39.580] We have to press it. [01:39:39.580 --> 01:39:47.300] And the thing to understand about this, it's all politics, so you have to make your complaint [01:39:47.300 --> 01:39:48.940] political. [01:39:48.940 --> 01:39:57.620] We had federal officers creating fake warrants, giving those warrants to local state officials [01:39:57.620 --> 01:40:02.220] and having them come in and pull people out of their houses at two in the morning. [01:40:02.220 --> 01:40:07.060] The feds would go in and steal all their stuff and go away, and there never was any kind [01:40:07.060 --> 01:40:09.620] of case file. [01:40:09.620 --> 01:40:18.180] So I filed a letter with all of the federal magistrates in Pennsylvania wanting to see [01:40:18.180 --> 01:40:25.900] all of the warrants they had issued that were sealed and subsequently executed, because [01:40:25.900 --> 01:40:31.420] once they're executed, they're no longer sealed, so that I could compare these warrants with [01:40:31.420 --> 01:40:39.300] the copies of warrants that I had that I believe were falsely created by agents in order to [01:40:39.300 --> 01:40:44.140] use them to steal from people with. [01:40:44.140 --> 01:40:50.420] Never got a single response from any of those magistrates, but I'd never heard of that stuff [01:40:50.420 --> 01:40:53.100] happening anymore either. [01:40:53.100 --> 01:40:57.860] So there are ways of getting this done. [01:40:57.860 --> 01:41:04.820] Every magistrate, in the courts, in the federal courts, they have judges, and then they have [01:41:04.820 --> 01:41:11.660] magistrates that sit in your cases for the judge, and then they issue recommendations [01:41:11.660 --> 01:41:12.660] to the judge. [01:41:12.660 --> 01:41:15.340] Well, they're all magistrates. [01:41:15.340 --> 01:41:18.820] They can all take criminal complaints. [01:41:18.820 --> 01:41:28.340] So if the SAC doesn't take your complaint, doesn't act on it, or even if he did act on [01:41:28.340 --> 01:41:33.260] it and he didn't tell you about it, take a complaint against him and file it with a federal [01:41:33.260 --> 01:41:39.540] judge in his capacity as a magistrate, and ask him to hold an examining trial. [01:41:39.540 --> 01:41:44.780] When he refuses, file a judicial complaint against him and then file criminal complaints [01:41:44.780 --> 01:41:50.540] against him with the U.S. attorney. [01:41:50.540 --> 01:41:59.060] Nobody will prosecute anybody, but what it will do is politically damage all of them. [01:41:59.060 --> 01:42:04.300] They're not going to run up to you and say, hey, you know you did that to me, and it really [01:42:04.300 --> 01:42:05.300] hammered me. [01:42:05.300 --> 01:42:07.740] They're not going to tell you that part. [01:42:07.740 --> 01:42:10.260] You just run the routine on them. [01:42:10.260 --> 01:42:15.620] What happens is, if you hammer them enough, they'll go to these judges in your court and [01:42:15.620 --> 01:42:17.500] say, you better get rid of this guy. [01:42:17.500 --> 01:42:22.180] You better do something to make him happy, or we're going to kick your behinds. [01:42:22.180 --> 01:42:24.180] It's all politics. [01:42:24.180 --> 01:42:26.180] Does that make sense, David? [01:42:26.180 --> 01:42:31.580] Yeah, this is what I was trying to do, a trigger settlement, because they did give me the one [01:42:31.580 --> 01:42:37.900] lawsuit here in the district court that judge, for some reason, I don't know why, but she [01:42:37.900 --> 01:42:43.220] sent me the complaint, I filled it out this time and served it. [01:42:43.220 --> 01:42:48.980] The only thing I got, like I said, the attorney, he's demanding a jury trial, so I was trying [01:42:48.980 --> 01:42:54.700] to cook something up to get his, you know, want the sling so that you don't have a little [01:42:54.700 --> 01:43:00.980] leverage on maybe either both of them, the federal judge and the attorney representing [01:43:00.980 --> 01:43:03.620] the code enforcement officer. [01:43:03.620 --> 01:43:12.580] Okay, you beat him up for a while, now go hire an attorney solely to make a deal and [01:43:12.580 --> 01:43:18.540] offer him, say, this is how much I want for a deal, any more, anything above that you [01:43:18.540 --> 01:43:24.500] can get, we split it, and I'll give you a percentage of my deal, and attorneys love [01:43:24.500 --> 01:43:29.700] to do that, then they won't make a deal with you, but they will make a deal with another [01:43:29.700 --> 01:43:30.700] attorney. [01:43:30.700 --> 01:43:39.820] Oh, yeah, well then I'll just wait and see if I get something back on this slide. [01:43:39.820 --> 01:43:46.500] Okay, thank you, David, and don't be a stranger, this is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Real [01:43:46.500 --> 01:43:51.460] of Our Radio, I'm not going to give out the calling number, we're going to our last segment [01:43:51.460 --> 01:43:55.580] and we've got Scott in Michigan, and Scott, I'm going to want to hear all about what's [01:43:55.580 --> 01:44:00.340] going on in Michigan, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.340 --> 01:44:05.620] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [01:44:05.620 --> 01:44:09.140] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method. [01:44:09.140 --> 01:44:13.460] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [01:44:13.460 --> 01:44:14.460] can win two. [01:44:14.460 --> 01:44:19.260] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:44:19.260 --> 01:44:20.420] civil rights statutes. [01:44:20.420 --> 01:44:25.700] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and [01:44:25.700 --> 01:44:30.140] phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the financial [01:44:30.140 --> 01:44:33.900] tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.900 --> 01:44:39.020] The Michael Maris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:39.020 --> 01:44:41.140] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:41.140 --> 01:44:46.700] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner [01:44:46.700 --> 01:44:56.140] or email Michael Maris at yahoo.com, that's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [01:44:56.140 --> 01:45:01.340] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [01:45:01.340 --> 01:45:04.540] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.540 --> 01:45:11.260] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [01:45:11.260 --> 01:45:14.260] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.260 --> 01:45:19.140] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.140 --> 01:45:23.260] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.260 --> 01:45:28.180] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.180 --> 01:45:34.860] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.860 --> 01:45:39.380] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:39.380 --> 01:45:43.700] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.700 --> 01:45:49.820] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.820 --> 01:45:52.380] prosay tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.380 --> 01:45:56.620] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:56.620 --> 01:46:01.620] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:01.620 --> 01:46:23.620] Hello. Oh, man, you're in jail. You got busted, man. Oh, man, I'm broken. [01:46:23.620 --> 01:46:48.620] Okay, we are back. Rule of law radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [01:46:48.620 --> 01:46:53.620] And we're going to go for our last segment here. We're going to go to Scott in Michigan. [01:46:53.620 --> 01:46:58.620] Scott, thank you for calling in. And tell us what's on your mind. [01:46:58.620 --> 01:47:03.620] Oh, well, I've got some traffic victories to talk about. [01:47:03.620 --> 01:47:07.620] All right, traffic victories. That's good to hear. [01:47:07.620 --> 01:47:12.620] Yeah, yeah. Actually, I've got a pretty good streak going. [01:47:12.620 --> 01:47:17.620] I've got 13 traffic dismissals in a row here in Michigan. [01:47:17.620 --> 01:47:22.620] Oh, wow. And the prosecutor told me last time I talked to the prosecutor on the phone, [01:47:22.620 --> 01:47:25.620] he said he has no interest in pursuing any more charges against me. [01:47:25.620 --> 01:47:29.620] So I think I'm immune now. [01:47:29.620 --> 01:47:34.620] Wonderful. No interest in pursuing charges. That's great. [01:47:34.620 --> 01:47:38.620] That's like being able to do nothing and listen to the spirit anyways. [01:47:38.620 --> 01:47:46.620] Yes. So would you like to share with the listeners about just a synopsis of what they can do [01:47:46.620 --> 01:47:49.620] to be like you? [01:47:49.620 --> 01:47:53.620] Well, you know, listen to the archives of the show. [01:47:53.620 --> 01:47:57.620] I mean, I've listened to the archives all the way through from the beginning twice. [01:47:57.620 --> 01:48:01.620] And you can pick up so much from just hearing, you know, [01:48:01.620 --> 01:48:07.620] basically from all around the different areas of law that are discussed on the show. [01:48:07.620 --> 01:48:13.620] And, you know, a lot of it reinforces how to fight traffic stuff, [01:48:13.620 --> 01:48:16.620] how to, you know, at least prepare for a criminal case, [01:48:16.620 --> 01:48:23.620] how to comport yourself like a proper motor scooter when you're in the courthouse. [01:48:23.620 --> 01:48:34.620] And, you know, you get to a point where the light bulb goes off in your head [01:48:34.620 --> 01:48:38.620] and you think of something good or something positive that you know from your knowledge [01:48:38.620 --> 01:48:43.620] before, you know, the rhetoric of the judge can overwhelm you with stress. [01:48:43.620 --> 01:48:47.620] That's another big thing that they're discussed on the show, [01:48:47.620 --> 01:48:53.620] is how to prepare yourself mentally to be bulletproof [01:48:53.620 --> 01:48:57.620] because they're going to try to use their rhetoric to make you feel small, [01:48:57.620 --> 01:49:00.620] stupid, and significant and incompetent. [01:49:00.620 --> 01:49:04.620] And they're going to make you just like give up on yourself [01:49:04.620 --> 01:49:10.620] and you basically force it because you allowed yourself to be controlled by their, [01:49:10.620 --> 01:49:14.620] you know, kind of mode of how they were going to direct things. [01:49:14.620 --> 01:49:15.620] So... [01:49:15.620 --> 01:49:17.620] Right. That's very good. [01:49:17.620 --> 01:49:18.620] Time is huge. [01:49:18.620 --> 01:49:19.620] Yeah. [01:49:19.620 --> 01:49:20.620] Yeah. [01:49:20.620 --> 01:49:22.620] Knowing that kind of time helps a lot. [01:49:22.620 --> 01:49:24.620] And 13 in a row. [01:49:24.620 --> 01:49:25.620] That's wonderful. [01:49:25.620 --> 01:49:26.620] Yeah. [01:49:26.620 --> 01:49:29.620] And the tip that I got from the show was once upon a time, [01:49:29.620 --> 01:49:36.620] you said payment refused is payment received. [01:49:36.620 --> 01:49:43.620] And I had this, you know, case sheet from a traffic thing [01:49:43.620 --> 01:49:47.620] where they said that I didn't pay, you know, for the ticket [01:49:47.620 --> 01:49:50.620] where I was convicted of or whatever. [01:49:50.620 --> 01:49:53.620] I had the receipt but I just couldn't seem to get any traction [01:49:53.620 --> 01:49:55.620] without I kept showing them the receipt saying, [01:49:55.620 --> 01:49:58.620] here it's paid and they just kept saying, well, you owe us. [01:49:58.620 --> 01:50:04.620] And, you know, in terms of philosophy, I think it's important to remember that, [01:50:04.620 --> 01:50:08.620] you know, when you go in there to try to defend the traffic case, [01:50:08.620 --> 01:50:12.620] they might be willing to concede that you're not guilty [01:50:12.620 --> 01:50:15.620] or that you don't have to pay them. [01:50:15.620 --> 01:50:19.620] But I'm very insistent on sticking the guns of, [01:50:19.620 --> 01:50:22.620] I don't owe you any money in the first place. [01:50:22.620 --> 01:50:25.620] You know, that really has to be the starting point. [01:50:25.620 --> 01:50:31.620] But anyways, that's where I was going with that. [01:50:31.620 --> 01:50:34.620] I definitely have a lot of fun with traffic and the information to do that [01:50:34.620 --> 01:50:36.620] is definitely getting all over the show. [01:50:36.620 --> 01:50:41.620] So anyway, finally I got a suspended license over this issue [01:50:41.620 --> 01:50:44.620] and then I got pulled over and got arrested over it [01:50:44.620 --> 01:50:47.620] and they impounded my car. [01:50:47.620 --> 01:50:50.620] So once they had my son, it was serious business, right? [01:50:50.620 --> 01:50:55.620] Well, so I sent something in that was a pleading that said basically that, [01:50:55.620 --> 01:51:00.620] you know, when I, you know, I get this judgment against me [01:51:00.620 --> 01:51:05.620] and I go to the clerk and say, with cash in hand and say, I want to pay [01:51:05.620 --> 01:51:07.620] and she says, you don't owe anything. [01:51:07.620 --> 01:51:09.620] And I say, okay, we'll write that on my paper. [01:51:09.620 --> 01:51:11.620] She writes that on my paper. [01:51:11.620 --> 01:51:16.620] You know, I can come to you and say, payment refused, payment received. [01:51:16.620 --> 01:51:22.620] And boy did that, boy was that a tipping point in resolving it. [01:51:22.620 --> 01:51:26.620] I mean, the prosecutor called me up just as nice as it could possibly be [01:51:26.620 --> 01:51:34.620] and he told me that that, because it was a maximum of law is what says that. [01:51:34.620 --> 01:51:39.620] And the prosecutor said, you know, your pleading was submitted to the chief judge [01:51:39.620 --> 01:51:43.620] and honestly, you know, he's going to check us in common law people [01:51:43.620 --> 01:51:46.620] and but we just want to, we just want to get rid of this administratively [01:51:46.620 --> 01:51:49.620] and give you a car back if I'll go away. [01:51:49.620 --> 01:51:51.620] Okay, let me give you a reference. [01:51:51.620 --> 01:51:52.620] Yes. [01:51:52.620 --> 01:51:54.620] Payment refused is payment received. [01:51:54.620 --> 01:52:00.620] That's the universal commercial code, uniform commercial code. [01:52:00.620 --> 01:52:01.620] Okay. [01:52:01.620 --> 01:52:03.620] That's the law of contracts. [01:52:03.620 --> 01:52:09.620] When I said that, they took me seriously as could be and they got out of my way. [01:52:09.620 --> 01:52:14.620] When I walked into the police station with a release order from my car that had been impounded for 60 days [01:52:14.620 --> 01:52:18.620] to give it to me for free, I mean, it was like a thing of curiosity. [01:52:18.620 --> 01:52:22.620] They had never seen anybody get a 60 day car back for free. [01:52:22.620 --> 01:52:31.620] So it was like that statement just greased the wheels and made it happen. [01:52:31.620 --> 01:52:34.620] You know, 13 wins. [01:52:34.620 --> 01:52:38.620] I don't think I've had any wins in court. [01:52:38.620 --> 01:52:44.620] They always find me incredibly guilty. [01:52:44.620 --> 01:52:48.620] I actually had a case where I knew the former. [01:52:48.620 --> 01:52:49.620] It's a small town. [01:52:49.620 --> 01:52:56.620] Half the jury knew me and I had a great time in the case. [01:52:56.620 --> 01:53:01.620] And the jury comes back and the foreman stood up and said, [01:53:01.620 --> 01:53:09.620] we, the jury having in case number, blah, blah, blah, find the defendant incredibly guilty. [01:53:09.620 --> 01:53:14.620] Judge Plum Raspberry, she was absolutely a sweetheart. [01:53:14.620 --> 01:53:16.620] She said, incredibly guilty. [01:53:16.620 --> 01:53:22.620] Yes, your honor, we find the defendant incredibly guilty. [01:53:22.620 --> 01:53:27.620] That was a high point for me. [01:53:27.620 --> 01:53:31.620] But yeah, if you won 13, you certainly beat my record. [01:53:31.620 --> 01:53:36.620] Heck, if you win one, you beat my record. [01:53:36.620 --> 01:53:43.620] You know, I win the first time to try to fight it and absolutely got my behind handed to me. [01:53:43.620 --> 01:53:47.620] And that just put me in a mode of like, I'm going to figure this out. [01:53:47.620 --> 01:53:49.620] I'm going to, I'm going to crack this. [01:53:49.620 --> 01:53:54.620] I think most people who get to that point are just so dejected that they're just like, [01:53:54.620 --> 01:53:58.620] no way I'm ever coming back here to be made to feel like this again. [01:53:58.620 --> 01:54:00.620] I'm just going to pay it from, you know what I mean? [01:54:00.620 --> 01:54:04.620] They really use that intimidation system to get you to give up. [01:54:04.620 --> 01:54:10.620] Okay, you know you have a debt to pay. [01:54:10.620 --> 01:54:13.620] You got, you got this. [01:54:13.620 --> 01:54:18.620] Just like me, it's your job to pay it forward. [01:54:18.620 --> 01:54:26.620] I'm always preaching the gospel of, you know, traffic violations and that kind. [01:54:26.620 --> 01:54:29.620] This is how we're going to beat them. [01:54:29.620 --> 01:54:37.620] If we don't need a whole army, do you know how many people participated in the American Revolution? [01:54:37.620 --> 01:54:42.620] What percentage of the population? [01:54:42.620 --> 01:54:43.620] I don't. [01:54:43.620 --> 01:54:46.620] Three percent. [01:54:46.620 --> 01:54:48.620] That's really small. [01:54:48.620 --> 01:54:52.620] That's, that's all it took is three percent. [01:54:52.620 --> 01:54:54.620] Right. [01:54:54.620 --> 01:54:56.620] And we can get us a small army out here. [01:54:56.620 --> 01:55:02.620] We can make changes and you're making changes because of what you've done to the court. [01:55:02.620 --> 01:55:09.620] The court's going to operate somewhat differently to keep that from happening again. [01:55:09.620 --> 01:55:23.620] Sure, I mean, he's honestly getting a little embarrassed that a non, I mean, they're dumbfounded that a non lawyer could possibly have any intelligence that they could bring to bear in the courtroom, you know. [01:55:23.620 --> 01:55:27.620] So that's, that's the most important thing we can do. [01:55:27.620 --> 01:55:34.620] And if other people can see it, they don't teach civics in school anymore. [01:55:34.620 --> 01:55:39.620] So we need to teach the civics and you've done really good. [01:55:39.620 --> 01:55:41.620] Keep it up. [01:55:41.620 --> 01:55:43.620] I sure will. [01:55:43.620 --> 01:55:46.620] Now you need to call us with wins. [01:55:46.620 --> 01:55:50.620] Other people have got from what you taught them. [01:55:50.620 --> 01:56:01.620] Well, actually I am starting to help some other people and it was funny because I went to help one of my female friends and I just pretended like I was her boyfriend just so I could like, you know, be with her at court and stuff like that. [01:56:01.620 --> 01:56:05.620] And so she actually went up like, you know, behind a little gate or whatever. [01:56:05.620 --> 01:56:09.620] I said all the time and the judge was like, for you and I was like, I'm her boyfriend. [01:56:09.620 --> 01:56:12.620] He was like, boyfriends have to stay back. [01:56:12.620 --> 01:56:15.620] It was pretty funny. [01:56:15.620 --> 01:56:19.620] Yes, yes. [01:56:19.620 --> 01:56:21.620] They might catch on to that pretty soon. [01:56:21.620 --> 01:56:22.620] Wait a minute. [01:56:22.620 --> 01:56:24.620] You're her boyfriend too? [01:56:24.620 --> 01:56:29.620] Yeah, right, right, right. [01:56:29.620 --> 01:56:31.620] Okay, well, that's really good to hear. [01:56:31.620 --> 01:56:35.620] We don't get enough wins stories. [01:56:35.620 --> 01:56:38.620] We get plenty of fight stories, but not near enough wins stories. [01:56:38.620 --> 01:56:43.620] And we've had some pretty good wins here lately. [01:56:43.620 --> 01:56:46.620] We're looking for some this month. [01:56:46.620 --> 01:56:48.620] We both got important. [01:56:48.620 --> 01:56:57.620] Brett's got Manuki and the director of the US Treasury go into a grand jury and I got the governor go into a grand jury. [01:56:57.620 --> 01:57:00.620] So we've got some really good things coming. [01:57:00.620 --> 01:57:05.620] And then we get somebody called in with 13 wins. [01:57:05.620 --> 01:57:07.620] No, it's just about getting over that initial hump. [01:57:07.620 --> 01:57:13.620] You've got to, you know, you've got to get to that point where they take you seriously and then it's easy from that point out. [01:57:13.620 --> 01:57:24.620] But you're going to have to make a fool out of yourself a few times and fall for their bullying a few times before you get wise and then you can unlock it. [01:57:24.620 --> 01:57:33.620] He's exactly right. You know, people talk to me and they think I got all this law memorized and I just know all this stuff. [01:57:33.620 --> 01:57:36.620] This came the hard way. [01:57:36.620 --> 01:57:37.620] I got beat up. [01:57:37.620 --> 01:57:41.620] I walked into court just as terrified as everybody else. [01:57:41.620 --> 01:57:45.620] It just, it took staying after it. [01:57:45.620 --> 01:57:48.620] And after a few times in court, it got a lot easier. [01:57:48.620 --> 01:57:56.620] The judge I'm about to go before now, last time I was in court with her, she started the hearing and she said, Mr. Coutton, you need to turn that phone off. [01:57:56.620 --> 01:57:59.620] Oh, but judge, I wanted to record this procedure. [01:57:59.620 --> 01:58:00.620] Mr. Maynard, take that phone. [01:58:00.620 --> 01:58:02.620] Take the phone away from me. [01:58:02.620 --> 01:58:06.620] Started the hearing again three times. [01:58:06.620 --> 01:58:11.620] She asked me if I had a recording device and each time I pulled out another one. [01:58:11.620 --> 01:58:12.620] Oh, judge. [01:58:12.620 --> 01:58:16.620] But 20 years ago, I wouldn't have done that. [01:58:16.620 --> 01:58:21.620] Now I'm not the least bit impressed. [01:58:21.620 --> 01:58:24.620] Okay. Thank you, Scott. [01:58:24.620 --> 01:58:26.620] And don't be such a... [01:58:26.620 --> 01:58:27.620] Congratulations. [01:58:27.620 --> 01:58:28.620] Absolutely. [01:58:28.620 --> 01:58:29.620] Thank you. [01:58:29.620 --> 01:58:31.620] Don't be such a stranger. [01:58:31.620 --> 01:58:35.620] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:58:35.620 --> 01:58:40.620] We'll be back tomorrow night with our four hour info marathon. [01:58:40.620 --> 01:58:44.620] So make sure you listen and if you have a question or comment, call us. [01:58:44.620 --> 01:58:47.620] Thank you for listening and good night. [01:59:14.620 --> 01:59:21.620] Thank you very much. [01:59:44.620 --> 01:59:51.620] Thank you very much.