[00:00.000 --> 00:15.400] Markets for Monday 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver $16.45.00, [00:15.400 --> 00:24.560] Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63.00, Brent Crude $62.47.00, and Cryptos in order [00:24.560 --> 00:34.120] of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, [00:34.120 --> 00:41.400] Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 of Crypto Coin. [00:41.400 --> 00:52.360] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.360 --> 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 --> 01:09.520] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, legalizing HEPA into [01:09.520 --> 01:14.280] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:14.280 --> 01:18.160] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.160 --> 01:22.800] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.800 --> 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 --> 01:33.040] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.040 --> 01:34.040] law. [01:34.040 --> 01:37.640] 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 H.B. 1325 works, [01:48.320 --> 01:54.560] as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma 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 --> 02:10.820] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.820 --> 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 --> 02:28.160] A paper by Tulane University identified a 5-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark as the first of its [02:28.160 --> 02:33.640] kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured [02:33.640 --> 02:39.520] or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [02:39.520 --> 02:43.840] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.840 --> 02:50.080] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.080 --> 03:16.920] glow, because his work rode with the loadout for July 22, 2019. [03:16.920 --> 03:26.600] And I received my remedy today, came in a box just like the snake, I accepted it for value [03:26.600 --> 03:37.520] right away, not sooner, not later, we are originators, and the pathway seems to get straighter every [03:37.520 --> 03:38.520] day. [03:38.520 --> 03:55.640] And I can take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use, but I was good for [03:55.640 --> 04:01.520] the gender, I don't know what to do, I know some archipelagos, I know some engines, they [04:01.520 --> 04:02.520] see me every day. [04:02.520 --> 04:07.760] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Blue Ball Radio, and we're talking to John [04:07.760 --> 04:08.760] in New York. [04:08.760 --> 04:17.760] John, we do need to finish up, and if it seems like I was using you toward a purpose, yes, [04:17.760 --> 04:18.760] I was. [04:18.760 --> 04:28.400] I really wanted people to hear your perspective, but I also wanted people to listen to your [04:28.400 --> 04:31.120] perspective with a critical mind. [04:31.120 --> 04:36.760] Well, you have to have faith, you just have to have faith, that's all. [04:36.760 --> 04:37.760] Faith? [04:37.760 --> 04:38.760] I want to mention that. [04:38.760 --> 04:39.760] I want to mention that. [04:39.760 --> 04:40.760] No, we do not. [04:40.760 --> 04:42.760] Well, hold on, John, we do not have faith. [04:42.760 --> 04:43.760] These are facts. [04:43.760 --> 04:50.400] Oh, I'm sorry, okay, my problem, you're exactly right, John, we need facts, and we get into [04:50.400 --> 04:55.880] a subject, you know, I have the same problem, I decide something's a certain way and I try [04:55.880 --> 05:02.520] to prove it that way, and I don't want to hear no proof to the contrary. [05:02.520 --> 05:08.840] So in dealing with you, John, I'm trying to be the contrarian. [05:08.840 --> 05:18.760] You have really good information, and I'm trying to get everyone listening to not just [05:18.760 --> 05:30.720] accept information because it sounds good, or because it seems to fit our personal perspective. [05:30.720 --> 05:35.320] We need to look at both sides, okay, okay, I think everybody knows that. [05:35.320 --> 05:39.520] Okay, go ahead, John, but we do need to move along pretty soon, we've got more callers [05:39.520 --> 05:40.520] in. [05:40.520 --> 05:41.520] Right. [05:41.520 --> 05:44.440] But this is interesting, you've done very well, thank you, John. [05:44.440 --> 05:45.440] Okay, go ahead. [05:45.440 --> 05:46.440] Thank you. [05:46.440 --> 05:53.160] It's only taken 62 years, literally, okay, two chemicals have been found allegedly found [05:53.160 --> 05:54.760] in the mask. [05:54.760 --> 06:00.440] One is very disruptive to your lungs over a period of time, and the other chemical affects [06:00.440 --> 06:08.120] negatively male potency, and the list of illnesses caused by the COVID vaccines has [06:08.120 --> 06:14.720] been mounting steadily, and it's getting pretty, pretty tall, and the reason why you [06:14.720 --> 06:19.680] don't hear about it is the mainstream media ain't going to cover it, because they've [06:19.680 --> 06:22.760] got a vested interest in this as well. [06:22.760 --> 06:23.760] That's why you have to- [06:23.760 --> 06:30.360] Yes, and the part about male potency, you won't hear about that because guys like us [06:30.360 --> 06:33.880] who haven't got it up in 20 years, we don't want to talk about it. [06:33.880 --> 06:40.640] Well, anyway, and your nephew and people like your nephew who are very good in their field [06:40.640 --> 06:45.840] have to understand that this is all part of a bigger picture, it's all part of a major [06:45.840 --> 06:52.280] political takeover, and that is not paranoia talking, that's fact. [06:52.280 --> 06:59.760] And VAERS is the vaccine, and the last thing I'm going to say for the evening, VAERS vaccine [06:59.760 --> 07:13.720] adverse effect reporting system, VAERS, of all the adverse effects caused by vaccines [07:13.720 --> 07:15.720] in general, all of it. [07:15.720 --> 07:19.240] Okay, VAERS, that's the acronym. [07:19.240 --> 07:21.240] Okay, VAERS. [07:21.240 --> 07:23.240] VAERS. [07:23.240 --> 07:30.520] VAERS, VAERS, VAERS. [07:30.520 --> 07:34.280] Okay, good. [07:34.280 --> 07:35.280] Only 10% get- [07:35.280 --> 07:40.880] To your knowledge, is there a website or something that we can go to to look at that? [07:40.880 --> 07:47.040] Yeah, yeah, four and a half billion dollars if vaccines are so safe in general vaccines, [07:47.040 --> 07:52.120] why has four and a half billion dollars been paid out to those who have been damaged? [07:52.120 --> 07:56.000] That's a billion with a B, four and a half billion dollars. [07:56.000 --> 08:03.600] And the last thing I'm going to say is only up to 10% of the actual damaged people get [08:03.600 --> 08:08.560] reported to VAERS, not everybody knows about it. [08:08.560 --> 08:15.480] And that's pretty much it, it's very difficult to get into a topic like this because a lot [08:15.480 --> 08:20.880] of years of research went into it, and it's like trying to learn the Spanish or the Latin [08:20.880 --> 08:24.960] or the Italian language or French in just a week or two. [08:24.960 --> 08:25.960] You can't do it. [08:25.960 --> 08:30.880] You've got to, you've really got to do the research yourself, and you've got to see [08:30.880 --> 08:36.120] and you've got to learn the same things that I did, and you'll realize after a while that [08:36.120 --> 08:40.280] there is an exact science to everything. [08:40.280 --> 08:41.440] That's basically it. [08:41.440 --> 08:42.440] That's basically it. [08:42.440 --> 08:50.840] And so that's where we are, and I'll say, well, John, we've talked about a lot of things [08:50.840 --> 08:56.320] here, and you've tried to discuss these issues, and I kept interrupting you. [08:56.320 --> 09:05.400] So can you give us a good synopsis of what we should take away from this? [09:05.400 --> 09:06.560] Okay. [09:06.560 --> 09:15.000] One of the reasons why vaccines don't work the way they claim they do is because you've [09:15.000 --> 09:22.360] bypassed two of the body's very important defense systems. [09:22.360 --> 09:27.040] You have gone and injected something directly into the bloodstream. [09:27.040 --> 09:29.080] The human body is not designed that way. [09:29.080 --> 09:34.200] The human body has two routes of defense that they have bypassed. [09:34.200 --> 09:36.360] One is the respiratory system. [09:36.360 --> 09:43.120] The other is the elementary canal of the stomach, and they have bypassed them both. [09:43.120 --> 09:50.120] So naturally, you're going to get into problems, but I see that as one of the many problems [09:50.120 --> 09:51.520] with vaccines. [09:51.520 --> 09:56.800] They have deliberately bypassed two, and it's not nice to fool Mother Nature. [09:56.800 --> 09:57.800] You know that. [09:57.800 --> 10:00.480] It's not nice to fool Mother Nature. [10:00.480 --> 10:05.480] So they bypassed the oral route and the lung route, and that's bad. [10:05.480 --> 10:07.240] That's a bad thing. [10:07.240 --> 10:12.480] And anybody who says differently doesn't know what the heck they're talking about, and that's [10:12.480 --> 10:14.520] basically it. [10:14.520 --> 10:19.000] I'll add that to the mix. [10:19.000 --> 10:22.760] Okay. [10:22.760 --> 10:25.080] Thank you, John. [10:25.080 --> 10:29.240] You're very welcome anytime. [10:29.240 --> 10:34.800] The best I can tell you is don't take my word for it. [10:34.800 --> 10:40.400] A lot of this stuff is actually some very contradictory information has been put into [10:40.400 --> 10:45.520] the Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine, believe it or not. [10:45.520 --> 10:48.160] And it's contradictory, and yet nobody does anything about it. [10:48.160 --> 10:52.600] They do studies, and, voila, look at what we've discovered, and then they sweep it under [10:52.600 --> 10:55.640] the carpet because you can't make money with it. [10:55.640 --> 10:56.640] Yes. [10:56.640 --> 11:02.080] That is a very frustrating issue, especially with the show that I do. [11:02.080 --> 11:09.960] I get all kinds of information from all over the place, and a good portion of it is directly [11:09.960 --> 11:17.200] contradictory, and struggling to find the right information from the plethora of nonsense [11:17.200 --> 11:19.680] that I get is a real struggle. [11:19.680 --> 11:25.880] And I appreciate your effort at helping us focus on what matters and what doesn't. [11:25.880 --> 11:30.920] Well, and then if you want the secret to life, here it is. [11:30.920 --> 11:36.920] You give the body what it needs, and it will present and cure just about anything. [11:36.920 --> 11:43.360] So part of that, and I tried to tell you on a different show, and when we got sidetracked [11:43.360 --> 11:56.440] one night, GMO foods, the deficiencies in the soil, the poisons in the environment, [11:56.440 --> 12:06.160] things like chlorine and fluoride in the water, food that's been cooked and overcooked. [12:06.160 --> 12:10.120] These are all things that weigh down on the immune system. [12:10.120 --> 12:15.440] And if you can fix these things, things like COVID-19 and the flu wouldn't run rampant [12:15.440 --> 12:17.840] through the world. [12:17.840 --> 12:22.560] And you've got to take supplements, and you've got to take vitamins and minerals. [12:22.560 --> 12:23.560] That's what it's going to be. [12:23.560 --> 12:26.440] And so it doesn't cure disease. [12:26.440 --> 12:28.280] No, it presents it. [12:28.280 --> 12:30.080] And in some cases, it will cure disease. [12:30.080 --> 12:31.400] Yes, it will. [12:31.400 --> 12:38.400] Like selenium, and it's been proven in a court of law by Dr. Joel Wallach, he proved in a [12:38.400 --> 12:45.320] court of law and he won the case that he now can say that selenium presents cancer. [12:45.320 --> 12:47.040] He can actually say that. [12:47.040 --> 12:52.320] And the FDA has to back up and admit it because they lost the case. [12:52.320 --> 12:55.120] So that's the best I can tell you. [12:55.120 --> 12:56.120] Okay. [12:56.120 --> 12:58.880] Thank you very much, John. [12:58.880 --> 13:02.640] We do need to move along, we've got a bunch of callers. [13:02.640 --> 13:06.120] This was a very good segment and I appreciate you. [13:06.120 --> 13:07.120] Thanks. [13:07.120 --> 13:08.120] Okay. [13:08.120 --> 13:12.000] We're going to Tina in California. [13:12.000 --> 13:13.720] Hello, Tina. [13:13.720 --> 13:16.120] What do you have for us today? [13:16.120 --> 13:20.680] Well, I wanted to thank John for his input there. [13:20.680 --> 13:25.120] It's always good to hear of things we can do to help ourselves. [13:25.120 --> 13:32.560] I've got some enough problems with health now, but I was wondering if you guys would [13:32.560 --> 13:44.360] have a chance to go over that anti-slap for anyone who's on the call that might come across [13:44.360 --> 13:51.880] this and explain a little bit more about what it means and how to interpret it. [13:51.880 --> 13:56.720] Brett, have you looked at anti-slap? [13:56.720 --> 13:59.600] No, I have not. [13:59.600 --> 14:00.600] Okay. [14:00.600 --> 14:10.240] It's my understanding that anti-slap was primarily put in place for journalists to [14:10.240 --> 14:22.680] protect journalists from lawsuits based on their stories that would have the appearance [14:22.680 --> 14:31.760] of negatively affecting a person who is in the public. [14:31.760 --> 14:38.880] Chris, I'm going to talk to Chris, Brett, you and I, I'm looking at Chris from Colorado, [14:38.880 --> 14:40.920] I see you're down there. [14:40.920 --> 14:45.360] Brett, you and I are hosts on a radio show. [14:45.360 --> 14:49.880] We are in the public. [14:49.880 --> 14:54.240] So we don't have the right to privacy, other people do. [14:54.240 --> 15:02.240] And when we do this show in the public, we are listened to by a lot of people and people [15:02.240 --> 15:04.960] tend to pay attention to what we say. [15:04.960 --> 15:18.440] So if we speak negatively about someone, we can have an amplified effect on them. [15:18.440 --> 15:30.520] And anti-slap was put into place so that persons like you and I could not abuse our capacity [15:30.520 --> 15:40.520] and unduly and negatively affect someone in a position of public notice. [15:40.520 --> 15:47.960] Tina, how the heck does that have anything to do with your foreclosure suit? [15:47.960 --> 15:50.640] Well, this is not the point. [15:50.640 --> 15:55.680] This is actually the suit against the attorney, which of course they lump it all together [15:55.680 --> 15:59.400] and it's all the same property, same, you know, residue to carter issue. [15:59.400 --> 16:08.960] But when I looked at the sentence today, they only state that because in addition to the [16:08.960 --> 16:17.080] feeding challenges, because the alleged statements by Alan Mackins were in the course of representing [16:17.080 --> 16:26.200] its client, CitBank, in litigation methods, your claims are also subject to an anti-slap [16:26.200 --> 16:31.560] special motion to strike under code of civil procedure section 42516. [16:31.560 --> 16:38.360] When I looked up, I think we're running off the clips here, have to come back after the [16:38.360 --> 16:40.360] music and the funcers. [16:40.360 --> 16:44.080] Okay, we've got about 20 seconds. [16:44.080 --> 16:48.680] Okay, hang on, Tina, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we were on radio. [16:48.680 --> 16:53.000] A call in number, 512-646-1984. [16:53.000 --> 16:56.800] We do have a full board of callers at the moment. [16:56.800 --> 17:00.240] So as soon as someone drops it off, you can call in, we'll be... [17:00.240 --> 17:05.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.520 --> 17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meyers Proven Method. [17:09.000 --> 17:13.320] Michael Meyers has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.320 --> 17:14.320] can win two. [17:14.320 --> 17:19.160] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.160 --> 17:20.840] civil rights statute. [17:20.840 --> 17:24.520] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [17:24.520 --> 17:26.560] How to answer letters and phone call? 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[19:59.320 --> 20:02.320] Okay, we are back. [20:02.320 --> 20:04.320] This is the Rule of Law Radio. [20:04.320 --> 20:05.320] Randy Kelton. [20:05.320 --> 20:06.320] I'm Brad Fountain. [20:06.320 --> 20:09.320] And this is the 23rd of April, 2021. [20:09.320 --> 20:11.320] We're talking with Tina in California. [20:11.320 --> 20:13.320] All right, Tina. [20:13.320 --> 20:18.320] So we were talking about this anti-slap thing and trying to figure out how they got there. [20:18.320 --> 20:22.320] What makes them think this is connected with journalists? [20:22.320 --> 20:28.320] Well, let me read it, the first two sections to you then, because I looked it up and they [20:28.320 --> 20:30.320] didn't name a section of it. [20:30.320 --> 20:41.320] They just said section 4245.16 and that goes A through I or A through J. So the first two [20:41.320 --> 20:49.520] of it, A says the legislature finds and declares that there has been a disturbing increase in [20:49.520 --> 20:58.520] lawsuits or primarily to kill the valid exercise of the constitutional rights of freedom of [20:58.520 --> 21:02.520] speech and petition for the redress of grievances. [21:02.520 --> 21:10.520] The legislature finds and declares that it is in the public interest to encourage continued [21:10.520 --> 21:18.520] participation in matters of public significance and that this participation should not be [21:18.520 --> 21:22.520] done through abuse of the judicial process. [21:22.520 --> 21:26.520] To this end, the section shall be construed broadly. [21:26.520 --> 21:35.520] And B1 says a cause of action against the person arising from any act of that person [21:35.520 --> 21:42.520] in furtherance of the person's right of petition or free speech under the United States [21:42.520 --> 21:48.520] Constitution or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue shall be [21:48.520 --> 21:55.520] subject to a special motion to strike unless the court determines that the plaintiff has [21:55.520 --> 22:00.520] established that there is a probability that the plaintiff will prevail on the claim. [22:00.520 --> 22:08.520] What I'd like to ask and try to understand is what is public in terms of this case I've [22:08.520 --> 22:15.520] got against the firm who, you know, made the false statement in the line. [22:15.520 --> 22:18.520] Why is this public? [22:18.520 --> 22:23.520] Why is it public interest? [22:23.520 --> 22:25.520] Am I misreading this? [22:25.520 --> 22:28.520] Yeah, that's a real good question. [22:28.520 --> 22:32.520] And what you said goes exactly what the slap goes to. [22:32.520 --> 22:42.520] Is reporters when they're reporting news about issues, they're essentially protected from [22:42.520 --> 22:50.520] these frivolous suits that are designed to prevent those reporters from reporting what [22:50.520 --> 22:53.520] they consider to be news. [22:53.520 --> 23:04.520] And how this lawyer in your suit gets to slap is, I don't know, I'm confused. [23:04.520 --> 23:05.520] I don't know. [23:05.520 --> 23:06.520] I wouldn't personally. [23:06.520 --> 23:08.520] I wouldn't spend too much time on it. [23:08.520 --> 23:13.520] I would be thinking, let me think of a way to just slap him and say something like, I [23:13.520 --> 23:15.520] don't know who you are. [23:15.520 --> 23:19.520] I think you got your clients mixed up because this is not a journalism issue. [23:19.520 --> 23:22.520] Go away. [23:22.520 --> 23:28.520] You have such a distinct way of putting it, right? [23:28.520 --> 23:31.520] And let me add one comment to that. [23:31.520 --> 23:37.520] This appears to be a matter of fomenting litigation. [23:37.520 --> 23:41.520] What is foment, spell that out for me, please. [23:41.520 --> 23:44.520] Fomenting, F-O-M-E-N-T-I-N-G. [23:44.520 --> 23:55.520] When you advise a client to take a position that will result in added litigation that [23:55.520 --> 24:03.520] you will then be engaged to litigate, that's fomenting litigation. [24:03.520 --> 24:10.520] In Texas, it's called baritry and it's a felony. [24:10.520 --> 24:17.520] But only, Texas in New York are the only states I know of that make it a crime for a lawyer [24:17.520 --> 24:23.520] to create litigation that the lawyer then gets to adjudicate. [24:23.520 --> 24:30.520] And in this case, it seems as though the lawyer is bringing frivolous arguments that he will [24:30.520 --> 24:40.520] then be paid to write motions, pleadings, and briefs to adjudicate those issues. [24:40.520 --> 24:44.520] That goes right to baritry. [24:44.520 --> 24:53.520] Does that go to sanctions for citing a case that doesn't fit, that has no bearing? [24:53.520 --> 25:01.520] Or sometimes they cite the wrong case or they don't cite a case. [25:01.520 --> 25:05.520] No, it's not exactly about citing cases. [25:05.520 --> 25:11.520] He's raising an issue that's irrelevant. [25:11.520 --> 25:13.520] He's raising an issue? [25:13.520 --> 25:18.520] He's stirring up problems where there were no problems. [25:18.520 --> 25:19.520] Exactly. [25:19.520 --> 25:23.520] Nina, the term he used, churning. [25:23.520 --> 25:30.520] Churning means creating litigation that you get to then represent. [25:30.520 --> 25:33.520] He raised an irrelevant issue. [25:33.520 --> 25:39.520] The issue of slap, slap absolutely does not apply here. [25:39.520 --> 25:45.520] But he raises the issue and now you have to come in and argue that the issue is frivolous, [25:45.520 --> 25:52.520] that it doesn't apply here, you have to do the research, you have to write the motions and pleadings. [25:52.520 --> 26:02.520] And then when you do that, then he gets to write oppositions and demirers. [26:02.520 --> 26:05.520] Exactly. [26:05.520 --> 26:12.520] That's churning a case and that's exactly what this lawyer is doing. [26:12.520 --> 26:20.520] Okay, I'll read two more quick sections which might go to exactly what you've said. [26:20.520 --> 26:37.520] You know, it says defendant who prevails on a special motion to strike an inaction subject to paragraph one shall not be entitled to attorney's fees and costs if that cause of action is brought pursuant to section 5259 and some other government codes. [26:37.520 --> 26:46.520] Nothing in the paragraph will be construed to prevent a prevailing defendant from recovering attorney's fees and costs pursuant to these subdivisions. [26:46.520 --> 27:07.520] And it says as used in this section act in furtherance of a person's right of petition of free speech under the United States or all California constitution in connection with a public issue includes any written or oral statement or writing made before every legislative, [27:07.520 --> 27:27.520] executive or judicial proceeding or any other official proceeding authorized by law, any written or oral statement or writing made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive or judicial body, [27:27.520 --> 27:41.520] or any other official proceeding authorized by law, any written or oral statement or writing made in a place open to the public or a public forum in connection with an issue of public interest, [27:41.520 --> 27:49.520] or any other conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of petition for free speech. [27:49.520 --> 28:00.520] So I think he's trying to weave their statements into this particular section. But again, I believe he's misappropriating it. [28:00.520 --> 28:03.520] Yeah, this is not a public issue. [28:03.520 --> 28:05.520] Public issue. [28:05.520 --> 28:11.520] Public is the key word. This is a private issue between the two litigants. [28:11.520 --> 28:20.520] Now, when we're talking to John about the vaccines, that is a public issue because it affects everyone. [28:20.520 --> 28:30.520] But whether or not this lawyer gives you a document that he promised to give you, that's not a public issue. [28:30.520 --> 28:31.520] Correct. [28:31.520 --> 28:47.520] And how he can get to slap is that he just made up some stuff. He made up some stuff. Probably something he may have last month had a slap case that he was dealing with. [28:47.520 --> 29:03.520] And he said, oh, it is pretty cool stuff. And I already wrote all these motions and pleadings. I could raise that issue in this case and then drag in all my motions and pleadings and charge my client for building all these documents when I already had them ready. [29:03.520 --> 29:05.520] Copy and paste. [29:05.520 --> 29:08.520] That's called churning. [29:08.520 --> 29:28.520] This is interesting then because the person who has written this is a actual partner in the law firm. And when we had the meeting conferred today, which I didn't give away any of what I'm thinking or what we've talked about, is he said he is representing the attorney and the firm. [29:28.520 --> 29:32.520] He is the in-house counsel for them. [29:32.520 --> 29:36.520] Well, go in-house and talk to him. Don't bother me. [29:36.520 --> 29:46.520] Okay. Hang on. We're about to go to our sponsor, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [29:46.520 --> 30:00.520] I'm not going to give out the call-in number. The call board is full. As soon as someone drops off, you can call in. Hang on. We'll be right back. [30:00.520 --> 30:07.520] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:07.520 --> 30:14.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.520 --> 30:24.520] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.520 --> 30:32.520] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [30:32.520 --> 30:40.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.520 --> 30:43.520] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.520 --> 30:55.520] The new research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.520 --> 31:07.520] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.520 --> 31:16.520] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:16.520 --> 31:21.520] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.520 --> 31:38.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:52.520 --> 32:00.520] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son, go to buildingwhat.org. Why it's health, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.520 --> 32:11.520] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:11.520 --> 32:21.520] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [32:21.520 --> 32:34.520] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.520 --> 32:47.520] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [32:47.520 --> 33:00.520] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:00.520 --> 33:10.520] Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:30.520 --> 33:49.520] I Won't Let You Pull The Wall Over My Eyes [33:49.520 --> 34:05.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Belton with Law Radio and we're talking to Tina in California. Okay, Tina, where were we? Sometimes over the break we have some lively discussions and I lose my center. [34:05.520 --> 34:23.520] So that's okay. You were just saying that it really doesn't apply that they're saying this is bringing in something that does not apply and what this is telling me is and hopefully our listeners will hear this is when you see something that you've never seen before in a response [34:23.520 --> 34:45.520] and you don't understand it, you know, after reading it two or three times and you're thinking, what the heck is this? It's really good to bring it up to others who have a little bit more legal knowledge or, you know, understanding of how to read these, you know, cases and law and statutes [34:45.520 --> 35:00.520] to talk it over and realize where this is going and why it might be wrong or why it might be right. Yeah, and especially when you're buried in an issue, it's hard to see outside the issue. [35:00.520 --> 35:21.520] And if there's any way you can try to cultivate a group of people around you with similar interests so that they can come in and look at something you've read and look at it from a perspective of someone who's outside the issue. [35:21.520 --> 35:23.520] Correct. [35:23.520 --> 35:30.520] And you will be surprised at the insights you get from people. [35:30.520 --> 35:41.520] Yes, and this has been really interesting and I'll start writing some notes that obviously I will have to respond to it when they file their demure, which of course they're going to. [35:41.520 --> 35:54.520] I mean, well, I didn't expect us to come to an agreement today, but we've met the, you know, the meet-ins come for requirements. And so I said, yes, okay, thank you. I'll just wait for your response. [35:54.520 --> 36:06.520] And, you know, so this gives me some time to think about it. And there's a couple of other issues which we'll address next week, which I think will help other people understand what Frivolous argument is. [36:06.520 --> 36:17.520] And I'll let you go to other callers. And if there's room at the end, we'll come back. If not, we'll come back next week. And thank you very much for your input and wise counsel, both of you. [36:17.520 --> 36:32.520] Okay. Thank you very much, Tina. Okay, Tina, hang on and listen to Bob. We're going to Bob in California and Bob has some crowing to do. Hello, Bob. [36:32.520 --> 36:34.520] Hello, Randy. [36:34.520 --> 36:38.520] Yeah, tell us what you've been up to. [36:38.520 --> 36:46.520] Well, I have been working on an appeal and I had a Zoom a few weeks ago with three. [36:46.520 --> 36:51.520] Okay, hold on. Appeal to what? [36:51.520 --> 37:01.520] Driving without a license was the charge. And I appealed the court's decision. [37:01.520 --> 37:06.520] Okay. Were you nice about it? [37:06.520 --> 37:08.520] Yes. [37:08.520 --> 37:14.520] No, you weren't. You told me about the order. Okay, go ahead. [37:14.520 --> 37:19.520] What? The mental evaluation of the judge? [37:19.520 --> 37:26.520] That was part of it. Talk to me, folks. [37:26.520 --> 37:38.520] Bob called me earlier and told me about this and I struggled with getting all the information because I was laughing too hard. [37:38.520 --> 37:59.520] Well, the judge, the appeals court had said that the trial was fragmented and conducted across two different hearings before two different judicial officers with appellant filing, confusing motions, [37:59.520 --> 38:17.520] and interrupting the flow of the hearing with questions and objections. However understandable, the result was that the appellant was not afforded the opportunity to get formal rulings on motions, to cross-examine the officer, [38:17.520 --> 38:21.520] or to offer evidence before judgment was entered. [38:21.520 --> 38:31.520] Okay, hold on, Bob. What was your claim in your appeal? [38:31.520 --> 38:52.520] I claim that they had changed the charge from a misdemeanor to an infraction without my consent. I addressed that I wasn't offered the opportunity to cross-examine the police officer or enter evidence, [38:52.520 --> 39:07.520] and into the case I called my own witnesses and that they hadn't ruled on the interrogatories before he entered the guilty police, I mean guilty verdict. [39:07.520 --> 39:14.520] Good. So that sounds pretty much like what the court was complaining about. [39:14.520 --> 39:27.520] Okay, go ahead. I wanted the listener to understand why the court is raising these issues because you raised them in your appeal. [39:27.520 --> 39:46.520] Right, in the opening brief I listed, in fact, back in here they say I addressed everything they did wrong, that I felt was wrong. [39:46.520 --> 40:08.520] And I think they called it a myrium of issues, but they didn't necessarily rule on, well, I threw the kitchen sink at them. [40:08.520 --> 40:23.520] Well, it goes to the horse dumpling rule. I had a lawyer who had just ran for state representative and lost. It was his first time running, so he expected to. [40:23.520 --> 40:34.520] It was very knowledgeable, and when I came out of court I was taking on the judge and the prosecutor and the high sheriff of the county. [40:34.520 --> 40:45.520] He commented on, after having reading read my suit, he said, Mr. Calderon, you threw everything at him but the kitchen sink. [40:45.520 --> 40:54.520] I said, well, yeah, as a matter of fact, I did. And he said, well, that's a good idea because it goes to the horse dumpling rule. [40:54.520 --> 41:10.520] I said, the horse dumpling rule, he said, yeah, you know, horse dumplings are kind of fibrous and round and pretty dry, but if you throw enough of them against the wall, one of them's likely to stick. [41:10.520 --> 41:15.520] So you're saying you use the horse dumpling rule. [41:15.520 --> 41:28.520] Everything that I found as I went through that they that I could find a statute that said they weren't supposed to do. [41:28.520 --> 41:50.520] I put it in my opening brief and all those things actually I used in criminal complaints against the police officer, the presiding judge, the judges. [41:50.520 --> 42:08.520] So considering that these courts gather up behind this thin blue line and everybody tries to protect each other, it sounds like you just threw the book at him. [42:08.520 --> 42:22.520] Well, it was quite rewarding. It wasn't an easy task, but it was a rewarding task and I recommend it to anyone. [42:22.520 --> 42:29.520] Okay, I kept interrupting you. What was the end result? [42:29.520 --> 42:45.520] The end result was accordingly the judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial. [42:45.520 --> 42:50.520] Yahoo! [42:50.520 --> 43:02.520] For all your various and annoying, seemingly frivolous pleadings, you won the appeal. [43:02.520 --> 43:04.520] Right. [43:04.520 --> 43:10.520] And in traffic, that does not happen often. [43:10.520 --> 43:39.520] Well, from what I saw in the courtroom, and I've not been in the courtroom in 50, 60 years, I mean, I have very little experience there, but it's running rampant, their behavior, and they're so used to it, they're not used to anyone who bends them the right way. [43:39.520 --> 43:45.520] And that's our job. [43:45.520 --> 43:59.520] Once they have one citizen do it to them, they're always wondering about the next one. Hang on, Randy Colton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [43:59.520 --> 44:10.520] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:10.520 --> 44:17.520] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.520 --> 44:31.520] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.520 --> 44:47.520] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor, along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.520 --> 45:00.520] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [45:00.520 --> 45:14.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.520 --> 45:22.520] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.520 --> 45:33.520] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:33.520 --> 45:42.520] 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. [45:42.520 --> 45:55.520] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.520 --> 46:14.520] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:14.520 --> 46:35.520] Ohhhhhhhhhhhh... always I must be careful what I'm hoping for. When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:35.520 --> 46:40.520] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no blood [46:40.520 --> 46:46.520] I'm just here makin' my livin' pushin' button [46:46.520 --> 46:50.520] I get my message out and anyone [46:50.520 --> 46:53.520] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio [46:53.520 --> 46:56.520] We're talking to Bob in California [46:56.520 --> 47:00.520] And Bob, you've been havin' way too much fun [47:00.520 --> 47:05.520] It looks like your fun is just started [47:05.520 --> 47:14.520] Well, I think that the bonus was that the case has been remanded for a new trial [47:14.520 --> 47:19.520] Which means I get to take all the eyes that I've learned to dot [47:19.520 --> 47:24.520] And the keys I've learned to cross and run it by them again [47:24.520 --> 47:35.520] In traffic cases, appeals are almost never approved [47:35.520 --> 47:41.520] I don't know that I've ever won an appeal in a traffic court [47:41.520 --> 47:46.520] Well, yes you have. You helped me win one, that's for sure [47:46.520 --> 47:50.520] I don't know that I could have done it without Rue La Radio [47:50.520 --> 47:53.520] In fact, I sure could now [47:53.520 --> 47:59.520] And for me, to do this in California [47:59.520 --> 48:06.520] At least in Texas, they pretend like they look at the law [48:06.520 --> 48:11.520] In California, they tend not to even pretend [48:11.520 --> 48:15.520] You know, I don't like to single out a certain jurisdiction [48:15.520 --> 48:20.520] Because people always say, oh, my county is the most corrupt county in the nation [48:20.520 --> 48:23.520] And I hear that from everywhere [48:23.520 --> 48:28.520] But after following some cases through the California courts [48:28.520 --> 48:33.520] Especially Tina Cope, Tina's case [48:33.520 --> 48:39.520] I believe California absolutely is the most corrupt state in the union [48:39.520 --> 48:42.520] As concerns the criminal justice system [48:42.520 --> 48:51.520] And for you to beat them to give them a presentation that they just could not ignore [48:51.520 --> 48:55.520] Is absolutely phenomenal [48:55.520 --> 48:58.520] Well, it can be done [48:58.520 --> 49:06.520] And they're easy prey because they're so blatant about their abuse [49:06.520 --> 49:12.520] They have no idea you would be filing that with post [49:12.520 --> 49:17.520] Most states call it post, Texas calls it TECO [49:17.520 --> 49:20.520] Texas Commission on Law Enforcement [49:20.520 --> 49:27.520] But most states just define it as post, POST [49:27.520 --> 49:35.520] And, again, why was I going there? [49:35.520 --> 49:38.520] I'm not sure [49:38.520 --> 49:43.520] Something to do with the phase of the moon, I believe [49:43.520 --> 49:48.520] I don't know, I'm getting lost. It's been a long day for me and I'm struggling here [49:48.520 --> 49:53.520] But I'm really pleased at Bob [49:53.520 --> 49:58.520] That you actually got a California of all places [49:58.520 --> 50:06.520] And in traffic, if you go to my traffic site, I've got 150 pages for Texas it'll download [50:06.520 --> 50:12.520] And I do not expect the judge to read any of those [50:12.520 --> 50:16.520] The purpose of them is to get them just to ignore them [50:16.520 --> 50:20.520] So that's the standard procedure with traffic [50:20.520 --> 50:25.520] You ignore everything the litigant does and just rule against them out of hand [50:25.520 --> 50:31.520] And California is the worst and Bob beat them [50:31.520 --> 50:38.520] They did all the things you said, they ruled against me at every turn [50:38.520 --> 50:45.520] So I guess my question is now, they've scheduled a new trial date [50:45.520 --> 50:51.520] But at some point, isn't it too old to prosecute? [50:51.520 --> 50:57.520] No, no, because it's still in litigation [50:57.520 --> 51:04.520] So that part of it, they have a certain amount of time to initiate prosecution [51:04.520 --> 51:11.520] That clock stops running at that point, the prosecution can take as long as it takes [51:11.520 --> 51:17.520] And a lot of things these prosecutors do is for the purpose of extending that clock [51:17.520 --> 51:24.520] They'll order you to court and then they won't show up, they'll get a continuance and order you again [51:24.520 --> 51:30.520] Ted Scarlett in California has been to court over 200 times [51:30.520 --> 51:36.520] They absolutely do not want his issues to come before the court [51:36.520 --> 51:43.520] And what's likely to happen with you, Bob, is when this trial restarts [51:43.520 --> 51:51.520] They'll set a hearing and oh my goodness, the prosecutor, the policeman [51:51.520 --> 51:57.520] Because in California the policeman's prosecutor, he didn't show up [51:57.520 --> 52:07.520] We just had Martichet Olivier filed a complaint alleging that a Florida statute was void aminishio [52:07.520 --> 52:09.520] From the beginning [52:09.520 --> 52:21.520] He went into court and the court said oh my goodness, the prosecutor didn't show up [52:21.520 --> 52:25.520] And the police, well they didn't show up either [52:25.520 --> 52:34.520] Well Mr. Olivier, if you filed a motion to dismiss, well I would have to sign it [52:34.520 --> 52:40.520] Olivier said oh yeah, did I move to dismiss? [52:40.520 --> 52:45.520] And the judge said, case dismissed [52:45.520 --> 52:57.520] He beat him up and caused him so much trouble that on appeal they used technical reading of the statute [52:57.520 --> 53:04.520] If they order you to be there on a certain day at a certain time, you have to be there [53:04.520 --> 53:10.520] If you don't, they can charge you with contempt to court, but you were there [53:10.520 --> 53:18.520] You raised all the right questions and now it is my opinion from what I saw [53:18.520 --> 53:25.520] Is that the court did this so they could say oh my goodness, I hate it when things like this happen [53:25.520 --> 53:28.520] The prosecutor, well he probably got stuck in traffic [53:28.520 --> 53:38.520] However, when we order you to be here at a certain day at a certain time, we are commanded to be ready for trial [53:38.520 --> 53:41.520] Now they care about what the law says [53:41.520 --> 53:45.520] Yeah, so we can't, so we're going to have to dismiss this [53:45.520 --> 53:49.520] It breaks my heart and I hate to have to do it [53:49.520 --> 53:55.520] Since the prosecutor and the lawyer is not here, we're going to have to dismiss it [53:55.520 --> 53:58.520] Yuck, yuck [53:58.520 --> 54:03.520] That's how it works in the real world, you and Olivier [54:03.520 --> 54:07.520] I don't believe they want me to get the cop [54:07.520 --> 54:11.520] I don't believe they want me to be able to cross the cop [54:11.520 --> 54:24.520] The officer, I've gotten through information requests that he has no training certificates [54:24.520 --> 54:32.520] They don't have any records that show that he has any training certificates [54:32.520 --> 54:38.520] Several other information requests kind of have pulled their pants down [54:38.520 --> 54:49.520] So to speak, that the officer probably shouldn't even be in a uniform on the street [54:49.520 --> 55:05.520] Well Randy, is there anything that could be done to sort of preempt or prevent this sideways dismissal and get it to really go through to a real win? [55:05.520 --> 55:13.520] What you have to do in Texas is just, wait a minute, lost my place [55:13.520 --> 55:17.520] I was thinking about how to take them on [55:17.520 --> 55:20.520] Will you say that again Brett? [55:20.520 --> 55:27.520] Is there a way to prevent so that he doesn't accept a sideways quiet dismissal he wants to really win [55:27.520 --> 55:29.520] He wants to see these issues through [55:29.520 --> 55:37.520] For the sake of justice, let's go on through, let's address the merits, let's find out whether this officer has authority, all of that stuff [55:37.520 --> 55:42.520] Instead of just whoops, they didn't show up, I guess you just win by default [55:42.520 --> 55:43.520] See you later [55:43.520 --> 55:45.520] I've tried that [55:45.520 --> 55:52.520] And when my last case was dismissed in Austin [55:52.520 --> 55:59.520] The lawyer was absolutely ecstatic, but the judge had dismissed the case to protect my lawyer for me [55:59.520 --> 56:06.520] And when he told me that the judge dismissed the case, I said, well did he dismiss it with prejudice? [56:06.520 --> 56:12.520] And the lawyer said, well no, would you get back in there and get that back on, I don't want to dismiss it with prejudice [56:12.520 --> 56:14.520] Oh Mr. Kilden [56:14.520 --> 56:19.520] When they do this, they want this thing out of their court [56:19.520 --> 56:23.520] And once they dismiss it, you have no standing [56:23.520 --> 56:29.520] You can't really object to having your case dismissed [56:29.520 --> 56:40.520] Can you introduce a counterclaim, like have an amended answer, to add a counterclaim to it so that it can't just go away? [56:40.520 --> 56:53.520] No, not in criminal, you can't enter a counterclaim, but you can enter a file petition in the district court against the officer [56:53.520 --> 56:58.520] The criminal and the civil are totally separate [56:58.520 --> 57:09.520] So you'll have this problem in the criminal where they don't do exactly what they're supposed to, it's less problematic in the civil [57:09.520 --> 57:16.520] But once they dismiss, even if they dismiss without prejudice [57:16.520 --> 57:25.520] Without prejudice means if they get new information later, they can come back and resubmit [57:25.520 --> 57:36.520] But they can only do that if they get facts and information they did not have at the time of trial, and that almost never happens [57:36.520 --> 57:44.520] So what is likely to happen is the court will dismiss it without prejudice [57:44.520 --> 57:55.520] And then they'll put a red line across your criminal history so that when the prosecutor pulls it up on his computer [57:55.520 --> 58:06.520] There'll be a big red bar across the front of it and with white lettering that says, do not be tamed [58:06.520 --> 58:12.520] They don't like fighting with someone who knows how to fight back [58:12.520 --> 58:20.520] And when that happens, they will maneuver a situation where they can say, oh my goodness [58:20.520 --> 58:31.520] I told that lawyer to be here and that the investigator, the witness, they're supposed to be here but they didn't show up [58:31.520 --> 58:35.520] Oh my goodness, now I have to dismiss [58:35.520 --> 58:40.520] That disposes of the case without them getting provosts [58:40.520 --> 58:47.520] I'll let you go Randy and Brett, I appreciate it and I'll see you then, talk to you soon [58:47.520 --> 58:50.520] OK, thank you Bob [59:17.520 --> 59:27.520] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church [59:27.520 --> 59:40.520] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102 [59:40.520 --> 59:49.520] Or visit us online at bfa.org [59:49.520 --> 59:59.520] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com [59:59.520 --> 01:00:05.520] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdowns [01:00:05.520 --> 01:00:20.520] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019, open with precious metals, gold $1,429.00, silver $16.45.00, copper $2.75.00, oil, Texas crude $55.63 of barrel, [01:00:20.520 --> 01:00:36.520] Brent crude $62.47 of barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, [01:00:36.520 --> 01:00:41.520] and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 of crypto coin [01:00:41.520 --> 01:00:56.520] 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, [01:00:56.520 --> 01:00:59.520] killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:00:59.520 --> 01:01:00.520] Today in history. [01:01:00.520 --> 01:01:12.520] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:01:12.520 --> 01:01:18.520] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, [01:01:18.520 --> 01:01:24.520] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.520 --> 01:01:33.520] 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. [01:01:33.520 --> 01:01:42.520] 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, [01:01:42.520 --> 01:01:56.520] 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, Kaima Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, [01:01:56.520 --> 01:02:01.520] quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.520 --> 01:02:13.520] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.520 --> 01:02:22.520] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:22.520 --> 01:02:38.520] A paper by Tulane University identified a 5.5-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. [01:02:38.520 --> 01:02:53.520] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:53.520 --> 01:03:08.520] This is Brooke Rody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:23.520 --> 01:03:38.520] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Louis Vuillard Radio, and we have a first-time caller. [01:03:38.520 --> 01:03:47.520] You're from the 903 Area Code. Speak up. What do you have for us today? [01:03:47.520 --> 01:04:01.520] I'm James Chad. I'm from the 903 Area Code, and last night I got into a little altercation with the local police here, and basically it was parked in a fire lane. [01:04:01.520 --> 01:04:12.520] They didn't like the fact that I wouldn't turn over my identification, so they wrote me a citation, gave them an affidavit of status as my identification. [01:04:12.520 --> 01:04:23.520] They didn't like that at all, and threatened me to arrest me if I came back out to the ballpark. Basically, they banned me from the public ballpark. [01:04:23.520 --> 01:04:32.520] Of course, I asked them if they owned the ballpark, and he said, no, it was a city-owned ballpark, and I said, okay, well, then I can't be banned at all. [01:04:32.520 --> 01:04:35.520] He said, well, if you come back, we're going to arrest you. [01:04:35.520 --> 01:04:44.520] I'm going to go back to the ballgames west in the season. My biggest concern is not getting arrested. It's not really that big of a deal. [01:04:44.520 --> 01:04:56.520] I've been arrested once before on a misunderstanding, but I wasn't in front of my kids, and a lot of the community that I know I own a business where I'm at, and I just don't like the look of it. [01:04:56.520 --> 01:05:06.520] So I'm wondering if there is some ideas you have on what I can do between now and Monday to kind of avoid that situation. [01:05:06.520 --> 01:05:16.520] That is a good question. Did he file a criminal trespass notice? [01:05:16.520 --> 01:05:21.520] No, they just verbally told me. [01:05:21.520 --> 01:05:29.520] I haven't considered how do I get past that. [01:05:29.520 --> 01:05:35.520] I'll have to think about that. Okay. [01:05:35.520 --> 01:05:40.520] A policeman ordered you not to come back. [01:05:40.520 --> 01:05:46.520] Charge him with filing a complaint against him for official oppression. [01:05:46.520 --> 01:06:00.520] 39.03 penal code in that he exerted a purported, exerted authority, did not expressly have in the process to not uniform free access to enjoying a right. [01:06:00.520 --> 01:06:10.520] And take that to a magistrate and ask the magistrate to issue a restraining order against the officer to keep him from arresting you. [01:06:10.520 --> 01:06:18.520] Okay. You could try to find a file of restraining order, but there's no case going on. [01:06:18.520 --> 01:06:36.520] So if you file a criminal complaint against him and then ask the court for a restraining order, then that gives the court standing to file a restraining order against the police. [01:06:36.520 --> 01:06:52.520] What will actually happen is, is the magistrate or is very likely to contact the department and tell them, tell this officer to stand down. [01:06:52.520 --> 01:06:53.520] Okay. [01:06:53.520 --> 01:06:57.520] That's the way a jury works. [01:06:57.520 --> 01:06:58.520] Okay. [01:06:58.520 --> 01:07:04.520] When you step past these guys, these guys step out there and they got a pistol on their hip. [01:07:04.520 --> 01:07:11.520] And they get the notion that they're somehow important. [01:07:11.520 --> 01:07:17.520] And they tend to exceed the scope of their authority. [01:07:17.520 --> 01:07:19.520] Just go over the head. [01:07:19.520 --> 01:07:22.520] They are public servants. [01:07:22.520 --> 01:07:27.520] You are the master of those servants. [01:07:27.520 --> 01:07:32.520] If they step outside one of your legal lines, it is your job to smack them good. [01:07:32.520 --> 01:07:36.520] And the best way to do that is use the court to do it. [01:07:36.520 --> 01:07:40.520] So you can do this in a local JP court. [01:07:40.520 --> 01:07:43.520] Okay. [01:07:43.520 --> 01:07:44.520] All right. [01:07:44.520 --> 01:07:50.520] And there's no magic to doing this. There's no special way you got to write everything. [01:07:50.520 --> 01:08:07.520] If you will look at the disco online and look at some motions, the Texas has a particular kind of heading with the plaintiff versus defendant on the left hand side and the court on the right hand side. [01:08:07.520 --> 01:08:17.520] And then you have an introduction that says now comes so and so here and after referred to as plaintiff and will show the court as follows. [01:08:17.520 --> 01:08:22.520] I need to do a little introduction. This is what I'm going to show the court. [01:08:22.520 --> 01:08:29.520] This officer gave me a trespass verbal trespass warning, but not a written one. [01:08:29.520 --> 01:08:45.520] And I'm concerned that he's going to exert an authority doesn't have and you charge him with official oppression and ask the court to issue restraining order to prevent this officer from resting me. [01:08:45.520 --> 01:08:47.520] Okay. [01:08:47.520 --> 01:08:51.520] And if you have any issues with it when you're writing it, give me a call. [01:08:51.520 --> 01:09:01.520] I can give you a link to some of the documents on my websites or just give you some ideas how to write the thing. [01:09:01.520 --> 01:09:19.520] Really, do you think it would be a good idea for him to mention in this request for his restraining order to mention that this is a public place that he's being told that this officer is telling him that he's going to get arrested for being in a public place? [01:09:19.520 --> 01:09:23.520] Absolutely. [01:09:23.520 --> 01:09:41.520] Just describe the place, you know, a lot of people who call into this show are at odds with the system and we tend to want to divide everything between good guys and bad guys. [01:09:41.520 --> 01:09:55.520] So we tend to lump all these public officials into the bad guy section, but that's not always the case. For the most part, they're ordinary human beings trying to do the best they can given the circumstances they're in. [01:09:55.520 --> 01:10:10.520] If you give them what they need in order to be able to give you your remedy, very often they'll be glad to give you the remedy because what the judge is going to want to do is say, hey, guys, come here, sit down. [01:10:10.520 --> 01:10:19.520] Let's all be adults. Let's fix this situation so it doesn't have to come before me. [01:10:19.520 --> 01:10:31.520] And just filing the document, whether the judge grants it or not, probably won't make any difference to the officer who's going to back up. [01:10:31.520 --> 01:10:34.520] Okay. [01:10:34.520 --> 01:10:47.520] And if you have any questions, give us a call. You will find that when you go after them, it's totally different than when they're coming after you. [01:10:47.520 --> 01:11:06.520] If the officer comes out and tries to show how big and bad he is and how much authority he has, when you go sting him with the courts, are you familiar with the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement? [01:11:06.520 --> 01:11:09.520] I've heard of it, sir. [01:11:09.520 --> 01:11:10.520] Oh. [01:11:10.520 --> 01:11:12.520] Familiar with it. [01:11:12.520 --> 01:11:18.520] It's like having a professional sledgehammer. [01:11:18.520 --> 01:11:25.520] Just today, I printed out 38 of those complaints. [01:11:25.520 --> 01:11:33.520] If you file a T. Cole complaint against that officer, he's going to get apoplexy. [01:11:33.520 --> 01:11:36.520] And he's going to want to be your buddy. [01:11:36.520 --> 01:11:41.520] So you might look at filing a T. Cole complaint against him. [01:11:41.520 --> 01:11:42.520] Okay. [01:11:42.520 --> 01:11:45.520] I will definitely look into that. [01:11:45.520 --> 01:12:10.520] And if you have any questions, send me an email. I have a T. Cole complaint form that I downloaded from their website and converted it into a Word document so that it's real easy to just add the information you need into it and send it to him. [01:12:10.520 --> 01:12:11.520] Okay. [01:12:11.520 --> 01:12:15.520] And guarantee you this will get his attention. [01:12:15.520 --> 01:12:22.520] Criminal complaints, they're not too concerned about those because they know the judge to protect them. [01:12:22.520 --> 01:12:32.520] But with T. Cole, T. Cole is the outfit that certifies peace officers, trains and certifies. [01:12:32.520 --> 01:12:38.520] If you file a complaint with T. Cole, they'll throw it in the trash. [01:12:38.520 --> 01:12:45.520] Now seeing you in these letters said we examined into your accusation, find it does not rise to the level of misconduct. [01:12:45.520 --> 01:12:47.520] And that's a good thing. [01:12:47.520 --> 01:12:51.520] We've examined ourselves and found no wrongdoing. [01:12:51.520 --> 01:12:52.520] Yeah. [01:12:52.520 --> 01:12:53.520] Right. [01:12:53.520 --> 01:12:59.520] And that's good. That's good because their insurance carrier knows they'll do that. [01:12:59.520 --> 01:13:04.520] So how does the insurance carrier gauge his level of risk? [01:13:04.520 --> 01:13:06.520] By valid complaints? [01:13:06.520 --> 01:13:08.520] File in the trash. [01:13:08.520 --> 01:13:10.520] By the numbers. [01:13:10.520 --> 01:13:16.520] Six professional conduct complaints on your record as a peace officer. [01:13:16.520 --> 01:13:22.520] And you've got this bonding agent who holds the insurance for the jurisdiction. [01:13:22.520 --> 01:13:29.520] It is his job to charge you as much as possible and avoid any claims. [01:13:29.520 --> 01:13:36.520] So he gets these complaints, professional conduct complaints against the officer. [01:13:36.520 --> 01:13:42.520] You get six and he's going to go to the jurisdiction and say, hey, you got this officer here. [01:13:42.520 --> 01:13:47.520] He has a unacceptable risk. [01:13:47.520 --> 01:13:55.520] If you keep him, we will raise the bond rating for your entire department. [01:13:55.520 --> 01:14:00.520] He thinks it's going to happen to Joe Jackbroot. [01:14:00.520 --> 01:14:02.520] It's got Richardson. [01:14:02.520 --> 01:14:06.520] He files T-code complaints against every officer gives him hard time. [01:14:06.520 --> 01:14:12.520] This next time he goes to court, that officer is not with the department anymore. [01:14:12.520 --> 01:14:16.520] It's like dropping a sledgehammer on them and there's nothing they can do. [01:14:16.520 --> 01:14:18.520] The officer can't talk to you about it. [01:14:18.520 --> 01:14:22.520] If he tells the judge about it, you file another complaint against him for that. [01:14:22.520 --> 01:14:26.520] You get to sting him big time. [01:14:26.520 --> 01:14:32.520] So look up T-code T-C-O-L-E. [01:14:32.520 --> 01:14:35.520] And if you have any problems with it, give me a call. [01:14:35.520 --> 01:14:44.520] My number is 940-399-9922. [01:14:44.520 --> 01:14:48.520] I'm most available in the mornings about 10 or 11 o'clock. [01:14:48.520 --> 01:14:51.520] My phone starts blowing up big time. [01:14:51.520 --> 01:14:54.520] But before that, I'm generally available. [01:14:54.520 --> 01:14:58.520] And I can get you the form and walk you right through it. [01:14:58.520 --> 01:15:02.520] And you will be surprised how much fun this is. [01:15:02.520 --> 01:15:04.520] Okay. [01:15:04.520 --> 01:15:05.520] I'll definitely get into that. [01:15:05.520 --> 01:15:07.520] And if I have any problems, I'll give you a call. [01:15:07.520 --> 01:15:08.520] I really appreciate it. [01:15:08.520 --> 01:15:09.520] Okay. [01:15:09.520 --> 01:15:10.520] Thank you. [01:15:10.520 --> 01:15:12.520] Thank you, guys. [01:15:12.520 --> 01:15:13.520] Okay. [01:15:13.520 --> 01:15:15.520] Now we're going to Chris in Colorado. [01:15:15.520 --> 01:15:16.520] Hello, Chris. [01:15:16.520 --> 01:15:17.520] Hey, right. [01:15:17.520 --> 01:15:18.520] What are you holding? [01:15:18.520 --> 01:15:22.520] How are you? Have you done anything in the last day or so? [01:15:22.520 --> 01:15:27.520] Oh, my God, I haven't left the computers in six this morning. [01:15:27.520 --> 01:15:29.520] Yeah, I've been typing all day long. [01:15:29.520 --> 01:15:33.520] So I'm calling in just to have a couple questions. [01:15:33.520 --> 01:15:35.520] My first question is, when you lived in Chicago, [01:15:35.520 --> 01:15:39.520] was there something in the water there? [01:15:39.520 --> 01:15:45.520] Oh, have you seen the movie, The Blues Brothers? [01:15:45.520 --> 01:15:47.520] A long time ago, yeah. [01:15:47.520 --> 01:15:48.520] Okay. [01:15:48.520 --> 01:15:50.520] This was a movie about Chicago. [01:15:50.520 --> 01:15:55.520] And The Blues Brothers, they're trying to help the nuns. [01:15:55.520 --> 01:16:00.520] And they're going somewhere and there's this KKK group, [01:16:00.520 --> 01:16:04.520] this white supremacist group doing a march across the bridge. [01:16:04.520 --> 01:16:07.520] And The Blues Brothers just drives right through them [01:16:07.520 --> 01:16:10.520] and forces them to jump off into the river. [01:16:10.520 --> 01:16:14.520] And through the rest of the movie, these guys are chasing them. [01:16:14.520 --> 01:16:18.520] And most people who didn't understand Chicago didn't understand why. [01:16:18.520 --> 01:16:23.520] They forced them to jump into the Chicago River. [01:16:23.520 --> 01:16:27.520] When I was growing up, we walked across the bridge of the Chicago River [01:16:27.520 --> 01:16:33.520] and there were condoms and poop and every nasty, disgusting thing [01:16:33.520 --> 01:16:38.520] you could imagine in that water. [01:16:38.520 --> 01:16:40.520] I believe it. [01:16:40.520 --> 01:16:45.520] That's why they were after. [01:16:45.520 --> 01:16:48.520] Did they think a nasty thing there was something in the water? [01:16:48.520 --> 01:16:52.520] Yes, there was definitely something in the water. [01:16:52.520 --> 01:16:59.520] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Red Mountain, we'll be right there. [01:16:59.520 --> 01:17:04.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.520 --> 01:17:08.520] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [01:17:08.520 --> 01:17:12.520] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [01:17:12.520 --> 01:17:14.520] and now you can win two. [01:17:14.520 --> 01:17:18.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [01:17:18.520 --> 01:17:20.520] using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.520 --> 01:17:24.520] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:17:24.520 --> 01:17:26.520] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:17:26.520 --> 01:17:28.520] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports. [01:17:28.520 --> 01:17:33.520] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.520 --> 01:17:38.520] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.520 --> 01:17:40.520] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.520 --> 01:17:44.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:44.520 --> 01:17:49.520] and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.520 --> 01:17:57.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:17:57.520 --> 01:18:00.520] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.520 --> 01:18:04.520] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.520 --> 01:18:07.520] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.520 --> 01:18:10.520] I need my truth fix. I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:10.520 --> 01:18:13.520] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.520 --> 01:18:16.520] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite [01:18:16.520 --> 01:18:20.520] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.520 --> 01:18:22.520] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.520 --> 01:18:24.520] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.520 --> 01:18:27.520] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.520 --> 01:18:30.520] You can learn your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:30.520 --> 01:18:32.520] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:32.520 --> 01:18:35.520] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:35.520 --> 01:18:38.520] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:38.520 --> 01:18:44.520] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:44.520 --> 01:18:45.520] Do I pay extra? [01:18:45.520 --> 01:18:46.520] No. [01:18:46.520 --> 01:18:48.520] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:48.520 --> 01:18:49.520] No. [01:18:49.520 --> 01:18:50.520] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:50.520 --> 01:18:51.520] No. [01:18:51.520 --> 01:18:52.520] I mean, yes. [01:18:52.520 --> 01:18:55.520] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:55.520 --> 01:18:56.520] This is perfect. [01:18:56.520 --> 01:18:57.520] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.520 --> 01:18:58.520] You're welcome. [01:18:58.520 --> 01:19:00.520] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.520 --> 01:19:10.520] This is the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:19:10.520 --> 01:19:35.520] Oh, come on. [01:19:35.520 --> 01:19:48.520] Okay. [01:19:48.520 --> 01:19:49.520] We are back. [01:19:49.520 --> 01:19:54.520] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountainville of our radio and Chris over the break. [01:19:54.520 --> 01:19:56.520] I'm having a lot of fun. [01:19:56.520 --> 01:20:04.520] You reminded me of a lot of stories I have of growing up on the near north side in Chicago. [01:20:04.520 --> 01:20:11.520] I told Brett about I was standing at a bus stop and this guy looked out the bus stop [01:20:11.520 --> 01:20:13.520] so people got off, some others got on. [01:20:13.520 --> 01:20:16.520] This guy looked out the window and gave me the finger. [01:20:16.520 --> 01:20:21.520] I gave him the finger back just as the bus started to move out. [01:20:21.520 --> 01:20:28.520] This guy reached out the window with a fish about a foot and a half long. [01:20:28.520 --> 01:20:35.520] And before I realized what he was doing, he whacked me upside the head with it, knocked me clean off my feet. [01:20:35.520 --> 01:20:37.520] The fish stuck to bed. [01:20:37.520 --> 01:20:42.520] I thought I would vomit. [01:20:42.520 --> 01:20:45.520] Life on the streets in the inner city. [01:20:45.520 --> 01:20:49.520] Okay. [01:20:49.520 --> 01:20:58.520] Where are you with your issue? Avoid the buses. You never know what's going to come out the window. [01:20:58.520 --> 01:21:07.520] Randy, I don't think those words or those particular string of words have ever strung together. [01:21:07.520 --> 01:21:20.520] I was sitting there on the ground behind smelling this nasty tasting fish and just had to chuckle. [01:21:20.520 --> 01:21:24.520] The guy got me righteous. [01:21:24.520 --> 01:21:28.520] Oh man. [01:21:28.520 --> 01:21:41.520] That was Chicago. We used to stand in the subway at the elevated downtown. The commuter train goes underground, but out in the city it's elevated. [01:21:41.520 --> 01:21:47.520] And when we were growing up, we would go down to the station and they had A trains and B trains. [01:21:47.520 --> 01:21:52.520] If you're at an A station and the B train comes along, it doesn't stop. [01:21:52.520 --> 01:21:54.520] So they're moving about 30 miles an hour. [01:21:54.520 --> 01:22:04.520] And we're 13, 14. If you were good, you could take an egg and they didn't have air conditioning in those days. [01:22:04.520 --> 01:22:12.520] And it wasn't enough to throw the eggs through the window into the car that the train is passing by. [01:22:12.520 --> 01:22:23.520] If you were good, you could hit the window sill and the egg would explode into the cabin. [01:22:23.520 --> 01:22:27.520] That's the kind of stuff we used to do growing up. [01:22:27.520 --> 01:22:34.520] I dropped a Coke bottle off the Milwaukee Street L over North Avenue. [01:22:34.520 --> 01:22:42.520] I looked down as a cop car coming and I timed it and dropped the Coke bottle and it took out the cops windshield. [01:22:42.520 --> 01:22:44.520] Oh wow. [01:22:44.520 --> 01:22:46.520] Bad idea. [01:22:46.520 --> 01:22:49.520] Those guys got real ugly. [01:22:49.520 --> 01:22:56.520] We had to hide under the train between the rails and the fifth wheel. [01:22:56.520 --> 01:22:59.520] Yeah, the guys with me didn't think that was so funny. [01:22:59.520 --> 01:23:01.520] But yeah, we used to do a lot of that stuff. [01:23:01.520 --> 01:23:08.520] Okay, so what did you have for us? Do you have some questions or comments? [01:23:08.520 --> 01:23:12.520] I have a couple questions. Just basic stuff. [01:23:12.520 --> 01:23:15.520] The reason I asked that question about the water, it's real interesting. [01:23:15.520 --> 01:23:23.520] I spend hours on the phone every day this whole week trying to get a hold of people and just randomly shooting at numbers. [01:23:23.520 --> 01:23:30.520] I really don't get anywhere, but all I do is I find a satellite office that five counties over and they'll talk to me. [01:23:30.520 --> 01:23:33.520] They'll take some planes, they'll do all kinds of work. [01:23:33.520 --> 01:23:38.520] It's crazy for the city of Chicago because it's so dysfunctional there. [01:23:38.520 --> 01:23:47.520] But anyway, I have hopefully an attorney general or assistant attorney general who's going to help get some stuff done. [01:23:47.520 --> 01:23:54.520] But I have a criminal complaint in front of me that I've been working on the most good part of the day and I'm a little just some procedural stuff. [01:23:54.520 --> 01:23:58.520] So you guys have done this before. [01:23:58.520 --> 01:24:04.520] When you pull up the criminal complaint offline, it says the United States District Court of whatever. [01:24:04.520 --> 01:24:08.520] Am I doing this district court federally or am I doing a state court circuit? [01:24:08.520 --> 01:24:16.520] No, I would do this in the state court and to figure out how to write a criminal complaint. [01:24:16.520 --> 01:24:22.520] Just go online to the clerk's office. [01:24:22.520 --> 01:24:35.520] I call the clerk's office and ask them what is the last cause number of the last case that was filed in this court. [01:24:35.520 --> 01:24:40.520] And what that will tell you is how they numbered their cases. [01:24:40.520 --> 01:24:49.520] And then go online and just put in either that number or deduct 50 from that number. [01:24:49.520 --> 01:24:55.520] And then pull up the case and look at the complaint. [01:24:55.520 --> 01:24:59.520] And so you see the form of the complaint. [01:24:59.520 --> 01:25:04.520] Most complaints are in the form of emotion or a pleading. [01:25:04.520 --> 01:25:09.520] Texas is the only state I know of that has a special form. [01:25:09.520 --> 01:25:16.520] The code says a complaint shall run in the name of the name and under the authority of the state of Texas. [01:25:16.520 --> 01:25:29.520] And the complainant must state that he has reason to believe and does believe that the accused committed this crime. [01:25:29.520 --> 01:25:32.520] Those words have to be in there in that order. [01:25:32.520 --> 01:25:36.520] But Texas as far as I know is the only one that does that. [01:25:36.520 --> 01:25:40.520] The rest of them look like emotion. [01:25:40.520 --> 01:25:45.520] Same kind of court heading you would use if you're filing something in court. [01:25:45.520 --> 01:25:52.520] But go to the county record and find a cause number that brings up a case. [01:25:52.520 --> 01:25:55.520] And then look at the documents, see how it's structured. [01:25:55.520 --> 01:26:01.520] If they have an information, that's the one to look at. [01:26:01.520 --> 01:26:06.520] Complaints are intended to be filed by private citizens. [01:26:06.520 --> 01:26:13.520] So they don't have a stringent requirements as to form. [01:26:13.520 --> 01:26:23.520] When a prosecutor receives a complaint from a citizen, then he is to reduce the complaint to an information. [01:26:23.520 --> 01:26:34.520] An information looks exactly like a complaint, except it's produced by the prosecutor and it is improper form. [01:26:34.520 --> 01:26:45.520] So you look at the information and write your complaint to look just like that and instead of information you put complaint. [01:26:45.520 --> 01:26:47.520] Does that make sense? [01:26:47.520 --> 01:26:59.520] And the way I generally write it is I say, I have reason to believe and do believe that so-and-so committed a crime as follows, colon. [01:26:59.520 --> 01:27:03.520] And then I put in the statement of facts. [01:27:03.520 --> 01:27:24.520] And once I'm done with that, based on the above, I, based on the above complainant, alleges that whatever the person's name is, committed the crime of whatever in violation of, and then you put the statute that they violated. [01:27:24.520 --> 01:27:31.520] Sign it, you know, put in a signature section and a notary section. [01:27:31.520 --> 01:27:36.520] And that's all that's required for a complaint. [01:27:36.520 --> 01:27:42.520] It is intended that private citizens file criminal complaints. [01:27:42.520 --> 01:27:53.520] And that's why they have the prosecutor create a information because the complaint does not necessarily have to be in perfect form. [01:27:53.520 --> 01:28:03.520] The prosecutor takes that complaint and creates an information based on the complaint. The information is in proper form. [01:28:03.520 --> 01:28:06.520] And then he submits both to the judge. [01:28:06.520 --> 01:28:17.520] And that's why, because he's got the layman's complaint and then he's got the professional complaint from the prosecutor, he gets them both. [01:28:17.520 --> 01:28:24.520] So all you have to do is find the information and style your complaint just like the information. Does that make sense? [01:28:24.520 --> 01:28:31.520] Yeah, I've been styling mine today off of a district with criminal complaint. I just am using all that terminology. [01:28:31.520 --> 01:28:38.520] But if it sounds like I need to tone it down, the issue I'm having, Randy, is that it doesn't matter district or state or whatever. [01:28:38.520 --> 01:28:42.520] Everybody talked to this because you can't file a criminal complaint. I mentioned this yesterday. [01:28:42.520 --> 01:28:48.520] So I've been finding out how to do an e-file and just kind of get around the system and say, I asked the guy, [01:28:48.520 --> 01:28:55.520] he said, if this gets in the system, we'll judge see it. That's my only goal. He says it's all attached. It all goes with form. [01:28:55.520 --> 01:29:01.520] I said, okay, so it doesn't matter how I file it. But he says, you cannot file a criminal complaint. I said, okay, okay, okay. [01:29:01.520 --> 01:29:16.520] That is nonsense. We have a case, Gerstein Pugh, and it requires that, I'm sorry, I went to the wrong place. [01:29:16.520 --> 01:29:33.520] Every state needs the public to report crime. And in every state I've looked at, all reports of crime are directed to some magistrate. [01:29:33.520 --> 01:29:41.520] And this goes back to 800 years of law. About to run out of time on this. I'll explain that when we come back on the other side. [01:29:41.520 --> 01:29:47.520] But he is the magistrate who gets the complaint, not the police. Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:29:47.520 --> 01:29:49.520] Okay. [01:29:49.520 --> 01:30:11.520] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.520 --> 01:30:15.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.520 --> 01:30:26.520] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.520 --> 01:30:34.520] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.520 --> 01:30:44.520] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.520 --> 01:30:52.520] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home, too, with a smart grid. [01:30:52.520 --> 01:30:59.520] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.520 --> 01:31:08.520] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.520 --> 01:31:15.520] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.520 --> 01:31:24.520] I'd long oppose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. But catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:24.520 --> 01:31:31.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.520 --> 01:31:37.520] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:37.520 --> 01:31:43.520] The fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.520 --> 01:31:46.520] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.520 --> 01:31:49.520] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.520 --> 01:31:50.520] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.520 --> 01:31:51.520] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.520 --> 01:31:52.520] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:52.520 --> 01:31:53.520] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.520 --> 01:31:55.520] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.520 --> 01:31:58.520] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.520 --> 01:32:01.520] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.520 --> 01:32:08.520] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.520 --> 01:32:13.520] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.520 --> 01:32:17.520] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.520 --> 01:32:20.520] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.520 --> 01:32:26.520] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.520 --> 01:32:31.520] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.520 --> 01:32:35.520] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.520 --> 01:32:41.520] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.520 --> 01:32:45.520] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:45.520 --> 01:32:51.520] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.520 --> 01:32:55.520] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.520 --> 01:33:00.520] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:25.520 --> 01:33:38.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we do need to move along. [01:33:38.520 --> 01:33:46.520] You're getting to the best part, Chris. When you start filing criminal charges, you will be amazed [01:33:46.520 --> 01:33:52.520] at how these guys start jumping up and down and trying to find a way to make you happy. [01:33:52.520 --> 01:33:59.520] Yeah. All the time doing this show, you know, people are accustomed to doing civil pleadings, [01:33:59.520 --> 01:34:07.520] but when I mention criminal, it terrifies them. And that's because always the criminal is pointed at them. [01:34:07.520 --> 01:34:15.520] When you start pointing criminal the other way, you'll be like Bob in Texas, laughing and chuckling [01:34:15.520 --> 01:34:23.520] because he's got them jumping up and down and going crazy. And this is when they will want to find a way [01:34:23.520 --> 01:34:29.520] to make you happy so you go away and leave along. Okay, do you have any other questions? [01:34:29.520 --> 01:34:34.520] Just a couple quick things. So do I do the affidavit with a little bit of evidence with this? [01:34:34.520 --> 01:34:36.520] So I'll wait for later for that. [01:34:36.520 --> 01:34:51.520] Go to jurismprudence.website, click on what is it, documents and research. [01:34:51.520 --> 01:34:59.520] It's a top frog on the right. And in there, you will find criminal complaints. [01:34:59.520 --> 01:35:07.520] Look for Cherokee County. In Cherokee County, I filed 35 criminal complaints. [01:35:07.520 --> 01:35:12.520] I have an affidavit in there, a statement of facts. [01:35:12.520 --> 01:35:22.520] And I wrote that affidavit to say this judge and his prosecutor did these things, [01:35:22.520 --> 01:35:32.520] but I wrote it as if I were writing a criminal affidavit. So I have 35 of them in there. [01:35:32.520 --> 01:35:42.520] And then once I got all that written, all the things that happened, then I took out a criminal affidavit form [01:35:42.520 --> 01:35:50.520] and went down to the location and grabbed the section out that went to this crime and dropped it in the document. [01:35:50.520 --> 01:35:56.520] Some of them, one argument I've filed three or four or five different people. [01:35:56.520 --> 01:36:08.520] And this way, the adjudicator, the judge or the grand jury will read the affidavit [01:36:08.520 --> 01:36:16.520] and then they pull out the complaint and the facts of the complaint are right out of the affidavit. [01:36:16.520 --> 01:36:21.520] So they've seen that before. And if I file against two or three people, [01:36:21.520 --> 01:36:28.520] they'll read that same complaint two or three different times. Heck, they'll have that thing memorized. [01:36:28.520 --> 01:36:33.520] But this will demonstrate a nice, clean, succinct way of doing it. [01:36:33.520 --> 01:36:36.520] Okay. I'll look at it. That's similar to what I've got drafted here. [01:36:36.520 --> 01:36:46.520] I took a plagiarized district court affidavit and complaint that I found online. [01:36:46.520 --> 01:36:52.520] And then how about a motion to compel or rid of mandamus to get the actual police or somebody to do their job [01:36:52.520 --> 01:36:57.520] and arrest somebody? I mean, I'm not sure I can go that far with this filing first. [01:36:57.520 --> 01:37:00.520] Or should I just do criminal complaint first? [01:37:00.520 --> 01:37:08.520] Okay. The process is the complaint is filed with some magistrate. [01:37:08.520 --> 01:37:17.520] If a policeman files a criminal complaint with a magistrate, he does not do that in his capacity as a policeman. [01:37:17.520 --> 01:37:25.520] He does that in his capacity as a credible person. [01:37:25.520 --> 01:37:34.520] There is no state I've ever looked at. Is there a distinction made between police and the public? [01:37:34.520 --> 01:37:38.520] This is a republic. All the states are republics. [01:37:38.520 --> 01:37:43.520] And the ultimate authority in the state is the citizen. [01:37:43.520 --> 01:37:47.520] Citizens file criminal complaints. This guy may be a policeman, [01:37:47.520 --> 01:37:52.520] but he doesn't file that criminal complaint in his capacity as a policeman. [01:37:52.520 --> 01:37:55.520] He files it in his capacity as a credible person. [01:37:55.520 --> 01:38:09.520] And they're always directed to some magistrate that provisions been in law for 800 years since the first signing of the Magna Carta Libertarium. [01:38:09.520 --> 01:38:16.520] If a policeman arrests someone for any reason, he should take them directly to the magistrate and explain himself. [01:38:16.520 --> 01:38:23.520] And if the magistrate decides there is sufficient probable cause to believe the crime has been committed and the named person committed the crime, [01:38:23.520 --> 01:38:29.520] then he issues an order stating that he found probable cause. [01:38:29.520 --> 01:38:34.520] And then that gives the court jurisdiction. [01:38:34.520 --> 01:38:36.520] Same way everywhere. [01:38:36.520 --> 01:38:37.520] Okay. [01:38:37.520 --> 01:38:41.520] So for them to say you have to give it to a policeman's horseman lawyer. [01:38:41.520 --> 01:38:46.520] So you make a complaint and send it to some magistrate. [01:38:46.520 --> 01:38:49.520] And then the magistrate must find probable cause. [01:38:49.520 --> 01:38:56.520] If he finds probable cause, then he will issue an order and a warrant. [01:38:56.520 --> 01:38:59.520] And then the prosecution starts. [01:38:59.520 --> 01:39:00.520] Okay. [01:39:00.520 --> 01:39:06.520] In this country, we have the duty to report crime. [01:39:06.520 --> 01:39:14.520] But once we report crime, we have no standing as to the prosecution of the crime. [01:39:14.520 --> 01:39:18.520] That's strictly left up to the magistrate. [01:39:18.520 --> 01:39:19.520] Okay. [01:39:19.520 --> 01:39:21.520] Okay. [01:39:21.520 --> 01:39:22.520] All right. [01:39:22.520 --> 01:39:25.520] I'll do it in the church. [01:39:25.520 --> 01:39:26.520] Okay. [01:39:26.520 --> 01:39:28.520] Thank you very much, Chris. [01:39:28.520 --> 01:39:29.520] Yeah. [01:39:29.520 --> 01:39:34.520] Now, now we're going to go to what appears to be a first time caller. [01:39:34.520 --> 01:39:40.520] We have someone from area code 716. [01:39:40.520 --> 01:39:44.520] If you're from Syria, 716, talk to us. [01:39:44.520 --> 01:39:45.520] Yep. [01:39:45.520 --> 01:39:46.520] Yep. [01:39:46.520 --> 01:39:48.520] That would be me. [01:39:48.520 --> 01:39:53.520] Just give me your first name and state. [01:39:53.520 --> 01:39:55.520] New York. [01:39:55.520 --> 01:39:59.520] Sounds like John. [01:39:59.520 --> 01:40:01.520] Pardon me. [01:40:01.520 --> 01:40:03.520] Is this John? [01:40:03.520 --> 01:40:04.520] This is Mark. [01:40:04.520 --> 01:40:05.520] Oh, okay. [01:40:05.520 --> 01:40:11.520] You sound like, I guess all you folks from New York sound alike. [01:40:11.520 --> 01:40:19.520] We had John on earlier and you sound remarkably like him. [01:40:19.520 --> 01:40:23.520] And I notice you speak with a strange foreign accent. [01:40:23.520 --> 01:40:26.520] You're obviously not from Texas. [01:40:26.520 --> 01:40:27.520] No. [01:40:27.520 --> 01:40:28.520] No. [01:40:28.520 --> 01:40:29.520] Okay. [01:40:29.520 --> 01:40:31.520] What do you have for us today? [01:40:31.520 --> 01:40:33.520] Germany. [01:40:33.520 --> 01:40:50.520] Well, going to a foreclosure in the house and trying to get the other side to show the [01:40:50.520 --> 01:40:53.520] original note. [01:40:53.520 --> 01:40:58.520] I have the original note still. [01:40:58.520 --> 01:41:06.520] I guess most people don't, but they'll get out of the attic and I still have it. [01:41:06.520 --> 01:41:19.520] What I realized is when they file their paperwork, the note is not the same size. [01:41:19.520 --> 01:41:24.520] It's a copy of the original and it's not the same size. [01:41:24.520 --> 01:41:40.520] So I was wondering, can I enter my note as evidence that their note is wrong? [01:41:40.520 --> 01:41:45.520] I need more information before I say yes or no. [01:41:45.520 --> 01:41:55.520] I want to say yes, but that way if your note is the original notice note, then you can't [01:41:55.520 --> 01:41:59.520] ask them for the original note. [01:41:59.520 --> 01:42:04.520] And we want to ask them to produce the original note because that's what they're required [01:42:04.520 --> 01:42:08.520] to have to have standing to foreclose. [01:42:08.520 --> 01:42:14.520] Now, the courts will rule against you, but it is a claim you can make. [01:42:14.520 --> 01:42:17.520] The courts will always rule against you. [01:42:17.520 --> 01:42:20.520] They're bought and paid for. [01:42:20.520 --> 01:42:24.520] That's not how you win in foreclosure. [01:42:24.520 --> 01:42:31.520] You win by costing the other side so much money that they'll make a deal with you. [01:42:31.520 --> 01:42:35.520] How long have you been in foreclosure? [01:42:35.520 --> 01:42:39.520] About two years. [01:42:39.520 --> 01:42:44.520] Have they attempted to take the property? [01:42:44.520 --> 01:42:47.520] No. [01:42:47.520 --> 01:42:50.520] Okay, in New York it is a mortgage state. [01:42:50.520 --> 01:42:57.520] Have they filed a foreclosure action in the state court? [01:42:57.520 --> 01:43:00.520] Yes. [01:43:00.520 --> 01:43:07.520] How long ago? [01:43:07.520 --> 01:43:09.520] Two years. [01:43:09.520 --> 01:43:13.520] They'll be coming up two years in June. [01:43:13.520 --> 01:43:19.520] Okay, we are going to run out of time on this show tonight. [01:43:19.520 --> 01:43:28.520] Send me an email, Randy at rootoflawradio.com, and I will give you a list of things that [01:43:28.520 --> 01:43:36.520] we need, and then I can give you a pretty good idea of where you're at and what you can [01:43:36.520 --> 01:43:37.520] do. [01:43:37.520 --> 01:43:43.520] We've got over 700 people filed federal lawsuits, but in order to be able to advise you [01:43:43.520 --> 01:43:47.520] reasonably, I need more information. [01:43:47.520 --> 01:43:51.520] And we've only got one segment left, so we're going to run out of time. [01:43:51.520 --> 01:43:56.520] My email will give you on the other side, Randy Kelton, rootoflawradio. [01:43:56.520 --> 01:44:00.520] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.520 --> 01:44:05.520] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved except in the area of [01:44:05.520 --> 01:44:06.520] nutrition. [01:44:06.520 --> 01:44:10.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all [01:44:10.520 --> 01:44:11.520] that. [01:44:11.520 --> 01:44:16.520] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:16.520 --> 01:44:22.520] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [01:44:22.520 --> 01:44:25.520] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.520 --> 01:44:31.520] Logo Sweden Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.520 --> 01:44:34.520] We have come to trust young Jevity so much. [01:44:34.520 --> 01:44:39.520] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.520 --> 01:44:45.520] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:44:45.520 --> 01:44:47.520] quality radio. [01:44:47.520 --> 01:44:51.520] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.520 --> 01:44:56.520] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:44:56.520 --> 01:44:58.520] increase your income. [01:44:58.520 --> 01:45:02.520] Order now. [01:45:02.520 --> 01:45:06.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:06.520 --> 01:45:12.520] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD [01:45:12.520 --> 01:45:17.520] course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:17.520 --> 01:45:21.520] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.520 --> 01:45:25.520] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:25.520 --> 01:45:30.520] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:30.520 --> 01:45:36.520] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:36.520 --> 01:45:41.520] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:41.520 --> 01:45:45.520] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.520 --> 01:45:51.520] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:51.520 --> 01:45:54.520] prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.520 --> 01:46:03.520] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.520 --> 01:46:34.520] Okay, we are back. [01:46:34.520 --> 01:46:46.520] Brett, who are we talking to? [01:46:46.520 --> 01:46:47.520] Mark? [01:46:47.520 --> 01:46:50.520] Yeah, Mark in New York. [01:46:50.520 --> 01:46:53.520] Okay, Mark in New York. [01:46:53.520 --> 01:46:56.520] Okay, send me that information. [01:46:56.520 --> 01:47:03.520] That way, the next show you call in, we won't have to waste a lot of time going through [01:47:03.520 --> 01:47:09.520] all of the things that amount to Residucata, and I can give you some good direction on [01:47:09.520 --> 01:47:11.520] how to go after these guys. [01:47:11.520 --> 01:47:15.520] I got lots of ways of beating them up. [01:47:15.520 --> 01:47:16.520] Great. [01:47:16.520 --> 01:47:18.520] I will get you that information. [01:47:18.520 --> 01:47:20.520] Thank you very much. [01:47:20.520 --> 01:47:22.520] Okay, thank you very much, Mark. [01:47:22.520 --> 01:47:25.520] And now we're going to Scott in Michigan. [01:47:25.520 --> 01:47:27.520] Hello, Scott. [01:47:27.520 --> 01:47:28.520] Hello, guys. [01:47:28.520 --> 01:47:30.520] How are you doing? [01:47:30.520 --> 01:47:31.520] Doing good. [01:47:31.520 --> 01:47:33.520] What do you have for us today? [01:47:33.520 --> 01:47:38.520] Well, at the top of the show, you mentioned that Brett is so awesome that he's best thing [01:47:38.520 --> 01:47:44.520] the resident guru, and I think you're a really good sport about the students are passing [01:47:44.520 --> 01:47:45.520] the teacher. [01:47:45.520 --> 01:47:47.520] So I thank you for that. [01:47:47.520 --> 01:47:49.520] That's the best. [01:47:49.520 --> 01:47:53.520] That's the best thing that's for me. [01:47:53.520 --> 01:47:55.520] That's really cool. [01:47:55.520 --> 01:48:01.520] No, no, no, no, no, Brett, that's big head, not big belly. [01:48:01.520 --> 01:48:05.520] He's leaving a challenge of golden bread crumbs, and I just wanted to know that people are [01:48:05.520 --> 01:48:08.520] picking up on it. [01:48:08.520 --> 01:48:10.520] Good. [01:48:10.520 --> 01:48:14.520] Okay, what do you have for us, Scott? [01:48:14.520 --> 01:48:18.520] Well, I wanted to talk about bar grievances real quick. [01:48:18.520 --> 01:48:22.520] I have an idea about why they don't stick. [01:48:22.520 --> 01:48:28.520] And, you know, when you read the standard, they talk about it's a grievance to violate [01:48:28.520 --> 01:48:35.520] the standards, and then they go on to say, especially if it raises a substantial question [01:48:35.520 --> 01:48:39.520] of honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness. [01:48:39.520 --> 01:48:45.520] So I'm thinking that in my grievances, you know, I will not only state the standard that [01:48:45.520 --> 01:48:53.520] I violated, but also try to find a way to show how it's a question of honesty, trustworthiness, [01:48:53.520 --> 01:48:59.520] or fitness, and I feel like that might be the extra little step that gets them to take [01:48:59.520 --> 01:49:01.520] it seriously. [01:49:01.520 --> 01:49:05.520] Oh, Scott, you live in fantasy land. [01:49:05.520 --> 01:49:10.520] You must be going to Disneyland. [01:49:10.520 --> 01:49:15.520] These guys really don't care. [01:49:15.520 --> 01:49:18.520] They're just a public relations agency for the bar. [01:49:18.520 --> 01:49:21.520] Forget about the bar doing anything. [01:49:21.520 --> 01:49:30.520] They don't care, and that's good, because the insurance agent knows they don't care. [01:49:30.520 --> 01:49:32.520] We already got what we need. [01:49:32.520 --> 01:49:35.520] You got this bonding agent sitting back there. [01:49:35.520 --> 01:49:43.520] He's allowed to charge his client as much as possible and avoid any claims. [01:49:43.520 --> 01:49:51.520] When a lawyer gets a bar grievance, if he doesn't report that to his insurance carrier [01:49:51.520 --> 01:49:57.520] and he subsequently gets sued, he's not covered. [01:49:57.520 --> 01:50:01.520] I'm not going to find any information about it. [01:50:01.520 --> 01:50:03.520] Good. [01:50:03.520 --> 01:50:06.520] I'm just doing a word of caution. [01:50:06.520 --> 01:50:13.520] Don't be upset or feel like you haven't done a good enough job if the bar doesn't [01:50:13.520 --> 01:50:20.520] elect to discipline the lawyer, because they're really there just to be public relations. [01:50:20.520 --> 01:50:27.520] It's important to keep in mind that over time, multiple grievances concerning the same attorney [01:50:27.520 --> 01:50:32.520] could add up to a pattern, and they could then take action down the road. [01:50:32.520 --> 01:50:34.520] That would be great if we can get them to do it. [01:50:34.520 --> 01:50:43.520] I just built 38 bar grievances against lawyers who represented criminal clients in the county I live in. [01:50:43.520 --> 01:50:46.520] Well, they weren't my lawyer. [01:50:46.520 --> 01:50:52.520] They were lawyers for somebody else, but I claim that there were documents that [01:50:52.520 --> 01:50:56.520] claims that these lawyers should have adjudicated in the court. [01:50:56.520 --> 01:51:03.520] Then at the end of it, I noticed the bar that I fully understood that no matter [01:51:03.520 --> 01:51:09.520] what I put in this complaint, you will throw it in the trash. [01:51:09.520 --> 01:51:15.520] It's because of this that we have this horrible problem with mass incarceration [01:51:15.520 --> 01:51:17.520] because you folks won't do your job. [01:51:17.520 --> 01:51:21.520] Fortunately, the insurance carrier will. [01:51:21.520 --> 01:51:29.520] Because you never take a bar grievance seriously, the insurance carrier doesn't care [01:51:29.520 --> 01:51:33.520] if a violation is a bar grievance is valid or not. [01:51:33.520 --> 01:51:37.520] They're going to punish the lawyer the same. [01:51:37.520 --> 01:51:43.520] If you want this fixed, do your job. [01:51:43.520 --> 01:51:47.520] So I'm hoping that by that they will get it. [01:51:47.520 --> 01:51:54.520] You got this guy looking through the record and every time he doesn't find a 16.17 order, [01:51:54.520 --> 01:51:59.520] he's going to file a bar grievance against that individual's lawyer and there's not [01:51:59.520 --> 01:52:02.520] anything you can do about it. [01:52:02.520 --> 01:52:06.520] You have no defense against me. [01:52:06.520 --> 01:52:11.520] If I file against you, you can't even complain about it. [01:52:11.520 --> 01:52:16.520] If you say one word to me about the bar grievance, I'll file your bar grievance against you for that. [01:52:16.520 --> 01:52:22.520] So imagine you're a lawyer and you got some chomp out here looking at your cases [01:52:22.520 --> 01:52:27.520] and accusing you of malpractice in cases he has nothing to do with. [01:52:27.520 --> 01:52:31.520] And he's bar grieving you. [01:52:31.520 --> 01:52:40.520] How do you go about making sure that they report it to their insurance carrier? [01:52:40.520 --> 01:52:43.520] I can't find any information about that. [01:52:43.520 --> 01:52:46.520] You don't have to. [01:52:46.520 --> 01:52:59.520] I'm going to try to remember the string I used to find this about lawyers reporting grievances to insurance carriers. [01:52:59.520 --> 01:53:11.520] And I got this extensive analysis of this and it essentially said that if the lawyer has any reason to believe [01:53:11.520 --> 01:53:20.520] that he could possibly be sued and he doesn't notify the insurance carrier if he is subsequently sued, [01:53:20.520 --> 01:53:23.520] he's not covered. [01:53:23.520 --> 01:53:28.520] And a bar grievance is a clear indication that he could be sued for malpractice. [01:53:28.520 --> 01:53:35.520] So he has to tell on himself because if you sue him, he's not covered. [01:53:35.520 --> 01:53:41.520] Fine, but how would you know if he took the high-risk maneuver of not reporting? How would you ever know? [01:53:41.520 --> 01:53:43.520] You wouldn't. [01:53:43.520 --> 01:53:50.520] And those are private contracts, so we can't get into those. [01:53:50.520 --> 01:53:53.520] So the best thing we can do is sue him. [01:53:53.520 --> 01:53:54.520] Okay. [01:53:54.520 --> 01:53:56.520] Well, I'll tell you what. You might find it encouraging. [01:53:56.520 --> 01:54:07.520] I did. There's the guy who he sat down. He's married into a family of lawyers and he's sitting down at this table. [01:54:07.520 --> 01:54:13.520] And at the big extended family, they're all lawyers except he's the odd man out. [01:54:13.520 --> 01:54:17.520] He's the only non-lawyer at the table. [01:54:17.520 --> 01:54:23.520] And he just started mentioning about bar grievances and they all got quiet. [01:54:23.520 --> 01:54:34.520] And now they don't even let him. He says, they don't let me at the big people table anymore. [01:54:34.520 --> 01:54:42.520] Yeah, bar grievances are bad news for lawyers, but they created this problem themselves. [01:54:42.520 --> 01:54:59.520] If the bar adequately addressed these issues and policed the lawyers, the insurance agents wouldn't have to consider every single grievance as valid. [01:54:59.520 --> 01:55:08.520] They use that to punish the lawyers with. And they created this problem themselves to deal with it. [01:55:08.520 --> 01:55:13.520] It would be fun to go after them for the felony of not reporting to their insurance. [01:55:13.520 --> 01:55:15.520] Isn't the felony in that report? [01:55:15.520 --> 01:55:27.520] No, no, that's not it. That's not a felony. It's just that the insurance carrier won't be covered for that particular instance. [01:55:27.520 --> 01:55:34.520] This is one of those things where you don't get instant gratification. [01:55:34.520 --> 01:55:44.520] What happens is you file a grievance and the next time you communicate with the other party, they've got a different lawyer. [01:55:44.520 --> 01:55:47.520] Brad, will you address that? [01:55:47.520 --> 01:55:57.520] Yeah, that's exactly what happens. Usually after the first bar grievance, but certainly after two, whatever lawyer you're dealing with will just disappear. [01:55:57.520 --> 01:56:04.520] You show up for the next hearing and there's somebody else sitting in that seat. [01:56:04.520 --> 01:56:15.520] Randy says that they know about the first one, why they're changing places and so they're charging higher prices. [01:56:15.520 --> 01:56:24.520] Yeah, but I've had lawyers switch out one after the other and show up at one hearing and then next hearing and the next hearing and a different lawyer every time. [01:56:24.520 --> 01:56:31.520] One city brought in a special prosecutor after I went through their whole prosecutorial team. [01:56:31.520 --> 01:56:41.520] They brought in a special prosecutor from, I don't know where, he got a bar grievance too. He was gone. [01:56:41.520 --> 01:56:44.520] Yes, that really seems like the way to go. [01:56:44.520 --> 01:56:50.520] The thing about it is there's no instant gratification. [01:56:50.520 --> 01:57:00.520] Oh, believe me, I have delayed my gratification. I basically let a vulnerable case room me, femurling me under the concepts of don't interrupt when your opponent is screwing up. [01:57:00.520 --> 01:57:08.520] And so now I'm going back through and just going to file a mountain of grievances and stuff like that. [01:57:08.520 --> 01:57:10.520] Wonderful. [01:57:10.520 --> 01:57:11.520] Yep. [01:57:11.520 --> 01:57:17.520] This is how we fix it. This is why I do this show to find people like you. [01:57:17.520 --> 01:57:21.520] This is how we fix it going after their weaknesses. [01:57:21.520 --> 01:57:37.520] I've only got a minute left. You got Shane and Shane filed bar grievances against some lawyers and the lawyers complained about it to the court and he grieved them for that. [01:57:37.520 --> 01:57:52.520] And the bar actually sanctioned them because the bar tells you that you're not, you can't talk about this bar grievance with anyone except the bar. [01:57:52.520 --> 01:58:05.520] And when they spoke about it to someone else, they used it to try to discredit him or intimidate him, you know, get the judge to rule more harshly against him. [01:58:05.520 --> 01:58:14.520] And they're forbidden to do that. So he grieved them for giving notice and two of them and the bar actually sanctioned them. [01:58:14.520 --> 01:58:23.520] That's worse than all the fraud that they go through and everybody does all these wrong things, but talking about a bar grievance, that's a bad part. [01:58:23.520 --> 01:58:30.520] You can't even talk about it or you get hammered. There's something intuitively satisfying about that. [01:58:30.520 --> 01:58:36.520] I am sorry we are out of time. Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, Rula Radio. [01:58:36.520 --> 01:58:50.520] We'll be back next week on our regular four hour, I'm sorry, two hour on Thursday and four hour on Friday. Thank you all for listening and good night. 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