[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.440] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.840] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $200.00 [00:29.840 --> 00:41.440] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:45.840 --> 00:52.400] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.400 --> 00:57.360] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, [00:57.360 --> 01:00.240] killing 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.400 --> 01:09.440] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into [01:09.440 --> 01:14.080] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, [01:14.080 --> 01:18.080] and San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.080 --> 01:22.640] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.640 --> 01:27.760] to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier [01:27.760 --> 01:32.400] this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:32.400 --> 01:37.040] because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated [01:37.040 --> 01:42.080] in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.080 --> 01:48.320] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well [01:48.320 --> 01:54.880] as other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also [01:54.880 --> 01:59.600] stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution [01:59.600 --> 02:05.040] of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, [02:05.040 --> 02:09.760] an assistant public defender in Harris County who stated that quote, the law is constantly [02:09.760 --> 02:14.160] changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if [02:14.160 --> 02:23.120] someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by [02:23.120 --> 02:28.560] Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind [02:28.560 --> 02:34.640] in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded [02:34.640 --> 02:39.600] with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the [02:39.600 --> 02:45.760] university paper, the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the [02:45.760 --> 02:54.640] purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Brook Roddy of the [02:54.640 --> 03:10.720] Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:25.440 --> 03:32.560] Yeah, bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.560 --> 03:38.320] Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.320 --> 03:43.760] When you were eight and you had bad dreams, you go to school and learn to go, then lose. [03:43.760 --> 03:49.120] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? If you get hot, then you must get cool. [03:49.120 --> 03:54.560] Bad boys, bad boys. What you going to do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.560 --> 04:00.320] Bad boys, bad boys. What you going to do? What you going to do when they come for you? [04:00.320 --> 04:04.160] You choking, done, that's one. You choking, done, this one. It choking, done, your mother [04:04.160 --> 04:08.000] or your choking, done, your father. You choking, done, your father or your choking, done, your [04:08.000 --> 04:13.120] second one. It choking, done, that one. You choking, done, me. Bad boys, bad boys. What you [04:43.120 --> 04:49.120] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:49.120 --> 04:55.120] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:55.120 --> 05:00.120] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [05:00.120 --> 05:04.120] On this Thursday, uh, what day is it, Brett? [05:04.120 --> 05:07.120] And this is the last day of September. [05:07.120 --> 05:11.120] There's a ought, and I can't carry the ought, uh, what makes us... [05:11.120 --> 05:19.120] September 30th, 19, 2021, Thursday. [05:19.120 --> 05:23.120] We'll get this in a minute. [05:23.120 --> 05:25.120] Thank you all for being here. [05:25.120 --> 05:28.120] I'm gonna turn the phone lines on. [05:28.120 --> 05:30.120] The phone lines are on. [05:30.120 --> 05:33.120] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [05:33.120 --> 05:35.120] 512-646-1984. [05:35.120 --> 05:40.120] Talking to Brett before the show, he said I should talk about timelines. [05:40.120 --> 05:50.120] Timelines, probably the single most important document you can create. [05:50.120 --> 05:51.120] The document... [05:51.120 --> 05:59.120] And the single most difficult document that people seem to have a hump to get over before they can write the rest of their stuff or even get help from anybody. [05:59.120 --> 06:05.120] Absolutely. If you've listened to my show, you hear me ask people for timelines. [06:05.120 --> 06:09.120] I'm gonna give away a secret. [06:09.120 --> 06:13.120] When I ask for a timeline, that's a test. [06:13.120 --> 06:19.120] People get into these fights, and they start out with a purpose. [06:19.120 --> 06:32.120] And then they get in the fight, and the other side fails to act appropriately under law, especially when you're dealing with public officials. [06:32.120 --> 06:39.120] You have an investment in your public officials acting in accordance with law. [06:39.120 --> 06:45.120] If public officials don't act in accordance with law, what protection do you have? [06:45.120 --> 06:50.120] We have to be able to depend on and trust something. [06:50.120 --> 06:59.120] And when the public officials ignore law, we have to say to ourselves, we're not protected. [06:59.120 --> 07:02.120] We have our own here. [07:02.120 --> 07:08.120] And people don't like to think that they have no protection. [07:08.120 --> 07:14.120] And they tend to respond to what happens emotionally. [07:14.120 --> 07:25.120] And these emotional reactions tend to distort our perspective on what actually occurred. [07:25.120 --> 07:29.120] And they pause in, and they talk about what happened to them. [07:29.120 --> 07:40.120] If you folks have listened close, you'll notice that they're not cold and detached and state just the facts, ma'am. [07:40.120 --> 07:46.120] They don't do that. They go from one emotional high point to the next to the next to the next. [07:46.120 --> 07:52.120] And all those details in between kind of get lost and dropped. [07:52.120 --> 07:55.120] Someone has been in the fight too long. [07:55.120 --> 08:02.120] And if you listen to the show and when I get someone that's been in the fight a long time, you will begin to notice this. [08:02.120 --> 08:07.120] That it stops being about the original issue. [08:07.120 --> 08:12.120] It stops being about a specific outcome. [08:12.120 --> 08:16.120] And it becomes about the fight. [08:16.120 --> 08:22.120] They go from one bad thing that was done to them to the next to the next to the next to the next. [08:22.120 --> 08:25.120] And they miss all the stuff that comes in between. [08:25.120 --> 08:40.120] So in order for me to determine whether or not this person is in a position to where they can take control of and adjudicate their case, [08:40.120 --> 08:44.120] I ask them for a timeline. [08:44.120 --> 08:52.120] And I realize when I ask for it, it will be extremely difficult to produce. [08:52.120 --> 09:00.120] Now you and I sitting back here from a detached perspective looking in, it looks relatively simple. [09:00.120 --> 09:04.120] But that's because you hadn't had the crap beat out of you. [09:04.120 --> 09:13.120] You hadn't had to deal with all these emotional issues and all the trauma of realizing that your government is not your friend. [09:13.120 --> 09:15.120] Remember what Reagan said. [09:15.120 --> 09:17.120] The most terrifying words you can hear. [09:17.120 --> 09:21.120] I'm from the government and I'm here to help. [09:21.120 --> 09:26.120] And in these situations, you begin to realize that they're not your buddies. [09:26.120 --> 09:27.120] They're not going to help you. [09:27.120 --> 09:29.120] They're not going to protect your rights. [09:29.120 --> 09:31.120] They're going to do whatever they want to. [09:31.120 --> 09:34.120] And they'll throw you under the bus in a heartbeat. [09:34.120 --> 09:46.120] So when I ask them to produce the timeline, they have to go back through and re-experience all these negative emotional events. [09:46.120 --> 09:50.120] And it is extremely difficult. [09:50.120 --> 10:02.120] And, you know, I ask for a timeline because I'm trying to help them separate themselves from the emotional content. [10:02.120 --> 10:04.120] Don't tell me all this. [10:04.120 --> 10:05.120] Don't explain anything. [10:05.120 --> 10:13.120] Don't argue the issue because that just gets in to regurgitating all this negative emotion. [10:13.120 --> 10:16.120] Just tell me what's facts are. [10:16.120 --> 10:21.120] But even doing that, it is extremely difficult. [10:21.120 --> 10:23.120] It is extremely exhausting. [10:23.120 --> 10:25.120] And I know that. [10:25.120 --> 10:36.120] I also know if you're not able to produce a timeline for me, I'm not going to be able to help you. [10:36.120 --> 10:38.120] It is unfortunate. [10:38.120 --> 10:44.120] And it is distressing to me that there are people I can't help. [10:44.120 --> 10:46.120] Yeah, that's right. [10:46.120 --> 10:51.120] And Brett, you know, he hadn't been in this as long as me. [10:51.120 --> 10:56.120] But am I right, Brett? You're beginning to see that? [10:56.120 --> 10:58.120] Yeah, it definitely makes a difference. [10:58.120 --> 11:01.120] People can't help themselves even just the first little bit. [11:01.120 --> 11:03.120] Then there's just about nothing you can do. [11:03.120 --> 11:04.120] Yeah. [11:04.120 --> 11:05.120] And that's distressing. [11:05.120 --> 11:06.120] It's frustrating. [11:06.120 --> 11:12.120] And I've spent years trying to figure out how to get past this. [11:12.120 --> 11:18.120] You know, when I present all these things I do and, you know, I get a lot of comment on my stories. [11:18.120 --> 11:23.120] I had one guy say, don't worry if you missed one of Randy's stories, you'll hear it again. [11:23.120 --> 11:25.120] I said, yeah, that's right, you will. [11:25.120 --> 11:28.120] And that's very intentional. [11:28.120 --> 11:43.120] I tell these stories and I try to couch them in a way that tends to objectify public officials [11:43.120 --> 11:57.120] and make them look like comical figures so that I can try to counteract some of the effect that they tend to have on people. [11:57.120 --> 12:07.120] We need a way to separate ourselves from this terror of authority. [12:07.120 --> 12:20.120] So I try to ridicule them and not all me doing that just to help everybody understand how limited they are. [12:20.120 --> 12:23.120] But I do enjoy it. [12:23.120 --> 12:28.120] Okay, I confess, I have great fun doing that. [12:28.120 --> 12:36.120] But if we don't reframe these people, then we have people who have gone to court [12:36.120 --> 12:43.120] and been beat up by judges and they feel absolutely helpless. [12:43.120 --> 12:48.120] So we struggle to get them past that. [12:48.120 --> 12:54.120] Timeline is the single most important thing you can do. [12:54.120 --> 13:02.120] If you can't separate yourself from the emotional content and go back to some simple basics, [13:02.120 --> 13:06.120] I won't be able to pull you out of that. [13:06.120 --> 13:17.120] You'll get angrier and angrier and you'll develop the unstated presupposition that you're going to lose in the end. [13:17.120 --> 13:23.120] That will become an internal expectation and you will create your internal expectations. [13:23.120 --> 13:37.120] It is our job, Brett's in mind, to change your internal expectation to give you a way that you can see winning this at the end of the day. [13:37.120 --> 13:44.120] So when we ask for a timeline, understand it is a test. [13:44.120 --> 13:53.120] It is a test of your ability to be able to defend yourself and adjudicate your case. [13:53.120 --> 14:03.120] So when we ask for a timeline, the whole point is disassociate yourself from the trauma. [14:03.120 --> 14:05.120] Don't explain anything to me. [14:05.120 --> 14:07.120] Don't justify yourself. [14:07.120 --> 14:12.120] Just say, well, this happened on this day and then this happened on this day and this happened on this day. [14:12.120 --> 14:17.120] And don't even worry about whether or not you get everything in there. [14:17.120 --> 14:19.120] It doesn't matter. [14:19.120 --> 14:20.120] This is a mnemonic device. [14:20.120 --> 14:22.120] It's a memory tool. [14:22.120 --> 14:24.120] You put all these things down. [14:24.120 --> 14:26.120] What comes to mind? [14:26.120 --> 14:29.120] You just add them in there just as they come to mind. [14:29.120 --> 14:35.120] You will be inclined to justify yourself, to argue your issue. [14:35.120 --> 14:37.120] Discipline yourself. [14:37.120 --> 14:38.120] Just put down what happened. [14:38.120 --> 14:42.120] Leave the arguments later. We'll get to that later. [14:42.120 --> 14:45.120] Then you put it away for a couple of days and go back to it again. [14:45.120 --> 14:49.120] And you look at it and you'll say, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. [14:49.120 --> 14:52.120] This happened in between these two things. [14:52.120 --> 14:54.120] This happened in between these. [14:54.120 --> 15:07.120] The tool will begin to access stuff that you not necessarily forgot but didn't pay attention to in the first place. [15:07.120 --> 15:09.120] And I think it's really helpful. [15:09.120 --> 15:15.120] If you have a recording, then play your recording back after you've already put in, you know, [15:15.120 --> 15:20.120] you've put in some bullet points, let's say, for your timeline and you've put dates and times on things. [15:20.120 --> 15:22.120] And then go and listen to your recording. [15:22.120 --> 15:24.120] You can make a transcript of it if you can. [15:24.120 --> 15:31.120] And take from that and insert it into the structure that you've just started. [15:31.120 --> 15:33.120] Absolutely. [15:33.120 --> 15:41.120] That recording will cause you to remember stuff that doesn't always show up on a recording. [15:41.120 --> 15:46.120] Who else is there? What else is going on? [15:46.120 --> 15:54.120] You start filling in those details and start filling themselves in without the emotional content attached. [15:54.120 --> 16:01.120] It is absolutely crucial that you separate yourself from the emotional content. [16:01.120 --> 16:05.120] This is a document that the court will never see. [16:05.120 --> 16:15.120] It will never be in any motion or pleading, but it is the most important tool you can have. [16:15.120 --> 16:18.120] From the foundation of your house. [16:18.120 --> 16:20.120] Exactly. [16:20.120 --> 16:24.120] Nobody can see your foundation from the outside. [16:24.120 --> 16:33.120] Every step you take will take this statement, this timeline, and we'll build it into a statement. [16:33.120 --> 16:36.120] And we'll build that into points and authorities. [16:36.120 --> 16:39.120] We'll build that into a statement of facts. [16:39.120 --> 16:44.120] Everything will follow from this document and everything will remain consistent. [16:44.120 --> 16:49.120] Every time you build a new document, you'll remember new stuff and you'll add more content. [16:49.120 --> 16:56.120] Hang on, Randy Kalb and Brett Fouton, we'll be right back. [17:20.120 --> 17:24.120] The Grand Prize Up for Grabs is a spiked tactical AR-15. [17:24.120 --> 17:27.120] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:27.120 --> 17:30.120] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:30.120 --> 17:35.120] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:35.120 --> 17:39.120] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [17:39.120 --> 17:48.120] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on Talk Radio today. [17:48.120 --> 17:51.120] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:51.120 --> 17:55.120] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:55.120 --> 18:21.120] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:26.120 --> 18:34.120] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [18:34.120 --> 18:41.120] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [18:41.120 --> 18:48.120] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [18:48.120 --> 19:00.120] 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. [19:18.120 --> 19:38.120] The Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [19:38.120 --> 20:06.120] The Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [20:06.120 --> 20:14.120] The Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [20:14.120 --> 20:15.120] All right, we are back. [20:15.120 --> 20:17.120] This is the rule of law radio, Randy Kelton. [20:17.120 --> 20:19.120] I'm Brett Fountain. [20:19.120 --> 20:21.120] And we have our caller board this evening. [20:21.120 --> 20:25.120] It's working again and it sure did so up quickly. [20:25.120 --> 20:31.120] So we're going to go ahead and start out with first time caller, Stephanie from Nevada. [20:31.120 --> 20:33.120] Good evening, Stephanie. [20:33.120 --> 20:35.120] What's on your mind? [20:35.120 --> 20:36.120] Hello. [20:36.120 --> 20:38.120] Thank you for taking my call. [20:38.120 --> 20:40.120] Of course. [20:40.120 --> 20:43.120] I'm super nervous to call in. [20:43.120 --> 20:47.120] Well, I have a situation and it's pretty... [20:47.120 --> 20:54.120] It can be pretty long and drawn out so I'm not quite sure where to begin completely. [20:54.120 --> 20:57.120] I'll just start talking and then hopefully you can help direct me. [20:57.120 --> 20:58.120] Sure. [20:58.120 --> 21:07.120] My father passed away two years ago in February, suddenly, unexpected, and he had left his [21:07.120 --> 21:12.120] niece, one of his nieces, as the executor of his trust in will. [21:12.120 --> 21:16.120] He's actually a stepfather, but my whole life felt like a father. [21:16.120 --> 21:21.120] He had his niece handling this situation. [21:21.120 --> 21:27.120] So right away, within the first day or two, myself and others, [21:27.120 --> 21:36.120] I noticed that there was some very unusual activity going on and I just believe there [21:36.120 --> 21:37.120] was. [21:37.120 --> 21:38.120] So here we are two years later. [21:38.120 --> 21:44.120] Activity like personal behavior or like financial transactions, what kind of activity? [21:44.120 --> 21:53.120] Well, the niece, the sister, and probably another niece or two, perhaps, they all went [21:53.120 --> 21:57.120] to the original attorney and took everything away. [21:57.120 --> 22:04.120] The original attorney that drafted up his trust in his will for the niece, he had a [22:04.120 --> 22:05.120] relationship with him. [22:05.120 --> 22:06.120] So they went in right away. [22:06.120 --> 22:08.120] I don't know what day. [22:08.120 --> 22:12.120] Right away, because the first or second day after he passed away. [22:12.120 --> 22:15.120] And I thought it was just as simple. [22:15.120 --> 22:22.120] They took it over to their attorneys and had everything handled there. [22:22.120 --> 22:29.120] However, myself and other people, he had some very dear friends, close friends that he [22:29.120 --> 22:32.120] also had very close relationships. [22:32.120 --> 22:37.120] He had promised to take care of them, of course, take care of me, of course. [22:37.120 --> 22:42.120] These were just conversations through our lives and then it did not happen. [22:42.120 --> 22:48.120] That did not take place in the will and trust that everyone thought. [22:48.120 --> 22:55.120] So even worse, they tried to take away, they did. [22:55.120 --> 23:01.120] They found every little reason to take away even small gifts that were in that trust and [23:01.120 --> 23:08.120] will that they somehow managed to get over to their attorney and make what they wanted [23:08.120 --> 23:09.120] to be. [23:09.120 --> 23:14.120] So this is even hard for me to explain because I don't even really know all the details. [23:14.120 --> 23:21.120] So I was ousted, another dear friend of his and he was also put out. [23:21.120 --> 23:24.120] They even took away our small gifts. [23:24.120 --> 23:29.120] And then these, so let's stop forward now to two years. [23:29.120 --> 23:36.120] So this May, I decided, I think I'm going to call that lawyer because he wasn't talking [23:36.120 --> 23:37.120] at the time. [23:37.120 --> 23:42.120] I'm going to call that lawyer and just tell him who I am, see if he'll see what he says. [23:42.120 --> 23:47.120] The original one who had the paperwork but got it taken away from him? [23:47.120 --> 23:48.120] Correct. [23:48.120 --> 23:51.120] I said, this is who I am. [23:51.120 --> 23:55.120] I am his daughter and he spoke with me. [23:55.120 --> 24:02.120] I was a little bit surprised because he wouldn't speak before, trust me. [24:02.120 --> 24:10.120] So his conversation was so interesting that I didn't even know what to make of it. [24:10.120 --> 24:14.120] I called, you know, my friends who were also very dear friends of my father and they're [24:14.120 --> 24:16.120] like, you need to, what is happening? [24:16.120 --> 24:20.120] So you need to call back and find out. [24:20.120 --> 24:22.120] So his words were there. [24:22.120 --> 24:31.120] I've never known more despicable people in my life, speaking of the niece and the sister [24:31.120 --> 24:33.120] and whoever else. [24:33.120 --> 24:35.120] Horrible, despicable people. [24:35.120 --> 24:43.120] In my whole time I've been in practice since 1989, I've never encountered anything of any [24:43.120 --> 24:44.120] people like them ever. [24:44.120 --> 24:52.120] What they asked of me were whatever word he used and we went ahead and just did what they [24:52.120 --> 24:57.120] wanted us to do so we could get rid of them. [24:57.120 --> 25:04.120] And he told this to me and I said, wait, I think I'm missing something there. [25:04.120 --> 25:05.120] Yes. [25:05.120 --> 25:08.120] The people that you're saying are despicable. [25:08.120 --> 25:16.120] I've got up to that point and then you were saying who told whom something? [25:16.120 --> 25:25.120] Well, so we were all wondering what took place in those very first dates in February of [25:25.120 --> 25:26.120] 2019. [25:26.120 --> 25:36.120] Then this gentleman went on to say to me that they approached him threatening to sue them, [25:36.120 --> 25:42.120] him, the lawyer, if he didn't do what they wanted him to do. [25:42.120 --> 25:55.120] So he ended up doing what they wanted is what he said and he didn't give me details obviously [25:55.120 --> 25:58.120] but even just to say that much. [25:58.120 --> 26:03.120] He even pulled in his malpractice to be able to get rid of them. [26:03.120 --> 26:05.120] I don't know enough about that. [26:05.120 --> 26:10.120] Why or when one can do that. [26:10.120 --> 26:12.120] So he told me this. [26:12.120 --> 26:15.120] So I said, well, what does that exactly mean? [26:15.120 --> 26:19.120] He said they didn't like some of the stuff that was in the will and the trust. [26:19.120 --> 26:23.120] So we had to change it. [26:23.120 --> 26:26.120] And he didn't tell me what. [26:26.120 --> 26:29.120] He told me with his words. [26:29.120 --> 26:30.120] Yes. [26:30.120 --> 26:32.120] And did you record this? [26:32.120 --> 26:33.120] Well, of course not. [26:33.120 --> 26:37.120] No, that's what I was asked before but I didn't expect him to even talk with me. [26:37.120 --> 26:39.120] I wasn't for sure. [26:39.120 --> 26:41.120] I was just talking with him. [26:41.120 --> 26:42.120] Okay, wait, wait. [26:42.120 --> 26:48.120] You heard the first part of this show where we were talking about a timeline. [26:48.120 --> 26:50.120] Build one. [26:50.120 --> 26:52.120] Put together a timeline. [26:52.120 --> 26:54.120] This is the stuff you're trying to tell us now. [26:54.120 --> 26:57.120] February 2019. [26:57.120 --> 26:59.120] Stop, stop, stop, stop. [26:59.120 --> 27:01.120] Okay. [27:01.120 --> 27:05.120] You're trying to tell us this and you're going back in your memory. [27:05.120 --> 27:11.120] And in your memory you will tend to go from one emotional high point to the next. [27:11.120 --> 27:12.120] Sure. [27:12.120 --> 27:16.120] Sit down and write up a timeline. [27:16.120 --> 27:21.120] The timeline will help you bypass the emotional content. [27:21.120 --> 27:36.120] It sounds like this lawyer admitted that he violated the intent of the will because he was threatened by these other people. [27:36.120 --> 27:37.120] Yes. [27:37.120 --> 27:38.120] Correct. [27:38.120 --> 27:41.120] You need to take a step back. [27:41.120 --> 27:48.120] Since you didn't record it, then all of the stuff you're telling us now, write it down. [27:48.120 --> 27:54.120] And then tomorrow, take that out and read it. [27:54.120 --> 27:58.120] And when you read it, you'll say, wait a minute, wait a minute. [27:58.120 --> 28:00.120] This happened here. [28:00.120 --> 28:01.120] This happened here. [28:01.120 --> 28:06.120] You'll start feeding details in the gaps. [28:06.120 --> 28:09.120] And then look at it the next day. [28:09.120 --> 28:21.120] After three or four times through it, you will have a very consistent and coherent statement of what actually occurred. [28:21.120 --> 28:22.120] Then we can help you. [28:22.120 --> 28:32.120] Right now you're trying to pull this from your active memory and clearly there's way too much emotional content here. [28:32.120 --> 28:39.120] Your emotional content will trick you, it will distract you, and it will mislead you. [28:39.120 --> 28:50.120] Build this timeline is absolutely the most powerful tool you can have. [28:50.120 --> 28:57.120] You tend to, when you talk about these things, you tend to go from one emotional high point to the other. [28:57.120 --> 29:01.120] One of the negative consequences of that. [29:01.120 --> 29:13.120] We used to think that memory was something that we go inside and we read memory and then we relate the memory that we read from our history. [29:13.120 --> 29:17.120] Science shows us not the way it works. [29:17.120 --> 29:27.120] When we talk about these things, we go in and take the memory out, re-experience the memory and the telling, and then put it back. [29:27.120 --> 29:31.120] But we don't put back the one we took out. [29:31.120 --> 29:36.120] We put back the memory from what we told. [29:36.120 --> 29:41.120] Now that memory is going to be context-relevant. [29:41.120 --> 29:52.120] So depending on what the context of the conversation is, we'll determine what in the memory appears to be important and what doesn't. [29:52.120 --> 30:00.120] It causes your memory to get out of sequence. You remember things. [30:00.120 --> 30:06.120] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.120 --> 30:11.120] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.120 --> 30:15.120] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:15.120 --> 30:21.120] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.120 --> 30:26.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.120 --> 30:31.120] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.120 --> 30:34.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.120 --> 30:41.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.120 --> 30:45.120] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.120 --> 30:52.120] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [30:52.120 --> 30:54.120] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.120 --> 31:04.120] It's not an idle question. According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. [31:04.120 --> 31:08.120] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [31:08.120 --> 31:12.120] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.120 --> 31:18.120] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. The cupboard would be bare. [31:18.120 --> 31:21.120] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.120 --> 31:46.120] Objective Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.120 --> 31:53.120] I believe there is more to the story. [31:53.120 --> 31:56.120] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:56.120 --> 31:58.120] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.120 --> 32:26.120] Why it sells, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:26.120 --> 32:31.120] Our Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.120 --> 32:35.120] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold reports to the rule of law. [32:35.120 --> 32:41.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.120 --> 32:45.120] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. The Line, [32:45.120 --> 32:51.120] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.120 --> 32:55.120] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.120 --> 33:02.120] For your copy today and together, we can have free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.120 --> 33:12.120] Live free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:12.120 --> 33:26.120] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the line to heaven. Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't understand. [33:26.120 --> 33:42.120] This job is difficult to get the service. Be Arabies. Officer! [33:56.120 --> 34:07.120] So please, Mr. Michael, and each officer has to abuse their power. Send a request to the leader, the captain of our officer. [34:07.120 --> 34:14.120] Tell them to uphold the law. Abuse, don't abuse their power. [34:14.120 --> 34:20.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Sound and Rule of Law Radio. [34:20.120 --> 34:27.120] There we go. My click didn't click. Brett clicked on clicking, so I clicked and Mike clicked on clicking. [34:27.120 --> 34:31.120] We're producing our own show, so we have to do the board stuff. [34:31.120 --> 34:46.120] Okay, we're talking to Stephanie in Nevada, and Stephanie, before we can do anything, do you need to sit down and organize what happened? [34:46.120 --> 34:56.120] Right now you don't know what happened. You've got an impression of what happened. You hear these stories about witnesses, and all these witnesses have different stories. [34:56.120 --> 35:05.120] That's because they witness things from their individual personal perspective. [35:05.120 --> 35:07.120] Right. [35:07.120 --> 35:19.120] We need a way to step outside that perspective. Anytime you do deal with any of these people, take a pad and piece of paper and take notes. [35:19.120 --> 35:25.120] You don't have to write down everything. Just take notes. They create mental markers. [35:25.120 --> 35:37.120] And then when you get out of that situation, you sit down, you go down that list, and you write out a statement of what happened. [35:37.120 --> 35:47.120] Thirty minutes to an hour from the time you walk away from an emotional encounter, you'll start losing details. [35:47.120 --> 35:55.120] I was sitting on a bench outside the courthouse once, and this lieutenant came by and asked if he could help me. [35:55.120 --> 36:06.120] And I had just had two deputies pick me up by my elbows, walk me out of the courthouse, and threw me down so my face hit the concrete first. [36:06.120 --> 36:13.120] The third time I called 911 on them, that was pretty emotional. [36:13.120 --> 36:18.120] So I sat down on a bench right there and was writing down what happened. [36:18.120 --> 36:22.120] And this lieutenant came to see if he could help me. I told him to get lost. [36:22.120 --> 36:29.120] I didn't want to be interrupted. I wanted to collect everything I could remember at that moment in time. [36:29.120 --> 36:38.120] Four years later, I dug that out of my notes, and it was absolutely critical. [36:38.120 --> 36:43.120] I was able to take these guys on in fine detail. [36:43.120 --> 36:49.120] None of them remembered that stuff, but I did because they wrote it down. [36:49.120 --> 36:55.120] So write down everything you remember. [36:55.120 --> 37:03.120] Don't analyze it. Don't criticize it. Just what happened. Don't explain yourself. [37:03.120 --> 37:09.120] Don't even explain your perceptions of the lawyer's position. Just say what he did. [37:09.120 --> 37:19.120] Speaking in terms of bullet points, date and time, subject, verb, object, boom. Next. [37:19.120 --> 37:25.120] And then tomorrow, go back through it again and see if you can add some more bullet points in between. [37:25.120 --> 37:36.120] But the third time you do it, you will find an occasional piece in between, but you will be surprised at how much detail you have. [37:36.120 --> 37:41.120] You have a will to work with. [37:41.120 --> 37:49.120] The lawyer has admitted that he changed the will to keep himself from being sued. [37:49.120 --> 37:58.120] He moved in the first place. Telling you about it was an even worse move in the second place. [37:58.120 --> 38:06.120] So collect all the debt you can. Call us back next week when you have that as complete as you can get it. [38:06.120 --> 38:20.120] We will give you some specific steps to take to take care of these miserable people. Miserable people tend to be careless. [38:20.120 --> 38:25.120] They're not terribly thoughtful. Come and threaten your lawyer. [38:25.120 --> 38:31.120] Oh, they got problems. Does this other group have their own lawyer? [38:31.120 --> 38:38.120] They wouldn't took it that immediately. Goodie, goodie, goodie. Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [38:38.120 --> 38:45.120] And we have someone on our show who is a specialist at working over lawyers. [38:45.120 --> 38:51.120] And that's Brad over here. [38:51.120 --> 39:01.120] And the lawyer is the low-hanging fruit. He has a million-dollar, as a rule, they'll have a million-dollar errors in admissions policy. [39:01.120 --> 39:05.120] And you want to get a crack at that errors in admissions policy. [39:05.120 --> 39:13.120] The people on the other side are just bad guys. They're not the problem. The shyster lawyer is the problem. [39:13.120 --> 39:22.120] So we go for the shyster lawyer first and police him for his insurance policy. Then we go after the characters on the other side. [39:22.120 --> 39:25.120] Because those guys may or may not have money. [39:25.120 --> 39:34.120] I'll do my best to write it down. I have already written it down. I reported it to the bar association and they dismissed it instead. [39:34.120 --> 39:41.120] Oh, let me tell you. Brad, tell her what happens when you bark at a lawyer. [39:41.120 --> 39:47.120] Well, you tend to get this letter back that says, you failed. [39:47.120 --> 39:53.120] It says, pretty much you feel like, oh, man, nothing happened. [39:53.120 --> 40:02.120] Oh, well, I didn't have any result. Bummer. That was my best shot. I just unloaded everything and it just riddered into nothing. [40:02.120 --> 40:05.120] Yeah. That's exactly what happened. [40:05.120 --> 40:12.120] Yeah. But what they don't tell you is what happens on their end. [40:12.120 --> 40:23.120] One thing is that the people that are reviewing it, they'll reach out to the lawyer and say, hey, you need to answer this thing. [40:23.120 --> 40:28.120] But it's all just going through the motions. They don't really care. They're just going to throw it in the trash. [40:28.120 --> 40:38.120] And they're all going to defend the lawyer if it comes up in some kind of an appeal process for that that pretty much nobody uses. [40:38.120 --> 40:45.120] But if it comes up, they're just going to defend the lawyer. In fact, they try to get it in the trash before it gets counted. [40:45.120 --> 40:53.120] But once it gets counted, then that dings the insurance for the lawyer. [40:53.120 --> 40:59.120] Because the lawyer has insurance for like this malpractice you were talking about. [40:59.120 --> 41:01.120] Right. [41:01.120 --> 41:13.120] The people that are trying to evaluate how much they charge this guy for his premiums, they have to look at how much of a risk he is. [41:13.120 --> 41:21.120] If he's never gotten grieved, well, then that's one level of risk. But then when he receives a grievance, then they crank his rates up. [41:21.120 --> 41:29.120] And if he receives more grievances, then they cancel his insurance. So it really hits him hard. [41:29.120 --> 41:38.120] Yeah. There are approximately nine underwriters for errors in emissions policies for lawyers in the country. [41:38.120 --> 41:48.120] All of those underwriters are ultimately underwritten by Lloyds of London. So they all have the same criteria. [41:48.120 --> 41:53.120] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. [41:53.120 --> 41:57.120] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they cancel. [41:57.120 --> 42:06.120] Three, they cancel your law-affirmed malpractice insurance. Valid, invalid, they don't care. [42:06.120 --> 42:15.120] You got this insurance agent, and it's his job to charge his client as much as possible and avoid any claims. [42:15.120 --> 42:28.120] And it's part of the contract. If anything occurs to where you could possibly be subject to litigation, you must notice the insurance company. [42:28.120 --> 42:35.120] If you don't, you're not covered. So the lawyer has to tell on himself. [42:35.120 --> 42:45.120] And it's just like you get insurance on your car. You buy a brand new car, you go down the Walmart, you come out, somebody's backed into it, bash in a fender. [42:45.120 --> 42:53.120] You call the insurance company, they come out, they fix it, they increase your premium, they go away. [42:53.120 --> 42:59.120] They come back next week, somebody's bashing in another one. They come out, they fix it, they cancel. [42:59.120 --> 43:07.120] Your fault, their fault, nobody's fault, they don't care. You are an unacceptable risk. [43:07.120 --> 43:16.120] Same for lawyers, except malpractice starts between 15 and 25,000 a year. [43:16.120 --> 43:27.120] You grieve him. The state bar throws it in the trash. His insurance agent hammers him big time. [43:27.120 --> 43:34.120] And if he says one word to you about the grievance, you bar grieve him for that. [43:34.120 --> 43:42.120] Because he can only talk to the state bar about the grievance. He is forbidden to talk to you about it. [43:42.120 --> 43:50.120] They're afraid he'll try to intimidate you. And I had lawyers tell me, but it's patently unfair. Yeah, it is, Bubba. [43:50.120 --> 43:59.120] Life is tough, deal with it. Hang on, go under our sponsors, Randy Shelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [44:20.120 --> 44:22.120] How can I help Logos? [44:22.120 --> 44:29.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.120 --> 44:35.120] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to LogosRegualNetwork.com. [44:35.120 --> 44:43.120] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.120 --> 44:44.120] Do I pay extra? [44:44.120 --> 44:45.120] No. [44:45.120 --> 44:47.120] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.120 --> 44:48.120] No. [44:48.120 --> 44:49.120] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.120 --> 44:50.120] No. [44:50.120 --> 44:51.120] I mean, yes. [44:51.120 --> 44:57.120] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. Thank you so much. [44:57.120 --> 44:58.120] We are welcome. [44:58.120 --> 45:27.120] Happy Holidays, Logos! [45:28.120 --> 45:34.120] This was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.120 --> 45:43.120] 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. [45:43.120 --> 45:52.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.120 --> 46:02.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.120 --> 46:33.120] Thank you. [46:33.120 --> 47:01.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruleoflaw Radio, and we're talking to Stephanie [47:01.120 --> 47:18.120] in Nevada. Okay, Stephanie, first thing we need is that timeline. Get that for us. Go over it two or three times during the week and then call us back next week, and we will have a much more sophisticated conversation. [47:18.120 --> 47:25.120] Right. So, you would want me to read the timeline to you, the things that I write down? [47:25.120 --> 47:30.120] It would be better if you could email it to us before the show. [47:30.120 --> 47:32.120] Okay. [47:32.120 --> 47:37.120] Send it to randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [47:37.120 --> 47:39.120] Okay, that sounds great. [47:39.120 --> 47:51.120] And then I can use your timeline as talking points, and then I'll show you how we put together a set of claims from this timeline. [47:51.120 --> 47:52.120] I see. [47:52.120 --> 48:03.120] You'll like this. We're not lawyers. Lawyers are subject to judges and they're subject to the bar association. [48:03.120 --> 48:07.120] They have to tip-toe around the courts. [48:07.120 --> 48:12.120] We're not. We're the proceeds from hell. [48:12.120 --> 48:22.120] We understand that you and I and Brett, we are citizens of a republic. [48:22.120 --> 48:32.120] And as citizens of the Republic, we are the baddest motor scooters in the building. [48:32.120 --> 48:36.120] Everybody answers to us. [48:36.120 --> 48:47.120] You forget it at your professional peril, and we have the tools to bring these people to task. [48:47.120 --> 49:00.120] Bar grievances, judicial conduct complaints, professional conduct complaints against police officers, against court clerks, against everybody. [49:00.120 --> 49:09.120] Everybody is subject to your authority, and they will do everything they can to keep you from knowing and understanding that. [49:09.120 --> 49:19.120] And everything about this show is to demonstrate to you why and how you are the most powerful person in the building. [49:19.120 --> 49:27.120] And get us a timeline. We'll walk through it, and then we'll show you how to take these guys on. [49:27.120 --> 49:29.120] Okay. [49:29.120 --> 49:33.120] I'll email it to you, and then I'll call in next week. [49:33.120 --> 49:37.120] Okay. Thank you very much, Stephanie. [49:37.120 --> 49:40.120] Thank you so much. Okay. Bye. [49:40.120 --> 49:46.120] Bye-bye. Now we're going to Jeff in Mississippi. [49:46.120 --> 49:57.120] Hello, Jeff. I have switched on my automatic translator so I can now translate Hillbilly into Redneck. [49:57.120 --> 50:00.120] Good deal. Okay. Well, you're going to be amazed. [50:00.120 --> 50:06.120] I am now on a smartphone, and I'm having to figure out how to turn my speaker off. [50:06.120 --> 50:08.120] Okay. This is what you do. [50:08.120 --> 50:09.120] Budget? [50:09.120 --> 50:12.120] Go out into the street. [50:12.120 --> 50:21.120] Slag down the first 10-year-olds, you see, and have them explain to you that this is the 21st century, you old buzzard. [50:21.120 --> 50:26.120] And that is the best advice I've ever got. [50:26.120 --> 50:32.120] I told that to Robert Fox several years ago, and he said, that's cold. [50:32.120 --> 50:35.120] True, but cold. [50:35.120 --> 50:38.120] Yes. Okay. Get the first teenager you can. [50:38.120 --> 50:46.120] Well, I've got some good news. I won't spend too much time, but if we've got some listeners that have been listening to the show for several years, [50:46.120 --> 50:57.120] if you remember, I was the rifle guy from Mississippi, the campus of the university out there in Mississippi, and they started calling me a serial killer and a sniper, [50:57.120 --> 51:03.120] went to prison, did all that fun stuff. So for any of you listeners, I used to call in quite a bit. [51:03.120 --> 51:08.120] After 11 years, my record just got expunged. [51:08.120 --> 51:12.120] Whoa. How did that happen? [51:12.120 --> 51:25.120] I think it was an interesting story, but just to catch our listeners up, I went to three district courts, three jury trials, [51:25.120 --> 51:32.120] and then I was in the newspaper and on TV and stuff, and then I went to the Supreme Court twice. [51:32.120 --> 51:40.120] Anyway, I was constantly in there fighting in the courthouse, you know, yelling and screaming and stuff. Well, a couple of people liked me. [51:40.120 --> 51:48.120] And I think what happened is after about, after, well, this just happened a couple of months ago. [51:48.120 --> 51:52.120] Somebody said, hey, if you want to get a job in the corporate world, you need to get expunged. [51:52.120 --> 51:59.120] So I wrote the clerk and said, you know, hey, this is Jeffrey Hill, a serial killer, and she actually used to like me. [51:59.120 --> 52:07.120] She giggled when I walked by and stuff, so she wrote me back and sent me a template for petition for expungement, [52:07.120 --> 52:14.120] and I copied that, I sent it in back to her, and within 28 days I was expunged. [52:14.120 --> 52:20.120] I don't think I did that. Oh, and she didn't charge me any court costs. [52:20.120 --> 52:28.120] I personally believe that she picked that up and walked that across the hall and had someone stamp it. [52:28.120 --> 52:30.120] Wonderful. [52:30.120 --> 52:38.120] It would just be, because I met people, but it's taken five years to, you know, and the attorneys have just gouged them with costs. [52:38.120 --> 52:45.120] And I did it for free in 28 days. I've never heard of that happening. I guarantee you that wasn't me. That was God, and that was that lady. [52:45.120 --> 52:51.120] No, I think it was this court not wanting you back down there stomping all over them. [52:51.120 --> 53:04.120] Uh-huh. Yeah, so those were fun days, but they're over with. I'm expunged, so for our listeners, Jeffrey Hill, the serial killer, is no more. [53:04.120 --> 53:11.120] You mean you're a reformed serial killer, or you're not a serial killer at all anymore? [53:11.120 --> 53:20.120] I'm not a serial killer. I'm going to school to be a newscaster, and I'm almost done, and I figured something out about the whole serial killer thing. [53:20.120 --> 53:28.120] Why do I want to go in the park and hide in the bushes and wait for somebody to wait for some girl to jog by and jump out of her? [53:28.120 --> 53:35.120] Out of her? Why don't I just get a job at a TV station and work real hard, and women can jump out of the bushes at me? [53:35.120 --> 53:40.120] Good idea. Good luck with that. [53:40.120 --> 53:47.120] Brett and I, we are famous radio stars. Brett, how many... [53:47.120 --> 53:50.120] We can jump up the face here, too. [53:50.120 --> 53:56.120] Yeah, we do. How many women have you had jump out of the bushes chasing you? [53:56.120 --> 54:01.120] Well, just my wife, really, and that happens every time. [54:01.120 --> 54:06.120] Even my wife don't chase me. [54:06.120 --> 54:12.120] Because she knows she can stay mad longer than I can stay awake. [54:12.120 --> 54:19.120] I can run faster scared than she can mad, but she can stay mad longer than I can stay awake. [54:19.120 --> 54:22.120] Life tends to balance things out. [54:22.120 --> 54:31.120] Well, that was good news. Now, I got some bad news, but I don't think it's going to be that big of a deal, because it follows right along with what you're saying. [54:31.120 --> 54:44.120] A week ago, my mother's 87 years old. She's half blind, mostly deaf. I would say 30% demented or dimensional, whatever, however you say that. [54:44.120 --> 54:52.120] She's got about 30% mental illness. She's 87. She can only walk about 20 steps before she falls. [54:52.120 --> 55:08.120] And she's 100% disabled. The landlord of her trailer park had an attorney write her a threatening letter telling her that she had 30 days to move or else she would be ejected. [55:08.120 --> 55:19.120] Now, she's never failed to pay the rent. She's always paid the rent, so they have no cause, and they have not filed for an eviction in any kind of civil court. [55:19.120 --> 55:29.120] It was just a nasty letter, and an ugly guy came and banged on the door and scared her. He's the one that handed her the letter, and you're supposed to mail that eviction letter by certified mail. [55:29.120 --> 55:39.120] I've already looked that up, so that's three boo-goos that they made, plus having a scary guy come and yell at her and scare her. [55:39.120 --> 55:42.120] So why did they do this? Do you have any idea? [55:42.120 --> 55:58.120] Well, it turns out that the attorney tipped their hat, or tipped their hat, or tipped their hand. They want to sell that land off so they can build a Walmart supercenter, but they're not telling anybody that. [55:58.120 --> 56:00.120] Oh. [56:00.120 --> 56:02.120] Interesting. [56:02.120 --> 56:20.120] So a tort letter claiming that they're denying your mom and your rights so they can sell the property to a Walmart supercenter might get them to come to the table and make you a deal. [56:20.120 --> 56:27.120] Okay, now they didn't add any of that in the tort letter. They just said get out. You've got 30 days to get out or we'll eject you. [56:27.120 --> 56:38.120] Now, you just throw that in there, and that tells them I'm going to tell everybody what you're doing so that everybody else will resist you. [56:38.120 --> 56:43.120] Maybe get everybody on that. Go around and have a little petition run. [56:43.120 --> 56:48.120] Okay, now when you say everybody, do you mean like contact DHS and HUD housing? [56:48.120 --> 56:59.120] No, no. You're in a critical. No, I'm thinking about all of the people that live there. Get them all up in arms. Maybe even call the news. [56:59.120 --> 57:03.120] Because that's something that can just sound ugly, you know. [57:03.120 --> 57:05.120] Throw all these people out. [57:05.120 --> 57:20.120] Many people about to be out on their ear. They've all done everything right. Nobody's behind on their rent. And the owner's going to throw them all out in a rough and horrible way. [57:20.120 --> 57:27.120] So that they don't have to provide a relocation allowance. [57:27.120 --> 57:34.120] They want to cancel this contract and not be liable for counseling the contract. [57:34.120 --> 57:45.120] They can cancel the contract, but they would be liable to any damages to the people with whom they were in contract. [57:45.120 --> 57:50.120] So they're trying to avoid those damages. [57:50.120 --> 58:01.120] And if you tell everybody that they're going to sell this to Walmart for a supercenter, then everybody's likely to claim more damages. [58:01.120 --> 58:03.120] Okay. [58:03.120 --> 58:11.120] I'll tell the lawyers. I know you're going to sell this as a supercenter. And it's just wrong. You can't do this to us poor people. [58:11.120 --> 58:13.120] Make me an offer. [58:13.120 --> 58:16.120] And go ahead and bar grade him first. [58:16.120 --> 58:17.120] Okay. [58:17.120 --> 58:23.120] No, no, no. Wait, wait. Don't bar grade him first. Bar grade him first, second, third. [58:23.120 --> 58:25.120] Okay. [58:25.120 --> 58:27.120] Bar grade him first. [58:31.120 --> 58:34.120] Let's get right into it. [58:34.120 --> 58:38.120] Who the heck are you? Why are you talking to me? [58:38.120 --> 58:43.120] I don't have any business. I have no business with you. [58:43.120 --> 58:50.120] This is an innovation Brett bought to this show that's absolutely genius. [58:50.120 --> 58:58.120] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.120 --> 59:06.120] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.120 --> 59:09.120] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.120 --> 59:18.120] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.120 --> 59:28.120] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.120 --> 59:33.120] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.120 --> 59:44.120] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.120 --> 59:49.120] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:49.120 --> 59:52.120] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.120 --> 01:00:00.120] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.120 --> 01:00:06.120] The following news flash is brought to you by the Low Star Lowdowns. [01:00:06.120 --> 01:00:17.120] Market for Monday the 22nd of July 2019, open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, [01:00:17.120 --> 01:00:29.120] oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:29.120 --> 01:00:46.120] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:46.120 --> 01:00:57.120] In history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a tying suitcase bomb was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:57.120 --> 01:01:04.120] killing 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:01:04.120 --> 01:01:12.120] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:01:12.120 --> 01:01:18.120] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, [01:01:18.120 --> 01:01:24.120] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.120 --> 01:01:33.120] 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. [01:01:33.120 --> 01:01:39.120] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday, [01:01:39.120 --> 01:01:47.120] that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, [01:01:47.120 --> 01:01:57.120] as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, [01:01:57.120 --> 01:02:01.120] quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.120 --> 01:02:08.120] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, [01:02:08.120 --> 01:02:13.120] the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.120 --> 01:02:18.120] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:18.120 --> 01:02:27.120] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [01:02:27.120 --> 01:02:39.120] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.120 --> 01:02:49.120] 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 [01:02:49.120 --> 01:02:51.120] who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:51.120 --> 01:03:10.120] This is Brook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:51.120 --> 01:04:01.120] This is Brook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:04:21.120 --> 01:04:42.120] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Helton, Brent Fountain, Google Law Radio on this Thursday, the 30th day of September, the last day of September, 2021. [01:04:42.120 --> 01:04:44.120] Wow. [01:04:44.120 --> 01:04:46.120] Are you surprised I remembered all that? [01:04:46.120 --> 01:04:48.120] You wouldn't wrap through that like you know it. [01:04:48.120 --> 01:04:54.120] Yes, because I'm a fart smeller and a deep stinker. [01:04:54.120 --> 01:04:59.120] And we were talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [01:04:59.120 --> 01:05:01.120] What were we talking about? [01:05:01.120 --> 01:05:08.120] I remembered that when I started, but when I went to, oh, I was talking about Jeff being somebody being a genius. [01:05:08.120 --> 01:05:11.120] Was that you, Jeff? [01:05:11.120 --> 01:05:13.120] I don't think it was me. [01:05:13.120 --> 01:05:20.120] Oh, there might have been somebody else whose name I'm reluctant to mention. [01:05:20.120 --> 01:05:23.120] Mark grievances, they are so much fun. [01:05:23.120 --> 01:05:28.120] And Brett came up with this, you know, this idea. [01:05:28.120 --> 01:05:38.120] Sometimes things are really obvious and they're right in front of you and you can't see it because you do things the way you've always done things. [01:05:38.120 --> 01:05:42.120] And you never question why you're doing things the way you're doing things. [01:05:42.120 --> 01:05:51.120] And when Brett came up with this notion, I sued this guy and he hired a lawyer. [01:05:51.120 --> 01:06:00.120] And this lawyer is sending me annoying and disruptive communications. [01:06:00.120 --> 01:06:02.120] Who's this guy? [01:06:02.120 --> 01:06:05.120] I didn't hire this lawyer. [01:06:05.120 --> 01:06:14.120] If both parties have lawyers, the lawyers always have a covenant in their contract that you won't talk to the opposing party. [01:06:14.120 --> 01:06:24.120] And that's because they don't want the parties settling their differences without the lawyers because then the lawyers can't manipulate their parties. [01:06:24.120 --> 01:06:34.120] But if only one party has a lawyer and you don't, you didn't union the contract with that lawyer. [01:06:34.120 --> 01:06:38.120] So when the lawyer contacts you, who the heck are you? [01:06:38.120 --> 01:06:42.120] I don't know who you are. Go away and leave me alone. I don't want to talk to you. [01:06:42.120 --> 01:06:48.120] And he'll do all this song and dance. He's the lawyer for opposing party. [01:06:48.120 --> 01:06:51.120] Well then go talk to opposing party. Don't talk to me. [01:06:51.120 --> 01:06:53.120] I didn't hire you. Get lost. [01:06:53.120 --> 01:06:54.120] Exactly. [01:06:54.120 --> 01:06:56.120] Okay. [01:06:56.120 --> 01:06:59.120] Is that cool or what? [01:06:59.120 --> 01:07:07.120] Your lawyer was all of a sudden absolutely impotent. [01:07:07.120 --> 01:07:11.120] And then when he calls you, you barbeque him. [01:07:11.120 --> 01:07:30.120] And you make sure that your first rushing him off has the language in there of your local crime of harassment, baritry, put something in there that's in that language telling that you seem to have no reason to contact me. [01:07:30.120 --> 01:07:33.120] You're just trying to harass me and irritate me, aren't you? [01:07:33.120 --> 01:07:39.120] Put something like that in there and don't talk to me anymore. Go away. I don't know who you are. Who are you? [01:07:39.120 --> 01:07:42.120] In fact, never mind. Don't tell me. I don't want to hear it. [01:07:42.120 --> 01:07:48.120] And he'll come back and he will reply. You just told him not to. [01:07:48.120 --> 01:07:56.120] But he's going to because he's going to try to justify himself and tell you how important he is and all of that. [01:07:56.120 --> 01:08:00.120] And now he's committed that crime. [01:08:00.120 --> 01:08:06.120] Okay. Well, I kind of did things backwards. They gave the letter to my mother. [01:08:06.120 --> 01:08:11.120] And like I said, she's got a little bit of dementia, so she wasn't sure what was going on. [01:08:11.120 --> 01:08:16.120] And the big guy scared her. In fact, I wasn't, I didn't even think it was a lawyer. [01:08:16.120 --> 01:08:26.120] I thought it was an intruder, so I called the police on him and reported that there could be a possible intruder, but we're not sure because mom's not really. [01:08:26.120 --> 01:08:36.120] Then I told the attorney that the fellow that you guys sent to my doorstep or, you know, my mother's doorstep, I accidentally called the cops. [01:08:36.120 --> 01:08:42.120] Because I thought he was an intruder and she came back and said, oh, no worries. [01:08:42.120 --> 01:08:51.120] And then I said, well, then my question, I gave her a question because I asked her to send me this letter because I'm in Mississippi and my mom's in Arkansas. [01:08:51.120 --> 01:08:56.120] So can you send me the letter? And she sent it to me and I asked her a question. [01:08:56.120 --> 01:09:03.120] Is this a valid eviction notice, which I know that the answer is no, but I haven't gotten an answer from her. [01:09:03.120 --> 01:09:06.120] So I hope I didn't do something wrong. [01:09:06.120 --> 01:09:09.120] You did not. You did just fine. [01:09:09.120 --> 01:09:16.120] Can you get a power of attorney from your mom? [01:09:16.120 --> 01:09:18.120] I probably could, yeah. [01:09:18.120 --> 01:09:20.120] Get one. [01:09:20.120 --> 01:09:21.120] Okay. [01:09:21.120 --> 01:09:26.120] Then that will shield her. You can order these people do not talk to my mom. [01:09:26.120 --> 01:09:29.120] I have power of attorney talk to me. [01:09:29.120 --> 01:09:30.120] Okay. [01:09:30.120 --> 01:09:31.120] Got it. [01:09:31.120 --> 01:09:35.120] Because she doesn't have to, she should not, with what else she has to deal with. [01:09:35.120 --> 01:09:46.120] You know, I'm getting older myself and getting older involves a lot of issues that you didn't have to deal with when you were younger. [01:09:46.120 --> 01:09:53.120] I'm just getting over a lung issue and now I've got a foot issue and, you know, life kind of begins to cascade on you. [01:09:53.120 --> 01:09:57.120] You don't have enough room for all this other stuff. [01:09:57.120 --> 01:10:01.120] So you notify these people do not contact my mom. [01:10:01.120 --> 01:10:02.120] You contact my mom. [01:10:02.120 --> 01:10:05.120] I'm going to send the police out to have you arrested. [01:10:05.120 --> 01:10:15.120] Contact me and then you pull out your obnoxious genes and work them over. [01:10:15.120 --> 01:10:16.120] Okay. [01:10:16.120 --> 01:10:21.120] Should I go and bar grieve her right now anyway just for the fun of it? [01:10:21.120 --> 01:10:23.120] Oh, yeah. [01:10:23.120 --> 01:10:24.120] Okay. [01:10:24.120 --> 01:10:25.120] That's the spirit. [01:10:25.120 --> 01:10:30.120] You can bar grieve her because the sun came up this morning. [01:10:30.120 --> 01:10:31.120] Okay. [01:10:31.120 --> 01:10:34.120] They're going to throw it in trash anyway. [01:10:34.120 --> 01:10:35.120] Yeah. [01:10:35.120 --> 01:10:37.120] So it doesn't matter. [01:10:37.120 --> 01:10:42.120] And that's why I bar grieved a lawyer once for partners hair on the left. [01:10:42.120 --> 01:10:44.120] And that's why I did it. [01:10:44.120 --> 01:10:53.120] I wanted him to understand that I understood I can bar grieve you for anything. [01:10:53.120 --> 01:11:03.120] But if you don't want to do just anything, you want to have something then put something in there like you're going to look in the local Mississippi bar per state. [01:11:03.120 --> 01:11:05.120] There's a different set of rules. [01:11:05.120 --> 01:11:19.120] So you want to go by the rules from Mississippi, find the rules and look right there probably right at the very top, you're going to have like 1.2 is you can't get yourself involved in a crime and 1.1 is competence. [01:11:19.120 --> 01:11:20.120] They need to be competent. [01:11:20.120 --> 01:11:23.120] So you can say, you know, pick one. [01:11:23.120 --> 01:11:35.120] You can say probably around 1.15 there'll be something that says if your client wants to commit fraud, you're not supposed to represent that client. [01:11:35.120 --> 01:11:37.120] You can't help me to do fraud. [01:11:37.120 --> 01:11:38.120] Yeah. [01:11:38.120 --> 01:11:42.120] And what what what Brett is referring to are these numbers. [01:11:42.120 --> 01:11:49.120] But most every state have it has adopted the American Bar Association model standards. [01:11:49.120 --> 01:11:50.120] Yeah. [01:11:50.120 --> 01:11:58.120] All the same section paragraph one, two, three, five and eight. [01:11:58.120 --> 01:12:17.120] That's pretty well you got to look at all the rest go to selling law firms, merging law firms, all this stuff that's specifically between lawyers one, three, five, one, two, three, five and eight are the only ones that you really need to pay attention to. [01:12:17.120 --> 01:12:19.120] And they're not that long. [01:12:19.120 --> 01:12:24.120] And they've got all this cool stuff you can beat them up with. [01:12:24.120 --> 01:12:30.120] Last question is, so that is not an actual eviction. [01:12:30.120 --> 01:12:32.120] They she did not file with the court. [01:12:32.120 --> 01:12:38.120] Oh, no, in order to be an eviction, they have to post a notice to vacate. [01:12:38.120 --> 01:12:41.120] They have to give you 24 hour notice to vacate. [01:12:41.120 --> 01:12:46.120] And then they have to have grounds if she's under contract with them. [01:12:46.120 --> 01:12:52.120] And she's in good standing with the contract. [01:12:52.120 --> 01:12:53.120] Yeah. [01:12:53.120 --> 01:13:00.120] Then they have to have some way to cancel this contract first. [01:13:00.120 --> 01:13:01.120] Yeah. [01:13:01.120 --> 01:13:07.120] And once they cancel the contract, then they have to give her three noted three day notice to vacate. [01:13:07.120 --> 01:13:10.120] And then she has to tell them, go scratch. [01:13:10.120 --> 01:13:12.120] I'm not going anywhere. [01:13:12.120 --> 01:13:29.120] When she does that, then they have to go to the generally the justice of the piece and follow a motion for what they call Brett to take possession. [01:13:29.120 --> 01:13:47.120] They have to file a motion with the court to take possession of the property and then they have to give her a notice of the filing and give her notice and opportunity to object to the motion. [01:13:47.120 --> 01:14:04.120] Then they have to go to court and the judge has to rule and grant possession to the claimant. Then the claimant has to post on your door a 24, I think a 48 hour notice to vacate. [01:14:04.120 --> 01:14:07.120] So there's a long process they have to go through. [01:14:07.120 --> 01:14:10.120] And then if the judge was against you, you can appeal the ruling. [01:14:10.120 --> 01:14:13.120] It'll take them six months to a year. [01:14:13.120 --> 01:14:19.120] Even if you're not paying your rent, but if you're paying your rent, you're in a contract in good standing. [01:14:19.120 --> 01:14:21.120] Yes. [01:14:21.120 --> 01:14:30.120] Now they're trying and they have to have an exit clause from the contract. [01:14:30.120 --> 01:14:41.120] If he's in a car in a renewing contract, do you know, do you know what the terms of a contract is? [01:14:41.120 --> 01:14:48.120] Well, she's been there for 30 years, so I think it's just month to month now. [01:14:48.120 --> 01:14:58.120] Okay, then they can, you might not know. You need to check and see if they've given her notice that they do not intend to renew her contract. [01:14:58.120 --> 01:15:03.120] The letter does not say that. It just says get out. Really? [01:15:03.120 --> 01:15:10.120] Well, they may have already given her that. You need to check and make sure. [01:15:10.120 --> 01:15:12.120] Given her what? Do you need that letter? [01:15:12.120 --> 01:15:18.120] Given her a notice of intent to not to renew the contract. [01:15:18.120 --> 01:15:19.120] She may not remember. [01:15:19.120 --> 01:15:23.120] No, they haven't. This is her first letter. [01:15:23.120 --> 01:15:27.120] Then they're acting pretty unconsciously. [01:15:27.120 --> 01:15:39.120] I would want to dig, make sure your mom hasn't forgotten something or hasn't gotten the letter she didn't recognize the significance of. [01:15:39.120 --> 01:15:43.120] Which is intent to cancel contract? [01:15:43.120 --> 01:15:45.120] Yes. [01:15:45.120 --> 01:15:47.120] Okay, we're going to find that. [01:15:47.120 --> 01:15:48.120] Okay. [01:15:48.120 --> 01:16:00.120] Everything has to be reasonable. Someone has lived here for 30 years and you want to move, you have to give them reasonable notice. [01:16:00.120 --> 01:16:06.120] And depending on the state, the state will define what reasonable notice is. [01:16:06.120 --> 01:16:12.120] And it will almost always be in the contract. It will generally be 30 to 60 days. [01:16:12.120 --> 01:16:17.120] So she may have got something that you are not aware of. [01:16:17.120 --> 01:16:18.120] Okay. [01:16:18.120 --> 01:16:25.120] Well, I read it and she's paid the rent and she's never committed a crime and that's what the contract basically states. [01:16:25.120 --> 01:16:32.120] There's no drugs and you have to pay the rent and she's good on that. [01:16:32.120 --> 01:16:35.120] And they never stand cause. [01:16:35.120 --> 01:16:42.120] But even if she does have a contract and even if they have given her notice, ask them. [01:16:42.120 --> 01:16:44.120] Okay, good. [01:16:44.120 --> 01:16:49.120] That'll keep you in court for the next five years. [01:16:49.120 --> 01:16:51.120] So you want to sell this to Walmart? [01:16:51.120 --> 01:16:53.120] Good luck with that. [01:16:53.120 --> 01:16:54.120] Okay. [01:16:54.120 --> 01:16:56.120] I'll call you next week. [01:16:56.120 --> 01:16:57.120] Okay. [01:16:57.120 --> 01:17:00.120] Thank you, Jeff. [01:17:00.120 --> 01:17:05.120] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [01:17:05.120 --> 01:17:11.120] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. central time. [01:17:11.120 --> 01:17:14.120] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. [01:17:14.120 --> 01:17:21.120] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [01:17:21.120 --> 01:17:26.120] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:26.120 --> 01:17:34.120] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.120 --> 01:17:40.120] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [01:17:40.120 --> 01:17:48.120] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [01:17:48.120 --> 01:18:00.120] 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. [01:18:00.120 --> 01:18:11.120] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. [01:18:11.120 --> 01:18:15.120] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:15.120 --> 01:18:19.120] Your amount is appreciated. Everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:19.120 --> 01:18:25.120] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:25.120 --> 01:18:31.120] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:31.120 --> 01:18:36.120] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.120 --> 01:18:40.120] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:40.120 --> 01:18:49.120] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on Talk Radio today. [01:18:49.120 --> 01:18:52.120] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [01:18:52.120 --> 01:18:56.120] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:56.120 --> 01:19:11.120] Visit LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:26.120 --> 01:19:36.120] Well, you ain't gonna clue me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.120 --> 01:19:41.120] I was blindsided, but now I can see your eyes. [01:19:41.120 --> 01:19:46.120] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hands. [01:19:46.120 --> 01:19:52.120] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:52.120 --> 01:20:01.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Lula Radio, and we're going to Olivier in Florida. [01:20:01.120 --> 01:20:05.120] Hello, Olivier. What have you been up to? [01:20:05.120 --> 01:20:08.120] A lot. [01:20:08.120 --> 01:20:18.120] Yeah, Olivier and I have been talking and I have come to the conclusion that he is having way too much fun. [01:20:18.120 --> 01:20:21.120] Tell us about what happened today in court. [01:20:21.120 --> 01:20:24.120] Today, okay. Today in court? [01:20:24.120 --> 01:20:32.120] Okay, before that, give us kind of a brief, bring us up to speed so we'll understand what's going on. [01:20:32.120 --> 01:20:42.120] Okay, last time I was in court, we had the, it was supposed to be for trial, but I filed several... [01:20:42.120 --> 01:20:46.120] Okay, hold on, hold on. This is a traffic issue. [01:20:46.120 --> 01:20:47.120] Traffic. [01:20:47.120 --> 01:20:58.120] In Florida, where their Olivier was charged with driving while black. [01:20:58.120 --> 01:21:02.120] There's something like that. [01:21:02.120 --> 01:21:03.120] Okay. [01:21:03.120 --> 01:21:12.120] The first time, okay, here's what happened. One night, they pulled me over, stating that I failed to maintain lane [01:21:12.120 --> 01:21:21.120] and I was speeding and evading arrests and the video clearly shows that I never... [01:21:21.120 --> 01:21:26.120] I was driving like a grandma when the cop put the lights on me. [01:21:26.120 --> 01:21:34.120] I decelerated to like 20 miles an hour trying to find somewhere to park so I don't see how I evaded arrests. [01:21:34.120 --> 01:21:42.120] So from that incident, I guess this officer was called as backup or something like that, [01:21:42.120 --> 01:21:49.120] but he said that he knew he was called as backup and knew that I was being arrested. [01:21:49.120 --> 01:21:58.120] So this is another night where he saw me pass by and he decided that he was just going to pull me over and arrest me. [01:21:58.120 --> 01:22:11.120] So now we're in court dealing with that issue at the court date when we went to court to do the trial. [01:22:11.120 --> 01:22:14.120] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute. That is justifiable. [01:22:14.120 --> 01:22:20.120] You were in Florida, you were driving and you were black. [01:22:20.120 --> 01:22:29.120] So you're saying this guy saw you and decided he was going to pull you over? [01:22:29.120 --> 01:22:32.120] Right, wow. [01:22:32.120 --> 01:22:40.120] He saw me and decided to pull me over and I called him last time and told you about how the judge started jumping on him [01:22:40.120 --> 01:22:51.120] and then the prosecutor asked the judge not to assist me anymore because I have enough help from the court [01:22:51.120 --> 01:22:54.120] and the judge just stared at me for a little bit. [01:22:54.120 --> 01:22:58.120] I looked at the judge like, what are you going to do? Are you going to keep on being corrupt? [01:22:58.120 --> 01:23:10.120] And the judge just kept on, the judge said, well, your argument is noted and they turned around and kept on jumping on my officer. [01:23:10.120 --> 01:23:12.120] So that was great. [01:23:12.120 --> 01:23:22.120] So they postponed because I filed those motions and I guess because she was like, I can strike these motions for being untimely. [01:23:22.120 --> 01:23:29.120] I was like, I know and I do not object. So I guess they put her off like, I've got something planned. [01:23:29.120 --> 01:23:35.120] She was like, you know what, I'm going to allow the state attorney opportunity to answer them. [01:23:35.120 --> 01:23:39.120] So we're going to make another court date. [01:23:39.120 --> 01:23:45.120] So that court date was for today for us to have this. [01:23:45.120 --> 01:23:51.120] Okay, wait a minute. I know what's going on. I kind of missed something here. [01:23:51.120 --> 01:24:00.120] You're in court on this traffic issue and you have filed motions in the court. [01:24:00.120 --> 01:24:01.120] Right. [01:24:01.120 --> 01:24:08.120] And what was the hearing for? Was it to hear these motions? [01:24:08.120 --> 01:24:12.120] Today, yes. [01:24:12.120 --> 01:24:15.120] So did they hear these motions today? [01:24:15.120 --> 01:24:17.120] No. [01:24:17.120 --> 01:24:20.120] And why didn't they hear these motions today? [01:24:20.120 --> 01:24:32.120] Well, when I filed the territorial judgment suit and I put everyone on their prosecutor's, public defenders and everything the public defenders say, [01:24:32.120 --> 01:24:44.120] they're not going to argue my argument because it has no legal value, whatever they said. [01:24:44.120 --> 01:24:46.120] I wrote all of that in there. [01:24:46.120 --> 01:24:56.120] So when I filed it, now what happened is they got served. [01:24:56.120 --> 01:25:01.120] But I guess the prosecutor didn't get served yet. So I'm walking. [01:25:01.120 --> 01:25:12.120] Okay, hold on. So you got the traffic ticket. You filed a whole bunch of motions and essentially they just blew them all off. [01:25:12.120 --> 01:25:19.120] No, no. I got the traffic ticket. They brought me to court. [01:25:19.120 --> 01:25:25.120] In court, as we were getting ready to go to the trial date, we were having conversations. [01:25:25.120 --> 01:25:29.120] The judge is telling me this. I might not have the right to use the auto bills. [01:25:29.120 --> 01:25:35.120] You say no, you don't. That doesn't exist. So I'm writing all this stuff in the lawsuit. [01:25:35.120 --> 01:25:43.120] So we had several court dates. Now they set it up for a trial here for trial. [01:25:43.120 --> 01:25:56.120] Now what I do is right before trial, I drop in four, five, six motions the day before trial. [01:25:56.120 --> 01:26:05.120] So I know that it's not going to get to the court in time. So I wanted to sneak attack, like just put this in there. [01:26:05.120 --> 01:26:12.120] Y'all going to throw them out. I don't care because I wanted to go to the appeal of court anyways. [01:26:12.120 --> 01:26:17.120] So somehow the court, they get it to the judge the next day. [01:26:17.120 --> 01:26:21.120] The court told me that it's going to take at least seven days. [01:26:21.120 --> 01:26:29.120] I went to the courtroom the next day and the judges, as soon as I come in, the judges waving the motions in my face. [01:26:29.120 --> 01:26:35.120] Like, oh, we got these. I'm like, how do you get them? [01:26:35.120 --> 01:26:49.120] So that's what held that trial date up because those motions, she rescheduled it so they could have an opportunity to properly answer the motions. [01:26:49.120 --> 01:26:52.120] So that was the trial date. [01:26:52.120 --> 01:27:04.120] So this latest hearing was a hearing to hear the ruling of the judge on the motions or to hear the motions that you had before the court. [01:27:04.120 --> 01:27:09.120] Right. To rule on them. [01:27:09.120 --> 01:27:10.120] Yes. [01:27:10.120 --> 01:27:20.120] She had the motions in her hands. Did she already have argument from both parties and now she's going to make a determination? [01:27:20.120 --> 01:27:36.120] Yeah, yeah. On that day when she had it in her hands, she just reset it for another day so she could make the determination of whatever the state attorney wrote as an answer and whatever I argue, which is today. [01:27:36.120 --> 01:27:44.120] So now today you're in the courtroom waiting for them to convene so you can hear these motions. [01:27:44.120 --> 01:27:50.120] Right. So I'm sitting in front of the courtroom with a mask on. There's only two of us in there. [01:27:50.120 --> 01:28:06.120] So the state attorney is talking to the sheriff, talking to the sheriff about me, about being in the courtroom by myself, talking about I had to have drove to the courthouse. [01:28:06.120 --> 01:28:11.120] So I guess he's trying to set him up to come after me. [01:28:11.120 --> 01:28:21.120] He's talking and the sheriff, the door opens. So the sheriff stands up, the other sheriff stands up and it's all right. [01:28:21.120 --> 01:28:29.120] And then the judge just throw up one over her hand and like, nah, nah, nah. [01:28:29.120 --> 01:28:37.120] And then the sheriff looked like a what? He was like, well, okay, I guess court's in session. Nobody writes. [01:28:37.120 --> 01:28:44.120] So she's looking like the walking dead. You know, they're like, she's dragging over to the bench. [01:28:44.120 --> 01:28:55.120] I'm just sitting there like intense, just dead serious and every, I'm absorbing every molecule in the room. [01:28:55.120 --> 01:29:04.120] I'm watching everything. She slops down on the chair. She's looking at the state attorney talk to the sheriff, you know. [01:29:04.120 --> 01:29:11.120] And then she's like, did you see this? And then she starts, she's like, well, what's that? [01:29:11.120 --> 01:29:16.120] She said, here, she hands it over. [01:29:16.120 --> 01:29:22.120] Here, take a look at this. And then she comes up and look at it. [01:29:22.120 --> 01:29:29.120] Like, she said, I'm being sued. The prosecutor says, you being sued. [01:29:29.120 --> 01:29:40.120] He's like, yeah, she said, you being sued too. She said, what? He said, yeah, everybody being sued. [01:29:40.120 --> 01:29:44.120] You got the music coming up. [01:29:44.120 --> 01:29:49.120] Who was reading that? Who was saying that? That was the judge? [01:29:49.120 --> 01:29:53.120] The judge was talking to the prosecutor. [01:29:53.120 --> 01:30:00.120] I see these guys all the time. I never get to see that. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back here. [01:30:00.120 --> 01:30:10.120] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:10.120 --> 01:30:16.120] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. I'm Dr. Kaepfer and I'll be right back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.120 --> 01:30:27.120] 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. [01:30:27.120 --> 01:30:35.120] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:35.120 --> 01:30:42.120] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.120 --> 01:30:46.120] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.120 --> 01:30:52.120] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.120 --> 01:30:56.120] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.120 --> 01:31:04.120] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.120 --> 01:31:10.120] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.120 --> 01:31:15.120] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.120 --> 01:31:21.120] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.120 --> 01:31:31.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.120 --> 01:31:36.120] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.120 --> 01:31:43.120] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.120 --> 01:31:46.120] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.120 --> 01:31:49.120] And thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:49.120 --> 01:31:50.120] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.120 --> 01:31:51.120] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.120 --> 01:31:53.120] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.120 --> 01:31:54.120] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.120 --> 01:31:55.120] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:58.120] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.120 --> 01:32:01.120] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.120 --> 01:32:06.120] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:06.120 --> 01:32:08.120] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.120 --> 01:32:13.120] And 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. [01:32:13.120 --> 01:32:18.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.120 --> 01:32:20.120] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.120 --> 01:32:26.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.120 --> 01:32:31.120] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.120 --> 01:32:36.120] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law. [01:32:36.120 --> 01:32:41.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to rulevolradiog.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.120 --> 01:32:46.120] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:46.120 --> 01:32:48.120] video and audio of your original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.120 --> 01:32:51.120] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.120 --> 01:32:55.120] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from rulevolradiog.com. [01:32:55.120 --> 01:33:00.120] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:25.120 --> 01:33:54.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Shelton, Brett Stanton, Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:54.120 --> 01:33:57.120] And we were talking about a fly on the wall. [01:33:57.120 --> 01:34:02.120] You know, I've got a $400 million lawsuit. I'm fighting right now. [01:34:02.120 --> 01:34:09.120] Now, I've got a guy coming down. He's going to do the service on all of these litigants. [01:34:09.120 --> 01:34:17.120] And I'm always thinking, I would really like to be a fly on the wall when these guys get this lawsuit. [01:34:17.120 --> 01:34:20.120] Well, tell your friend he needs to wear a GoPro. [01:34:20.120 --> 01:34:22.120] Exactly. [01:34:22.120 --> 01:34:28.120] And you get to see their face. Maybe it's a delayed reaction, but you can still later on you can see their faces. [01:34:28.120 --> 01:34:34.120] That would help. But here's Olivier and he gets to see it in person. [01:34:34.120 --> 01:34:36.120] Yeah, real time. [01:34:36.120 --> 01:34:39.120] Go ahead, Olivier. [01:34:39.120 --> 01:34:44.120] So now she has a document over the podium. [01:34:44.120 --> 01:34:52.120] She's like, I'm being sued. She's like, what? What's this? You're being sued too. She's like, I'm being sued. [01:34:52.120 --> 01:34:58.120] She's like, yes, everybody's being sued. She's like, huh? She's looking at the document. [01:34:58.120 --> 01:35:03.120] She's like, I didn't get this. She's like, well, go make your copy. [01:35:03.120 --> 01:35:16.120] I'm sitting there just watching the prosecutor walk across the room to the bathroom machine and hand it over to the clerk and they just making copies, right? [01:35:16.120 --> 01:35:23.120] So I'm just sitting there. I want to laugh, but I'm so serious. I'm in killer mode now. [01:35:23.120 --> 01:35:26.120] I'm very serious about this. [01:35:26.120 --> 01:35:37.120] But on the inside, I'm like, yo, this is ridiculous. This is funny. But I can't laugh outside. So I'm watching because something was weird to me. [01:35:37.120 --> 01:35:45.120] I'm like, why is she talking so loud? I didn't realize that she didn't notice that I was in the courtroom. [01:35:45.120 --> 01:35:57.120] She walked back and she was like, well, we can't go on with the case today. And then she was like, Miss Olivia is here. She's like, he's here. [01:35:57.120 --> 01:36:03.120] I'm like, yeah, he's outside. And then she looked back and she was like, actually, he's right there. [01:36:03.120 --> 01:36:12.120] And then the judge looked into the seats at the bottom and he was like, oh, Miss Olivia, come on up. [01:36:12.120 --> 01:36:20.120] I walked into the podium and they're like, oh man, did we just say all that right in front of him? [01:36:20.120 --> 01:36:28.120] And the sheriff, you know, he was just talking to the sheriff about, I guess, setting me up to get arrested again. [01:36:28.120 --> 01:36:36.120] And the sheriff was just sitting there like, what's going on? We're not going after the black guy no more? [01:36:36.120 --> 01:36:42.120] It's a lie. It's a lie. It's a lie. She's worried. She's just stuck. Like, what's going on? [01:36:42.120 --> 01:36:55.120] She's leaving. She's like, well, since I'm being sued, I have to re-requeue myself and we'll have to sign your real signed case to another courtroom. [01:36:55.120 --> 01:36:57.120] I'm like, okay, I ain't got no problem with that. [01:36:57.120 --> 01:37:06.120] She's like, well, okay, leave your email downstairs and we'll contact you when we figure out how to dismiss the case. [01:37:06.120 --> 01:37:16.120] But it doesn't matter to me. That's what they sound like. They say they're going to transfer it, but it sounds like we've got to figure out how to dismiss it. [01:37:16.120 --> 01:37:23.120] But I already got you locked in. I wanted precedent law. President, yeah, precedent law. [01:37:23.120 --> 01:37:31.120] And whatever you do now, you have to answer the lawsuit. And it's 28th. [01:37:31.120 --> 01:37:40.120] Yeah, that's good, because just dismissing it isn't going to make it go away. They hope it can go away, but that'll only take care of the part that they initiated. [01:37:40.120 --> 01:37:43.120] They can't make yours go away. [01:37:43.120 --> 01:37:53.120] Right. And then my whole thing is to have case law that people can use and stop having to worry about this descriptive language. [01:37:53.120 --> 01:38:00.120] I'm like, okay, I ain't got to say nothing. Just go look at Mr. Olivier's case. He did all the work. [01:38:00.120 --> 01:38:08.120] I'm trying to plan these games. Here you go. If you can't read this, then you don't need to be a public servant. [01:38:08.120 --> 01:38:16.120] If you can't understand it, you don't need a public servant. And then Randy, I don't know which incident to tell you about next. [01:38:16.120 --> 01:38:22.120] I don't know if he's trying to tell you about the mayor situation or the car accident with the officer. [01:38:22.120 --> 01:38:29.120] Okay. Let me describe Olivier. You can't appreciate this until you've seen him. [01:38:29.120 --> 01:38:38.120] I went to Clarksville, Tennessee. The first time I saw Olivier, he came into the courtroom. [01:38:38.120 --> 01:38:50.120] Pretty good-sized guy. He just has this look that says, you don't want to meet this guy in a dark alley. [01:38:50.120 --> 01:39:01.120] He had a really rough look about it. He's got long dreadlocks. And he goes up to the podium and he opens his mouth. [01:39:01.120 --> 01:39:11.120] And it was like everybody in the courtroom, his mouth dropped open and was thinking, who is this guy? [01:39:11.120 --> 01:39:21.120] His presentment, his posture was so professional. His arguments were so articulate. [01:39:21.120 --> 01:39:28.120] It was an absolute opposite of the impression he gives when you see him. [01:39:28.120 --> 01:39:39.120] I can just imagine these guys. You know, if they see me come into the courtroom, I'm a white-out Anglo-Saxon Protestant old fat guy. [01:39:39.120 --> 01:39:51.120] They expect me to be difficult, but Olivier is a sleeper. You just don't see it coming. [01:39:51.120 --> 01:40:02.120] I sat in that courtroom with my mouth hanging open and said, who thought who is this guy? [01:40:02.120 --> 01:40:11.120] And the whole court, the demeanor of the whole court changed. So I'm sitting here listening to his story, thinking about Clarksville, Tennessee. [01:40:11.120 --> 01:40:18.120] And I can imagine their problem. This is the last guy I expected to do this to me. [01:40:18.120 --> 01:40:25.120] Yeah, and that's probably why they felt comfortable just discussing this. Hey, I just got sued. You got sued? Yeah, you got sued too. [01:40:25.120 --> 01:40:32.120] We all got sued. And they're saying this, thinking, well, it can't be any of these people over here. [01:40:32.120 --> 01:40:43.120] I mean, it's got to be some rich dude in a nice suit off in some white palace somewhere sending this stuff to us. [01:40:43.120 --> 01:40:50.120] Jeans, white sneakers and a T-shirt. [01:40:50.120 --> 01:40:52.120] That's great. [01:40:52.120 --> 01:41:03.120] She looked terrified. And here's the bad thing about it is like this whole process is setting me up to go back and take care of Clarksville in a devastating way. [01:41:03.120 --> 01:41:24.120] Yeah, I was saying I'm touching over nine cases, nine different cases and my house, that imminent domain. Man, once I put this equation out, everybody who's been dealing with an imminent domain in Texas and all these other states, [01:41:24.120 --> 01:41:39.120] that they've been filling their property, this declaratory judgment was shut that down so fast, not only on the statutory construction, but the application of the statute. [01:41:39.120 --> 01:42:02.120] And then you can end the declaratory judgment, you can make them declare that it is fraud because how are you going to declare to you, how are you going to use imminent domain and then obtain the property and then not use it for public interest or the public benefit. [01:42:02.120 --> 01:42:04.120] Can't do that. [01:42:04.120 --> 01:42:11.120] This is perfect. They create their own worst enemy. [01:42:11.120 --> 01:42:17.120] And what's so bad about it is like ten years later, so they thought they got rid of me. [01:42:17.120 --> 01:42:18.120] Yeah. [01:42:18.120 --> 01:42:20.120] Then you're just getting warmed up on them. [01:42:20.120 --> 01:42:40.120] Oh, and the fact is like every word that I spoke in there, like in the courtroom as they walk me back out to the jail, I'll look at the prosecutor and be like, I'll see you in federal court, stat boy. [01:42:40.120 --> 01:42:51.120] And then like all this stuff is happening now. Like, wait a minute, like everything I said, I told them I was going to do is coming true. I'm sending them out of the system right now. [01:42:51.120 --> 01:43:06.120] And then all I have to do is either wait for the verdict here and go apply it and go apply it in Tennessee or just go make a whole bunch of mess in Tennessee and let them see what other good stuff they allow me to pull out. [01:43:06.120 --> 01:43:19.120] And I'm trying to get Olivier to come on to our telegram sites because the people on that site need to hear what he's accomplished. [01:43:19.120 --> 01:43:27.120] We've been talking for a long time and he's filed federal lawsuits and the judges dismissed his case. [01:43:27.120 --> 01:43:41.120] And he's all upset. I said, read the judgment. He reads the judgment and he realizes that the judge is trying to instruct him on how to adjudicate his case. [01:43:41.120 --> 01:43:51.120] And that's not improper because the judge, primarily in federal courts, they do this. They will tell this party, this is what's wrong with your pleadings. [01:43:51.120 --> 01:43:59.120] This is what you do need to do to fix them. And they'll tell the party on the other side. This is what's wrong with yours. This is what you need to fix them. [01:43:59.120 --> 01:44:00.120] Judge. [01:44:00.120 --> 01:44:05.120] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:05.120 --> 01:44:14.120] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:44:14.120 --> 01:44:33.120] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.120 --> 01:44:40.120] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:40.120 --> 01:44:49.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:44:49.120 --> 01:45:00.120] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [01:45:00.120 --> 01:45:15.120] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.120 --> 01:45:23.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.120 --> 01:45:34.120] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.120 --> 01:45:43.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.120 --> 01:45:56.120] 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. [01:45:56.120 --> 01:46:22.120] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:22.120 --> 01:46:31.120] Some things in this world I will never understand, some things I realize fully. [01:46:31.120 --> 01:46:40.120] Somebody's known a police, that police man, somebody's known a police, a bully. [01:46:40.120 --> 01:46:49.120] There's always a room at the top of the hill, I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely left to [01:46:49.120 --> 01:46:53.120] They're wishing it with more than I've ever listened to feel [01:46:53.120 --> 01:46:58.120] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:46:58.120 --> 01:47:04.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're on our last segment. [01:47:04.120 --> 01:47:11.120] And Debra, you've been holding a long time, and Chris, and Tina, and EJ. [01:47:11.120 --> 01:47:18.120] I'm sorry we won't get to you tonight. I've been trying to get Olivier on here for a long time. [01:47:18.120 --> 01:47:23.120] But if you will call in tomorrow, we will take you guys first in line. [01:47:23.120 --> 01:47:27.120] It's been a while since we've had a live show, so we're getting a lot of callers. [01:47:27.120 --> 01:47:31.120] And I definitely want to get you guys in and I apologize, especially Debra. [01:47:31.120 --> 01:47:36.120] Debra's been a long time since you've called in, if you're the Debra, I think you are. [01:47:36.120 --> 01:47:42.120] And I'm looking forward to have you on the air, and I apologize we won't get to you tonight. [01:47:42.120 --> 01:47:49.120] Back to Olivier, I'm especially pleased with Olivier because I've been working with him for a long time [01:47:49.120 --> 01:47:52.120] since I was in Tennessee taking care of my mom. [01:47:52.120 --> 01:47:55.120] And he was struggling fighting these issues. [01:47:55.120 --> 01:48:01.120] And he's one of the few that, you know, I have people call into my show and ask me what to do. [01:48:01.120 --> 01:48:06.120] And one of the first things I tell them is read the code. [01:48:06.120 --> 01:48:09.120] He read the code. [01:48:09.120 --> 01:48:12.120] Brett Fountain called into my show years ago and he said, what to do? [01:48:12.120 --> 01:48:15.120] I said, read the code. He read the code. [01:48:15.120 --> 01:48:17.120] And now look at Brett. [01:48:17.120 --> 01:48:20.120] Brett is forced to be reckoned with. [01:48:20.120 --> 01:48:27.120] Olivier is coming into his own as a force to be reckoned with. [01:48:27.120 --> 01:48:36.120] Okay, Olivier, so you are, how many cases do you have in court right now? [01:48:36.120 --> 01:48:42.120] One, two, two cases. [01:48:42.120 --> 01:48:51.120] Two or three cases because I just got in a car accident and the officer arrested me in the hospital. [01:48:51.120 --> 01:48:53.120] But that story is kind of long. [01:48:53.120 --> 01:48:58.120] I figure I should tell you the story about the mayor calling my phone. [01:48:58.120 --> 01:49:02.120] Oh, yes, the mayor. You got to tell this one. [01:49:02.120 --> 01:49:08.120] Okay, so now we had an incident about a year ago where we dropped off a car. [01:49:08.120 --> 01:49:11.120] Me and my brother dropped off a car to a client and we left. [01:49:11.120 --> 01:49:15.120] The cop pulled us over saying that we failed to maintain lane. [01:49:15.120 --> 01:49:20.120] They demanded to get us to get out the car so we could search the car for drugs. [01:49:20.120 --> 01:49:22.120] We're like, no, we don't know. [01:49:22.120 --> 01:49:25.120] We called out supervisors. They called out. [01:49:25.120 --> 01:49:26.120] They said she's not doing nothing wrong. [01:49:26.120 --> 01:49:28.120] She has the right to do that. [01:49:28.120 --> 01:49:32.120] We asked the probable cause. We were recording. [01:49:32.120 --> 01:49:34.120] They said that they don't need probable cause. [01:49:34.120 --> 01:49:40.120] Four of us used them the right to search any vehicle that they stopped. [01:49:40.120 --> 01:49:44.120] No probable cause. [01:49:44.120 --> 01:49:48.120] So we're like, okay, well, I'm going to mess you up. [01:49:48.120 --> 01:49:49.120] We're going to mess you up. [01:49:49.120 --> 01:49:54.120] So we went and filed an internal investigation report. [01:49:54.120 --> 01:49:59.120] They said, well, they didn't find anything wrong. [01:49:59.120 --> 01:50:08.120] They said it wrote plausible and probable. [01:50:08.120 --> 01:50:09.120] I'm like, what? [01:50:09.120 --> 01:50:11.120] They're idiots. [01:50:11.120 --> 01:50:16.120] So I'm like, okay, well, now, so I called city attorney. [01:50:16.120 --> 01:50:23.120] I'm like, hey, we had a situation happen a while back and I didn't get a proper response. [01:50:23.120 --> 01:50:26.120] So now we're going to sue you. [01:50:26.120 --> 01:50:33.120] And I need the public information request with the law that this officer is talking about [01:50:33.120 --> 01:50:38.120] that gives them the right to search our vehicle without probable cause. [01:50:38.120 --> 01:50:39.120] Okay. [01:50:39.120 --> 01:50:41.120] She was like, well, you got to call the police station. [01:50:41.120 --> 01:50:48.120] I'm like, listen, what sense does it make to go contact the same tyrant that told me [01:50:48.120 --> 01:50:55.120] that nothing was wrong and the case file that they put in the information in the report [01:50:55.120 --> 01:51:01.120] has nothing to do with them not having probable, not needing probable cause. [01:51:01.120 --> 01:51:10.120] Now you are the person reliable for the legal representation for these officers and you, [01:51:10.120 --> 01:51:15.120] your office is the one that's going to take my public information request. [01:51:15.120 --> 01:51:21.120] And I'm like, I want to email confirming that I requested this. [01:51:21.120 --> 01:51:22.120] Well, okay. [01:51:22.120 --> 01:51:23.120] She got it. [01:51:23.120 --> 01:51:24.120] She got my information and everything. [01:51:24.120 --> 01:51:26.120] She's like, well, I'm just going to contact them. [01:51:26.120 --> 01:51:29.120] I said, I don't care what you do as long as it comes from your office. [01:51:29.120 --> 01:51:32.120] So I went out and write it down in my lawsuit. [01:51:32.120 --> 01:51:34.120] You're liable. [01:51:34.120 --> 01:51:37.120] She's like, okay. [01:51:37.120 --> 01:51:38.120] She takes them now. [01:51:38.120 --> 01:51:39.120] The officer called me. [01:51:39.120 --> 01:51:41.120] I'm like, who's this? [01:51:41.120 --> 01:51:42.120] I'm like, what? [01:51:42.120 --> 01:51:44.120] Why are you calling me? [01:51:44.120 --> 01:51:47.120] Well, they said that you called. [01:51:47.120 --> 01:51:48.120] Exactly. [01:51:48.120 --> 01:51:53.120] They called, but I don't want nothing from you because nothing you have to say to me is [01:51:53.120 --> 01:51:55.120] going to be lawful or valid. [01:51:55.120 --> 01:51:56.120] You're eating it. [01:51:56.120 --> 01:51:57.120] You don't know the law. [01:51:57.120 --> 01:51:58.120] And then he was like... [01:51:58.120 --> 01:51:59.120] You're live for a living. [01:51:59.120 --> 01:52:01.120] You expect me to listen to you? [01:52:01.120 --> 01:52:02.120] Yeah. [01:52:02.120 --> 01:52:07.120] I was like, so that was the first time he called me. [01:52:07.120 --> 01:52:12.120] So I contacted the person that I needed to contact. [01:52:12.120 --> 01:52:14.120] So now a couple of days passed by. [01:52:14.120 --> 01:52:19.120] Now I called them again to make sure that, hey, see how far they're along with it, if [01:52:19.120 --> 01:52:21.120] everything, because I didn't check my email. [01:52:21.120 --> 01:52:22.120] I called her. [01:52:22.120 --> 01:52:26.120] I'm like, hey, try and check to see how far you got along with the paperwork. [01:52:26.120 --> 01:52:28.120] And then she was like, oh, hold on. [01:52:28.120 --> 01:52:30.120] And then she transferred me back to the police station. [01:52:30.120 --> 01:52:32.120] I'm like, why she transferred me to the police station? [01:52:32.120 --> 01:52:33.120] She doesn't understand. [01:52:33.120 --> 01:52:35.120] I made it clear last time. [01:52:35.120 --> 01:52:36.120] I'm like, you know what I mean? [01:52:36.120 --> 01:52:38.120] My energy is pretty clear. [01:52:38.120 --> 01:52:42.120] So I hung up the phone and I called back the city attorney's office. [01:52:42.120 --> 01:52:44.120] They wouldn't pick up the phone. [01:52:44.120 --> 01:52:46.120] I said, oh, you think I'm a joke? [01:52:46.120 --> 01:52:47.120] I said, okay. [01:52:47.120 --> 01:52:48.120] I hung up the phone. [01:52:48.120 --> 01:52:52.120] I picked up the phone and I called the mayor's office. [01:52:52.120 --> 01:52:54.120] Then I found out that it's not really a mayor. [01:52:54.120 --> 01:52:59.120] It's like a half a mayor, but it's like five council members and a mayor. [01:52:59.120 --> 01:53:02.120] I said, oh, five council members and a mayor? [01:53:02.120 --> 01:53:07.120] I said, okay, whatever you do, I need to send it to that office. [01:53:07.120 --> 01:53:13.120] I said, okay, I need to put them on notice that they're going to be sued. [01:53:13.120 --> 01:53:18.120] I don't want to take the public information that I need for 50 cents. [01:53:18.120 --> 01:53:23.120] I said, okay, send me what's going on. [01:53:23.120 --> 01:53:25.120] I'm just trying to figure out what's going on. [01:53:25.120 --> 01:53:26.120] All right. [01:53:26.120 --> 01:53:29.120] So now you need to let them know that if they don't reach out, [01:53:29.120 --> 01:53:34.120] reach out to their names and send them on the lawsuit also. [01:53:34.120 --> 01:53:37.120] I'm like, hello, you still there? [01:53:37.120 --> 01:53:39.120] He's like, five, six weeks. [01:53:39.120 --> 01:53:40.120] I'm just talking. [01:53:40.120 --> 01:53:41.120] I'm like, hello, you still there? [01:53:41.120 --> 01:53:42.120] She's like, I'm right here, Mr. Libby. [01:53:42.120 --> 01:53:44.120] I'm writing down every word. [01:53:44.120 --> 01:53:47.120] I'm just making sure I have all the information. [01:53:47.120 --> 01:53:49.120] I'm like, okay. [01:53:49.120 --> 01:53:52.120] So now we hang up. [01:53:52.120 --> 01:53:56.120] And the next day I'm cleaning out the car and I get a phone call. [01:53:56.120 --> 01:53:57.120] I'm like, hello? [01:53:57.120 --> 01:54:00.120] And this man is on the phone talking very prestigious. [01:54:00.120 --> 01:54:05.120] He's like, yeah, I'm so, so, so, like, I don't want to talk to you. [01:54:05.120 --> 01:54:07.120] What are you calling me? [01:54:07.120 --> 01:54:09.120] I don't want to talk to my police officers. [01:54:09.120 --> 01:54:11.120] He's like, no, I'm not a police officer. [01:54:11.120 --> 01:54:12.120] Like, you're not a police officer. [01:54:12.120 --> 01:54:13.120] Like, who are you? [01:54:13.120 --> 01:54:16.120] I'm still in several cities. [01:54:16.120 --> 01:54:18.120] Where are you from? [01:54:18.120 --> 01:54:21.120] What seat do you sit in? [01:54:21.120 --> 01:54:22.120] Who are you? [01:54:22.120 --> 01:54:24.120] I don't know who you are. [01:54:24.120 --> 01:54:26.120] I'm still in several cities. [01:54:26.120 --> 01:54:29.120] Take a number. [01:54:29.120 --> 01:54:30.120] I'm still in several cities. [01:54:30.120 --> 01:54:31.120] Who are you? [01:54:31.120 --> 01:54:33.120] I don't know what you're saying to me. [01:54:33.120 --> 01:54:36.120] I could see if I want to talk to you or not. [01:54:36.120 --> 01:54:39.120] Like, well, I'm part of the council member, the council. [01:54:39.120 --> 01:54:41.120] I'm like, no, the man. [01:54:41.120 --> 01:54:42.120] Like, oh, wait a minute. [01:54:42.120 --> 01:54:43.120] Okay, let me stop what I'm doing. [01:54:43.120 --> 01:54:44.120] Go talk to you. [01:54:44.120 --> 01:54:46.120] I'm like, I'm happy to hear from you. [01:54:46.120 --> 01:54:48.120] I don't understand what's going on. [01:54:48.120 --> 01:54:50.120] Like, where is it going on? [01:54:50.120 --> 01:54:54.120] I call the department and then they keep on sending me to the police station. [01:54:54.120 --> 01:55:00.120] And we had an incident where a police station unlocked the stoppers and then the investigation [01:55:00.120 --> 01:55:06.120] department, the internal investigation, internal affairs did nothing about it. [01:55:06.120 --> 01:55:10.120] So now it's causing us to sue your city. [01:55:10.120 --> 01:55:17.120] So now I'm asking for the legal law that they're using to violate our rights. [01:55:17.120 --> 01:55:19.120] And I'm not getting it. [01:55:19.120 --> 01:55:21.120] I'm getting the run around. [01:55:21.120 --> 01:55:27.120] And I don't have time to play with, and I don't feel like I'm not the type to blindside [01:55:27.120 --> 01:55:28.120] people. [01:55:28.120 --> 01:55:33.120] So what I did was call the office because I know that I can apply you and every council [01:55:33.120 --> 01:55:35.120] member in that lawsuit. [01:55:35.120 --> 01:55:42.120] But I didn't want to do that without you having the opportunity to do something about the [01:55:42.120 --> 01:55:43.120] situation. [01:55:43.120 --> 01:55:51.120] And then he was like, well, are you supposed to call the police department for that? [01:55:51.120 --> 01:55:55.120] I'm like, why would I call those tyrants? [01:55:55.120 --> 01:56:00.120] Does that make sense for me to call the same people who didn't even do anything on the [01:56:00.120 --> 01:56:08.120] internal investigation and turn around and gave me a crap defense that has no legal [01:56:08.120 --> 01:56:09.120] standing? [01:56:09.120 --> 01:56:15.120] I said your city attorney is the one responsible for them on the law and their practices. [01:56:15.120 --> 01:56:19.120] The city attorney is the one who's going to give me something lawful enough so I can [01:56:19.120 --> 01:56:22.120] call them in the court and argue. [01:56:22.120 --> 01:56:23.120] I'm not going to argue. [01:56:23.120 --> 01:56:25.120] I'm not going to take crap into court. [01:56:25.120 --> 01:56:28.120] What your officers gave me was crap. [01:56:28.120 --> 01:56:30.120] I said they ignorant. [01:56:30.120 --> 01:56:34.120] I said if they knew the law, they would be attorneys. [01:56:34.120 --> 01:56:38.120] They wouldn't be police officers. [01:56:38.120 --> 01:56:48.120] And then he was like, well, I thought you're like, no, that's not how it goes. [01:56:48.120 --> 01:56:49.120] I'm well versed. [01:56:49.120 --> 01:56:54.120] I'm like, you don't know how law works. [01:56:54.120 --> 01:56:55.120] You're like, well, I do know. [01:56:55.120 --> 01:56:59.120] You just stated a while ago that you wasn't attorney. [01:56:59.120 --> 01:57:01.120] You're like, yeah, I'm not attorney. [01:57:01.120 --> 01:57:02.120] Exactly. [01:57:02.120 --> 01:57:06.120] I said, do you know what the black slot dictionary is? [01:57:06.120 --> 01:57:11.120] He said, he said, no, I said, well, I say, you just pulled my point. [01:57:11.120 --> 01:57:17.120] The black slot dictionary is the dictionary that controls all the language that we use [01:57:17.120 --> 01:57:18.120] in the legal system. [01:57:18.120 --> 01:57:21.120] So if you're telling me that you never, you don't know what it is. [01:57:21.120 --> 01:57:23.120] You never read a word of it. [01:57:23.120 --> 01:57:25.120] And somehow you know the law. [01:57:25.120 --> 01:57:28.120] It's impossible. [01:57:28.120 --> 01:57:32.120] You're ignorant to it. [01:57:32.120 --> 01:57:37.120] I said, so that's exactly why I'm not going to take anything from the ignorant officers [01:57:37.120 --> 01:57:40.120] into a court of law. [01:57:40.120 --> 01:57:44.120] I requested the information precisely what I needed. [01:57:44.120 --> 01:57:51.120] Everything is written down, specified clearly in the city's attorney's office. [01:57:51.120 --> 01:57:53.120] And that's what I wanted. [01:57:53.120 --> 01:57:57.120] And he was like, Mr. Olivier, I'm going to contact the office and I'm going to make sure [01:57:57.120 --> 01:58:05.120] to get everything to you immediately. [01:58:05.120 --> 01:58:07.120] That's beautiful, man. [01:58:07.120 --> 01:58:08.120] Just beautiful. [01:58:08.120 --> 01:58:11.120] I love it. [01:58:11.120 --> 01:58:15.120] Oh, I'm a guy in the East James. [01:58:15.120 --> 01:58:17.120] I said, that doesn't make sense. [01:58:17.120 --> 01:58:21.120] You're sitting in a seat in the seat of power and you don't even know the legal language. [01:58:21.120 --> 01:58:24.120] It sounds like a slave to me. [01:58:24.120 --> 01:58:28.120] As I said that, he was trying to get off the phone. [01:58:28.120 --> 01:58:32.120] I was touching that sweet spot. [01:58:32.120 --> 01:58:34.120] I said, how are you going to be in the seat of power? [01:58:34.120 --> 01:58:37.120] And you got to go ask somebody else what something means. [01:58:37.120 --> 01:58:39.120] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:58:39.120 --> 01:58:40.120] We are out of time. [01:58:40.120 --> 01:58:43.120] Randy Helton, Brent Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:58:43.120 --> 01:58:46.120] If everybody's on the call board, we'll call back tomorrow night. [01:58:46.120 --> 01:58:48.120] We'll take you at the front of the line. [01:58:48.120 --> 01:58:50.120] Take your all. [01:58:50.120 --> 01:58:57.120] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.120 --> 01:59:04.120] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.120 --> 01:59:08.120] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.120 --> 01:59:11.120] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.120 --> 01:59:16.120] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 [01:59:16.120 --> 01:59:20.120] or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.120 --> 01:59:25.120] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.120 --> 01:59:29.120] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.120 --> 01:59:32.120] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.120 --> 01:59:40.120] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.120 --> 01:59:49.120] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.