[00:00.000 --> 00:07.000] The following news flash is brought to you by TheLoneStarLowdown. [00:30.000 --> 00:53.120] The year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market [00:53.120 --> 00:58.380] Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and [00:58.380 --> 01:04.880] injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.880 --> 01:09.560] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into [01:09.560 --> 01:14.200] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin [01:14.200 --> 01:18.240] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.240 --> 01:22.400] new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:22.400 --> 01:24.960] equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:24.960 --> 01:28.560] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.560 --> 01:33.160] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.160 --> 01:34.160] law. [01:34.160 --> 01:37.720] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.720 --> 01:42.240] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.240 --> 01:48.400] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB1325 works, as [01:48.400 --> 01:54.640] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, China Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.640 --> 01:59.120] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.120 --> 02:01.920] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.920 --> 02:06.920] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.920 --> 02:10.920] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.920 --> 02:13.640] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.640 --> 02:17.520] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.520 --> 02:22.720] charged with. [02:22.720 --> 02:27.560] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [02:27.560 --> 02:32.480] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.480 --> 02:38.160] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.160 --> 02:39.160] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.160 --> 02:43.920] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.920 --> 02:50.200] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.200 --> 03:17.040] glow. [03:17.040 --> 03:39.960] And [03:39.960 --> 03:45.960] I can take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use [03:45.960 --> 03:51.960] The word I was good for the gender, don't wanna work for the blues [03:53.960 --> 04:03.960] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue's All Radio on this, the first day of October 2021 [04:03.960 --> 04:12.960] And we were talking to Chris in Colorado. Okay, Chris, I'm kind of changing how I think about lawsuits [04:12.960 --> 04:21.960] You know, most of them, especially civil suits, they almost always go to let's make a deal [04:21.960 --> 04:32.960] So I changed my strategy. I'm not looking for all the specifics in particular as a law I need to win the case at the end of the day [04:32.960 --> 04:44.960] Heck, I don't even ever expect to get there. How can I beat the other guy up enough and make him miserable enough that they don't want to pay me to go away and leave him alone? [04:44.960 --> 04:54.960] Exactly. It's a skill. [04:54.960 --> 05:04.960] So, you know, I look for motions and pleadings for all kinds of stuff. You're a pro se, you can file anything you want to [05:04.960 --> 05:14.960] If a lawyer files a motion that's not appropriate, a judge will beat him up, everybody will be upset at him [05:14.960 --> 05:22.960] But you're just taking an old pro se. Heck, you don't know any better. They gotta go in and do all the legal research and write the pleadings [05:22.960 --> 05:27.960] I look for stuff that hasn't been adjudicated [05:27.960 --> 05:34.960] I get this from Eddie Craig. He always looks for constitutional questions [05:34.960 --> 05:43.960] The hate constitutional questions, or you look for something that if they rule against you, it changes everything [05:43.960 --> 05:48.960] So they gotta fight you like crazy to not get a ruling against you [05:48.960 --> 05:57.960] So look for those unusual issues. Lawyers got all these motions and pleadings already written up [05:57.960 --> 06:04.960] They get pro se's and those dirty rotten rascals, they don't file the playbook [06:04.960 --> 06:10.960] They write up their own stuff. What the heck is this? I don't have an answer already written up for that [06:10.960 --> 06:15.960] I don't have to go research it. Shoot [06:15.960 --> 06:21.960] So that's kind of my strategy. It's not that difficult [06:21.960 --> 06:27.960] Well, I'm playing that. I've got actually a lot of things on deck. I've been doing some constitutional research [06:27.960 --> 06:34.960] I've found some awesome lawsuits that have brought towing even into the first and 14th amendment. It's just awesome stuff [06:34.960 --> 06:37.960] So I've got a lot of stuff to plagiarize that's gonna work well [06:37.960 --> 06:43.960] But however, I think I'm actually on the judge's good side already [06:43.960 --> 06:52.960] He accepted my lawsuit with just one correction and he also gave me an extension for 90 days and no lawyer said I would ever get 90 days [06:52.960 --> 07:00.960] So then at the hearing, the first initial hearing, he asked me at the end of all of our discussion [07:00.960 --> 07:05.960] He says, have you ever filed a lawsuit before in federal court? I said no, Your Honor [07:05.960 --> 07:10.960] And then he said, okay, motion granted. I will see you in November and that was it [07:10.960 --> 07:18.960] That was a good sign. Did you respond to his criticism saying that the court's criticisms are well taken? [07:18.960 --> 07:22.960] Yeah, that was my correction. I totally used it. I think that's what warned him over [07:22.960 --> 07:31.960] So he didn't get any pro stay with an attitude. He got pro stay like totally, you know, appreciating him [07:31.960 --> 07:35.960] And so he was very polite to me as well. He's a nice guy anyway. I think I've heard that before [07:35.960 --> 07:40.960] So I don't want to upset the guy by saying, okay, I'm not talking to the lawyers because I have no business with them [07:40.960 --> 07:47.960] But I actually want to do that. I'm looking for a way to do that and not upset the judge [07:47.960 --> 07:54.960] Okay, you don't have to do it the way Brett does. You can play sweet and nice [07:54.960 --> 08:04.960] I appreciate you guys and I appreciate this is your job but I don't have any duty to talk with you and frankly, I don't trust lawyers [08:04.960 --> 08:07.960] I'd rather talk to the party themselves [08:07.960 --> 08:18.960] Exactly. Please have the party themselves. You are under contract with your party. I'm not [08:18.960 --> 08:24.960] And if I had a lawyer, I would be under contract that forbid me to talk to the client on the other side [08:24.960 --> 08:31.960] But I don't have that restriction unless you can show where your restriction applies to me [08:31.960 --> 08:44.960] So do the same thing to them but just in a way that the judge will say, well, this is just an ignorant pro say asking reasonable questions [08:44.960 --> 08:52.960] Okay, I think that's the angle. I like it. Okay, that'll be undone for the next one [08:52.960 --> 09:03.960] Okay, thank you Chris. Now we're going to go to James in Texas. Hello, James. What do you have for us today? [09:03.960 --> 09:10.960] Well, I got court Tuesday for a traffic ticket but I wanted to ask you something [09:10.960 --> 09:17.960] Randy, when you got arrested in Wise County did they fingerprint you and take your mug shot? [09:17.960 --> 09:20.960] Yes, they did [09:20.960 --> 09:22.960] Do you have that in your suit? [09:22.960 --> 09:30.960] No, I didn't. My suit was very focused. I only have one issue [09:30.960 --> 09:42.960] And I very carefully, if you get a lot of issues, they'll pick the one they like, dismiss for that one and ignore all the rest [09:42.960 --> 09:58.960] Yeah, I've heard you said that before but I got this, for some reason I was thinking about that today and I went, well, if they took his fingerprints and stuff on arrest, that would be a cause of action [09:58.960 --> 10:08.960] Yeah, but it's not, I have a very specific purpose when they arrested me I was thrilled [10:08.960 --> 10:21.960] Oh yeah, this'll work. They could never arrest me for something more stupid, it will give me precisely the claim I need [10:21.960 --> 10:34.960] So I did not want to dilute the suit. Everything I claim rises directly out of the failure to take before a magistrate [10:34.960 --> 10:51.960] The paramedics, the biological data they collected, that's been collected from me so many times that bringing such a claim would be somewhat insincere [10:51.960 --> 10:57.960] Last time I was arrested in Austin, the jailer looked up and said, you again? [10:57.960 --> 11:06.960] I said, yeah, I want to enter a complaint about your room service here, it sucks. He said, we'll see what we can do about that [11:06.960 --> 11:13.960] The guy is bringing my baloney sandwich and the bunk is right at the back of the cell, a big long narrow cell [11:13.960 --> 11:23.960] He opens the door and I start to get up. No, no, don't get up. I understand that you had some complaints about our room service and we're trying to improve [11:23.960 --> 11:28.960] He threw you the sandwich [11:28.960 --> 11:35.960] The jailers weren't too bad. They were kind of fun. As long as I didn't give them a hard time they were easy to get along with [11:35.960 --> 11:43.960] So raising that issue, for me it seemed I didn't want to get things off point [11:43.960 --> 11:50.960] Gotcha. That's just something I thought about today and I thought, huh, I need to ask you about that [11:50.960 --> 12:04.960] No, I'm not concerned about court Tuesday. It's a JP court, so even if I lose, which we all know I will, it'll just be a trial de novo [12:04.960 --> 12:12.960] Okay, glad you mentioned trial de novo. Do you know what that means? [12:12.960 --> 12:34.960] It's basically a do-over. No. That's what they want you to think. You get a new trial, but it's not a do-over. A do-over indicates that what went on in the first trial is not relevant anymore [12:34.960 --> 12:40.960] Because we're doing it all over again. And I do understand that aspect of it [12:40.960 --> 12:46.960] I really wasn't talking to you. I'm talking to everybody else. That's why I'm glad you brought that up [12:46.960 --> 13:01.960] And when you do an appeal de novo, that means it is de novo for the purpose of perfecting the appeal [13:01.960 --> 13:06.960] That means you don't have to appeal based on writ of error [13:06.960 --> 13:20.960] And that's all it means. If there was a statement in the original trial court, it's still collateral estoppel [13:20.960 --> 13:33.960] If they made a boo boo and said the wrong thing in the trial court, they don't get to do it over in the appellate court or in the first appeal in the county court where it's trial de novo [13:33.960 --> 13:37.960] That's a really important distinction [13:37.960 --> 13:44.960] You bring up what they said in the first one. The prosecutor's going to object, this is trial de novo [13:44.960 --> 13:54.960] The judge, I need you to sanction that lawyer. He knows this trial de novo only for the purpose of perfecting appeal [13:54.960 --> 14:00.960] Not for shielding them from their bad behavior in the first trial [14:00.960 --> 14:05.960] Okay, thank you for giving me a chance to say that. I don't get to address that often [14:05.960 --> 14:20.960] Randy, if there's a case where it was supposed to be on the record and the record, they had a problem, technical difficulties [14:20.960 --> 14:31.960] Is there some kind of mechanism for effecting this same kind of a thing? Is it only JP? [14:31.960 --> 14:48.960] Oh, okay, if it's a court of record and they don't have a record, then there was no trial. They have to do it over [14:48.960 --> 14:54.960] That could be really prejudicial [14:54.960 --> 15:02.960] Yes, it can, both sides. That should get a motion for sanctions against the court [15:02.960 --> 15:06.960] Whoever it is is supposed to keep that record [15:06.960 --> 15:19.960] As generally in the municipal courts, the municipal court of record is the only one that's required to keep a record. They generally use a recording [15:19.960 --> 15:28.960] So if there's a recording, whoever operates the recorder is the one that gets hammered for sanctions [15:28.960 --> 15:38.960] So there's not any kind of mechanism to say what was said before, like the witnesses got impeached and so forth [15:38.960 --> 15:44.960] Well, they did all this perjury and now, well, next time they know how to live better to not be caught [15:44.960 --> 15:54.960] You can make those claims anyway. Proving them is difficult unless you have a court watcher [15:54.960 --> 16:00.960] If you've got a court watcher, you've got a record [16:00.960 --> 16:10.960] Yeah, I'm going to try to get two people to go to court with me to observe [16:10.960 --> 16:18.960] Make sure each of them has two recorders, one in their pocket and one in their hand [16:18.960 --> 16:24.960] And when Judge tells them to turn it off, you turn off the one in your hand [16:24.960 --> 16:34.960] And Brett, bringing up the court record stuff, I'm going to go in with my GoPro [16:34.960 --> 16:44.960] Go in with your GoPro and with, what's the case, Brett? [16:44.960 --> 16:50.960] The guy with a four-horse, turner driver [16:50.960 --> 16:59.960] Go in with turner driver and don't give it to the judge, give it to the bailiff when you're asking to arrest the judge [16:59.960 --> 17:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:04.960 --> 17:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Merris Proven Method [17:08.960 --> 17:13.960] Michael Merris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two [17:13.960 --> 17:19.960] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [17:19.960 --> 17:23.960] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons [17:23.960 --> 17:25.960] How to answer letters and phone calls [17:25.960 --> 17:28.960] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports [17:28.960 --> 17:32.960] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [17:32.960 --> 17:37.960] The Michael Merris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [17:37.960 --> 17:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well [17:40.960 --> 17:45.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner [17:45.960 --> 17:48.960] or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com [17:48.960 --> 17:56.960] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:56.960 --> 17:59.960] to learn how to stop debt collectors now [17:59.960 --> 18:03.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Center [18:03.960 --> 18:06.960] In today's America, we live in an us against them society [18:06.960 --> 18:11.960] 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 [18:11.960 --> 18:14.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [18:14.960 --> 18:18.960] The right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly, the right to due process of law [18:18.960 --> 18:24.960] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [18:24.960 --> 18:27.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Katie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio [18:27.960 --> 18:32.960] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [18:32.960 --> 18:34.960] and how to hold reports to the Rule of Law [18:34.960 --> 18:38.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [18:38.960 --> 18:39.960] and ordering your copy today [18:39.960 --> 18:44.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [18:44.960 --> 18:46.960] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [18:46.960 --> 18:49.960] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material [18:49.960 --> 18:53.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [18:53.960 --> 19:08.960] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve [19:23.960 --> 19:28.960] You know what I mean? My friend, I'm not a judge. Come on! [19:28.960 --> 19:33.960] You're still got me free, getting me a proper landing [19:33.960 --> 19:39.960] Callin' his name once again, everyday you'll know he worth it in [19:39.960 --> 19:45.960] You're still got me free, getting me a proper landing [19:45.960 --> 19:50.960] Callin' his name once again, everyday you'll know he worth it in [19:50.960 --> 19:53.960] Okay, we are back. Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [19:53.960 --> 19:56.960] We're talkin' to James in Texas and James [19:56.960 --> 20:02.960] Is this gonna be an in-person or a Zoom court? [20:02.960 --> 20:05.960] As far as I know, it's in-person [20:05.960 --> 20:09.960] Because if it was Zoom, we could get you lots of court watchers [20:09.960 --> 20:10.960] Yeah [20:10.960 --> 20:11.960] Me too [20:11.960 --> 20:22.960] I wanted to, because I don't get to, you know, I've heard y'all come in [20:22.960 --> 20:26.960] I need, Brett, anytime y'all need people to watch [20:26.960 --> 20:30.960] I'm sittin' there in front of a computer all day waitin' [20:30.960 --> 20:33.960] Hit me up, you've got my phone number [20:33.960 --> 20:36.960] Just hit me up, I'll be glad to check in [20:36.960 --> 20:42.960] I'm glad you brought that up, Randy, that's something I wanted to talk to Brett about [20:42.960 --> 20:47.960] Just let me know, I can certainly tune in anytime [20:47.960 --> 20:53.960] But I'm not just goin' in with Turner Driver [20:53.960 --> 20:58.960] I'm also gonna go in with Walker V. Packer [20:58.960 --> 21:00.960] What is it, versus Packer? [21:00.960 --> 21:03.960] Not Packer V. Walker, but Walker V. Packer [21:03.960 --> 21:07.960] I got it down, finally [21:07.960 --> 21:16.960] I'm takin' light, I'll have about four different, you know, the one where an answer played in [21:16.960 --> 21:19.960] by the opposition becomes judicially admitted facts [21:19.960 --> 21:22.960] I think that's the PEC, right? [21:22.960 --> 21:28.960] And then the one that says once something's become a judicially admitted fact [21:28.960 --> 21:33.960] the opposition is to stop from arguing that point [21:33.960 --> 21:36.960] I will be goin' in with that one too [21:36.960 --> 21:38.960] What's that one? [21:38.960 --> 21:43.960] Brett, I don't know, I asked Randy, he's the one that gave it to me [21:43.960 --> 21:45.960] I did? [21:45.960 --> 21:48.960] Yeah, but I've slept since then [21:48.960 --> 21:51.960] Yeah, me too [21:51.960 --> 21:53.960] I looked at it [21:53.960 --> 21:56.960] For the life of me, I can't remember it [21:56.960 --> 22:02.960] If you come across it and remember to email it to us [22:02.960 --> 22:06.960] Okay, yeah, I'll send that to y'all tomorrow [22:06.960 --> 22:10.960] So I'm goin' in with at least four different ones [22:10.960 --> 22:16.960] And again, I have no illusions that I'm gonna win this [22:16.960 --> 22:19.960] But hey, it's more practice is the way I look at this [22:19.960 --> 22:23.960] This is only my second time goin' into it [22:23.960 --> 22:25.960] There you go [22:25.960 --> 22:32.960] I will file my notice of appeal when I go into court [22:32.960 --> 22:34.960] for the trial [22:34.960 --> 22:37.960] But here's the thing [22:37.960 --> 22:40.960] And I talked about this the last time I talked to y'all [22:40.960 --> 22:47.960] This judge, two and a half years, well back in 2018 [22:47.960 --> 22:53.960] He's the one that denied my motion for a fair and impartial trial [22:53.960 --> 22:57.960] when we were havin' a motion to him where he just said [22:57.960 --> 23:00.960] Your motions are denied [23:00.960 --> 23:03.960] And I just... [23:03.960 --> 23:06.960] I asked him, I said, you're denying all of my motions? [23:06.960 --> 23:08.960] He said, yeah, they're denied [23:08.960 --> 23:12.960] And I just leaned back to my chair and kind of got a little... [23:12.960 --> 23:15.960] I was tryin' not to just smile [23:15.960 --> 23:18.960] But the prosecutor stood right beside me and I could... [23:18.960 --> 23:20.960] He jerked back because he was watchin' me [23:20.960 --> 23:23.960] He was like, I see smilein' [23:23.960 --> 23:26.960] Well, when I walked in and handed him criminal complaints [23:26.960 --> 23:33.960] against a judge the next day, he understood while I was smilein' [23:33.960 --> 23:36.960] And he just... [23:36.960 --> 23:40.960] He just sat there and I said, you know, how long has this judge been... [23:40.960 --> 23:43.960] He said, well, I started here in 2011 [23:43.960 --> 23:45.960] He was here when I got here and I went [23:45.960 --> 23:48.960] and he still doesn't know somethin' this basic [23:48.960 --> 23:51.960] And I was just raggin' on the judge [23:51.960 --> 23:56.960] And he was gonna print, you know, I don't know what to... [23:56.960 --> 23:59.960] But he said, I'll get him to the district attorney [23:59.960 --> 24:01.960] And I said, okay, thank you [24:01.960 --> 24:06.960] And I didn't push it, I should've, but... [24:06.960 --> 24:10.960] So he didn't even hear this case because of that [24:10.960 --> 24:12.960] Because he... [24:12.960 --> 24:15.960] The assistant county attorney witnessed it [24:15.960 --> 24:19.960] A sheriff's deputy that gave me a ticket and his bailiff [24:19.960 --> 24:21.960] There were three people that witnessed that [24:21.960 --> 24:22.960] And I had it written... [24:22.960 --> 24:25.960] Have you moved for his disqualification? [24:25.960 --> 24:26.960] Oh, yeah [24:26.960 --> 24:28.960] Yeah [24:28.960 --> 24:29.960] And last time... [24:29.960 --> 24:32.960] He can't do anything else [24:32.960 --> 24:38.960] And when I filed the criminal complaint [24:38.960 --> 24:40.960] I also filed a judicial conduct complaint [24:40.960 --> 24:44.960] and sent a recording in of the judge denying [24:44.960 --> 24:48.960] my motions and I sent copies of the motions in [24:48.960 --> 24:53.960] And he recused himself that time [24:53.960 --> 24:58.960] And I messed up because, like, again, that was my first time [24:58.960 --> 25:02.960] They moved it over to precinct one [25:02.960 --> 25:06.960] And we held the trial at precinct one [25:06.960 --> 25:09.960] And, like, he told me, Randy, last time [25:09.960 --> 25:11.960] that's an improper venue [25:11.960 --> 25:16.960] And I wasn't expecting to go to trial that day [25:16.960 --> 25:21.960] because I had a disqualification motion against the precinct one judge [25:21.960 --> 25:24.960] And he just denied it under some statute [25:24.960 --> 25:27.960] under the government code [25:27.960 --> 25:29.960] And so we went to trial [25:29.960 --> 25:34.960] And I should've been prepared, but I wasn't [25:34.960 --> 25:38.960] And I should've caught that [25:38.960 --> 25:43.960] I didn't think about it until I talked to you the last time I called in [25:43.960 --> 25:45.960] And I realized that way [25:45.960 --> 25:49.960] And I actually told them, the court clerk, we won't be doing that again [25:49.960 --> 25:53.960] And they're telling me, you're not going to tell us how to run our courts [25:53.960 --> 25:56.960] and blah, blah, blah, no [25:56.960 --> 26:00.960] Well, honestly, no disrespect, but this isn't your court [26:00.960 --> 26:02.960] This is the people's court [26:02.960 --> 26:04.960] It's my court [26:04.960 --> 26:07.960] And you're right, I don't tell you what to do [26:07.960 --> 26:10.960] The legislature tells us what to do [26:10.960 --> 26:14.960] And I don't think the court clerks like me too much [26:14.960 --> 26:18.960] They got a little bent with me [26:18.960 --> 26:22.960] I got over it [26:22.960 --> 26:27.960] So it's... [26:27.960 --> 26:29.960] I'm enjoying myself [26:29.960 --> 26:32.960] Even though I lost my first trial [26:32.960 --> 26:35.960] I enjoyed doing it [26:35.960 --> 26:37.960] And the prosecutor actually told me [26:37.960 --> 26:40.960] He said, how many times have you done this? [26:40.960 --> 26:42.960] And I said, this is the first time [26:42.960 --> 26:46.960] He said, well, for your first time, you did pretty good [26:46.960 --> 26:50.960] And I went, well, you know, I'm going to appeal this [26:50.960 --> 26:52.960] He said, I have no doubt [26:52.960 --> 26:56.960] And then, of course, I ended up having to go out of town [26:56.960 --> 27:03.960] My dad had a surgery head go through the next day [27:03.960 --> 27:06.960] And I missed my 10-day window for appeal [27:06.960 --> 27:09.960] So I will be filing my notice of appeal Tuesday [27:09.960 --> 27:11.960] When I go in the court before the trial [27:11.960 --> 27:13.960] So that it's already there [27:13.960 --> 27:16.960] And I won't have to worry about that [27:16.960 --> 27:22.960] But when I asked for a... [27:22.960 --> 27:24.960] Because this judge has already told me before [27:24.960 --> 27:26.960] I'm not going to give you a fine in effect [27:26.960 --> 27:28.960] You don't have a right to a fine in effect [27:28.960 --> 27:30.960] Some conclusions at law [27:30.960 --> 27:33.960] But I will ask for one this time [27:33.960 --> 27:35.960] And I will... [27:35.960 --> 27:42.960] I'll ask Fortin Court and then I will file a... [27:42.960 --> 27:45.960] Official oppression [27:45.960 --> 27:49.960] Failure to perform a duty he's required to perform [27:49.960 --> 27:51.960] That's what I filed against the district judge here [27:51.960 --> 27:56.960] In Wise County [27:56.960 --> 28:01.960] But here, this is the one question I really wanted to ask [28:01.960 --> 28:04.960] If this judge tries to hear this case [28:04.960 --> 28:07.960] And I ask the bailiff to arrest him, and he won't [28:07.960 --> 28:09.960] And I ask... [28:09.960 --> 28:13.960] I'll ask the prosecutor [28:13.960 --> 28:16.960] Are you going to tell the bailiff to arrest him [28:16.960 --> 28:18.960] Or are you going to collude and conspire to commit [28:18.960 --> 28:21.960] That let me shield him from prosecution [28:21.960 --> 28:24.960] And he doesn't tell him to do it [28:24.960 --> 28:27.960] Do I call 911 at that point? [28:27.960 --> 28:29.960] Absolutely [28:29.960 --> 28:32.960] Okay, that's what I was... [28:32.960 --> 28:37.960] That was the main question I wanted to ask tonight [28:37.960 --> 28:40.960] Well, does the... [28:40.960 --> 28:43.960] Does the judge have a requirement by law [28:43.960 --> 28:51.960] To disqualify or recuse since he's only a JP? [28:51.960 --> 28:53.960] And they don't [28:53.960 --> 28:56.960] Yeah, I haven't seen it [28:56.960 --> 29:00.960] No, they don't [29:00.960 --> 29:03.960] The... [29:03.960 --> 29:09.960] Before that last trial, I was talking to the prosecutor about that [29:09.960 --> 29:12.960] And he said, hold on, let's go talk to the judge [29:12.960 --> 29:15.960] And we went back there and we talked to the judge [29:15.960 --> 29:19.960] And then he had us step out of his office [29:19.960 --> 29:22.960] And I guess he got on the phone with the head administrative judge [29:22.960 --> 29:26.960] And they gave him my heads up to a statute [29:26.960 --> 29:28.960] And I didn't write it down [29:28.960 --> 29:31.960] I didn't bring my patent in with me [29:31.960 --> 29:34.960] But there's a statute in the Texas government code [29:34.960 --> 29:37.960] Where a JP does not have to... [29:37.960 --> 29:42.960] He can just deny the disqualification [29:42.960 --> 29:44.960] And he read it to him [29:44.960 --> 29:46.960] And I was like, well, crud [29:46.960 --> 29:48.960] I never saw that coming [29:48.960 --> 29:52.960] And so that's why I had the trial that I wasn't expecting [29:52.960 --> 29:54.960] Yeah, there's one in the government [29:54.960 --> 29:59.960] All right, let's talk about it after we come back from the sponsors [29:59.960 --> 30:02.960] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise [30:02.960 --> 30:04.960] But you might not know that the way you walk [30:04.960 --> 30:07.960] Could predict how long you're going to live [30:07.960 --> 30:08.960] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht [30:08.960 --> 30:13.960] And I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment [30:13.960 --> 30:15.960] Privacy is under attack [30:15.960 --> 30:19.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [30:19.960 --> 30:23.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [30:23.960 --> 30:25.960] So protect your rights [30:25.960 --> 30:29.960] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [30:29.960 --> 30:31.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [30:31.960 --> 30:35.960] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com [30:35.960 --> 30:39.960] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing [30:39.960 --> 30:42.960] Start over with StartPage [30:42.960 --> 30:47.960] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live [30:47.960 --> 30:55.960] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected [30:55.960 --> 30:59.960] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour [30:59.960 --> 31:06.960] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures [31:06.960 --> 31:09.960] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer [31:09.960 --> 31:15.960] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk in a few minutes [31:15.960 --> 31:20.960] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care [31:20.960 --> 31:40.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [31:51.960 --> 31:55.960] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son [31:55.960 --> 31:57.960] Go to buildingwhat.org [31:57.960 --> 32:00.960] Why it's felt, why it matters, and what you can do [32:00.960 --> 32:05.960] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year [32:05.960 --> 32:11.960] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [32:11.960 --> 32:14.960] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516 [32:14.960 --> 32:20.960] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven [32:20.960 --> 32:25.960] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [32:25.960 --> 32:34.960] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works [32:34.960 --> 32:40.960] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week [32:40.960 --> 32:47.960] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development [32:47.960 --> 33:00.960] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures [33:00.960 --> 33:10.960] Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:30.960 --> 33:36.960] Oh, yeah, I won't [33:38.960 --> 33:41.960] Oh, I won't [33:41.960 --> 33:48.960] I won't let you pull the load over my eyes [33:49.960 --> 33:56.960] And they must refuse your news also coming like [33:56.960 --> 34:04.960] It seems you like to say but please take some words to the wise [34:04.960 --> 34:14.960] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to James in Texas. [34:14.960 --> 34:23.960] Okay, James, that's interesting. Brett, you were talking about disqualifying a JP on the board. [34:23.960 --> 34:36.960] Because James had mentioned that there's something about the JP, Justice of the Peace, is it's okay for him to deny a disqualification motion. [34:36.960 --> 34:50.960] And yeah, I was mentioning on the break that I've seen in the Texas government code where it does reference that if a JP is disqualified, here's what you do. [34:50.960 --> 34:54.960] You can bring in somebody from another precinct, you can, here's how you handle that. [34:54.960 --> 35:03.960] But in the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 18A, where it talks about disqualifying a judge, it carves out an exclusion, an exception, [35:03.960 --> 35:11.960] so that the Justices of the Peace are not, they don't follow that procedure for disqualification. [35:11.960 --> 35:23.960] And I don't understand why they would be carved out and we don't have, the people don't have some other remedy that's specifically laid out there. [35:23.960 --> 35:33.960] Like if we're not going to get, if the rules are not going to have something special for a JP, why did they carve the JP out of the other one, the general one? [35:33.960 --> 35:42.960] I don't know, I don't understand it. I haven't found an answer to this about how do you disqualify a JP? [35:42.960 --> 35:52.960] What are the grounds for disqualification? What's the process? A JP is accepted from this, so where's the one for a JP? [35:52.960 --> 36:04.960] Yeah, and Randy, you had another sort of a general solution for that? [36:04.960 --> 36:15.960] Well, you can follow the disqualification motion and you can deny it. So you can always do an interlocutory appeal. [36:15.960 --> 36:25.960] But I'm not sure how these, I haven't read the status, if he's exempted from the Rule 18 grounds for disqualification, [36:25.960 --> 36:37.960] they established constitutional grounds for disqualification, if the JP is exempted from that, don't know what grounds you could have to disqualify him. [36:37.960 --> 36:51.960] Well, you've still got the Constitution to fall back on. No judge shall sit in the case where he's interested. [36:51.960 --> 37:00.960] And where you file criminal charges against the judge, he's interested. [37:00.960 --> 37:07.960] I don't know. That's his best I got. James, have you filed criminal charges against this judge? [37:07.960 --> 37:24.960] I didn't file criminal charges against the one that actually heard the case. I did file multiple against the one that has the case right now. [37:24.960 --> 37:42.960] So that should be around if the criminal complaints you filed were not adjudicated, then they're still open. So he has an interest. [37:42.960 --> 38:05.960] And in my motion to disqualify or recuse him, I attached copies of those criminal complaints, judicial conduct complaints, everything I filed against him was attached to that, to that motion. [38:05.960 --> 38:29.960] Okay. That motion being motion to disqualify. Yes, sir. But, you know, obviously he doesn't read motions because why else, why in the world would any judge, it just boggles my mind. [38:29.960 --> 38:40.960] The nine motion for a fair and impartial trial that just proves he doesn't read them. If he just denied them out of hand. [38:40.960 --> 38:42.960] Right. [38:42.960 --> 38:48.960] So. [38:48.960 --> 38:53.960] I'm thinking Walker v. Packer. [38:53.960 --> 38:59.960] Well, and yes, and I will be, I will have a copy of that. [38:59.960 --> 39:09.960] For those of you who don't know what it says, it says that a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [39:09.960 --> 39:14.960] A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. [39:14.960 --> 39:25.960] If we penal code the state of Texas, if a public official abuses his discretion in the process, not a citizen, full of free access to or enjoyment of a right. [39:25.960 --> 39:32.960] Well, that's a class A misdemeanor in Texas. [39:32.960 --> 39:51.960] It's a failure to arrest him. Oh, believe me, I will. And when I, when I made my initial appearance in 2018, I brought a special appearance subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [39:51.960 --> 40:04.960] I think I had six or seven different motions and the clerks didn't know what to do with it. And I guess Mr. Puckett heard him talking to me. [40:04.960 --> 40:13.960] He finally came out and was asking what I was doing and I told him, you know, I'm filing these motions. [40:13.960 --> 40:23.960] And I have a trial here and he told me, he said, well, you know, I can just deny those motions if I want to. [40:23.960 --> 40:28.960] I don't have to. [40:28.960 --> 40:38.960] I can just deny it. And I went, really? He said, yeah, it's in my discretion if I want to grant your motions or not. [40:38.960 --> 40:45.960] I went, okay. If that's what you think. [40:45.960 --> 40:49.960] But we ended up getting in a shouting match with each other. [40:49.960 --> 40:59.960] I went in the next day and apologized to him. He apologized to me. Of course, he'd already gotten criminal complaints filed against him and judicial conduct. [40:59.960 --> 41:11.960] Of course, he didn't know about the judicial conduct complaint yet, but I guess the assistant county attorney had called him and told him that I filed criminal complaints against him. [41:11.960 --> 41:14.960] Yeah, that kind of news travels quick. [41:14.960 --> 41:35.960] We had a, we had a decent conversation that time, but his bailiff came out. He heard the judge raising his voice and he came out dressed in, he was wearing black fatigues with his gun and everything on, a black t-shirt. [41:35.960 --> 41:46.960] And he got right across from me and leaned against the counter and crossed his arms and just glared at me. And I just looked up at him and smiled. [41:46.960 --> 42:02.960] Like, okay. Now go ahead, glare. All you want. You're not intimidating me. So the bailiff doesn't like me either. Nobody in that courtroom likes me. [42:02.960 --> 42:11.960] So it's, you know, it's an uphill battle, but hey, it is what it is. [42:11.960 --> 42:17.960] So, but, oh, it gets better as you fight them more. [42:17.960 --> 42:18.960] Oh, yeah. [42:18.960 --> 42:23.960] If nothing else, they gain a grudging respect. [42:23.960 --> 42:32.960] I think the assistant county attorney is already there. He's actually a pretty nice guy. [42:32.960 --> 42:43.960] You know, I think he, he appreciated what I attempted to do. I'm not going to say I did, but attempted to do. [42:43.960 --> 43:03.960] He sat out there and talked while the jury was deliberating. He seems very easy to get along with, but, you know, and of course, when they called me in for, what do you call it, let's make a deal with a prosecutor this time. [43:03.960 --> 43:16.960] When he sat down, he looked, he just looked at me, called me into room and he's looking across, had me across the table and he went, well, we can do a pre-child diversion or deferred adjudication. [43:16.960 --> 43:27.960] And I just looked at him and I, and, you know, I think the pre-child diversion, I could pay 50 bucks and I just looked at him and I said, you know, you're not getting any money from me, right? [43:27.960 --> 43:38.960] I know, but I had to ask. I said, okay, no, we're going to trial. [43:38.960 --> 43:53.960] There is something very satisfying about that. When you, most people, when they experienced the courts, they're taught in school to be terrified of them. [43:53.960 --> 43:59.960] Being able to get past that terror, there's something extremely satisfying about it. [43:59.960 --> 44:10.960] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:10.960 --> 44:16.960] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:16.960 --> 44:24.960] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:24.960 --> 44:30.960] LogoSradial Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:30.960 --> 44:38.960] We have come to trust Jevity so much. We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:38.960 --> 44:46.960] When you order from LogoSradialNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:46.960 --> 44:59.960] As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [44:59.960 --> 45:14.960] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.960 --> 45:22.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.960 --> 45:33.960] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:33.960 --> 45:42.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.960 --> 45:55.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit LulavLawRadio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.960 --> 46:22.960] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:22.960 --> 46:39.960] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm wishing for. I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:39.960 --> 46:53.960] I'm just here makin' my livin' pushin' buttons. I give my message out to anyone who's shinin' [46:53.960 --> 47:01.960] Alright, we are back. LulavLawRadio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brad Fountain, and we're talking with James in Texas. [47:01.960 --> 47:11.960] Okay, here we go, James. Yeah, and this is kind of the last thing I've got tonight. [47:11.960 --> 47:24.960] And I believe I talked to, I know I talked to Randy about it before. I don't know if you were on yet, Brad. [47:24.960 --> 47:40.960] Next time I get a traffic citation by a municipal officer or a sheriff's deputy, when they don't tell me I'm under arrest, I'm just gonna let them take me to jail. [47:40.960 --> 47:54.960] And Randy told me, so you're wantin' to pick the fight, huh? Well, kind of, but I won't be pickin' the fight, they will. If they don't tell me I'm under arrest, they don't take me to jail. [47:54.960 --> 48:10.960] And I've already told my roommate, Nathan, I said, you know, if I ever call you and say, and ask for Lou Ann, who is my divorce attorney, you'll know I'm in jail. [48:10.960 --> 48:18.960] And he goes, we'll come get you. I said, no, you won't. You're gonna leave me there until I see the judge the next morning. [48:18.960 --> 48:29.960] I'll be calling you to let you know I won't be home. And you need to call Kathy and tell her I'm gonna be at work late the next day. [48:29.960 --> 48:43.960] But I wanted to ask, Brad, if that ever happens, is it okay if I have Nathan call you and get you started on him? [48:43.960 --> 48:54.960] Hey, hey, whenever I, if I get a call from the jail, from James, I'm gonna say, James, who? [48:54.960 --> 49:05.960] Well, I know rule of law radio's a number by heart by now, but Randy, I've had your cell phone number, I guess you've still got the same one I got it off an archive years ago. [49:05.960 --> 49:19.960] I've never called it. So I wouldn't know how to call your number if I wanted to. But no, that, you know, I'll call my roommates and let them know. [49:19.960 --> 49:26.960] They'll know exactly where I am when I give them that coded message and they know to leave me there. [49:26.960 --> 49:46.960] But my daughter was here tonight. And we were talking about, you know, people doing stuff. And she said, yeah, dad, the one thing about you is that I know is it if anybody called you and asked for help, you're not going to ask them why you're going to ask them, [49:46.960 --> 49:53.960] where are you and what do you need? Yeah, that is one of my weaknesses. [49:53.960 --> 50:06.960] I'm the same way I help. And of course, I'm getting old enough now that I can't roof houses in July or August anymore, but, you know, people need help moving. [50:06.960 --> 50:14.960] They need help. We plumb in their house, whatever. I'm gonna help. [50:14.960 --> 50:27.960] Oh, that is wonderful. I invited my whole family to a Christmas party. We were going to have a plumbing party in the crawl space. [50:27.960 --> 50:32.960] And I even agreed to provide the wetsuits. [50:32.960 --> 50:36.960] And none of them showed up. [50:36.960 --> 50:52.960] In February, under a pyramid house and water all under and took me about, of course, I was working two jobs and going to school at the time, took me about six weeks to get it all done. [50:52.960 --> 51:05.960] I did it a room at a time, but in there. And then about a month later, a good buddy of mine, same thing. And he and I are in about six inches of water under his house. [51:05.960 --> 51:06.960] Oh, yeah. [51:06.960 --> 51:16.960] February, yeah, or March by that time, but it was miserable. But hey, that's who I am. But no breath. [51:16.960 --> 51:21.960] If I, which sometime when you get a chance to give me a call. [51:21.960 --> 51:36.960] And I'll talk, if you don't want to do it, that's fine. If you do, hey, that'd be great. But I could let you know who would be calling and all that. But that's all I've got for tonight, guys. [51:36.960 --> 51:44.960] I'm sure I'll call back in next week and let you know how bloody I got. [51:44.960 --> 51:47.960] And how bloody they got. [51:47.960 --> 51:56.960] Yeah. Of course, they may not know the extent of their injuries by the time I call in, but. [51:56.960 --> 52:00.960] Yeah. [52:00.960 --> 52:02.960] Sounds good. [52:02.960 --> 52:10.960] That's all I've got tonight, y'all. And Rainey, I guess we had a couple of weeks ago, you were sick or something. [52:10.960 --> 52:12.960] Yeah, I'm getting better. [52:12.960 --> 52:22.960] And so I've been kind of concerned about that because I think I came up here to, I'm up here at my store in Luskin, I work in Nacodotius, but I live in Luskin. [52:22.960 --> 52:29.960] And I come up to my store to listen to you guys so I don't disturb my roommates and y'all weren't on the air. [52:29.960 --> 52:31.960] So that kind of concerned me. [52:31.960 --> 52:33.960] Thank you. [52:33.960 --> 52:36.960] Well, I had a long other issues too. [52:36.960 --> 52:45.960] I had a long issue and frankly it scared the crap out of me, but I got some x-rays and apparently everything's okay. [52:45.960 --> 52:49.960] Well, I'm glad to hear it. I'm glad to hear you on that air tonight. [52:49.960 --> 52:55.960] But anyway, I'll let you guys go and y'all have a good weekend and I'll speak to y'all next week. [52:55.960 --> 52:58.960] Okay, great. Thanks, James. [52:58.960 --> 52:59.960] Thanks. [52:59.960 --> 53:12.960] And now we're going to go to EJ in California. EJ, you've been so patient and glad to talk with you. What's on your mind this evening? [53:12.960 --> 53:15.960] Hi. [53:15.960 --> 53:30.960] So I got the last letter back from the shifters and the only reply that I did was after the first email. [53:30.960 --> 53:39.960] We need 15 days. I didn't reply back, but they did finalize the last email about a week and a half ago. [53:39.960 --> 53:45.960] And at this point, there's a lot of things that are incomplete. [53:45.960 --> 53:53.960] I wanted full names of the officers that just have the first initial and the last name and the batch number. [53:53.960 --> 54:01.960] They're public, you know, what they call it, public workers. [54:01.960 --> 54:04.960] Yeah, you ought to be able to get full names. [54:04.960 --> 54:06.960] Thank you. Okay, I just wanted to... [54:06.960 --> 54:08.960] Yeah, definitely. [54:08.960 --> 54:15.960] Okay, thank you. So I'm going to go back, write a second letter saying that this is incomplete. [54:15.960 --> 54:20.960] It's been over a month now and I need full names. [54:20.960 --> 54:28.960] I need the full name of you, Mike. It just says Mike on the website. That says Mike. [54:28.960 --> 54:38.960] I need the chief, what do you call it, the police officer number as well as... [54:38.960 --> 54:39.960] The batch number? [54:39.960 --> 54:43.960] The batch number, sorry. Yeah, the batch number. [54:43.960 --> 54:48.960] Well, you can also get this by going with a records request to HR. [54:48.960 --> 54:56.960] And this is not something that they can say it's limited to discovery because it's not really about your case. [54:56.960 --> 55:03.960] It's evidence that's in your case. It's ancillary, but it's open to the public. [55:03.960 --> 55:09.960] You can go to the HR director with a records request and say, I want to see everybody on your payroll. [55:09.960 --> 55:13.960] Or you can limit it. I only want to see the people that are on your payroll in the police. [55:13.960 --> 55:19.960] I want to know their full name, their job title, and how much you pay this person. [55:19.960 --> 55:30.960] And that becomes something of... It makes the HR director think they're looking at the paychecks. [55:30.960 --> 55:31.960] Oh, okay. [55:31.960 --> 55:37.960] Or you could just ask for an org chart. I want to see the reporting structure, the hierarchy of the people. [55:37.960 --> 55:46.960] I want to see their names, their titles. If they have a job position or title, I want to see who reports to whom. [55:46.960 --> 55:51.960] That's not really specific to your case. It's just public information. [55:51.960 --> 55:57.960] I see. Like, I can ask for the whole entire department of the police. [55:57.960 --> 55:58.960] Yes, yes. [55:58.960 --> 56:00.960] Of course. Wonderful. Wonderful. [56:00.960 --> 56:07.960] Yes. And that's just about fitting because if they're going to sit there and try to push back on... [56:07.960 --> 56:12.960] You've asked for just a few officers. You weren't asking for everybody, but now they're wanting to push back? Fine. [56:12.960 --> 56:19.960] So let's just get your whole department out here. Let's lay all the cards on the table. [56:19.960 --> 56:22.960] No? [56:22.960 --> 56:35.960] I would really like to do that now because they give such limited amount thinking that we don't know we're not intelligent enough to get all this information. [56:35.960 --> 56:43.960] So I just wanted to check before I write up my second one and send it out tomorrow in the letter. [56:43.960 --> 56:45.960] Yeah. [56:45.960 --> 56:52.960] You can ask for their training too. Ask for... Have they had training? I want to see everybody's training in whatever. [56:52.960 --> 57:02.960] De-escalation techniques. Or I want to see everybody's training on how to cooperate with the Open Meetings Act and the Open Records Act. [57:02.960 --> 57:08.960] I think in California it's a CPRA, California Public Records Act. [57:08.960 --> 57:14.960] And I want to see that they've had their training. Have they been to annual... I want to see the certificates. [57:14.960 --> 57:25.960] Get them having to produce stuff that they otherwise wouldn't have to if they hadn't been so much of an obstacle up front. [57:25.960 --> 57:34.960] Can I ask them to please produce the certificate training for all the top managers, especially the chief of police as well? [57:34.960 --> 57:35.960] Yeah. [57:35.960 --> 57:36.960] Can I ask for that? [57:36.960 --> 57:37.960] Yeah. [57:37.960 --> 57:39.960] Of course I can. Yeah. [57:39.960 --> 57:42.960] Absolutely. These are your records. [57:42.960 --> 57:44.960] Okay. [57:44.960 --> 57:55.960] We the people allow them to administer our records of what we hired them to do. [57:55.960 --> 58:03.960] We put them in a position of delegated authority, right? And they're keeping records. Those are our records. [58:03.960 --> 58:13.960] We don't give them the right to decide whether or not we get to see records and what's good for us to know and what's not good for us to know. [58:13.960 --> 58:19.960] We're the masters. We're the servants. [58:19.960 --> 58:28.960] Wonderful. I hear the music, so should I wait for my next question afterwards? [58:28.960 --> 58:34.960] Yeah, we'll probably go ahead and talk about that some more after we go to our sponsors. [58:34.960 --> 58:42.960] Let's see. We have left here. My clock went blank. [58:42.960 --> 58:49.960] Okay, Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, we'll be right back. [58:49.960 --> 58:53.960] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.960 --> 59:00.960] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.960 --> 59:05.960] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.960 --> 59:12.960] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.960 --> 59:17.960] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.960 --> 59:26.960] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:26.960 --> 59:39.960] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. [59:39.960 --> 59:48.960] That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:48.960 --> 59:58.960] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:00:18.960 --> 01:00:33.960] $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude $62.47 a barrel, and Crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, [01:00:33.960 --> 01:00:45.960] Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.960 --> 01:00:56.960] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:56.960 --> 01:01:00.960] killing 10 and entering 40. [01:01:00.960 --> 01:01:16.960] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges, [01:01:16.960 --> 01:01:23.960] and even refusing to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:23.960 --> 01:01:32.960] 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. [01:01:32.960 --> 01:01:41.960] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, [01:01:41.960 --> 01:01:54.960] and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso. [01:01:54.960 --> 01:02:00.960] Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:00.960 --> 01:02:12.960] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:12.960 --> 01:02:21.960] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:21.960 --> 01:02:38.960] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:38.960 --> 01:02:50.960] According to the University paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.960 --> 01:02:59.960] This was Roof Roadie with the Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:20.960 --> 01:03:30.960] All right, we are back. This is the rule of law radio. [01:03:30.960 --> 01:03:40.960] Randy Kelton and I'm Brett Fountain, and this is the first of October, 2021, and we're talking with EJ in California. [01:03:40.960 --> 01:03:51.960] And EJ, we were talking about records requests and how you can ask for these records because you're the master of your servants. [01:03:51.960 --> 01:03:55.960] These are your records, so yes, you absolutely can ask for these. [01:03:55.960 --> 01:04:03.960] And you know, Randy was talking on the break about, he has a particular, he calls it scope and content. [01:04:03.960 --> 01:04:07.960] You want to tell about that, Randy? [01:04:07.960 --> 01:04:16.960] Oh, yeah, that's my favorite. Whenever a jurisdiction gives me a problem, I pull out my scope and content request. [01:04:16.960 --> 01:04:23.960] The scope and content request doesn't ask for any particular piece of information. [01:04:23.960 --> 01:04:36.960] What I do is in every Open Records Act, they have a section that specifies certain records open for inspection. [01:04:36.960 --> 01:04:47.960] I took that section out of the Texas Open Records Act, and I dropped it inside my information request. [01:04:47.960 --> 01:04:57.960] And I want all of this, and everything I'm asking for here has been specifically designated open for public inspection. [01:04:57.960 --> 01:05:11.960] What it goes to is the scope and content of all the records you keep. I want to know the naming convention for the record, where it's kept, how it's kept, how to specifically request it, [01:05:11.960 --> 01:05:18.960] how to, what formats in which it can be outputted, and just on and on and on. [01:05:18.960 --> 01:05:24.960] And all of this is quoted exactly. I just captured it out of the code and dropped it in my request. [01:05:24.960 --> 01:05:34.960] So, when did they give me a hard time? I pulled this one out. I had a sheriff's deputy spend eight hours with me, a captain on the local sheriff's department. [01:05:34.960 --> 01:05:42.960] And halfway through, he said, Mr. Kelton, if you could tell me what you're looking for, I could speed up this process. [01:05:42.960 --> 01:05:50.960] I said, Mark, yes, you could. But if I told you what I was looking for, and then I didn't find it in the record, [01:05:50.960 --> 01:05:54.960] he said, I understand, Mr. Kelton, I would be compromised. I said, exactly. [01:05:54.960 --> 01:06:01.960] So, I made him go through eight hours. And I found all the records that I wanted. [01:06:01.960 --> 01:06:10.960] And then I put in a request form, and I went into the sheriff's office, and they had a stack of papers two feet tall, sitting on a desk. [01:06:10.960 --> 01:06:20.960] And I went into that room, and I sat down at the desk, and this female jail guard came in and stood there with her arms crossed looking down at me. [01:06:20.960 --> 01:06:28.960] I looked up and said, can I help you? Well, I need to make sure nothing happens to these records. [01:06:28.960 --> 01:06:39.960] No, what you need to do is get the heck out of here. You can't know what I'm looking at, and you're required to give me all comfort and facility in the examination of these records. [01:06:39.960 --> 01:06:46.960] She said, I'll be right back. She went back across the hall and talked to her boss. [01:06:46.960 --> 01:06:53.960] Come back, stuck her head in the door and said, Mr. Kelton, if you need me, I will be right outside. Thank you. [01:06:53.960 --> 01:07:01.960] So, I pulled out all the records I need, and then I tell her, I need to copy some of these records. [01:07:01.960 --> 01:07:08.960] Well, we can have someone do that for you. No, I have to do that myself. You don't get to know what I'm copying. [01:07:08.960 --> 01:07:21.960] So, it took them about two hours, and then they take me back in the jail, and they've got this holding cell sectioned off, and they have rolled a copy machine in there. [01:07:21.960 --> 01:07:32.960] And I'm looking at this. It's a big room, and they've got it over in the corner. Why on earth did they put that copier there? [01:07:32.960 --> 01:07:40.960] And I look up above it, and there's a video camera, and they have turned it so it points right down at the copier. [01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:53.960] So, I went in there, and I had a big stack of papers, and I set them down. I took off my suit coat, looked up at the camera, and hung my suit coat over the camera. [01:07:53.960 --> 01:08:06.960] And I could hear the jailers tackling in the other room, made all my copies, took my coat off the camera, waved at the camera. [01:08:06.960 --> 01:08:17.960] That was a great day. I was after the chief deputy, as I had been called and told, that he had been taking people out of the jail on work detail, [01:08:17.960 --> 01:08:26.960] and had them build additions onto people's houses, and he would pay them with cigarettes. [01:08:26.960 --> 01:08:35.960] And I got exactly what I was looking for. But long story, but scope and content. [01:08:35.960 --> 01:08:45.960] You want to know every record they keep, what they call that record, how to request that specific record, what format it's kept in, [01:08:45.960 --> 01:08:50.960] what software is used to save the information, just on and on and on. [01:08:50.960 --> 01:08:54.960] So, look at your Open Records Act and build you up one of those. [01:08:54.960 --> 01:09:02.960] Whenever I go into a courthouse or to a policing agency, I've got this folder. [01:09:02.960 --> 01:09:12.960] And in this folder, I've got criminal complaints, I've got information requests, I've got all kind of stuff that I might need in there. [01:09:12.960 --> 01:09:19.960] And I always have one page that's a contact sheet. [01:09:19.960 --> 01:09:26.960] So, I go in and I've got this clipboard and I've got this paper here and I ask somebody their name and I write it down. [01:09:26.960 --> 01:09:30.960] Despite everything I ask them, I write down on this sheet. [01:09:30.960 --> 01:09:34.960] And they're looking me wondering, who is this guy, what is going on? [01:09:34.960 --> 01:09:40.960] If you want to get these guys to take you serious, you need to look like you're serious. [01:09:40.960 --> 01:09:46.960] I ask them for records, they give me a little bit of problems, I pull out my scope and content, put their name at the top, sign the bottom. [01:09:46.960 --> 01:09:48.960] It's about three pages. [01:09:48.960 --> 01:09:54.960] Here, respond to this. [01:09:54.960 --> 01:09:57.960] They get real tense when I do this. [01:09:57.960 --> 01:09:59.960] Anyway, be prepared. [01:09:59.960 --> 01:10:01.960] It is so much fun. [01:10:01.960 --> 01:10:09.960] So, E.J., are you already familiar with your California Public Records Act? [01:10:09.960 --> 01:10:14.960] I'm familiar with it. [01:10:14.960 --> 01:10:21.960] I know that there's some things that they weren't able to submit. [01:10:21.960 --> 01:10:24.960] I haven't looked into the link. [01:10:24.960 --> 01:10:35.960] E.J., what in the act is the procedure for when a custodian is unable to send your records? [01:10:35.960 --> 01:10:38.960] What must they do? [01:10:38.960 --> 01:10:47.960] Okay, in Texas, they have to request an opinion from State Attorney General. [01:10:47.960 --> 01:10:52.960] The State Attorney General is generally their lawyer for this kind of issue. [01:10:52.960 --> 01:11:07.960] I just had a Justice of the Peace in Victoria, Texas, deny my information request for some of his court records because he said they're being kept by a third party on some kind of internet site. [01:11:07.960 --> 01:11:12.960] So, he denied my request. [01:11:12.960 --> 01:11:27.960] Well, in Texas, if I put in a request for records and you can't produce them, you have to write a letter and send a request to the State Attorney General and ask his permission to not produce the records. [01:11:27.960 --> 01:11:34.960] Well, and they have to let you know about that within their normal response time period as well. [01:11:34.960 --> 01:11:41.960] And I have to give you a copy of their request to the Attorney General to withhold. [01:11:41.960 --> 01:11:46.960] Yeah, when they send it, they have to give you a copy so you have opportunity to rebut. [01:11:46.960 --> 01:11:50.960] He didn't do any of this stuff. [01:11:50.960 --> 01:11:54.960] So, I'm going to send a request to the sheriff for these same documents. [01:11:54.960 --> 01:11:58.960] Now, I know he doesn't have these documents. [01:11:58.960 --> 01:12:05.960] The J.P. and the J.P. knows that I know he doesn't have these documents. [01:12:05.960 --> 01:12:12.960] That's why I would hurt him so badly if he were to say he doesn't have those records. [01:12:12.960 --> 01:12:15.960] See, he wants Justice of the Peace. [01:12:15.960 --> 01:12:20.960] Before he's a Justice of the Peace, he's a magistrate. [01:12:20.960 --> 01:12:28.960] A magistrate's job is to hold examining trials and after the examining trials, there are certain documents they're supposed to send to the court. [01:12:28.960 --> 01:12:34.960] And those are the documents I asked for that he doesn't have. [01:12:34.960 --> 01:12:39.960] Now, some of those documents actually do exist. [01:12:39.960 --> 01:12:45.960] They are required by statute to be sent to the clerk of the court, but the clerk doesn't have them. [01:12:45.960 --> 01:12:52.960] The J.P. who would have produced these documents doesn't have them either. [01:12:52.960 --> 01:13:03.960] And the district attorney who would be tasked with prosecuting the cases on which these documents are based, he doesn't have them either. [01:13:03.960 --> 01:13:06.960] The sheriff's got them. [01:13:06.960 --> 01:13:18.960] And I'm going to ask him to arrest the J.P. for not giving those records to me and then I'm going to ask him to give them to me himself. [01:13:18.960 --> 01:13:29.960] So I'm asking him to arrest the J.P. for not giving me these records and when I ask him from him, he is not going to want to give them to me. [01:13:29.960 --> 01:13:33.960] So it's going to be clear what's going to happen if he doesn't. [01:13:33.960 --> 01:13:36.960] I'm playing chess with him. [01:13:36.960 --> 01:13:40.960] Actually, I'm playing him like a cheap fiddle. [01:13:40.960 --> 01:13:44.960] And we're going to take these guys on. This is what we need to do. [01:13:44.960 --> 01:13:47.960] We need to figure out how things work and do it that way. [01:13:47.960 --> 01:13:49.960] Okay. [01:13:49.960 --> 01:13:53.960] So E.J., read your open record, Jack. [01:13:53.960 --> 01:13:58.960] We will find gems in there you can use against them. [01:13:58.960 --> 01:14:00.960] Okay. [01:14:00.960 --> 01:14:07.960] I have one more question. The Schreiber emailed me four times. [01:14:07.960 --> 01:14:13.960] The first one I told them, go away but out. You're not my public official. [01:14:13.960 --> 01:14:18.960] I have no business with you. You're irritating me. Stop. [01:14:18.960 --> 01:14:24.960] You're a quick study. Excellent. [01:14:24.960 --> 01:14:26.960] Thank you. [01:14:26.960 --> 01:14:29.960] I know what the lawyer said. [01:14:29.960 --> 01:14:32.960] Welcome to Bradstown. [01:14:32.960 --> 01:14:35.960] That's funny. [01:14:35.960 --> 01:14:40.960] She tries to say, oh, let's have a conversation. [01:14:40.960 --> 01:14:42.960] Call me and what does she say? [01:14:42.960 --> 01:14:49.960] But anyway, my question for you, because you know strategy, strategy is very important. [01:14:49.960 --> 01:14:54.960] I didn't reply to any of them. I just let them go forward. [01:14:54.960 --> 01:14:59.960] They emailed me four times. The fourth one, they said, here you go. [01:14:59.960 --> 01:15:05.960] This is the information and you go to this link. I haven't gone to the link yet. [01:15:05.960 --> 01:15:13.960] What do you, I mean, what should I do? Should I just send another public request tomorrow? [01:15:13.960 --> 01:15:16.960] Asking for an organization chart. [01:15:16.960 --> 01:15:19.960] Another thing is, can I ask for their oath? [01:15:19.960 --> 01:15:24.960] Especially the chief of police, since they gave me a hard time with this. [01:15:24.960 --> 01:15:28.960] Or should I, that's not really necessary. [01:15:28.960 --> 01:15:33.960] You can. Take a look and see if they are required to have one. [01:15:33.960 --> 01:15:36.960] And if they are, then you can ask them to produce it. [01:15:36.960 --> 01:15:41.960] You don't really want to ask them for things that you don't know if they have it or not. [01:15:41.960 --> 01:15:44.960] Ask them for what they're required to have. [01:15:44.960 --> 01:15:55.960] You can earlier about reports. The police chief is somebody who is required by law to produce certain various reports. [01:15:55.960 --> 01:16:03.960] Like maybe once a year or once a quarter he has to give something to the commissioners or he has to give something to the state board of this or that. [01:16:03.960 --> 01:16:08.960] And these requirements are already in place. [01:16:08.960 --> 01:16:11.960] So go and ask for those things. [01:16:11.960 --> 01:16:17.960] Ask for things that, there's no question of, oh, I don't have any of those documents. [01:16:17.960 --> 01:16:23.960] And you're like, ah, I don't think I believe him, but you don't have anything to rest on. [01:16:23.960 --> 01:16:28.960] Instead, ask for what you know he has or he's required to have. [01:16:28.960 --> 01:16:33.960] And to search for that, would that be on their police website or? [01:16:33.960 --> 01:16:35.960] Well, they shouldn't put it on their website. [01:16:35.960 --> 01:16:38.960] It's public information, so they could post it out there for everybody. [01:16:38.960 --> 01:16:43.960] But if you can't find it, you just ask for it. [01:16:43.960 --> 01:16:46.960] Does that make sense? [01:16:46.960 --> 01:16:54.960] And I like to ask for documents in a way that will make them wonder, what the heck is this person looking for? [01:16:54.960 --> 01:16:59.960] Yeah. All right, we'll be right back. [01:16:59.960 --> 01:17:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.960 --> 01:17:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. 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[01:17:48.960 --> 01:17:56.960] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.960 --> 01:17:59.960] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.960 --> 01:18:04.960] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.960 --> 01:18:08.960] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fit. [01:18:08.960 --> 01:18:12.960] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.960 --> 01:18:19.960] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give, because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:19.960 --> 01:18:21.960] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.960 --> 01:18:23.960] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.960 --> 01:18:26.960] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. 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[01:19:00.960 --> 01:19:07.960] This is the Logos Logos RadioNetwork. [01:19:07.960 --> 01:19:35.960] Oh, come on. [01:19:35.960 --> 01:20:00.960] Oh, come on. [01:20:00.960 --> 01:20:22.960] Okay, we're back. [01:20:22.960 --> 01:20:29.960] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Louisville Radeo, and we're talking to EJ in California. [01:20:29.960 --> 01:20:32.960] Okay, you had another question, EJ? [01:20:32.960 --> 01:20:33.960] Yes. [01:20:33.960 --> 01:20:41.960] Another question is, I can ask how much it costs them to ask the attorney, the shyster, [01:20:41.960 --> 01:20:45.960] to contact me and do all that work. [01:20:45.960 --> 01:20:48.960] That's a great idea. [01:20:48.960 --> 01:20:51.960] Go to the Comptroller. [01:20:51.960 --> 01:20:52.960] Comptroller? [01:20:52.960 --> 01:20:53.960] Okay. [01:20:53.960 --> 01:20:57.960] Yeah, whoever pays the bills. [01:20:57.960 --> 01:21:05.960] Generally the Comptroller, then ask for all of the payments to attorneys by the county [01:21:05.960 --> 01:21:10.960] or by this municipality. [01:21:10.960 --> 01:21:14.960] The financial records are always open for inspection. [01:21:14.960 --> 01:21:15.960] Oh, okay. [01:21:15.960 --> 01:21:24.960] So I'll ask specifically for this request because you know my case of sickness for the [01:21:24.960 --> 01:21:28.960] phone battery at the hospital, so that was specific to that. [01:21:28.960 --> 01:21:35.960] I wanted to get my report with the redacted information. [01:21:35.960 --> 01:21:39.960] So it's good to go ahead and click on that link. [01:21:39.960 --> 01:21:45.960] That's the shyster sense, the shyster lawyer sense and see what they gave me or should [01:21:45.960 --> 01:21:52.960] I just go back with the second letter saying that I made attention specifically writing [01:21:52.960 --> 01:22:01.960] to police chief and I sent the department of police in writing me back. [01:22:01.960 --> 01:22:09.960] I do not deal with anyone that I haven't expressed permission to or something like that. [01:22:09.960 --> 01:22:10.960] I don't know the writing. [01:22:10.960 --> 01:22:14.960] Would that be okay? [01:22:14.960 --> 01:22:19.960] Well, I would say it's your call on that whether you, you know, pick your battles. [01:22:19.960 --> 01:22:20.960] I think you can do that. [01:22:20.960 --> 01:22:28.960] You could say you could go back to the principal and say, I don't know who you may or may not [01:22:28.960 --> 01:22:34.960] have hired as an agent, but agency is not established out of the mouth of an agent. [01:22:34.960 --> 01:22:36.960] It's established out of the mouth of the principal. [01:22:36.960 --> 01:22:43.960] So if you're going to tell me that this person is your agent and you are responding to my [01:22:43.960 --> 01:22:47.960] records request, even though it's coming from them. [01:22:47.960 --> 01:22:53.960] All right, so now you've responded or you can just leave it alone. [01:22:53.960 --> 01:22:54.960] Just open up the things. [01:22:54.960 --> 01:22:57.960] See if you like it and then decide. [01:22:57.960 --> 01:23:00.960] You know, maybe you need to bar grieve the person or maybe you're going to file a criminal [01:23:00.960 --> 01:23:05.960] complaint for impersonating a public official. [01:23:05.960 --> 01:23:06.960] You know, it's up to you. [01:23:06.960 --> 01:23:10.960] Just I would say go ahead and open it up and then make your decision. [01:23:10.960 --> 01:23:11.960] Okay, got it. [01:23:11.960 --> 01:23:12.960] All right. [01:23:12.960 --> 01:23:15.960] That works with me. [01:23:15.960 --> 01:23:16.960] I will do that. [01:23:16.960 --> 01:23:17.960] Thank you so much. [01:23:17.960 --> 01:23:18.960] Thank you. [01:23:18.960 --> 01:23:19.960] Yeah. [01:23:19.960 --> 01:23:20.960] All right. [01:23:20.960 --> 01:23:21.960] Good night. [01:23:21.960 --> 01:23:22.960] Oh, good night. [01:23:22.960 --> 01:23:28.960] I'm going to keep posting on the telephone, but no one really responds, but I'll keep [01:23:28.960 --> 01:23:29.960] posting. [01:23:29.960 --> 01:23:30.960] Okay. [01:23:30.960 --> 01:23:31.960] All right. [01:23:31.960 --> 01:23:32.960] Good night. [01:23:32.960 --> 01:23:33.960] All right. [01:23:33.960 --> 01:23:43.960] And now we are going to go to Tina in California. [01:23:43.960 --> 01:23:45.960] Good evening, Tina. [01:23:45.960 --> 01:23:46.960] Good evening. [01:23:46.960 --> 01:23:55.960] It's late for you, but I'm still awake. [01:23:55.960 --> 01:24:03.960] I wanted to talk a little bit about the guy last night whose 87-year-old mother has given [01:24:03.960 --> 01:24:04.960] me eviction. [01:24:04.960 --> 01:24:19.960] Is it possible, probable, that he could make a news story of this, claim elder abuse, elder [01:24:19.960 --> 01:24:21.960] financial abuse? [01:24:21.960 --> 01:24:28.960] Usually when 87-year-olds and their mothers are being evicted, the public gets behind [01:24:28.960 --> 01:24:30.960] it pretty well. [01:24:30.960 --> 01:24:31.960] Exactly. [01:24:31.960 --> 01:24:39.960] What about, you know, and if he feels that he couldn't report that himself, somebody [01:24:39.960 --> 01:24:45.960] else who across the country could, I don't know who that might be, but, you know, you [01:24:45.960 --> 01:24:50.960] might know of somebody that's in California that might be there. [01:24:50.960 --> 01:24:53.960] I do happen to know somebody. [01:24:53.960 --> 01:24:58.960] She's very good with things like this. [01:24:58.960 --> 01:25:02.960] And yeah, that's actually, I think that's great. [01:25:02.960 --> 01:25:07.960] I think I suggested that to him last night that he go to the media and bring this up [01:25:07.960 --> 01:25:10.960] and raise a stink in the media. [01:25:10.960 --> 01:25:19.960] And if they know other people have learned about it in another state, that might help. [01:25:19.960 --> 01:25:21.960] I think you're right. [01:25:21.960 --> 01:25:31.960] Elder abuse is found upon, I mean, that could cause her to have a heart attack, I mean, [01:25:31.960 --> 01:25:32.960] all kinds of things. [01:25:32.960 --> 01:25:34.960] It could really hurt her. [01:25:34.960 --> 01:25:39.960] So why don't we do that? [01:25:39.960 --> 01:25:52.960] But, you know, you can suggest this to him and I'm willing to help as need be. [01:25:52.960 --> 01:25:53.960] Great. [01:25:53.960 --> 01:25:55.960] Thank you. [01:25:55.960 --> 01:25:58.960] I've seen it happen before. [01:25:58.960 --> 01:26:09.960] I've actually participated in and helped a lady get her husband moved from a different [01:26:09.960 --> 01:26:14.960] nursing facility to the same facility she was up there. [01:26:14.960 --> 01:26:23.960] They've been separated for two years and they would meet by the RTA bus and go to McDonald's [01:26:23.960 --> 01:26:26.960] for a date night. [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:33.960] And I got the press involved and within two weeks of that they were in the same facility [01:26:33.960 --> 01:26:37.960] and a week later they were in the same room. [01:26:37.960 --> 01:26:43.960] And it had taken two years of trying by their family to get that to happen. [01:26:43.960 --> 01:26:45.960] Without the press. [01:26:45.960 --> 01:26:46.960] Without. [01:26:46.960 --> 01:26:47.960] Nice. [01:26:47.960 --> 01:26:49.960] Way to go. [01:26:49.960 --> 01:26:57.960] Yeah, and it meant that during COVID before he passed away, she was able to spend time [01:26:57.960 --> 01:27:03.960] with him, which she would not have been able to do if the press hadn't got involved. [01:27:03.960 --> 01:27:04.960] Yes. [01:27:04.960 --> 01:27:10.960] So it's very powerful. [01:27:10.960 --> 01:27:15.960] And I just thought this is horrible thing to happen to someone who's 87. [01:27:15.960 --> 01:27:17.960] It shouldn't be happening. [01:27:17.960 --> 01:27:22.960] So, you know, maybe you could suggest that. [01:27:22.960 --> 01:27:27.960] And I'll be happy to help. [01:27:27.960 --> 01:27:28.960] Great. [01:27:28.960 --> 01:27:35.960] And then the next thing I wanted to bring up to you was, Randy, you know, you always talk [01:27:35.960 --> 01:27:38.960] about filing and bug grievances. [01:27:38.960 --> 01:27:54.960] Well, I did file one against an attorney for being rude, obnoxious, using, you know, really [01:27:54.960 --> 01:27:55.960] what was he? [01:27:55.960 --> 01:28:01.960] You know, it was kind of he used language that was sexist. [01:28:01.960 --> 01:28:05.960] He spoke over the two women in the complaint. [01:28:05.960 --> 01:28:08.960] You know, he said, oh, boohoo, grow up. [01:28:08.960 --> 01:28:09.960] You're wasting time. [01:28:09.960 --> 01:28:14.960] I'm so glad I didn't need to go to law school for you. [01:28:14.960 --> 01:28:21.960] And he talked to the two men in the plaintiffs, male plaintiffs, completely different. [01:28:21.960 --> 01:28:24.960] And so, of course, I filed my bug grievance. [01:28:24.960 --> 01:28:30.960] And the response was, well, you know, we're really not going to do anything because he [01:28:30.960 --> 01:28:32.960] really didn't do anything wrong. [01:28:32.960 --> 01:28:37.960] He was just obnoxious and that's not a problem. [01:28:37.960 --> 01:28:43.960] So we're not going to go any further. [01:28:43.960 --> 01:28:50.960] So what do you think? [01:28:50.960 --> 01:28:56.960] Do they have a responsibility to go further? [01:28:56.960 --> 01:28:59.960] You want to drill into that? [01:28:59.960 --> 01:29:07.960] Like, their disciplinary rules and go after the people who are on the review board personally? [01:29:07.960 --> 01:29:11.960] You can, you don't have to. [01:29:11.960 --> 01:29:17.960] You could just let the effect, let it have its current effect and move on knowing that [01:29:17.960 --> 01:29:24.960] you didn't fail, you did have some success there and you could leave it at that or you [01:29:24.960 --> 01:29:32.960] could drill into the review board because they have rules they have to follow. [01:29:32.960 --> 01:29:39.960] Well, I stated that he failed to treat frozen litigants with respect and he spoke to them [01:29:39.960 --> 01:29:45.960] in mocking and derisive terms and they said that are we running off the cliff? [01:29:45.960 --> 01:29:48.960] It's not my fault, I'm sure. [01:29:48.960 --> 01:29:50.960] Yeah, I was watching the clock. [01:29:50.960 --> 01:29:56.960] I was watching to see if Brett fell off the cliff and I was going to laugh hysterical. [01:29:56.960 --> 01:29:59.960] We'll be right back. [01:29:59.960 --> 01:30:04.960] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.960 --> 01:30:10.960] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:10.960 --> 01:30:15.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.960 --> 01:30:17.960] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.960 --> 01:30:22.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy is gone, [01:30:22.960 --> 01:30:25.960] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.960 --> 01:30:31.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.960 --> 01:30:33.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.960 --> 01:30:40.960] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:40.960 --> 01:30:44.960] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.960 --> 01:30:51.960] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:51.960 --> 01:30:58.960] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:58.960 --> 01:31:05.960] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:05.960 --> 01:31:07.960] hackers will have a field day. [01:31:07.960 --> 01:31:14.960] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.960 --> 01:31:18.960] I'd long oppose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.960 --> 01:31:23.960] But catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.960 --> 01:31:30.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.960 --> 01:31:36.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.960 --> 01:31:38.960] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.960 --> 01:31:43.960] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.960 --> 01:31:46.960] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.960 --> 01:31:49.960] Thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.960 --> 01:31:50.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.960 --> 01:31:51.960] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.960 --> 01:31:52.960] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:52.960 --> 01:31:53.960] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.960 --> 01:31:55.960] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:55.960 --> 01:31:58.960] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.960 --> 01:32:01.960] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.960 --> 01:32:06.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic similar. [01:32:06.960 --> 01:32:10.960] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.960 --> 01:32:13.960] then we're going to have to stand in between our own rights. [01:32:13.960 --> 01:32:16.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.960 --> 01:32:20.960] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.960 --> 01:32:26.960] The traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.960 --> 01:32:31.960] Your first deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.960 --> 01:32:35.960] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.960 --> 01:32:39.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com [01:32:39.960 --> 01:32:41.960] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.960 --> 01:32:44.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.960 --> 01:32:48.960] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:48.960 --> 01:32:51.960] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.960 --> 01:32:55.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:55.960 --> 01:32:59.960] Copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:26.960 --> 01:33:29.960] Alright, we are back. [01:33:29.960 --> 01:33:31.960] Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:31.960 --> 01:33:32.960] Randy Kelton. [01:33:32.960 --> 01:33:33.960] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:33:33.960 --> 01:33:36.960] And we are talking with Tina in California. [01:33:36.960 --> 01:33:39.960] Tina, we were just talking about bar grievances. [01:33:39.960 --> 01:33:44.960] And in specific, what do you do when the review board says, [01:33:44.960 --> 01:33:46.960] oh, that's not a problem? [01:33:46.960 --> 01:33:51.960] Well, in Texas, we used to have... [01:33:51.960 --> 01:33:55.960] They used to just send us the same failure letter. [01:33:55.960 --> 01:33:57.960] They changed their failure letter recently. [01:33:57.960 --> 01:34:06.960] And now they're saying that they have classified this incoming document as being not a complaint [01:34:06.960 --> 01:34:13.960] or, you know, because the grievance could be categorized as a complaint or an inquiry. [01:34:13.960 --> 01:34:21.960] The inquiry doesn't end up having this insurance effect and, you know, it's just a... [01:34:21.960 --> 01:34:24.960] You just asked something. [01:34:24.960 --> 01:34:31.960] The difference is whether or not you alleged a violation of one of their ethics rules. [01:34:31.960 --> 01:34:45.960] Well, the fact that the review board is intentionally miscategorizing this is in itself a violation of one of their rules. [01:34:45.960 --> 01:34:52.960] So, you know, I bar grieve the people that are doing that by name. [01:34:52.960 --> 01:35:02.960] And I also have changed the way that I write my bar grievance so that now, instead of just saying, you know, [01:35:02.960 --> 01:35:08.960] his Navy Blue Sox didn't match, I say, here's the rule. [01:35:08.960 --> 01:35:10.960] I cite it. [01:35:10.960 --> 01:35:13.960] Here's the rule, the number of the rule. [01:35:13.960 --> 01:35:19.960] And I quote it and I make sure that just visually, right next to where I'm quoting the rule, [01:35:19.960 --> 01:35:28.960] I'm also landing the statement of their violation right there next to it so it just, you know, looks identical. [01:35:28.960 --> 01:35:36.960] And then I also will cite the Texas disciplinary rules of procedure. [01:35:36.960 --> 01:35:43.960] You'll have to find something like that in California that tells the review board, here's how you categorize these things. [01:35:43.960 --> 01:35:48.960] Here's how you decide, is this a grievance or is this, as they put it, not a problem. [01:35:48.960 --> 01:35:51.960] How are they going to come to that conclusion? [01:35:51.960 --> 01:35:52.960] It can't just be arbitrary. [01:35:52.960 --> 01:35:54.960] They have rules for this. [01:35:54.960 --> 01:36:03.960] In Texas, we have the rule 2.10 tells them, here's what's an inquiry and here's what's a complaint. [01:36:03.960 --> 01:36:10.960] They have to categorize it properly or else they're in violation. [01:36:10.960 --> 01:36:18.960] Well, they wrote me a two-page letter back, but the basic paragraph that they went on after repeating what I said is, [01:36:18.960 --> 01:36:25.960] based on our evaluation of the information provided, we are closing your complaint. [01:36:25.960 --> 01:36:32.960] Under the laws of California, the facts as you have alleged them would not be grounds for disciplinary action. [01:36:32.960 --> 01:36:37.960] Although the state bar does not condone the conduct you have described, [01:36:37.960 --> 01:36:43.960] we are unable to prosecute some types of conduct even if it is questionable. [01:36:43.960 --> 01:36:59.960] Under a United States Court of Appeals ruling, the state bar is prohibited from imposing discipline upon attorneys for their near-offensive personality or purely personal conduct. [01:36:59.960 --> 01:37:12.960] The state bar must limit its prosecutorial discretion to conduct found to have directly and adversely affected the outcome of a case. [01:37:12.960 --> 01:37:20.960] And they quote US versus WUNSH, OK, 1996. [01:37:20.960 --> 01:37:23.960] Did you read those cases? [01:37:23.960 --> 01:37:25.960] No, I haven't had a chance to read that. [01:37:25.960 --> 01:37:28.960] It's just the one. [01:37:28.960 --> 01:37:36.960] It would be nice catching the bar misquoting case law. [01:37:36.960 --> 01:37:38.960] Wow, sure would. [01:37:38.960 --> 01:37:44.960] Now, Randy, attorneys would never misquote case law, would they? [01:37:44.960 --> 01:37:46.960] Oh, never. [01:37:46.960 --> 01:37:48.960] Never. [01:37:48.960 --> 01:37:50.960] Never. [01:37:50.960 --> 01:37:56.960] It's absolutely slanderous even to imagine such a thing. [01:37:56.960 --> 01:38:09.960] I find it interesting that they must limit their prosecutorial discretion to conduct found to have directly and adversely affected the outcome of a case. [01:38:09.960 --> 01:38:20.960] So what is the distinction of how it directly and adversely affects the outcome of a case? [01:38:20.960 --> 01:38:23.960] Something's wrong with that. [01:38:23.960 --> 01:38:31.960] The bar can't get into the adjudication of the case. [01:38:31.960 --> 01:38:32.960] How would they know? [01:38:32.960 --> 01:38:34.960] And it would say found. [01:38:34.960 --> 01:38:37.960] How would they know? [01:38:37.960 --> 01:38:52.960] It's the behavior of the lawyer, not whether or not he, if he did something improper that adversely affected the case, that would call for an appeal. [01:38:52.960 --> 01:38:57.960] And the adjudication of the case doesn't seem to be a business of the bar association. [01:38:57.960 --> 01:38:58.960] Right. [01:38:58.960 --> 01:39:06.960] Was he unethical or not? Did he violate one of the rules or not? [01:39:06.960 --> 01:39:14.960] And they're not supposed to treat proceeding against other parties with complete disrespect, which this guy did. [01:39:14.960 --> 01:39:17.960] That's what the complaint was about. [01:39:17.960 --> 01:39:28.960] These rules that they're required to follow and that they should be in trouble for not following don't even necessarily have a case involved. [01:39:28.960 --> 01:39:32.960] There may not be a case. [01:39:32.960 --> 01:39:35.960] You can still be unethical and be in trouble for it. [01:39:35.960 --> 01:39:52.960] If you're a lawyer to write me a will or a power of attorney and he screws that up, then he hasn't affected the adjudication of the case. [01:39:52.960 --> 01:39:56.960] So does he have carte blanche in those cases? [01:39:56.960 --> 01:40:01.960] This should get a serious issue. [01:40:01.960 --> 01:40:08.960] I'm thinking in California, this should go to the Supreme. [01:40:08.960 --> 01:40:10.960] Do you know what else the Supreme's like? [01:40:10.960 --> 01:40:12.960] I'll just deny it. [01:40:12.960 --> 01:40:15.960] Well, it was really serious. [01:40:15.960 --> 01:40:22.960] That's okay, but it stings these guys anyway, holds them out in a bad light. [01:40:22.960 --> 01:40:29.960] For them to say that a bar grievance actually goes to the adjudication of the case, that's ridiculous. [01:40:29.960 --> 01:40:32.960] That's what I thought. [01:40:32.960 --> 01:40:35.960] The wording of it was interesting. [01:40:35.960 --> 01:40:40.960] Why must they limit their prosecutorial discretion? [01:40:40.960 --> 01:40:44.960] Absolutely read those cases. [01:40:44.960 --> 01:40:58.960] If you can catch the bar misquoting case law, holy moly, that definitely needs to go to the Supreme and their request for sanctions. [01:40:58.960 --> 01:41:04.960] Yep. [01:41:04.960 --> 01:41:14.960] It seems that they also, when I file complaints, certain complaints are responded to and others are not. [01:41:14.960 --> 01:41:20.960] Especially the attorney that I'm going against, they don't seem to be responsive to those complaints. [01:41:20.960 --> 01:41:25.960] But these other more minor ones, they respond. [01:41:25.960 --> 01:41:28.960] I mean, they deny them, but they respond. [01:41:28.960 --> 01:41:42.960] And they did not respond to the attorney compliment that I wrote, which is the attorney that took over from this bad attorney. [01:41:42.960 --> 01:41:53.960] She was completely different and respectful too of, as per se, I mean, she was the opposing attorney, but she treated those completely different. [01:41:53.960 --> 01:41:55.960] It was like the night and day. [01:41:55.960 --> 01:42:04.960] So I wrote this complaint about him and in the same envelope, I put this compliment about this other attorney. [01:42:04.960 --> 01:42:07.960] Nothing about that. [01:42:07.960 --> 01:42:25.960] So they did say that if I had, what is it, they're closing the matter, but if I have new facts and circumstances that you believe may change our determination to close your complaint, you may submit a written statement with the new information to the intake unit for review. [01:42:25.960 --> 01:42:34.960] And if I have questions about the process, I can call the Deputy Trial Counsel Mark Harvey. [01:42:34.960 --> 01:42:43.960] I can submit a request for review. [01:42:43.960 --> 01:42:47.960] But what do I put is the question. [01:42:47.960 --> 01:42:50.960] I would go find a rule that was violated. [01:42:50.960 --> 01:43:02.960] Then you can peg them to hold him accountable, the lawyer who did the offense, who was rude and obnoxious. [01:43:02.960 --> 01:43:05.960] There's a rule that is violated by that. [01:43:05.960 --> 01:43:28.960] Because this other bit about offensive personality, California's shown themselves to be agreeing with the state of Washington about that not being offensive personality, not being clear enough. [01:43:28.960 --> 01:43:32.960] They said it was something vague, it's unconstitutionally vague or something. [01:43:32.960 --> 01:43:41.960] So don't hang it on the subjective decision of whether or not he was rude and obnoxious. [01:43:41.960 --> 01:43:43.960] Hang it on a rule with a number. [01:43:43.960 --> 01:43:44.960] Okay. [01:43:44.960 --> 01:43:45.960] Okay. [01:43:45.960 --> 01:43:53.960] I do have other complaints about him that I can go for because I didn't think them all in this particular one. [01:43:53.960 --> 01:43:54.960] Okay. [01:43:54.960 --> 01:43:59.960] I think we'll have to talk about that more after our sponsors. [01:44:25.960 --> 01:44:31.960] Logo Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.960 --> 01:44:34.960] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much. [01:44:34.960 --> 01:44:39.960] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. [01:44:39.960 --> 01:44:47.960] When you order from LogoRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.960 --> 01:44:51.960] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.960 --> 01:44:58.960] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family and increase your income. [01:44:58.960 --> 01:45:24.960] Order now. [01:45:28.960 --> 01:45:29.960] You can too. [01:45:29.960 --> 01:45:36.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:36.960 --> 01:45:45.960] 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. [01:45:45.960 --> 01:45:54.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:54.960 --> 01:46:03.960] Visit LulavLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.960 --> 01:46:38.960] Okay, we are back. [01:46:38.960 --> 01:46:41.960] We're in to help and breath out in Lulav Radio. [01:46:41.960 --> 01:46:48.960] Tina, we've got one segment and three callers. [01:46:48.960 --> 01:46:54.960] Have we pretty well handled this bar grief issue? [01:46:54.960 --> 01:46:58.960] Yeah, for now, I'll follow up on some other things. [01:46:58.960 --> 01:47:07.960] I just thought it would be interesting to the listeners to see what can happen in our corrupt states. [01:47:07.960 --> 01:47:13.960] You've had some real experience with things happening in a corrupt state in California. [01:47:13.960 --> 01:47:15.960] Oh, yes. [01:47:15.960 --> 01:47:24.960] After following your cases, it's clear to me that California is by far the most corrupt state in the union. [01:47:24.960 --> 01:47:26.960] Okay, thank you, Tina. [01:47:26.960 --> 01:47:27.960] We need to move on. [01:47:27.960 --> 01:47:28.960] Thank you. [01:47:28.960 --> 01:47:29.960] Oh, is this going to go to James? [01:47:29.960 --> 01:47:32.960] She dropped off. [01:47:32.960 --> 01:47:34.960] Oh, well, yeah. [01:47:34.960 --> 01:47:37.960] After waiting, she waited over an hour and then she dropped off. [01:47:37.960 --> 01:47:39.960] Okay, maybe she'll call back. [01:47:39.960 --> 01:47:41.960] Okay, thank you, Tina. [01:47:41.960 --> 01:47:44.960] We're going to move on to Ken in New York. [01:47:44.960 --> 01:47:45.960] Hello, Ken. [01:47:45.960 --> 01:47:48.960] What do you have for us today? [01:47:48.960 --> 01:47:54.960] Well, you mentioned earlier about the baloney sandwich in jail. [01:47:54.960 --> 01:47:59.960] That's what attracted my attention while he threw it in jail. [01:47:59.960 --> 01:48:13.960] But before that, as far as the derision given to relate upon our proceeds, I had that done during my case in 2014 with Civil Recovery. [01:48:13.960 --> 01:48:19.960] Oh, proceeds just don't understand the law, blah, blah, blah, blah, that sort of thing. [01:48:19.960 --> 01:48:26.960] And then three months later, they offered me a stipulation that discontinued with prejudice. [01:48:26.960 --> 01:48:31.960] It shows you how much they wanted to get away from me. [01:48:31.960 --> 01:48:36.960] They threatened me with a summary judgment and I said, go ahead. [01:48:36.960 --> 01:48:38.960] You know, I said set a court date. [01:48:38.960 --> 01:48:42.960] They never did. [01:48:42.960 --> 01:48:52.960] The thing about the baloney sandwich, I started reading about food in jail and apparently it's a national embarrassment, which I wasn't aware of. [01:48:52.960 --> 01:49:02.960] But, you know, if somebody were to serve me a baloney sandwich, I would just turn around and tell them I'm a Muslim and I want a halal meal. [01:49:02.960 --> 01:49:08.960] Let's see how that wears on them. [01:49:08.960 --> 01:49:13.960] They probably get that on occasion. [01:49:13.960 --> 01:49:17.960] Can you make an issue of prison food and tie that to it? [01:49:17.960 --> 01:49:27.960] Let's say you're wrongly thrown in jail for contempt of court and you have to have a couple yesterday's jail along with a baloney sandwich. [01:49:27.960 --> 01:49:29.960] What does that do to you? [01:49:29.960 --> 01:49:31.960] Psychologically. [01:49:31.960 --> 01:49:42.960] That's what I've been reading about that says that it affects people and, you know, it kind of lowers your expectations and all variety of things. [01:49:42.960 --> 01:49:44.960] But... [01:49:44.960 --> 01:49:46.960] Lowers expectations. [01:49:46.960 --> 01:49:51.960] Oh, you mean like psychologically affecting your expectation of justice? [01:49:51.960 --> 01:49:53.960] Yes. [01:49:53.960 --> 01:49:54.960] Wow. [01:49:54.960 --> 01:49:57.960] I've been reading little pieces, bits and pieces. [01:49:57.960 --> 01:50:06.960] And as I roll down a little further, it does appear that Russian prisoners, even in hard labor, treated a lot better than American prisoners are. [01:50:06.960 --> 01:50:17.960] Three pounds of black rye bread, four ounces of meat, including the bonus small quantity of barley, which is boiled as the soup along with the meat. [01:50:17.960 --> 01:50:21.960] Apparently they're eating fairly well compared to... [01:50:21.960 --> 01:50:22.960] Wow. [01:50:22.960 --> 01:50:24.960] Well, let me put it this way. [01:50:24.960 --> 01:50:37.960] I think the problem with the food and the American jails is that the money is being siphoned off from the food budget and somebody else is like stealing the money. [01:50:37.960 --> 01:50:41.960] Yeah, but at least someone's eating well. [01:50:41.960 --> 01:50:43.960] No, that was in Russia. [01:50:43.960 --> 01:50:44.960] I don't know about it. [01:50:44.960 --> 01:50:45.960] That's what I'm saying. [01:50:45.960 --> 01:50:49.960] No, I mean, the one stealing the money is the one who's eating it. [01:50:49.960 --> 01:51:01.960] Oh, by the way, somebody should be happy to notice that KFC chicken, they don't call it Kentucky fried. [01:51:01.960 --> 01:51:10.960] We don't want to let anybody know it came from the US, but it says KFC chicken is certified halal. [01:51:10.960 --> 01:51:15.960] Wow. [01:51:15.960 --> 01:51:25.960] Yeah, although some Muslims will not consume it because the chicken has been stunned before slaughter. [01:51:25.960 --> 01:51:29.960] They just want to clean, you know. [01:51:29.960 --> 01:51:33.960] Oh, you know, I'm getting back again. [01:51:33.960 --> 01:51:34.960] I'm sorry. [01:51:34.960 --> 01:51:40.960] I'm jumping back and forth, but I've been listening for a while. [01:51:40.960 --> 01:51:51.960] You know, about rather than getting in a colloquy about a lawyer, not how they treated you poorly because you're a pro say. [01:51:51.960 --> 01:52:00.960] Why don't you just say, oh, look, I'm going to write a little Lloyds of London and see how they feel about it. [01:52:00.960 --> 01:52:09.960] Yeah, Lloyds of London underwrites just about every errors and emissions policy in the country. [01:52:09.960 --> 01:52:10.960] Yeah. [01:52:10.960 --> 01:52:24.960] You know, the question is, if you haven't been able to find out the names of the insurance companies, is there a way to determine the insurance company that [01:52:24.960 --> 01:52:33.960] ensuring the lawyer in question, you know, the one you want to hit over the head with a little bit of baseball bat, so to speak. [01:52:33.960 --> 01:52:46.960] I've looked at that before and I don't think so. I had someone send me the names of nine errors and emissions policy underwriters. [01:52:46.960 --> 01:52:57.960] But as to the insurance provider for the individual lawyer, that's a private contract between the two of them. [01:52:57.960 --> 01:53:05.960] I don't know of anything specifically that requires them to report their insurance carrier. [01:53:05.960 --> 01:53:12.960] What about if it's the lawyer is not working for a private law firm but working for a governmental body? [01:53:12.960 --> 01:53:16.960] Then you can get that out of there with a record request. [01:53:16.960 --> 01:53:29.960] But in Texas, lawyers aren't specifically required by statute or rule or regulation to carry an insurance policy. [01:53:29.960 --> 01:53:44.960] So it would seem that's a private contract between the lawyer and the carrier and I wouldn't know of a way to extract that information. [01:53:44.960 --> 01:53:50.960] There may be something, maybe in the insurance code that I don't know about. [01:53:50.960 --> 01:53:55.960] Well, okay. Good night. See if you can get to a couple more callers. [01:53:55.960 --> 01:54:00.960] Well, when you came on, everybody else hung up. [01:54:00.960 --> 01:54:03.960] I don't know. Is that good or bad? [01:54:03.960 --> 01:54:10.960] I don't know. We had one more caller from Texas and he dropped off. [01:54:10.960 --> 01:54:16.960] I tried to go to Jane and Justin was going to Jane. She dropped off. [01:54:16.960 --> 01:54:23.960] So Brett and I are going to have to do four minutes all by ourselves. What will we do? [01:54:23.960 --> 01:54:30.960] Well, we'll blame Ken for it. [01:54:30.960 --> 01:54:42.960] I think this is probably something that could be brought into a case somehow. [01:54:42.960 --> 01:54:54.960] I mean, this is something that is apparently a big problem in the night. I wasn't aware of that while I started reading about it. [01:54:54.960 --> 01:55:00.960] I mean, a baloney sandwich is horrible. [01:55:00.960 --> 01:55:03.960] It was a horrible baloney sandwich. [01:55:03.960 --> 01:55:11.960] Yeah. I mean, I would have preferred one cordon bleu style at least wrapped in a piece of melted Swiss cheese or something. [01:55:11.960 --> 01:55:19.960] Yeah, good luck with that. It's been about the same in every jail I've been in. [01:55:19.960 --> 01:55:32.960] The food is absolutely atrocious. It's absolutely tasteless. I don't do baloney well, but they do absolutely as inexpensive as possible. [01:55:32.960 --> 01:55:42.960] But it still costs Texas $50 a day, I think it's 54 a day to hold a prisoner. [01:55:42.960 --> 01:55:51.960] And one of the things that the suit I just filed against the state of Texas was for $400 million because the arrest didn't even help me overnight in jail. [01:55:51.960 --> 01:56:04.960] And the reason for $400 million is because the counties in Texas are paying $990 million a year for pretrial incarceration. [01:56:04.960 --> 01:56:19.960] Good God. New York's worst, I think New York's spends one of the highest amounts per day, I think it's $70 something a day to house the prisoners. [01:56:19.960 --> 01:56:26.960] So they apparently take care of them better than Texas does. Texas is down on the bottom end. [01:56:26.960 --> 01:56:36.960] When they got rid of Cuomo, we got a worse crackpot in there. She just said that if Jesus was alive, he would have taken the vaccine. [01:56:36.960 --> 01:56:45.960] I heard about that. Yeah, just out of a mind. [01:56:45.960 --> 01:56:53.960] Where did New York find these flakes? I thought all the flakes were in California. Sorry to not just kidding. [01:56:53.960 --> 01:57:02.960] They're moving out of California. I know. It's really hard to live this stuff down. You don't know what it does to you psychologically. [01:57:02.960 --> 01:57:09.960] But Cuomo's older sister apparently refused. She didn't want him to stay with him. [01:57:09.960 --> 01:57:24.960] So he's out in the Hamptons, which is about 15 miles east of me. And he's staying with this guy named Jeffrey Sachs. This was a genius that almost destroyed Russia during the 90s by bringing the bankers in. [01:57:24.960 --> 01:57:31.960] Somebody put him in there. And everything was going downhill until Putin came along. [01:57:31.960 --> 01:57:43.960] He was starting to put bags over there and threw them in jail. I guess they didn't get below these sandwiches. [01:57:43.960 --> 01:57:55.960] Okay, we are about out of time. This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruvelaw Radio. If you're in or about the Fort Worth area and you want to go to one of our presentations, [01:57:55.960 --> 01:58:06.960] send us an email to randy at ruvelawradio.com. And I'll let you know when we're going to be speaking. I'm going to try to drag Brett into some of these. [01:58:06.960 --> 01:58:17.960] We're trying to spread the word on how to take on public officials. This is the right place, right time. The population is awake. [01:58:17.960 --> 01:58:27.960] We're hoping we can get them empowered before this interest begins to fade. Although this time I think it'll be quite a while. [01:58:27.960 --> 01:58:37.960] This may be our time to fix the system. So keep listening, call in, bring us your questions and comments. [01:58:37.960 --> 01:58:48.960] We appreciate all of you and thank you all for listening and good night. [01:59:07.960 --> 01:59:19.960] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:19.960 --> 01:59:29.960] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.960 --> 01:59:40.960] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.960 --> 01:59:50.960] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:50.960 --> 02:00:00.960] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com.