[00:00.000 --> 00:06.200] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution that guarantee [00:06.200 --> 00:09.400] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.400 --> 00:10.880] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.880 --> 00:14.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.800 --> 00:16.920] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.920 --> 00:18.520] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.520 --> 00:22.120] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.120 --> 00:26.880] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.880 --> 00:31.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:31.960 --> 00:34.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.640 --> 00:38.940] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.940 --> 00:42.480] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [00:42.480 --> 00:44.680] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.680 --> 00:47.760] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.760 --> 00:51.240] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.240 --> 00:54.440] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.440 --> 01:01.440] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly [01:01.440 --> 01:03.080] and R for religion. [01:03.080 --> 01:07.040] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.040 --> 01:08.520] assembly and religion. [01:08.520 --> 01:10.480] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.480 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.760] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.760 --> 01:31.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.000 --> 01:34.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.680 --> 01:38.120] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.120 --> 01:39.600] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.600 --> 01:43.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.480 --> 01:46.640] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.640 --> 01:48.220] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.220 --> 01:51.820] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.820 --> 01:56.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.600 --> 02:01.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.680 --> 02:04.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.360 --> 02:08.640] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.640 --> 02:12.200] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [02:12.200 --> 02:15.760] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.760 --> 02:20.120] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.120 --> 02:22.200] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.200 --> 02:26.680] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.680 --> 02:30.520] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.520 --> 02:31.520] Get it? [02:31.520 --> 02:33.840] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.840 --> 02:37.440] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.440 --> 02:43.200] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.200 --> 02:47.520] government, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America [02:47.520 --> 02:50.400] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.400 --> 02:52.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.360 --> 03:16.120] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:23.080 --> 03:50.080] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [03:50.080 --> 04:08.160] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America but which historically [04:08.160 --> 04:33.880] has proved to always be possible, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears [04:33.880 --> 04:50.240] remote in America but which historically has proved to always be possible, one more [04:50.240 --> 05:05.800] safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America but which historically has [05:05.800 --> 05:17.280] proved to always be possible, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote [05:17.280 --> 05:34.800] in America but which historically has proved to always be possible, one more safeguard against [05:34.800 --> 05:55.800] the tyranny which now appears remote in America but which now appears remote in America but [05:55.800 --> 06:16.800] which now appears remote in America but which now appears remote in America but which now [06:16.800 --> 06:39.800] appears remote in America but which now appears remote in America but which now appears remote [06:39.800 --> 06:55.800] in America but which now appears remote in America [06:55.800 --> 07:20.800] but which now appears remote in America but which now appears remote in America but which [07:20.800 --> 07:32.800] now appears remote in America [08:20.800 --> 08:30.240] procedure 16.17 it goes to an order a magistrate is required to produce after an examining [08:30.240 --> 08:35.460] trial and he's afforded to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction it says if an order [08:35.460 --> 08:42.540] is not filed with the clerk within 48 hours the accused has a right to discharge so this [08:42.540 --> 08:49.600] motion asked for discharge because there never was an examining trial there's no order in [08:49.600 --> 08:58.760] the record okay so the lawyer refused so we bar he bar grieved him and he filed the another [08:58.760 --> 09:04.080] motion to withdraw wait what do you mean the lawyer refused he refused the lawyer refused [09:04.080 --> 09:09.480] he wouldn't file the motion yeah he wouldn't file the motion but he did after he bar grieved [09:09.480 --> 09:17.480] him he did said he would stand aside and let Dan file the motion you know we talk about [09:17.480 --> 09:25.760] how these lawyers are low-hanging fruit sometimes it surprises me how inept they are when we [09:25.760 --> 09:34.600] when their client comes after them this lawyer had no clue of what to do so he's part of [09:34.600 --> 09:46.220] a law firm and Dan bar grieved him he filed another motion to withdraw and that backed [09:46.220 --> 09:55.340] up Dan a whole other month and they went in today and it seems that this lawyer is no [09:55.340 --> 10:05.520] longer with the firm he's now in civil practice oh finally we got this new lawyer and I told [10:05.520 --> 10:13.000] him Del Dan told him no we don't we still have that lawyer I don't care where he's [10:13.000 --> 10:19.880] went to he's still under contract and he was supposed to get a call oh that lawyer's [10:19.880 --> 10:29.960] gonna love that apparently they fired him because he couldn't handle a difficult client [10:29.960 --> 10:39.120] mm-hmm so now he's in civil practice well he's getting another bar grievance one for [10:39.120 --> 10:46.840] the second motion to withdraw and the other one for trying to replace himself with another [10:46.840 --> 10:54.880] lawyer so we'll bar grieve the second lawyer and send a notice of intent to sue to the [10:54.880 --> 11:03.080] second lawyer and bar grieve the first lawyer for abandoning him and move for sanctions [11:03.080 --> 11:09.720] against the first lawyer he said that in the hearing the judge said three different times [11:09.720 --> 11:17.840] that he should bar grieving really yeah wow that's super unusual well I've been down [11:17.840 --> 11:24.280] there with him every time except this time my wife was at the doctor's office and went [11:24.280 --> 11:28.440] to sit on a stool and slipped out from under and she hit the floor and I think she cracked [11:28.440 --> 11:34.240] her tailbone so she's in incredible misery and I'm here taking care of her so I couldn't [11:34.240 --> 11:43.080] go to Austin that's even worse she'd probably rather you wouldn't take care of her well [11:43.080 --> 11:50.840] I offered to kiss her boo-boo and make it better that's more than she did for me I fell [11:50.840 --> 11:57.400] down in the yard hurt my butt and asked her if she'd kiss it make it better and I'm not [11:57.400 --> 12:04.360] going to tell you what she told me or how much it cost to fix the wall I've been trying [12:04.360 --> 12:12.800] to get her to kiss my behind for 50 years I guess it's time to quit but anyway this [12:12.800 --> 12:19.760] was absolutely incredible these guys had no idea what to do well I think it's interesting [12:19.760 --> 12:25.960] that the judge would say that you should bar grieve and it occurs to me that the judge [12:25.960 --> 12:32.600] is probably trying to say to you please don't file a judicial misconduct on me please don't [12:32.600 --> 12:39.560] consider that I'm condoning this behavior and then yeah the judge was I was surprised [12:39.560 --> 12:44.640] that technically the judge had nothing to do with this because he had already refused [12:44.640 --> 12:52.440] to let him withdraw I don't think they've ever seen this before they have no idea what [12:52.440 --> 12:58.640] to do well the lawyer I think that's also interesting that when earlier on when the [12:58.640 --> 13:03.480] lawyer decided well I'm not going to file the motion but I will step aside and let you [13:03.480 --> 13:09.240] speak for yourself I don't know if they've ever really considered but that's not really [13:09.240 --> 13:13.280] all that big of him to let him just have his right to be heard he's the only one there [13:13.280 --> 13:19.860] with a right to be heard exactly but they are so unaccustomed to that they're so accustomed [13:19.860 --> 13:25.040] to people coming in and just doing whatever they say and then the lawyer winds up screwing [13:25.040 --> 13:35.280] him over and because the judge told him to bar grieve him I think the judge may have [13:35.280 --> 13:44.840] he's almost certainly read the motion that's my rather large 30 page motion and it's essentially [13:44.840 --> 13:53.400] a legal brief on due process I think he might have found it interesting because he he sit [13:53.400 --> 14:00.080] up there and do the same boring thing over and over and over yeah and we had a judge [14:00.080 --> 14:05.000] in the county I live in that lawyers complained about him because he said he was asleep he [14:05.000 --> 14:09.640] would go to sleep on the bench and he sat there with his hand head in his hand and his [14:09.640 --> 14:19.960] eyes closed but he's not he's not asleep he's listening he's just bored to tears yeah and [14:19.960 --> 14:26.240] I get that you can only watch table tennis for so long for this judge he gets to see [14:26.240 --> 14:34.040] some fireworks he gets to see some lawyers doing a song and dance and some pro se is [14:34.040 --> 14:42.240] in here wiping the floor with them you know when you're with a group of people that you [14:42.240 --> 14:49.600] know and somebody comes in like somebody's wife comes in and chews him out real good [14:49.600 --> 14:55.240] all these buddies are sitting back there chucking at him and that's kind of what this sounds [14:55.240 --> 15:08.400] like yeah that's a great middle image but I wanted everybody to hear that because lawyers [15:08.400 --> 15:15.520] really are low hanging fruit and now they're running around like mad trying to figure out [15:15.520 --> 15:23.680] what to do with this pro se litigant who's likely to shut down their law firm yeah can [15:23.680 --> 15:28.480] you just see back there behind in the in the hallways and the water cooler behind there [15:28.480 --> 15:34.680] with the judge saying oh hey counselor what's going on with Dan oh never mind you can't [15:34.680 --> 15:45.800] tell me about that and I was wondering how the the judge managed to even say something [15:45.800 --> 15:58.400] about barbreed I was wondering did this lawyer tell the judge that he had been barbreed why [15:58.400 --> 16:04.760] did the judge bring it up I think the judge he may have told the judge about it and the [16:04.760 --> 16:11.560] judge knew that that was improper you think what that kind of cut out there I'm thinking [16:11.560 --> 16:19.720] that the the lawyer may have told the judge that his client had barbreed it and the judge [16:19.720 --> 16:27.400] judge knew that was an oops so he did that he just compromised the judge because he's [16:27.400 --> 16:33.880] forbidden to do that so the judge is trying trying to judge can pretend like he doesn't [16:33.880 --> 16:39.320] know about that because he's the one that suggested it yeah you know after I thought [16:39.320 --> 16:44.600] about it that's what I was thinking I was thinking the lawyer probably screwed up pretty [16:44.600 --> 16:49.840] big time if he mentioned it to the judge you know the judge may have been upset about that [16:49.840 --> 17:00.640] because now you compromised me so the lawyer's history or he thinks he's history are you [17:00.640 --> 17:06.320] being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls letters or even losses stop debt collectors [17:06.320 --> 17:12.120] now with the Michael Mears proven method Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against [17:12.120 --> 17:17.360] debt collectors and now you can win too you'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [17:17.360 --> 17:22.280] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute what to do when contacted by [17:22.280 --> 17:27.680] phones mail or court summons how to answer letters and phone calls how to get debt collectors [17:27.680 --> 17:32.360] out of your credit report how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay [17:32.360 --> 17:38.640] you to go away the Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [17:38.640 --> 17:44.400] personal consultation is available as well for more information please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.400 --> 17:49.720] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email Michael Mears at yahoo.com that's [17:49.720 --> 17:58.480] ruleoflawradio.com or email m i c h a e l m i r r a f at yahoo.com to learn how to stop [17:58.480 --> 18:04.680] debt collectors next are you looking to have a closer relationship with god and a better [18:04.680 --> 18:10.120] understanding of his word then tune in to logosradio.com on wednesdays from eight to [18:10.120 --> 18:15.400] ten pm central time for scripture talk where nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [18:15.400 --> 18:21.200] in accord with second timothy 215 study to show thyself approved unto god a workman that [18:21.200 --> 18:26.320] need is not to be ashamed rightly dividing the word of truth starting in january our [18:26.320 --> 18:30.760] first hour studies are in the book of mark where we'll go verse by verse and discuss [18:30.760 --> 18:36.240] the true gospel message our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions [18:36.240 --> 18:42.040] on sound doctrine and christian character development we wish to reflect god's light and be a blessing [18:42.040 --> 18:47.400] to all those with a hearing ear our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [18:47.400 --> 18:52.680] more into the likeness of our lord and savior jesus so tune in to scripture talk live on [18:52.680 --> 18:59.000] logosradio.com wednesdays from eight to ten pm to inspire and motivate your studies of [18:59.000 --> 19:24.680] the scriptures [19:24.680 --> 19:30.560] we are back randy kelton brett fountain rubella radio give me one second to turn off this [19:30.560 --> 19:38.800] noise in the background so we were just saying over the break that uh we'll wrap that up [19:38.800 --> 19:47.840] and and turn on the phone lines so if you want to call in it's 512-646-1984 you have [19:47.840 --> 19:59.520] a comment have a question some legal issues 512-646-1984 we were discussing over the break [19:59.520 --> 20:07.240] what's going on with the law firm he filed a bar grievance against the lawyer and they [20:07.240 --> 20:14.000] fired him immediately i want to know if he got on at a different law firm whose partners [20:14.000 --> 20:23.080] are needing to be grieved or if he is starting up his own practice that's what i would want [20:23.080 --> 20:29.760] to know the guy's out here doing uh acting as court appointing counsel and he's doing [20:29.760 --> 20:36.760] the actually he got paid on this one but he's down here in the criminal courts and he's [20:36.760 --> 20:45.320] a fairly young guy i'm betting that this law firm tossed him because he couldn't handle [20:45.320 --> 20:53.640] his client because the lawyer really didn't know how to talk to people if he had any sense [20:53.640 --> 21:00.120] at all he he would have been really easy for him to schmooze dan but he just didn't know [21:00.120 --> 21:06.440] what to say and dan just worked him over so this may not be the first time he's had an [21:06.440 --> 21:13.480] issue i don't know but they got rid of him quickly and appointed this second one and [21:13.480 --> 21:20.920] he's going to file a motion to withdraw so he can bargain the first jack for letting [21:20.920 --> 21:27.680] him do that yeah obviously he must be working for you because i didn't hire him you're the [21:27.680 --> 21:30.880] one that's supposed to be representing me this dude must be your helper and he's trying [21:30.880 --> 21:39.360] to withdraw too yeah what are these guys what are they thinking that they put another [21:39.360 --> 21:43.600] lawyer on him and telling that he's going to motion to withdraw and they've moved it [21:43.600 --> 21:56.320] out another month so i'm thinking we prepare a suit for ineffective assistance of counsel [21:56.320 --> 22:01.920] and sue the law sue every lawyer in the law firm and a violation of his right to a speedy [22:01.920 --> 22:10.080] trial exactly and he's a lawyer is denying it because this is three months over motions [22:10.080 --> 22:19.360] to withdraw and i have a he had with him a speedy trial motion to withdraw i just finished [22:19.360 --> 22:30.440] a brief on speedy trial where i claimed that 3202 is that it brett 3032 20 i think it might [22:30.440 --> 22:42.440] be 3221a that was the speedy trial act it's 3220 something the alleged the courts overruled [22:42.440 --> 22:49.840] it because they didn't like the title they said it didn't give sufficient notice of what [22:49.840 --> 22:57.880] the statute was about and they had one other really piddling gripe about it but nothing [22:57.880 --> 23:08.040] had anything to do with the times defined as speedy by the legislature texas legislature [23:08.040 --> 23:17.840] said that in any in the case of class a misdemeanor if they exceeded 30 days then that was untimely [23:17.840 --> 23:29.520] for class b 60 class c class a 90 a felony 120 days those were not overturned that is [23:29.520 --> 23:40.600] what the legislature defined as speedy if they exceed that time then prima facie on [23:40.600 --> 23:49.160] the face of it they did they denied speedy trial they will have to show due cause and [23:49.160 --> 23:56.440] due cause would be that the defendant himself caused some delay and the delay caused by [23:56.440 --> 24:09.680] the defendant doesn't toe the clock so now we have the client's own lawyers delaying [24:09.680 --> 24:17.400] his case and denying him a speedy trial so i'm suggesting he sue his own lawyers while [24:17.400 --> 24:30.160] he's refusing to allow them to withdraw these lawyers that go nuts we start teaching people [24:30.160 --> 24:40.000] how to handle lawyers the lawyers will have to start actually adjudicating their cases [24:40.000 --> 24:49.520] this law firm is fighting like crazy to keep from having to be lawyers what is going on [24:49.520 --> 24:59.520] here we've already written motions for them this file is readable and pretty straight [24:59.520 --> 25:09.080] forward i think i have them both posted on the telegram site if i've done my job right [25:09.080 --> 25:20.400] they're pretty easy to read what is the problem why are these lawyers so terrified about fighting [25:20.400 --> 25:31.960] for their clients rights and i'm beginning to wonder if it's really that they're terrified [25:31.960 --> 25:39.360] it may be something more base if they can get a client and do absolutely nothing but [25:39.360 --> 25:46.440] delay and eventually the client will make a deal they can spend all their time getting [25:46.440 --> 25:55.680] new clients and no time wasting time adjudicating cases so it may not be the judges that are [25:55.680 --> 26:02.760] so much the problem but the lawyers don't want to do any work because they don't get [26:02.760 --> 26:10.200] as much profit doing legal research and going to hearings and spending their time the time [26:10.200 --> 26:19.560] is best spent prospecting for new clients can it be that base yeah i think it could [26:19.560 --> 26:26.620] be or it could just be that they've been trained in this is how it's done this is how we've [26:26.620 --> 26:36.960] always done it so it's how we're always going to do it so it's our job to fix that and that's [26:36.960 --> 26:44.200] what i'm working toward and working toward a really methodical way of going at them and [26:44.200 --> 26:51.800] from the responses we're getting we're getting to look like it works okay enough of that [26:51.800 --> 26:58.280] we have a couple callers on the board i'm going to go to travis in wisconsin hello travis [26:58.280 --> 27:05.760] what do you have for us today hello how are you doing i'm pretty good for an old fat guy [27:05.760 --> 27:15.640] awesome awesome it's pretty hot down there no no no no you're in wisconsin it never [27:15.640 --> 27:20.120] gets hotter in texas that's a bunch of yankee propaganda [27:20.120 --> 27:31.280] well i talked to you last week about disorderly conduct at a town meeting and resisting an [27:31.280 --> 27:39.040] attack have you read the statutes i've gone through them and through them through a few [27:39.040 --> 27:46.760] times i think i'm on the right side okay tell us what wisconsin calls disorderly conduct [27:46.760 --> 28:00.320] disorderly conduct as far as the statute says yes in texas it says it's disorderly conduct [28:00.320 --> 28:08.720] if you fire a weapon across a roadway if you display your gentle to genitals or anus in [28:08.720 --> 28:19.320] public and other a number of other things equally outrageous none of it has anything [28:19.320 --> 28:27.880] to do with the kinds of stuff normal human beings do so what does wisconsin say says [28:27.880 --> 28:35.160] abusive boisterous indecent profane unreasonable loud violence or other disorderly conduct [28:35.160 --> 28:42.840] under circumstances which such conduct contended to cause or provoke a disturbance contrary [28:42.840 --> 28:54.760] to session 947.01 and 39 what's that which one of those elements were you charged with [28:54.760 --> 29:03.600] specifically okay hold on let me explain why i asked the question that way in order for [29:03.600 --> 29:13.000] you to be charged with disorderly conduct they have to allege some conduct that was [29:13.000 --> 29:22.800] disorderly they can't just say that you were speeding they have to say the marked speed [29:22.800 --> 29:29.600] limit or posted speed limit is this i was in a position where i could directly see him [29:29.600 --> 29:35.600] and i clocked him with this radar that has been calibrated so i know have reason to believe [29:35.600 --> 29:44.800] it's accurate and i clocked him going in excess of the speed limit you have to name the elements [29:44.800 --> 29:55.440] of the crime so what elements did they allege against you okay wait wait hold on hold on [29:55.440 --> 30:03.320] back to go to our sponsors we'll be right back businesses ask you for a lot of personal [30:03.320 --> 30:07.720] information and you may trust them to keep it safe but it turns out that even the most [30:07.720 --> 30:12.880] trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets i'm dr kathryn albrecht and [30:12.880 --> 30:19.240] i'll be right back with details privacy is under attack when you give up data about yourself [30:19.240 --> 30:24.160] you'll never get it back again and once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms [30:24.160 --> 30:29.920] will start to vanish too so protect your rights say no to surveillance and keep your information [30:29.920 --> 30:35.200] to yourself privacy it's worth hanging on to this public service announcement is brought [30:35.200 --> 30:41.080] to you by startpage.com the private search engine alternative to google yahoo and bin [30:41.080 --> 30:48.720] start over with startpage data privacy is a big deal so nearly every company has a policy [30:48.720 --> 30:54.280] explaining how they handle your personal information but what happens if it escapes their control [30:54.280 --> 30:59.900] it's not an idle question according to a recent survey a shocking 90 percent of u.s. companies [30:59.900 --> 31:04.880] admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year that's one more reason you [31:04.880 --> 31:10.080] should trust your searches to startpage.com unlike other search engines startpage doesn't [31:10.080 --> 31:14.920] store any data on you they've never been hacked but even if they were there would be nothing [31:14.920 --> 31:19.660] for criminals to see the cupboard would be bare too bad other companies don't treat [31:19.660 --> 31:30.840] your data the same way i'm dr kathryn albrecht more news and information at kathrynalbrecht.com [31:30.840 --> 31:36.640] i lost my son my nephew my uncle my son on september 11 2001 most people don't know that [31:36.640 --> 31:42.080] the third tower fell on september 11 world trade center 7 a 47 story skyscraper was [31:42.080 --> 31:47.360] not hit by a plane although the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7 over [31:47.360 --> 31:51.920] 1200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more [31:51.920 --> 31:58.200] to the story bring justice to my son my uncle my nephew my son go to building what.org why [31:58.200 --> 32:04.200] it fell why it matters and what you can do rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule [32:04.200 --> 32:08.120] of law traffic seminar in today's america we live in an us against them society if we [32:08.120 --> 32:11.800] the people are ever going to have a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend [32:11.800 --> 32:15.720] our own rights among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [32:15.720 --> 32:19.400] the right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right to due process [32:19.400 --> 32:23.640] of law traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce [32:23.640 --> 32:27.920] and preserve our rights through due process former sheriff's deputy eddie craig in conjunction [32:27.920 --> 32:31.360] with rule of law radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.360 --> 32:34.920] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule [32:34.920 --> 32:39.480] of law you can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to rule of law radio.com [32:39.480 --> 32:43.000] and ordering your copy today by ordering now you'll receive a copy of eddie's book the [32:43.000 --> 32:47.960] texas transportation code the law versus the lie video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [32:47.960 --> 32:51.840] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material learn how to fight for your [32:51.840 --> 32:55.680] rights with the help of this material from rule of law radio.com order your copy today [32:55.680 --> 33:02.680] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:25.680 --> 33:44.680] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power, when you're going to stop abuse, you're [33:44.680 --> 33:59.680] power. [33:59.680 --> 34:27.680] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power, when you're going to stop abuse, you're [34:27.680 --> 34:30.680] power. [34:57.680 --> 35:16.680] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power, when you're going to stop abuse, you're [35:16.680 --> 35:28.680] power. [35:46.680 --> 36:05.680] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power, when you're going to stop abuse, you're [36:05.680 --> 36:17.680] power. [36:35.680 --> 37:00.680] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power, when you're going to stop abuse, you're [37:00.680 --> 37:05.680] power. [37:30.680 --> 37:59.680] Okay, I think we're in. [37:59.680 --> 38:14.680] Anybody out there if you're listening, if you can hear us, call in to, call in my number, [38:14.680 --> 38:25.680] 940-399-9922 and just give me a text that says that you can hear us. [38:25.680 --> 38:27.680] We're having some issues. [38:27.680 --> 38:36.680] Okay, we were talking to Travis in Wisconsin, and Travis, we were talking about disorderly [38:36.680 --> 38:37.680] conduct. [38:37.680 --> 38:39.680] So they said you were yelling. [38:39.680 --> 38:43.680] That's what they said, yep. [38:43.680 --> 38:45.680] Okay, so at least they said something. [38:45.680 --> 38:47.680] Okay, they said yelling and what else? [38:47.680 --> 38:51.680] They just said I was yelling and overtalking the chairman. [38:51.680 --> 38:57.680] I was talking loud because I didn't have a microphone and I'm a loud person anyways. [38:57.680 --> 39:03.680] Yeah, I don't think I did anything wrong for disorderly conduct at all, not even close. [39:03.680 --> 39:10.680] Well, did they indicate that you created a disturbance? [39:10.680 --> 39:12.680] Not beforehand. [39:12.680 --> 39:15.680] They just came in as soon as, I mean, as soon as I was trying to give my, I was trying to [39:15.680 --> 39:20.680] give three minutes of my time to somebody else to speak that had already spoke, and [39:20.680 --> 39:21.680] I hadn't spoken. [39:21.680 --> 39:25.680] Everybody gets three minutes, so I had given her my three minutes. [39:25.680 --> 39:27.680] And they said I couldn't do that. [39:27.680 --> 39:33.680] Under robber's rules of order, that's relatively common and it's allowed. [39:33.680 --> 39:38.680] That's what I thought too, you know, and they said I was out of order and I couldn't do [39:38.680 --> 39:39.680] that. [39:39.680 --> 39:43.680] I said it is my right to let anybody speak that I want to speak for me, and the cops [39:43.680 --> 39:47.680] were right there and they physically took me out right at that point. [39:47.680 --> 39:50.680] Okay, is all this on video of any kind? [39:50.680 --> 39:51.680] Yes, I do. [39:51.680 --> 39:59.680] I mean, it is so, I've got so much, it is crazy that they even charged me. [39:59.680 --> 40:07.680] Okay, in our opinion, I'm speaking for Brett, I think, best fight to have is the one you [40:07.680 --> 40:08.680] pick. [40:08.680 --> 40:14.680] So they want to have a fight, take it back to them. [40:14.680 --> 40:22.680] Charge them with tampering the government document, I'm doing that now to a judge. [40:22.680 --> 40:28.680] We had a clerk make a wrong entry on a document and I charged her with tampering. [40:28.680 --> 40:37.680] These guys, you can charge them with aggravated perjury and tampering the government document, [40:37.680 --> 40:42.680] false imprisonment, go after them. [40:42.680 --> 40:50.680] If they can file criminal charges, so can you. [40:50.680 --> 40:59.680] This is a public meeting, almost certainly they had some type of video of the meeting. [40:59.680 --> 41:02.680] Make sure you request it. [41:02.680 --> 41:05.680] They're certainly going to have a recording. [41:05.680 --> 41:07.680] I have possession of it. [41:07.680 --> 41:13.680] See, it's deeper than that, we have a 40-acre parcel that we were trying to get a gravel [41:13.680 --> 41:20.680] pit permit for last year and our land borders another existing gravel pit and the reason [41:20.680 --> 41:27.680] we went to that meeting was for to protest their renewal of their permit because they [41:27.680 --> 41:32.680] denied ours and ours is border, we touch each other. [41:32.680 --> 41:37.680] They can have one but we can't. [41:37.680 --> 41:42.680] So this sounds like payola. [41:42.680 --> 41:45.680] They're trying to keep me out of there? [41:45.680 --> 41:50.680] Well, somebody's being paid off. [41:50.680 --> 41:59.680] Who profits by this and who would lose profit if you got your gravel pit? [41:59.680 --> 42:02.680] Yeah, the owners of the other one obviously. [42:02.680 --> 42:05.680] Matthews would be. [42:05.680 --> 42:17.680] So you might want to start subpoenaing financial records of the council or whatever the tribunal [42:17.680 --> 42:22.680] is and of each of the members. [42:22.680 --> 42:27.680] You're not likely to get those records but everybody's going to get real excited when [42:27.680 --> 42:33.680] you start going for them. [42:33.680 --> 42:41.680] But if they did that to shut you down in a public meeting, then what's your public open [42:41.680 --> 42:45.680] meetings law say in Wisconsin? [42:45.680 --> 42:46.680] I didn't find that. [42:46.680 --> 42:54.680] I was looking for the laws on the meetings and I wasn't able to come across that one. [42:54.680 --> 43:02.680] It's generally either inside or associated with your open records law. [43:02.680 --> 43:03.680] Okay. [43:03.680 --> 43:07.680] There's a lot of categories to look through. [43:07.680 --> 43:10.680] I will continue my search on that for sure. [43:10.680 --> 43:13.680] Just do a search for open meetings Wisconsin. [43:13.680 --> 43:17.680] You'll probably get a hit on it. [43:17.680 --> 43:22.680] Okay. [43:22.680 --> 43:32.680] Find that, then call us back next week or tomorrow if you have another show then. [43:32.680 --> 43:33.680] Okay. [43:33.680 --> 43:37.680] The other thing I'm going to ask you is can I jump in? [43:37.680 --> 43:38.680] Okay. [43:38.680 --> 43:39.680] Hang on. [43:39.680 --> 43:40.680] We're about to go to our sponsors. [43:40.680 --> 43:43.680] We'll pick up your next question on the other side. [43:43.680 --> 43:51.680] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [43:51.680 --> 43:53.680] We'll be taking your calls all night. [43:53.680 --> 43:59.680] We'll be right back. [43:59.680 --> 44:00.680] I love Logos. [44:00.680 --> 44:04.680] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.680 --> 44:06.680] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:06.680 --> 44:07.680] I need my truth pick. [44:07.680 --> 44:12.680] I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:12.680 --> 44:19.680] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:19.680 --> 44:21.680] How can I help Logos? [44:21.680 --> 44:23.680] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.680 --> 44:28.680] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:28.680 --> 44:30.680] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:30.680 --> 44:33.680] Now go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [44:33.680 --> 44:36.680] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:36.680 --> 44:42.680] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:42.680 --> 44:43.680] Do I pay extra? [44:43.680 --> 44:44.680] No. [44:44.680 --> 44:46.680] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.680 --> 44:47.680] No. [44:47.680 --> 44:48.680] Can I use my Amazon Pride? [44:48.680 --> 44:49.680] No. [44:49.680 --> 44:50.680] I mean, yes. [44:50.680 --> 44:51.680] Wow. [44:51.680 --> 44:53.680] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:53.680 --> 44:55.680] This is perfect. [44:55.680 --> 44:56.680] Thank you so much. [44:56.680 --> 44:57.680] We are welcome. [44:57.680 --> 45:00.680] Happy holidays, Logos. [45:00.680 --> 45:03.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.680 --> 45:15.680] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.680 --> 45:18.680] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.680 --> 45:22.680] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.680 --> 45:27.680] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.680 --> 45:33.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.680 --> 45:42.680] 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. [45:42.680 --> 45:51.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.680 --> 46:14.680] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.680 --> 46:25.680] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? If you could not wait any bout too long, would your purpose let you die? [46:25.680 --> 46:30.680] Did I just stand around a soldier or warrior of love? [46:30.680 --> 46:38.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Travis in Wisconsin. [46:38.680 --> 46:41.680] Okay, Travis, you had another question. [46:41.680 --> 46:50.680] Yeah, could I also be charged in these offices of kidnapping, because it took me 45 miles away from where I was then, the department. [46:50.680 --> 46:54.680] Where was the nearest magistrate? [46:54.680 --> 47:02.680] They sent me to the jail, not to the judge, and it was a book and release, and it was 45 miles away. [47:02.680 --> 47:09.680] Okay, got that part. Was there a, what time of day was it? [47:09.680 --> 47:14.680] It was evening, probably like 637 o'clock in the evening. [47:14.680 --> 47:20.680] Okay, move the mic a little away from your mouth. You're over-driving the mic a little. [47:20.680 --> 47:30.680] Okay, you might put in an information request for all of the magistrates within the county. [47:30.680 --> 47:43.680] And what you'll probably get is a response saying, we do not keep such a list and we're not required to create one for your inquiry. [47:43.680 --> 47:48.680] And that will bolster your charge that they failed to take you to the nearest magistrate. [47:48.680 --> 48:00.680] You need to look at Wisconsin law under arrest in your criminal procedure code on arrest without a warrant. [48:00.680 --> 48:05.680] Read those sections. It'll tell the officers what they're supposed to do. [48:05.680 --> 48:17.680] In Texas, the statute for arrest without a warrant is 14.06, and it says that the officer must take you to the nearest magistrate. [48:17.680 --> 48:29.680] If you're arrested for a traffic citation, it's 543.006 says, or 002 says they're to take you to the nearest magistrate. [48:29.680 --> 48:41.680] 006 authorizes them to release you on your own recognizance if you promise to appear before a magistrate, not a judge, but a magistrate. [48:41.680 --> 48:48.680] All judges are magistrates, but when they're acting as a magistrate, they're not acting as a judge. [48:48.680 --> 48:56.680] The only thing a magistrate can do is hold a probable cause hearing and make a determination of probable cause. [48:56.680 --> 49:01.680] That was what was required. That's what the police should have done to have jurisdiction. [49:01.680 --> 49:12.680] So check that. If you can show that a magistrate was or would have made himself available, him or herself available, [49:12.680 --> 49:23.680] then you charge them with aggravated kidnapping because they did so while prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [49:23.680 --> 49:31.680] Are you familiar with the police officer certification and training agency for Wisconsin? [49:31.680 --> 49:33.680] No. [49:33.680 --> 49:41.680] Familiarize yourself with it. Look it up. Look up the agency that trains and certifies peace officers. [49:41.680 --> 49:49.680] It's usually called POST, peace officer standards of training, but each state might have a slightly different acronym. [49:49.680 --> 49:53.680] Like Texas has TECO, Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. [49:53.680 --> 49:59.680] So look that up. Whoever licenses peace officers and file a complaint with them. [49:59.680 --> 50:08.680] That works a lot like a bar grievance does. It steams their bond rating. [50:08.680 --> 50:24.680] So file a special conduct complaint against every officer involved. File aggravated kidnapping because they have pistols on their hip. [50:24.680 --> 50:32.680] Then read the codes. Have you read the criminal procedure code for Wisconsin? [50:32.680 --> 50:34.680] The what code? [50:34.680 --> 50:40.680] Criminal procedure code. [50:40.680 --> 50:46.680] You need to read it because you can't just look through it. There's stuff in there you won't see coming. [50:46.680 --> 50:53.680] And we suggest you read it twice. Generally just the first half is all you care about. [50:53.680 --> 50:58.680] But if you don't know what the code is, you don't know what they're doing wrong. [50:58.680 --> 51:06.680] Right. I'm not sure if I found the right thing. It says code, but it's got the statute numbers. [51:06.680 --> 51:14.680] And you click on the statute number, it brings you to that. And it just keeps branching off from there. [51:14.680 --> 51:21.680] So I don't know that I'm looking in the right thing. And I don't know where to get the book from. [51:21.680 --> 51:26.680] Okay. Wisconsin criminal procedure. [51:26.680 --> 51:32.680] I'm looking that up. I just finished looking up the post bunch over in Wisconsin. [51:32.680 --> 51:38.680] They call themselves the Standards Training and Standards Bureau. [51:38.680 --> 51:48.680] And it says they serve as the staff of Law Enforcement Standards Board, LESB. [51:48.680 --> 52:03.680] So apparently they're underneath the Department of Justice of Wisconsin. So you can find it that way. It's www.doj.state.wi.us. [52:03.680 --> 52:11.680] www.doj.state.wi.us. [52:11.680 --> 52:18.680] And they've got that Criminal Standards Bureau. Criminal Procedure Code. [52:18.680 --> 52:26.680] Wisconsin Statutes Criminal Procedure Code chapters 967 through 980. [52:26.680 --> 52:37.680] Read them twice. Once you've read them twice, the second time you read them, you'll start stitching all the pieces together and they'll begin to make sense. [52:37.680 --> 52:47.680] Then you can look more effectively at what they've done and evaluated based on what the code says they're supposed to do. [52:47.680 --> 52:53.680] Now these codes are not as difficult as it appears because they're outlined. [52:53.680 --> 52:59.680] There's lots of white space. And you'll see lots of stuff that's real technical that you don't care about. [52:59.680 --> 53:08.680] You can go through it relatively quickly. First time you go through it, don't try to understand it. Just read it. [53:08.680 --> 53:13.680] Go back and go through it again. Then you'll start stitching the pieces together. [53:13.680 --> 53:24.680] Then we get to have a whole different conversation. [53:24.680 --> 53:29.680] Okay. We don't have time to examine all the codes. We've got a whole board full of callers. [53:29.680 --> 53:36.680] And this is something we need to do off the air so we can move more quickly on the air. [53:36.680 --> 53:40.680] Okay. I will do that and I will get back to this more. [53:40.680 --> 53:54.680] I went to the first hearing and two days after that, the DA mailed my wife a letter telling her that she needed to contact a person [53:54.680 --> 54:02.680] about doing a community service, anger control management type class, or she was going to be charged. [54:02.680 --> 54:09.680] And this was like a month after it all happened. And they never charged my wife that night or nothing. They even said they were going to. [54:09.680 --> 54:14.680] That should definitely get a bar grievance against the prosecutor. [54:14.680 --> 54:26.680] Yeah. There's a special rule that says you can't bring or threaten to bring some civil or criminal proceedings to gain an advantage in a matter. [54:26.680 --> 54:34.680] So take a look at those rules because a lawyer is not allowed to do that. Explicitly not allowed. That's just right up their wrist. [54:34.680 --> 54:36.680] This is unethical. [54:36.680 --> 54:43.680] What are the bar rules, state bar association rules for lawyers in Wisconsin? [54:43.680 --> 54:47.680] Okay. Thank you very much. [54:47.680 --> 54:53.680] Okay. Call us next week. We'll have a much more interesting conversation. [54:53.680 --> 54:56.680] All right. Sounds good. Thank you very much. [54:56.680 --> 55:08.680] Okay. Thank you. Now we have what appears to be a first time caller from Connecticut 860. Did I say that right? [55:08.680 --> 55:18.680] Did I get you? I got the emphasis on the wrong sololable. [55:18.680 --> 55:31.680] Okay. It looks like Justin in Connecticut. If you're in the 806 area code, talk to us. [55:31.680 --> 55:36.680] He means 860. [55:36.680 --> 55:48.680] Hello. Okay. Maybe we lost him or maybe the velvety tones of my voice lulled him into unconsciousness. [55:48.680 --> 55:54.680] Or maybe it's somebody that's muted and they just called in on the line because we've got a lot of dead air. [55:54.680 --> 55:57.680] I was falling asleep. [55:57.680 --> 56:06.680] What? What? Did you hear that? This is scandalous. Falling asleep on my show. [56:06.680 --> 56:11.680] There's no other way for me to listen. [56:11.680 --> 56:16.680] Okay. Did you say you just called in to listen? [56:16.680 --> 56:17.680] I did. [56:17.680 --> 56:22.680] Oh, naughty, naughty, naughty. [56:22.680 --> 56:34.680] This is our caller line. So now that you're on the caller line, you have to ask us a really complex legal question. [56:34.680 --> 56:39.680] Why isn't the old radio working? [56:39.680 --> 56:46.680] I think it's my fault, but I'll get blamed for it anyway. Deborah's working on it at the moment. [56:46.680 --> 56:51.680] Yes, she is. I think she just figured it out and I think she's already blaming you. [56:51.680 --> 57:03.680] Okay. Okay, Justin. Hang up and go back to our – go to logosradionetwork.com and click on the Listen Live button. [57:03.680 --> 57:05.680] Will do. Thanks, gentlemen. [57:05.680 --> 57:15.680] Okay. Thank you. Now we're going to go to Jack in Texas. Hello, Jack. What do you have for us today? [57:15.680 --> 57:21.680] I couldn't get to the Internet either. [57:21.680 --> 57:22.680] Wait. Say that again? [57:22.680 --> 57:27.680] Question. I could not get you on the Internet. [57:27.680 --> 57:32.680] Oh, okay. Well, we were having some issues. We will have an archive and it will go up. [57:32.680 --> 57:40.680] But we were having some issues and I think Deborah's got it worked out now. So did you just call in to listen? [57:40.680 --> 57:42.680] No, no, no. I have a question. [57:42.680 --> 57:49.680] Oh, good. Because if you had, I was going to have to ask you to beat yourself around the eyes and the ears with the phone. [57:49.680 --> 57:58.680] In this case, you have a complex and insightful question. What do you have for us? [57:58.680 --> 58:05.680] But I hear the music. You had a traffic ticket with it one time. [58:05.680 --> 58:07.680] Wait. Say that again? [58:07.680 --> 58:10.680] Had a traffic ticket what? [58:10.680 --> 58:12.680] Website. [58:12.680 --> 58:19.680] Yeah, it went down and I'm talking to my Russian programmers, trying to get all my software back up. [58:19.680 --> 58:26.680] I just talked to him today. We're about 13 hours out of sync, so it's a little bit difficult. [58:26.680 --> 58:33.680] And I was afraid I'd lost him because of the war going on over there, but apparently he can still get out to me. [58:33.680 --> 58:38.680] I'm working on that. But we'll speak to this when we come back on the other side. [58:38.680 --> 58:43.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Love Radio. I'm not going to give out the calling number. [58:43.680 --> 58:49.680] We've got a full board of listeners is what we've got. [58:49.680 --> 58:57.680] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.680 --> 59:06.680] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.680 --> 59:08.680] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.680 --> 59:17.680] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.680 --> 59:27.680] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.680 --> 59:32.680] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.680 --> 59:47.680] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.680 --> 59:50.680] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.680 --> 59:59.680] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.680 --> 01:00:05.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.680 --> 01:00:08.680] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.680 --> 01:00:10.680] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.680 --> 01:00:16.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.680 --> 01:00:18.680] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.680 --> 01:00:22.680] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.680 --> 01:00:27.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.680 --> 01:00:32.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.680 --> 01:00:35.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.680 --> 01:00:42.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.680 --> 01:00:45.680] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.680 --> 01:00:48.680] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.680 --> 01:00:51.680] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.680 --> 01:00:54.680] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.680 --> 01:01:00.680] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.680 --> 01:01:06.680] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.680 --> 01:01:09.680] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.680 --> 01:01:12.680] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.680 --> 01:01:17.680] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.680 --> 01:01:31.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.680 --> 01:01:35.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.680 --> 01:01:38.680] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.680 --> 01:01:40.680] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.680 --> 01:01:46.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.680 --> 01:01:52.680] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.680 --> 01:01:57.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.680 --> 01:02:02.680] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.680 --> 01:02:04.680] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.680 --> 01:02:08.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.680 --> 01:02:12.680] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.680 --> 01:02:15.680] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.680 --> 01:02:21.680] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.680 --> 01:02:27.680] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.680 --> 01:02:30.680] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.680 --> 01:02:34.680] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.680 --> 01:02:39.680] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.680 --> 01:02:43.680] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.680 --> 01:02:46.680] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.680 --> 01:02:49.680] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.680 --> 01:02:53.680] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.680 --> 01:03:21.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:53.680 --> 01:04:09.680] Okay, we are back. [01:04:09.680 --> 01:04:13.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with La Radio, and we're talking to Jack in Texas. [01:04:13.680 --> 01:04:18.680] Okay, Jack, where were we? [01:04:18.680 --> 01:04:22.680] I was going to ask you about a portion of that website I used to have. [01:04:22.680 --> 01:04:31.680] It's about meeting with your first appearance in court. [01:04:31.680 --> 01:04:36.680] Okay, anybody who's listening who's interested in the documents there, [01:04:36.680 --> 01:04:41.680] if you'll send me an email and ask me for my traffic documents, [01:04:41.680 --> 01:04:46.680] what that website did was you put in your ticket information [01:04:46.680 --> 01:04:54.680] and it would merge all that information into a set of documents about 150 pages worth. [01:04:54.680 --> 01:04:59.680] So it's down so I can't merge them, but if you'll send me an email, [01:04:59.680 --> 01:05:03.680] I'll send you all the documents that I used for that. [01:05:03.680 --> 01:05:09.680] And first appearance in personum jurisdiction. [01:05:09.680 --> 01:05:14.680] You're in Texas, so all the documents will be pertinent to you. [01:05:14.680 --> 01:05:19.680] The first document is a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:05:19.680 --> 01:05:26.680] Were you cited by a DPS officer? [01:05:26.680 --> 01:05:30.680] No, it was a city police officer who got two tickets. [01:05:30.680 --> 01:05:32.680] Poisex. [01:05:32.680 --> 01:05:43.680] Did you charge the police officer with first degree felony aggravated assault? [01:05:43.680 --> 01:05:45.680] That was a question. [01:05:45.680 --> 01:05:49.680] Oh, we just lost him. [01:05:49.680 --> 01:05:50.680] Oh, boy. [01:05:50.680 --> 01:05:52.680] That was an ups. [01:05:52.680 --> 01:05:55.680] We were just getting to the good part. [01:05:55.680 --> 01:05:59.680] I had to wait to see if he calls back in. [01:05:59.680 --> 01:06:05.680] I got a ticket from the municipality the next town over from me. [01:06:05.680 --> 01:06:11.680] And I gave him a little bit of a hard time, but not the kind he normally gets. [01:06:11.680 --> 01:06:16.680] He asked me about my registration, which wasn't on my window. [01:06:16.680 --> 01:06:19.680] He said, where's your registration? [01:06:19.680 --> 01:06:22.680] He said, you don't have registration on your window. [01:06:22.680 --> 01:06:24.680] Is this automobile registered? [01:06:24.680 --> 01:06:26.680] Of course it is. [01:06:26.680 --> 01:06:28.680] Well, do you have your registration? [01:06:28.680 --> 01:06:30.680] Yeah, I do. [01:06:30.680 --> 01:06:32.680] Well, where is it? [01:06:32.680 --> 01:06:34.680] It's in the glove box. [01:06:34.680 --> 01:06:35.680] Will you show it to me? [01:06:35.680 --> 01:06:39.680] No. [01:06:39.680 --> 01:06:48.680] The reason I said that is he does not get to ask me for anything that he has equal access to. [01:06:48.680 --> 01:06:51.680] Well, plus, he doesn't have any probable cause for a crime. [01:06:51.680 --> 01:06:52.680] What's he trying to do? [01:06:52.680 --> 01:06:55.680] Compel you to give evidence against yourself? [01:06:55.680 --> 01:06:56.680] Exactly. [01:06:56.680 --> 01:06:57.680] No. [01:06:57.680 --> 01:06:59.680] So he said, will you show it to me? [01:06:59.680 --> 01:07:00.680] No. [01:07:00.680 --> 01:07:01.680] He said, no? [01:07:01.680 --> 01:07:03.680] Yeah, no. [01:07:03.680 --> 01:07:07.680] Well, then I'll have to give you a ticket. [01:07:07.680 --> 01:07:09.680] Well, that's OK. [01:07:09.680 --> 01:07:10.680] Go ahead. [01:07:10.680 --> 01:07:11.680] Give me a ticket. [01:07:11.680 --> 01:07:14.680] He said, well, Mr. Cutler, what about your insurance? [01:07:14.680 --> 01:07:16.680] Is this vehicle insured? [01:07:16.680 --> 01:07:18.680] Of course it is. [01:07:18.680 --> 01:07:20.680] Will you show me your proof of insurance? [01:07:20.680 --> 01:07:22.680] No. [01:07:22.680 --> 01:07:24.680] He didn't say anything about that one. [01:07:24.680 --> 01:07:25.680] He knew what I intended. [01:07:25.680 --> 01:07:26.680] He would look it up. [01:07:26.680 --> 01:07:28.680] So he went back and looked it up. [01:07:28.680 --> 01:07:30.680] And he found I did have insurance. [01:07:30.680 --> 01:07:35.680] But he also found that my registration expired six months ago. [01:07:35.680 --> 01:07:39.680] I said, oh, my, maybe that's why I should have put it on the window. [01:07:39.680 --> 01:07:41.680] Now you're going to have to write me a ticket. [01:07:41.680 --> 01:07:42.680] And he did. [01:07:42.680 --> 01:07:47.680] And when he did that, I charged him with first degree felony aggravated assault. [01:07:47.680 --> 01:07:55.680] Jack, did you charge your officer with first degree felony aggravated assault? [01:07:55.680 --> 01:07:57.680] Yes, I sure did. [01:07:57.680 --> 01:07:59.680] Oh, you're a good man. [01:07:59.680 --> 01:08:00.680] Excellent. [01:08:00.680 --> 01:08:05.680] Okay. To whom did you give the complaint? [01:08:05.680 --> 01:08:06.680] To the court. [01:08:06.680 --> 01:08:12.680] I don't know if it was the clerk or whoever the lady was at the court. [01:08:12.680 --> 01:08:16.680] That will be the municipal clerk. [01:08:16.680 --> 01:08:22.680] To your knowledge, did the municipal judge issue a warrant? [01:08:22.680 --> 01:08:25.680] I'm sure he did. [01:08:25.680 --> 01:08:32.680] Are you familiar with 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure? [01:08:32.680 --> 01:08:35.680] No, but I'm writing it down. [01:08:35.680 --> 01:08:38.680] You're going to like this one. [01:08:38.680 --> 01:08:48.680] I bet I read that thing a hundred times before it ever clicked to what I was actually seeing. [01:08:48.680 --> 01:08:57.680] In New York, it says that when a complaint is presented to a magistrate, the magistrate shall examine into the sufficiency of the complaint. [01:08:57.680 --> 01:09:02.680] And if he finds it sufficient, he is to issue a warrant. [01:09:02.680 --> 01:09:05.680] Texas law doesn't say that. [01:09:05.680 --> 01:09:06.680] Texas law says... [01:09:06.680 --> 01:09:09.680] Yeah, it leaves out the if. [01:09:09.680 --> 01:09:21.680] When a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith. [01:09:21.680 --> 01:09:24.680] It does not say may, might, or can if he wants to. [01:09:24.680 --> 01:09:27.680] It doesn't say he can examine into the sufficiency. [01:09:27.680 --> 01:09:31.680] He is commanded to issue a warrant. [01:09:31.680 --> 01:09:36.680] Does that have to be in writing? [01:09:36.680 --> 01:09:38.680] You mean the complaint? [01:09:38.680 --> 01:09:39.680] Yes. [01:09:39.680 --> 01:09:53.680] Yes, it does need to be in writing because it says when he gets the complaint forwarded to him that is compliant with 1504 and 1505, [01:09:53.680 --> 01:09:58.680] that tells about the sufficiency of a complaint. [01:09:58.680 --> 01:09:59.680] Wait a minute. [01:09:59.680 --> 01:10:01.680] You can't do that verbally. [01:10:01.680 --> 01:10:03.680] Wait a minute. [01:10:03.680 --> 01:10:08.680] 15.09, does it say compliant with 1504 or 1505? [01:10:08.680 --> 01:10:10.680] I don't remember that in there. [01:10:10.680 --> 01:10:13.680] I think it says 1505. [01:10:13.680 --> 01:10:18.680] And when you look at 1505, it is like flowing with it. [01:10:18.680 --> 01:10:21.680] Let me look at it right now. [01:10:21.680 --> 01:10:25.680] I think they both get included, but only 1505 is mentioned. [01:10:25.680 --> 01:10:27.680] Let me take a look. [01:10:27.680 --> 01:10:32.680] 1509. [01:10:32.680 --> 01:10:42.680] A complaint in accordance with article 1505 may be forwarded as provided by article 1508 to any magistrate in the state. [01:10:42.680 --> 01:10:49.680] And the magistrate who receives the same shall forthwith issue a warrant for the arrest of the accused. [01:10:49.680 --> 01:10:55.680] And the accused, when arrested, shall be dealt with as provided in this chapter in similar cases. [01:10:55.680 --> 01:10:56.680] Okay. [01:10:56.680 --> 01:10:58.680] Go back to 1505. [01:10:58.680 --> 01:11:02.680] 1505 is telling about the requisites of a complaint. [01:11:02.680 --> 01:11:05.680] State the name of the accused. [01:11:05.680 --> 01:11:09.680] If known, if not known, give some reasonably definite description of him. [01:11:09.680 --> 01:11:13.680] It must show that the accused has committed some offense against the laws of the state, [01:11:13.680 --> 01:11:22.680] either directly or that the affidavit has good reason to believe and does believe that the accused has committed such offense. [01:11:22.680 --> 01:11:29.680] It must state the time and place of the commission of the offense, as definitely as can be done by the affiant, [01:11:29.680 --> 01:11:36.680] and it must be signed by the affiant by writing his name or affixing his mark. [01:11:36.680 --> 01:11:38.680] That'll work. [01:11:38.680 --> 01:11:39.680] Okay. [01:11:39.680 --> 01:11:47.680] And frankly, when I recently read it that he had no discretion at all, that was a little bit unreasonable. [01:11:47.680 --> 01:11:53.680] But he only has discretion not to determine whether or not a crime's been committed, [01:11:53.680 --> 01:11:59.680] but whether or not the complaint is sufficient on its base. [01:11:59.680 --> 01:12:00.680] Yeah. [01:12:00.680 --> 01:12:05.680] And that makes sense, because honestly, his job is to hold an examining trial. [01:12:05.680 --> 01:12:10.680] So it makes perfect sense that you drag the person in there to have the examining trial. [01:12:10.680 --> 01:12:17.680] Texas forbids the magistrate from holding an ex parte examining trial. [01:12:17.680 --> 01:12:25.680] So he issues the warrant, then he calls the person in, and then he makes the determination of probable cause. [01:12:25.680 --> 01:12:27.680] So that's the idea. [01:12:27.680 --> 01:12:34.680] If your complaint then is sufficient on its base, [01:12:34.680 --> 01:12:43.680] now just because you make an accusation against a public official doesn't mean it's insufficient. [01:12:43.680 --> 01:12:52.680] In this case, I maintained that I gave a criminal complaint to this judge, this magistrate. [01:12:52.680 --> 01:12:55.680] The magistrate asked me if I was an attorney, and I told him my standard. [01:12:55.680 --> 01:13:00.680] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. [01:13:00.680 --> 01:13:05.680] He asked me if I talked to an attorney, and I told him, no, I don't waste my time with those shysters. [01:13:05.680 --> 01:13:09.680] Without reading the complaints, he threw them down on the counter. [01:13:09.680 --> 01:13:13.680] I'm not going to take these and turned and stormed out. [01:13:13.680 --> 01:13:18.680] Well, Bubba, let's see how that works out for you. [01:13:18.680 --> 01:13:24.680] So I called 911 and tried to get him arrested. [01:13:24.680 --> 01:13:34.680] Let's see, I'm talking to Jack. Have you filed criminal charges against the... [01:13:34.680 --> 01:13:39.680] I've got Jack in two places, and I unmuted both of them. [01:13:39.680 --> 01:13:46.680] Okay, so it doesn't matter if he issued a warrant or not. [01:13:46.680 --> 01:13:54.680] If you don't know that he issued a warrant, then charge him with not doing it. Let him prove he did. [01:13:54.680 --> 01:13:59.680] So file a criminal complaint against him with another magistrate. [01:13:59.680 --> 01:14:08.680] In Victoria County, I filed a criminal complaint with a district judge against the Justice of the Peace. [01:14:08.680 --> 01:14:17.680] You probably won't believe this, but he did not issue a warrant. Unbelievable. [01:14:17.680 --> 01:14:19.680] What a shocker. [01:14:19.680 --> 01:14:23.680] Yeah, I couldn't believe it. I was devastated. [01:14:23.680 --> 01:14:28.680] So I filed a criminal complaint against him with another district judge. [01:14:28.680 --> 01:14:38.680] And the Justice of the Peace, I filed a tort letter, a notice of intent to sue, [01:14:38.680 --> 01:14:45.680] because I asked the magistrate to do something that the law commanded him to do. [01:14:45.680 --> 01:14:52.680] He had no discretion in the matter, but he exercised discretion. [01:14:52.680 --> 01:14:58.680] If a public official fails to perform an administrative duty, [01:14:58.680 --> 01:15:03.680] and an administrative duty is a duty they are commanded to perform, [01:15:03.680 --> 01:15:14.680] under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code 7.001, he is liable to the party injured. [01:15:14.680 --> 01:15:20.680] It actually says he is liable only to the party injured. [01:15:20.680 --> 01:15:26.680] And I'm the one that was injured because by failing to issue the warrant, [01:15:26.680 --> 01:15:30.680] he denied me in the equal protections of the law [01:15:30.680 --> 01:15:38.680] and in my right to a reasonable expectation of the due course of the laws. [01:15:38.680 --> 01:15:43.680] And a due course violation is harm per se. [01:15:43.680 --> 01:15:48.680] So, I want your bass boat, Bubba. [01:15:48.680 --> 01:15:54.680] You don't want to do your job? We'll see how that works out for you. [01:15:54.680 --> 01:16:03.680] Jack, the idea is to give the judge the impression that you played him like a cheap fiddle. [01:16:03.680 --> 01:16:09.680] And back to your original question about the traffic site. [01:16:09.680 --> 01:16:15.680] Are there any documents, do you have all the documents from the traffic site? [01:16:15.680 --> 01:16:21.680] I have all, you did send me all the documents and I filed every one of them. [01:16:21.680 --> 01:16:23.680] Okay, good. [01:16:23.680 --> 01:16:27.680] But I do have a question. [01:16:27.680 --> 01:16:29.680] Go ahead. [01:16:29.680 --> 01:16:33.680] I have a question about something on the site. [01:16:33.680 --> 01:16:37.680] So, this part is about meeting with the... [01:16:37.680 --> 01:16:40.680] Okay, hang on, hang on, we're about to go to our sponsors. [01:16:40.680 --> 01:16:46.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:16:46.680 --> 01:16:50.680] No calling number, we've got a full board. [01:16:50.680 --> 01:16:54.680] Give it out. A couple of these look like duplicates. [01:16:54.680 --> 01:17:00.680] 514-646-1984. [01:17:00.680 --> 01:17:05.680] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.680 --> 01:17:11.680] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [01:17:11.680 --> 01:17:16.680] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:16.680 --> 01:17:23.680] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [01:17:23.680 --> 01:17:27.680] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [01:17:27.680 --> 01:17:31.680] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:31.680 --> 01:17:38.680] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [01:17:38.680 --> 01:17:43.680] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.680 --> 01:17:49.680] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:49.680 --> 01:17:55.680] So, tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [01:17:55.680 --> 01:17:59.680] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:17:59.680 --> 01:18:05.680] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.680 --> 01:18:09.680] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:09.680 --> 01:18:14.680] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:18:14.680 --> 01:18:20.680] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:18:20.680 --> 01:18:26.680] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:18:26.680 --> 01:18:33.680] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:33.680 --> 01:18:38.680] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.680 --> 01:18:40.680] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.680 --> 01:18:49.680] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.680 --> 01:19:00.680] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:19.680 --> 01:19:22.680] Don't fool me [01:19:26.680 --> 01:19:28.680] Well [01:19:30.680 --> 01:19:35.680] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:35.680 --> 01:19:40.680] I was blindsided but now I can see your plans [01:19:40.680 --> 01:19:45.680] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my hands [01:19:45.680 --> 01:19:51.680] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:54.680 --> 01:19:57.680] Ain't gonna fool me [01:20:01.680 --> 01:20:12.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 7th day of July, 2022. [01:20:12.680 --> 01:20:18.680] Year is half over already. Okay, we're talking to Jack in Texas. [01:20:18.680 --> 01:20:24.680] And where were we when we went out, Jack? [01:20:24.680 --> 01:20:27.680] I was about to get to my question. [01:20:27.680 --> 01:20:33.680] Okay. You have a question? Let's hear your question. [01:20:33.680 --> 01:20:45.680] Okay, so this is about if they try to force you to talk to the prosecutor instead of the magistrate at the examining trial. [01:20:45.680 --> 01:20:51.680] Okay, you're gonna like this. They're not gonna have an examining trial. [01:20:51.680 --> 01:20:58.680] Write down 2801 and 2601, Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:20:58.680 --> 01:21:04.680] 28.01, 28 point what? [01:21:04.680 --> 01:21:08.680] 28.01 and 26.01. [01:21:08.680 --> 01:21:10.680] Okay. [01:21:10.680 --> 01:21:18.680] 28.01 lists all of the things that court can order you to come to court for. [01:21:18.680 --> 01:21:24.680] And it has 11 things that are motions and pleadings and it has one, the very first one, [01:21:24.680 --> 01:21:31.680] they can order you to come to court for an arraignment. [01:21:31.680 --> 01:21:37.680] 26.01, Chapter 26 is about arraignments. [01:21:37.680 --> 01:21:55.680] 2601 says an arraignment may be held in the matter of a felony or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [01:21:55.680 --> 01:22:03.680] So when they call you into court, the first thing you need to say is, why am I here? [01:22:03.680 --> 01:22:12.680] And when it goes to prosecutors, they had a Zoom hearing last week for me on my ticket [01:22:12.680 --> 01:22:19.680] and it started out, the prosecutor started talking to me. I said, stop, stop, stop. [01:22:19.680 --> 01:22:23.680] I don't talk to prosecuting attorneys. [01:22:23.680 --> 01:22:25.680] You didn't say persecuting attorneys? [01:22:25.680 --> 01:22:29.680] I almost did, but I didn't. [01:22:29.680 --> 01:22:34.680] And she said, well, we need to get the judge then. And she did. [01:22:34.680 --> 01:22:38.680] I think she already knew who I was, so she was being careful with me. [01:22:38.680 --> 01:22:42.680] She didn't try to feed me any crapola. [01:22:42.680 --> 01:22:50.680] And she got the judge and the first thing she said was, Mr. Kelton said he doesn't talk to prosecuting attorneys. [01:22:50.680 --> 01:22:54.680] The judge definitely knew who I was. [01:22:54.680 --> 01:23:00.680] I had crawled down his throat before, but he was also the municipal judge for Newark, Texas. [01:23:00.680 --> 01:23:12.680] And I was helping a guy there and he kept asking me questions and the judge said, who are you? Observer. [01:23:12.680 --> 01:23:17.680] And he ordered me to stand up and I did. He said, what's your business in this court? [01:23:17.680 --> 01:23:24.680] I said, none of yours. I'm here to observe. [01:23:24.680 --> 01:23:32.680] I'm not sure, I don't remember exactly how it all went, but I told him, Yarder, you are to stay out of my business. [01:23:32.680 --> 01:23:37.680] You take care of your business, I will take care of my business. [01:23:37.680 --> 01:23:42.680] He told me to sit down, shut up, and I did. [01:23:42.680 --> 01:23:49.680] And then while the hearing was going on, I went over to the bailiff and first I filled out a criminal complaint [01:23:49.680 --> 01:23:57.680] and took it over to the bailiff and tried to get the bailiff to arrest the judge while he's having the hearing. [01:23:57.680 --> 01:24:03.680] And that's the one where Philip wound up wiping the floor with him. [01:24:03.680 --> 01:24:07.680] So he knew exactly who I was. [01:24:07.680 --> 01:24:15.680] And he was real careful with me. I told the clerk that I wanted a hearing on my subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:24:15.680 --> 01:24:22.680] We come to the hearing and the judge starts talking. I said, stop your honor, hold on. [01:24:22.680 --> 01:24:29.680] I have a challenge subject matter jurisdiction. I'm here at ArmsLink to the court and have a challenge subject matter jurisdiction before the court. [01:24:29.680 --> 01:24:35.680] We need to hear that petition. We're not hearing any motions today. [01:24:35.680 --> 01:24:44.680] Well, in that case, I had went to the clerk and asked her to set a hearing, a motion hearing for this subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:24:44.680 --> 01:24:47.680] And she said she would. She set this hearing. [01:24:47.680 --> 01:24:56.680] I said, in that case, I need you to arrest your clerk for tampering with the government document. [01:24:56.680 --> 01:25:03.680] I'm sorry, this one was for official misconduct. I got her later for tampering with the government document. [01:25:03.680 --> 01:25:10.680] Well, I'm not going to arrest my clerk. Well, in that case, I'd like you to arrest yourself. [01:25:10.680 --> 01:25:16.680] I'm not going to do that either. Well, then I'd like you to disqualify yourself for cause. [01:25:16.680 --> 01:25:21.680] He said, Mr. Kelton, do you mean you'd like me to recuse myself? No. [01:25:21.680 --> 01:25:25.680] I mean, I need you to disqualify yourself for incompetency. [01:25:25.680 --> 01:25:31.680] You have vacated your office by failing to perform a duty you're required to perform. [01:25:31.680 --> 01:25:37.680] Well, Mr. Kelton, I'm not going to disqualify myself. Well, in that case, we're done here. [01:25:37.680 --> 01:25:41.680] Well, you know, you can go back after he only has three business days. [01:25:41.680 --> 01:25:49.680] When you say that you're disqualifying, he has three business days to refer that matter to the presiding regional judge. [01:25:49.680 --> 01:25:54.680] The presiding judge of the administrative judicial region, he's got three days. That's it. [01:25:54.680 --> 01:26:01.680] Oh, I'm glad you reminded me of that. Is that in 18A? OK, good. [01:26:01.680 --> 01:26:04.680] Then I'll make up a complaint on that one. [01:26:04.680 --> 01:26:11.680] Yeah. Oh, and it also says that you get to tattle to the regional judge yourself, to the admin judge. [01:26:11.680 --> 01:26:17.680] You get to go and tattle and say that he failed to refer the matter or disqualify himself. [01:26:17.680 --> 01:26:22.680] He's still hanging around trying to preside over the matter and he's got pending disqualification. [01:26:22.680 --> 01:26:25.680] I'm going to go slap that boy. [01:26:25.680 --> 01:26:28.680] Jack, is this giving you any ideas? [01:26:28.680 --> 01:26:34.680] Yes, lots of ideas. I do have a specific question. [01:26:34.680 --> 01:26:37.680] OK. [01:26:37.680 --> 01:26:44.680] OK, so it says here, if the prosecutor insists or makes any threats against you, [01:26:44.680 --> 01:26:48.680] if you do not meet with him or her, you can go ahead and meet. [01:26:48.680 --> 01:26:54.680] We suggest that you ask for security to be present when you do. [01:26:54.680 --> 01:27:00.680] If the bailiff stays or does not stay, I guess, matter, [01:27:00.680 --> 01:27:06.680] stay or not doesn't matter as you have touched the legal base by requesting it. [01:27:06.680 --> 01:27:10.680] What do you mean by the legal base? [01:27:10.680 --> 01:27:22.680] Well, you have the bailiff is the public. He's there to keep the peace. [01:27:22.680 --> 01:27:30.680] And when they order you to meet with a prosecutor, they have absolutely zero power to do that. [01:27:30.680 --> 01:27:33.680] So let me tell you one other thing about that. [01:27:33.680 --> 01:27:41.680] You were talking about the arraignment and that one thing that they can do to get you in for an arraignment. [01:27:41.680 --> 01:27:48.680] The Code of Criminal Procedure 2603 tells when they can hold an arraignment. [01:27:48.680 --> 01:27:57.680] And they can't have an arraignment until the expiration of two full days after they gave you a copy of the indictment. [01:27:57.680 --> 01:28:01.680] Did you get a copy of the indictment, like from a grand jury? [01:28:01.680 --> 01:28:07.680] They have to wait until you get that and then you get two full days after that and then they can hold an arraignment. [01:28:07.680 --> 01:28:09.680] Yeah, I don't think they did that. [01:28:09.680 --> 01:28:12.680] I only got with the citation for two tests. [01:28:12.680 --> 01:28:14.680] Right. That's normal. Yeah. [01:28:14.680 --> 01:28:23.680] Now, it's been set for end of July to go to court for something. [01:28:23.680 --> 01:28:26.680] I don't know what the... [01:28:26.680 --> 01:28:34.680] Okay, for something you need to file a request for clarification. [01:28:34.680 --> 01:28:38.680] Well, he said that we're going to meet with him and the prosecutor. [01:28:38.680 --> 01:28:41.680] So that's why I was asking about this. [01:28:41.680 --> 01:28:47.680] You don't have to meet with a prosecutor under any situation. [01:28:47.680 --> 01:28:53.680] That's why I told the prosecutor that I don't talk to prosecuting attorneys. [01:28:53.680 --> 01:28:59.680] Okay. So if the prosecutor is there, do I ask for the bailiff to attend? [01:28:59.680 --> 01:29:09.680] Yes. And I just prepared a motion for the court requesting security be present on the Zoom hearing. [01:29:09.680 --> 01:29:14.680] Okay. Now, what is... [01:29:14.680 --> 01:29:20.680] What in the world? Why would he ask that? [01:29:20.680 --> 01:29:28.680] Because at that last hearing, if I'd have had security, a bailiff present, I would have asked him to arrest the judge [01:29:28.680 --> 01:29:32.680] because it occurred in his sight and within his hearing. [01:29:32.680 --> 01:29:36.680] And then when he didn't, I'd get to sue him personally. [01:29:36.680 --> 01:29:41.680] Okay. But it says here, and I hear the music. I'll ask real quick. [01:29:41.680 --> 01:29:47.680] If the bailiff stays or doesn't stay, you have touched the legal base. What is the... [01:29:47.680 --> 01:29:52.680] Yes. They denied you in due process, and that's hard for said. [01:29:52.680 --> 01:29:53.680] You can arrest us to baseball. [01:29:53.680 --> 01:30:02.680] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:30:02.680 --> 01:30:09.680] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.680 --> 01:30:12.680] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.680 --> 01:30:16.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.680 --> 01:30:21.680] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.680 --> 01:30:26.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.680 --> 01:30:32.680] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.680 --> 01:30:34.680] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.680 --> 01:30:41.680] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.680 --> 01:30:45.680] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.680 --> 01:30:48.680] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.680 --> 01:30:52.680] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.680 --> 01:30:56.680] But think again. All that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.680 --> 01:31:03.680] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:03.680 --> 01:31:10.680] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.680 --> 01:31:15.680] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.680 --> 01:31:21.680] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.680 --> 01:31:31.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.680 --> 01:31:36.680] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.680 --> 01:31:43.680] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.680 --> 01:31:46.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.680 --> 01:31:48.680] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.680 --> 01:31:50.680] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.680 --> 01:31:51.680] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.680 --> 01:31:52.680] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.680 --> 01:31:53.680] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.680 --> 01:31:55.680] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.680 --> 01:31:57.680] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.680 --> 01:32:02.680] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.680 --> 01:32:08.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.680 --> 01:32:13.680] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.680 --> 01:32:20.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.680 --> 01:32:26.680] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.680 --> 01:32:35.680] Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.680 --> 01:32:41.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.680 --> 01:32:51.680] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource materials. [01:32:51.680 --> 01:33:02.680] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.680 --> 01:33:12.680] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:12.680 --> 01:33:21.680] Yeah, who you want to chip? Who you take me for? Free Tully? Who you want to chip? I'm not free Tully. You can't chip me. All I'm saying. [01:33:21.680 --> 01:33:30.680] Don't let them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening. Put a chip in your body. And then when you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody. [01:33:30.680 --> 01:33:38.680] When I say chip in your mouth, chip in your daddy, chip in your grandpa and your granny, chip in me, chip in your baby. [01:33:38.680 --> 01:33:44.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Jack in Texas. [01:33:44.680 --> 01:33:56.680] And the courts have held. Rights belong to the belligerent litigant. If you want them, you must claim them. [01:33:56.680 --> 01:34:03.680] So I have a right to have security present. I claim it. [01:34:03.680 --> 01:34:13.680] And then if the prosecutor does anything improper, I have the right to demand that the peace officer perform his duty. [01:34:13.680 --> 01:34:21.680] Because he has a duty to arrest anyone who commits crime within his sight or within his hearing. [01:34:21.680 --> 01:34:28.680] And he is not there as an employee of the court. [01:34:28.680 --> 01:34:35.680] He's an employee of the state. And he is not even a member of the judiciary. [01:34:35.680 --> 01:34:42.680] He is there to keep the peace. And it makes no difference who breaches it. [01:34:42.680 --> 01:34:52.680] Jack, if you have never asked the bailiff to arrest the judge in the courtroom, you just haven't lived. [01:34:52.680 --> 01:35:03.680] That is so much fun. Does that answer your question about touching the basis? [01:35:03.680 --> 01:35:10.680] Not quite, because what if the bailiff does not attend that little meeting? [01:35:10.680 --> 01:35:22.680] Then you charge the bailiff with official misconduct or official oppression, failing to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:35:22.680 --> 01:35:35.680] It's his duty to keep the peace in the courtroom. If he intentionally rendered himself not present, he denied you in the due course of the laws. [01:35:35.680 --> 01:35:43.680] And a due course violation is harm per se, on its face. [01:35:43.680 --> 01:35:52.680] So if I request him to be present and he refuses to be present or the judge kicks him out, then they have violated my right. [01:35:52.680 --> 01:35:54.680] Absolutely. [01:35:54.680 --> 01:36:00.680] If the judge kicks him out, then that's on the judge. [01:36:00.680 --> 01:36:07.680] Right. What code is that? Anybody have it on their tip of their tongue? [01:36:07.680 --> 01:36:15.680] If a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority they do not expressly have, [01:36:15.680 --> 01:36:23.680] and in the process denies you in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right 39.03... [01:36:23.680 --> 01:36:26.680] Penal code. [01:36:26.680 --> 01:36:31.680] You have to understand the codes. [01:36:31.680 --> 01:36:41.680] The codes just simply cannot be so specific that they address every single possibility. [01:36:41.680 --> 01:36:44.680] So you need to read the codes in your spirit. [01:36:44.680 --> 01:36:56.680] 39.03, official misconduct or official oppression, was intended to ensure that public officials do what the law commands them to do. [01:36:56.680 --> 01:37:00.680] A failure to do that, that denies you in a right, is defined as a crime. [01:37:00.680 --> 01:37:05.680] So any failure. He is the court security officer. [01:37:05.680 --> 01:37:08.680] He is there to keep the peace in the courtroom. [01:37:08.680 --> 01:37:18.680] If he deliberately positions himself such that he can't do that, then you charge him with misfeasance in office, [01:37:18.680 --> 01:37:21.680] failing to perform a duty he is required to perform. [01:37:21.680 --> 01:37:26.680] Actually, 39.03 is kind of a catch-all. [01:37:26.680 --> 01:37:35.680] You need to read it a couple of times so it sinks in and makes sense, and then you can set them up. [01:37:35.680 --> 01:37:42.680] You can demand that they do something they are not going to want to do, like arrest that judge. [01:37:42.680 --> 01:37:45.680] Well, he is not going to arrest the judge. [01:37:45.680 --> 01:37:51.680] Well, Bubba, life is filled with little decisions. We all get to make some. [01:37:51.680 --> 01:37:56.680] Are you going to arrest that judge or are you going to throw yourself under the bus? [01:37:56.680 --> 01:38:03.680] Your call, and I never care which one they do, [01:38:03.680 --> 01:38:09.680] he is pretty well screwed either way he goes. Does that make sense? [01:38:09.680 --> 01:38:11.680] It makes a lot of sense. [01:38:11.680 --> 01:38:16.680] One more question, and then I will let everybody go. [01:38:16.680 --> 01:38:20.680] How do I record this little meeting? [01:38:20.680 --> 01:38:23.680] Okay, we have a procedure for that. [01:38:23.680 --> 01:38:29.680] You can go on the Internet and do a search for, I've got one here on my desk. [01:38:29.680 --> 01:38:36.680] This is called a DictoPro, D-I-C-T-O-P-R-O. [01:38:36.680 --> 01:38:41.680] It is a little handheld recorder that is designed for conference calls. [01:38:41.680 --> 01:38:45.680] It's got six microphones though. It costs about 30 bucks. [01:38:45.680 --> 01:38:49.680] You take one of these, you turn it on, you put it in your pocket. [01:38:49.680 --> 01:38:58.680] And you take your cell phone and turn the camera on on it and hold it in your hand and point it at them. [01:38:58.680 --> 01:39:01.680] Unless you get a judge that knows you, this generally works. [01:39:01.680 --> 01:39:06.680] I was in a hearing where I had filed as an interpleader. [01:39:06.680 --> 01:39:11.680] I kind of broke into the case and tried to foreclose on a friend of mine. [01:39:11.680 --> 01:39:13.680] The judge knew me. [01:39:13.680 --> 01:39:16.680] Now I've got my phone, I'm pointing it at her. [01:39:16.680 --> 01:39:20.680] And she said, Mr. Coughlin, I need you to turn that phone off. [01:39:20.680 --> 01:39:24.680] Oh, Judge, but I wanted to record these proceedings with it. [01:39:24.680 --> 01:39:30.680] She sent a mail up over, Mr. Mann, take that phone from Mr. Coughlin. [01:39:30.680 --> 01:39:34.680] He jerks it out of my hand and goes back off the side. [01:39:34.680 --> 01:39:38.680] The judge starts to begin the hearing and then she stopped. [01:39:38.680 --> 01:39:43.680] It was Judge Morrow, Precinct 1, Decatur, Texas. [01:39:43.680 --> 01:39:46.680] And she knows you better than that. [01:39:46.680 --> 01:39:48.680] Yes, she did. [01:39:48.680 --> 01:39:55.680] Mr. Coughlin, do you have anything else on your person capable of recording these proceedings? [01:39:55.680 --> 01:39:59.680] Oh, Judge, I was hoping you weren't going to ask me that. [01:39:59.680 --> 01:40:06.680] And I had one little zip-drive Velcro to my name tag and I ripped that off. [01:40:06.680 --> 01:40:09.680] David come and grabbed it. [01:40:09.680 --> 01:40:11.680] We start again. [01:40:11.680 --> 01:40:14.680] Mr. Coughlin, do you have anything? [01:40:14.680 --> 01:40:16.680] Oh, Judge. [01:40:16.680 --> 01:40:19.680] I put one out of my pocket. [01:40:19.680 --> 01:40:26.680] Okay, the point is, you point that phone at them and they'll tell you to turn it off. [01:40:26.680 --> 01:40:30.680] And that's crime in the state of Texas. [01:40:30.680 --> 01:40:34.680] Turner B. Driver, the Fifth Circuit said, [01:40:34.680 --> 01:40:42.680] It is axiomatic that a citizen may record his public officials in the performance of their duty. [01:40:42.680 --> 01:40:46.680] They did not exclude judges. [01:40:46.680 --> 01:40:48.680] So she tells you to turn that phone off. [01:40:48.680 --> 01:40:51.680] Oh, yes, sir. Yes, ma'am. [01:40:51.680 --> 01:40:54.680] You turn it right off. [01:40:54.680 --> 01:40:57.680] That's when they get stupid. [01:40:57.680 --> 01:41:02.680] They tend to never think of you having another recording device. [01:41:02.680 --> 01:41:10.680] Yeah, I've always been able to just keep on with the secondary device and never been asked to turn anything else off. [01:41:10.680 --> 01:41:13.680] They say we turn off the phone and then that's it. [01:41:13.680 --> 01:41:16.680] Then they get careless. [01:41:16.680 --> 01:41:19.680] Art Patton did that in North Carolina. [01:41:19.680 --> 01:41:24.680] Two guys, both of them had a recording device and they told them to turn it off. [01:41:24.680 --> 01:41:25.680] And they said, sure. [01:41:25.680 --> 01:41:27.680] Each one of them had another one in their pocket. [01:41:27.680 --> 01:41:30.680] They recorded the assistant prosecutor. [01:41:30.680 --> 01:41:32.680] This is about going to grand juries. [01:41:32.680 --> 01:41:36.680] They told him, you try to go to a grand jury again and we'll arrest you. [01:41:36.680 --> 01:41:40.680] He pointed at the DA. You see this man over here? [01:41:40.680 --> 01:41:46.680] As concerns grand juries in Bunscum County, he is God. [01:41:46.680 --> 01:41:51.680] Nobody goes to the grand jury except by him. [01:41:51.680 --> 01:41:54.680] I played that on the air. [01:41:54.680 --> 01:41:58.680] Two weeks later, the prosecutor attorney resigned. [01:41:58.680 --> 01:42:03.680] Now, I can't be sure it was because of that, but I like to hope it is. [01:42:03.680 --> 01:42:07.680] Anyway, so record them in secret. [01:42:07.680 --> 01:42:09.680] See, they can't complain. [01:42:09.680 --> 01:42:13.680] They can't say that your recording device interrupted their proceedings [01:42:13.680 --> 01:42:16.680] because they didn't know it was there. [01:42:16.680 --> 01:42:17.680] Okay. [01:42:17.680 --> 01:42:21.680] So is it illegal then to record? [01:42:21.680 --> 01:42:25.680] Wait, you broke up a little bit. Say that again. [01:42:25.680 --> 01:42:29.680] So it is not illegal to record a proceeding. [01:42:29.680 --> 01:42:34.680] No, it is not. [01:42:34.680 --> 01:42:39.680] The other person doesn't have to know you're recording. [01:42:39.680 --> 01:42:47.680] If they're speaking to you, where you can hear them, they have no expectation of privacy. [01:42:47.680 --> 01:42:49.680] If you're in a restaurant, someone's at the next table, [01:42:49.680 --> 01:42:54.680] they're speaking loud enough you can hear them, you can record them. [01:42:54.680 --> 01:42:59.680] That's what he was just saying about Turner v. Driver. [01:42:59.680 --> 01:43:02.680] That's what Turner v. Driver was about. [01:43:02.680 --> 01:43:09.680] He said it's axiomatic that a citizen can record their public officials in the performance of their duty. [01:43:09.680 --> 01:43:13.680] In that case, you have a special right. [01:43:13.680 --> 01:43:20.680] So yes, you can record them, but if they know you're recording, they will object vehemently. [01:43:20.680 --> 01:43:22.680] So don't tell them. [01:43:22.680 --> 01:43:25.680] Right. [01:43:25.680 --> 01:43:27.680] What if they do the same thing? You're judged. [01:43:27.680 --> 01:43:34.680] I mean, I charged them with violating 39.03, violating my rights again. [01:43:34.680 --> 01:43:37.680] Yeah, don't admit it. [01:43:37.680 --> 01:43:39.680] I admitted it there because I didn't care. [01:43:39.680 --> 01:43:41.680] But don't admit it. [01:43:41.680 --> 01:43:43.680] And if they find it, what are they going to charge you with? [01:43:43.680 --> 01:43:46.680] Contempt? Let's see how that works for them. [01:43:46.680 --> 01:43:48.680] Then you'll charge them with official oppression. [01:43:48.680 --> 01:43:52.680] If they don't know you're recording, they tend to be more careless. [01:43:52.680 --> 01:43:57.680] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:01.680] Dang, Cookie. [01:44:01.680 --> 01:44:03.680] Cookie? Me love cookies. [01:44:03.680 --> 01:44:06.680] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:06.680 --> 01:44:09.680] Cookie? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:44:09.680 --> 01:44:12.680] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.680 --> 01:44:13.680] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.680 --> 01:44:16.680] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.680 --> 01:44:17.680] Me have apples. [01:44:17.680 --> 01:44:20.680] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.680 --> 01:44:23.680] Yummy apple. [01:44:23.680 --> 01:44:26.680] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.680 --> 01:44:32.680] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.680 --> 01:44:34.680] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.680 --> 01:44:40.680] Now I go to logosradio.network.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:44:40.680 --> 01:44:46.680] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:46.680 --> 01:44:48.680] New cookies? For me? [01:44:48.680 --> 01:44:50.680] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.680 --> 01:44:56.680] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:44:56.680 --> 01:44:57.680] Fees for Cookie. [01:44:57.680 --> 01:44:59.680] Fees for Classified. [01:45:00.680 --> 01:45:03.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.680 --> 01:45:10.680] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [01:45:10.680 --> 01:45:14.680] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.680 --> 01:45:18.680] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.680 --> 01:45:22.680] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.680 --> 01:45:27.680] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.680 --> 01:45:33.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.680 --> 01:45:38.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.680 --> 01:45:42.680] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.680 --> 01:45:49.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.680 --> 01:45:51.680] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.680 --> 01:46:00.680] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:08.680 --> 01:46:09.680] Hello. [01:46:09.680 --> 01:46:12.680] Oh, man, can't tell. [01:46:12.680 --> 01:46:14.680] You got busted, man. [01:46:14.680 --> 01:46:16.680] Oh, man, I'm broke, man. [01:46:22.680 --> 01:46:26.680] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:46:26.680 --> 01:46:30.680] Some things I realize fully. [01:46:30.680 --> 01:46:33.680] Okay, we are back. [01:46:33.680 --> 01:46:37.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're finishing up with Jack. [01:46:37.680 --> 01:46:41.680] Jack, if you have more questions, call back tomorrow night. [01:46:41.680 --> 01:46:45.680] We've got one segment, and we've got two callers we haven't got to. [01:46:45.680 --> 01:46:46.680] All right, will do. [01:46:46.680 --> 01:46:47.680] Thanks a lot, guys. [01:46:47.680 --> 01:46:48.680] I sure appreciate it. [01:46:48.680 --> 01:46:49.680] Okay. [01:46:49.680 --> 01:46:50.680] All right. [01:46:50.680 --> 01:46:51.680] Thanks, Jack. [01:46:51.680 --> 01:46:55.680] Okay, now we're going to go to Jason in California. [01:46:55.680 --> 01:46:58.680] Jason, what do you have for us today? [01:46:58.680 --> 01:46:59.680] Hello. [01:46:59.680 --> 01:47:02.680] Hi, guys. [01:47:02.680 --> 01:47:08.680] Well, so there's a story that you told last time we spoke. [01:47:08.680 --> 01:47:15.680] You guys acknowledged that I'm giving them, like, they don't like me. [01:47:15.680 --> 01:47:25.680] They don't like the fact that I keep going there when they repeatedly make it known that they don't want me there. [01:47:25.680 --> 01:47:26.680] Okay. [01:47:26.680 --> 01:47:27.680] Okay. [01:47:27.680 --> 01:47:28.680] Bring me up to speed. [01:47:28.680 --> 01:47:29.680] Where are you going? [01:47:29.680 --> 01:47:31.680] Oh, I remember. [01:47:31.680 --> 01:47:36.680] It was a particular grocery store that he doesn't want to wear a mask, and they wanted to wear a mask, [01:47:36.680 --> 01:47:40.680] and then at this point it's gotten to be where they just don't want him to be in there at all, [01:47:40.680 --> 01:47:45.680] and they harass him when he's walking around getting his groceries. [01:47:45.680 --> 01:47:54.680] It's like they've come up, they've invented some reasons that they think justify them denying me service. [01:47:54.680 --> 01:48:01.680] Meanwhile, I have like 95% of everything on video. [01:48:01.680 --> 01:48:18.680] Today I just got served with a petition for a workplace violence restraining order, and there's a hearing set. [01:48:18.680 --> 01:48:20.680] Workplace violence. [01:48:20.680 --> 01:48:23.680] You don't work there, do you? [01:48:23.680 --> 01:48:35.680] No, it's something, let me see, the code is 526.8, I believe, civil code. [01:48:35.680 --> 01:48:42.680] It seems strange that you'd get served by something about a workplace because you're not an employee. [01:48:42.680 --> 01:48:52.680] No, that's what you do to protect your employees from outside violence or another employee or something. [01:48:52.680 --> 01:48:53.680] No, you don't. [01:48:53.680 --> 01:49:01.680] Another employee, sure, but outside violence, no, that's where criminal code kicks in. [01:49:01.680 --> 01:49:12.680] Well, this is, let me see here, 527.8, injunction, code of civil procedure, California. [01:49:12.680 --> 01:49:25.680] On behalf of an employee, if appropriate, other employees at the workplace, an employer, wait a minute. [01:49:25.680 --> 01:49:30.680] If they're going to treat you like an employer, then you need to demand a paycheck. [01:49:30.680 --> 01:49:38.680] And any employer whose employee has suffered unlawful violence from any individual. [01:49:38.680 --> 01:49:40.680] Sorry. [01:49:40.680 --> 01:49:43.680] Have you punched out anybody? [01:49:43.680 --> 01:49:54.680] No, but they're very terrified of me filming and not obeying their claim that I'm not allowed to talk there. [01:49:54.680 --> 01:50:00.680] Wait a minute, are you saying that you were not obedient? [01:50:00.680 --> 01:50:08.680] Yeah, I've not been obedient. [01:50:08.680 --> 01:50:12.680] Okay, look at the code carefully. [01:50:12.680 --> 01:50:17.680] Look at their documentation carefully. [01:50:17.680 --> 01:50:24.680] If they have made false statements in the documentation [01:50:24.680 --> 01:50:36.680] and you have extensive video data showing that it was not you harassing them, but them harassing you, [01:50:36.680 --> 01:50:43.680] then countersue them. [01:50:43.680 --> 01:50:50.680] Okay, right, so this is where I get, that's one of the places I get tripped up. [01:50:50.680 --> 01:50:54.680] So they have filed a petition and there's a hearing. [01:50:54.680 --> 01:51:04.680] And they've given me, there's a form that they, in this code that they want you to use [01:51:04.680 --> 01:51:19.680] as a response to petition, you know, for workplace violence restraining orders. [01:51:19.680 --> 01:51:23.680] Okay, do you have a problem with the form? [01:51:23.680 --> 01:51:25.680] No, no. [01:51:25.680 --> 01:51:26.680] Okay, good. [01:51:26.680 --> 01:51:27.680] It makes sense. [01:51:27.680 --> 01:51:38.680] You fill out the form and then if you have a counterclaim, if they have filed suit in a civil court, [01:51:38.680 --> 01:51:41.680] they've already paid a filing fee. [01:51:41.680 --> 01:51:44.680] That's what I'm saying, they have not. [01:51:44.680 --> 01:51:51.680] This is not, from what I gather, this is not a suit and it's in family court, [01:51:51.680 --> 01:52:00.680] which I don't understand that at all, the hearing, the case number. [01:52:00.680 --> 01:52:16.680] Okay, what is your claim of standing to use this establishment whether they want you to or not? [01:52:16.680 --> 01:52:22.680] An example is 14th Amendment, equal protection. [01:52:22.680 --> 01:52:24.680] Right. [01:52:24.680 --> 01:52:33.680] Do you have something in California law that goes to essentially equal protection? [01:52:33.680 --> 01:52:42.680] Yeah, there's some civil code, like civil rights stuff, Civil Code 51. [01:52:42.680 --> 01:52:50.680] Okay, the best defense is a good effective offense. [01:52:50.680 --> 01:52:56.680] They've filed documents that have statements that are untrue. [01:52:56.680 --> 01:53:03.680] Do any of those statements go to a circumstance where you have a video? [01:53:03.680 --> 01:53:06.680] Yeah. [01:53:06.680 --> 01:53:12.680] Will the video show that they misrepresented the truth? [01:53:12.680 --> 01:53:14.680] Yeah. [01:53:14.680 --> 01:53:18.680] They screwed up big time. [01:53:18.680 --> 01:53:24.680] This should get at least aggravated perjury, but there's kind of a trick to that. [01:53:24.680 --> 01:53:28.680] You've got to be careful to get them right. [01:53:28.680 --> 01:53:39.680] If before you make a claim or rebuttal, they recant their aggravated perjury, then they're not liable to it. [01:53:39.680 --> 01:53:45.680] So before they get a chance to change anything, the first thing you should do, [01:53:45.680 --> 01:53:54.680] give them is a set of criminal complaints against them for aggravated perjury. [01:53:54.680 --> 01:54:03.680] And notice in your answer to their claim, you make a counterclaim against them. [01:54:03.680 --> 01:54:08.680] Now, which brings a question, an issue to my mind. [01:54:08.680 --> 01:54:13.680] If you are in a justice of the peace court, at least in Texas, [01:54:13.680 --> 01:54:22.680] and they can handle up to $20,000, I believe is what it is, and someone sues you for $10,000, [01:54:22.680 --> 01:54:29.680] and you answer with a counter suit for $200,000. [01:54:29.680 --> 01:54:40.680] The justice of the peace is ordered by state law to dismiss your claim. [01:54:40.680 --> 01:54:43.680] That's the only one. [01:54:43.680 --> 01:54:48.680] So here you have apparently an administrative procedure, [01:54:48.680 --> 01:54:53.680] and you're coming back with a counterclaim against them. [01:54:53.680 --> 01:54:58.680] I'm not sure that you can do that in California. [01:54:58.680 --> 01:55:05.680] So how important is this fight to you? [01:55:05.680 --> 01:55:11.680] Well, it was important, and it's become more important. [01:55:11.680 --> 01:55:18.680] Okay. Is it worth a couple hundred bucks? [01:55:18.680 --> 01:55:21.680] Is it worth a couple hundred bucks? Yeah. [01:55:21.680 --> 01:55:27.680] Yeah. I mean, I would file a claim separate from this, right? [01:55:27.680 --> 01:55:32.680] Yeah. What I'm saying is, could you afford to file it in a municipal court? [01:55:32.680 --> 01:55:38.680] I mean, in a county court. That's generally about 125 filing fees. [01:55:38.680 --> 01:55:43.680] That's what it is in Texas, and it's like 250 in the district. [01:55:43.680 --> 01:55:51.680] And in the county court in Texas, you can go up to, I think, 70,000 or 80,000, Brett? [01:55:51.680 --> 01:55:59.680] I don't know. My understanding is that for certain types of claims, [01:55:59.680 --> 01:56:03.680] they kind of make you go to certain venues. [01:56:03.680 --> 01:56:10.680] Yeah. Well, if you make just a general civil claim against them, you'll almost certainly go to the county court. [01:56:10.680 --> 01:56:17.680] So you file a counterclaim of harm against you and then sue them in the county court [01:56:17.680 --> 01:56:27.680] and ask for an abatement in this case until your suit against them can be heard in the county court. [01:56:27.680 --> 01:56:34.680] Now they've got to hire lawyers, and now you're coming after them. [01:56:34.680 --> 01:56:44.680] I mean, they already have a lawyer right now. The lawyers, the petitioner. [01:56:44.680 --> 01:56:48.680] OK. I just don't have a clear plan. [01:56:48.680 --> 01:56:52.680] Like, I know I can request a continuance, like, just given. [01:56:52.680 --> 01:57:00.680] They give you one free because they give you so little time. [01:57:00.680 --> 01:57:03.680] So I could do that just to get another two. [01:57:03.680 --> 01:57:09.680] OK. Take a step back. What do you want to do? [01:57:09.680 --> 01:57:19.680] I want to have my initial claims from last year tripled and paid to me. [01:57:19.680 --> 01:57:23.680] What claims did you make and how did you make them? [01:57:23.680 --> 01:57:30.680] I sent affidavit of status, affidavit of fact, and another... [01:57:30.680 --> 01:57:34.680] Oh, you got tort letter out there. [01:57:34.680 --> 01:57:39.680] Yeah. So this is all like retaliation. This is like... [01:57:39.680 --> 01:57:42.680] Oh, that's even better. [01:57:42.680 --> 01:57:43.680] Yeah. [01:57:43.680 --> 01:57:46.680] So you're in a good position to sue them. [01:57:46.680 --> 01:57:50.680] This is a company. They only care about the money. [01:57:50.680 --> 01:57:54.680] And when you're going to cost them lawyers and a lot of money, [01:57:54.680 --> 01:57:57.680] then you can go to the court and ask the court to order mediation. [01:57:57.680 --> 01:57:59.680] They come to the table. They write you a check. [01:57:59.680 --> 01:58:03.680] Then they tell their employees to leave you the heck alone. [01:58:03.680 --> 01:58:06.680] Right. That would be the best case scenario. [01:58:06.680 --> 01:58:09.680] We're out of time for tonight, but if you want to talk more about this, [01:58:09.680 --> 01:58:11.680] call us back tomorrow night. [01:58:11.680 --> 01:58:14.680] Tina, I'm sorry we didn't get to you. [01:58:14.680 --> 01:58:18.680] I had some really annoying things I wanted to ask you, [01:58:18.680 --> 01:58:20.680] but now I'm not going to get to. [01:58:20.680 --> 01:58:24.680] So call back tomorrow night if you want to talk to us. [01:58:24.680 --> 01:58:28.680] That's Tina Churlish. I think everybody here knows her. [01:58:28.680 --> 01:58:29.680] You mean Tina Charming? [01:58:29.680 --> 01:58:30.680] Yeah. [01:58:30.680 --> 01:58:31.680] Oh, Charming. That's right. Charming. [01:58:31.680 --> 01:58:32.680] Right, right. [01:58:32.680 --> 01:58:33.680] I got it. [01:58:33.680 --> 01:58:34.680] You're right. [01:58:34.680 --> 01:58:35.680] The other CH word. [01:58:35.680 --> 01:58:38.680] Thank you all for listening. We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:38.680 --> 01:58:50.680] Good night. [01:58:50.680 --> 01:59:10.680] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:59:20.680 --> 01:59:25.680] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.680 --> 01:59:29.680] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.680 --> 01:59:32.680] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.680 --> 01:59:35.680] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, [01:59:35.680 --> 01:59:40.680] call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.680 --> 01:59:51.680] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:51.680 --> 02:00:11.680] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.