[00:00.000 --> 00:05.320] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.320 --> 00:09.360] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.360 --> 00:10.800] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.800 --> 00:14.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.760 --> 00:16.860] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.860 --> 00:18.460] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.460 --> 00:22.060] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.060 --> 00:26.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.840 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:33.000] Privacy. [00:33.000 --> 00:34.600] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.600 --> 00:38.880] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.880 --> 00:42.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.440 --> 00:44.880] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.880 --> 00:46.480] Spar. [00:46.480 --> 00:47.700] It's what fighters do. [00:47.700 --> 00:51.160] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.160 --> 00:54.400] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.400 --> 01:01.520] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.520 --> 01:02.880] and R for religion. [01:02.880 --> 01:07.000] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.000 --> 01:08.460] assembly, and religion. [01:08.460 --> 01:10.800] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.800 --> 01:14.520] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.520 --> 01:18.040] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.040 --> 01:20.720] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.720 --> 01:22.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.680 --> 01:31.040] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.040 --> 01:34.720] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.720 --> 01:38.160] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.160 --> 01:39.640] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.640 --> 01:43.540] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.540 --> 01:46.680] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.680 --> 01:48.260] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.260 --> 01:51.860] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.860 --> 01:56.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.640 --> 02:01.640] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.640 --> 02:04.400] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.400 --> 02:08.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.680 --> 02:12.220] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.220 --> 02:14.320] Start over with StartPage. [02:14.320 --> 02:20.160] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.160 --> 02:22.240] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.240 --> 02:26.720] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.720 --> 02:30.600] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.600 --> 02:31.600] Get it? [02:31.600 --> 02:33.880] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.880 --> 02:37.480] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.480 --> 02:38.480] when he said, [02:38.480 --> 02:43.640] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.640 --> 02:48.760] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which historically [02:48.760 --> 02:50.520] has proved to always be possible. [02:50.520 --> 02:52.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.400 --> 03:22.320] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:53.000 --> 04:19.240] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [04:19.240 --> 04:37.080] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:37.080 --> 04:56.880] now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now [04:56.880 --> 05:15.200] appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears [05:15.200 --> 05:36.600] remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote [05:36.600 --> 05:44.200] in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in [05:44.200 --> 05:49.200] and 23 and we're going through a cold spell yesterday. [05:52.440 --> 05:57.560] It only got up to 96. [05:57.560 --> 05:58.960] Burr. [06:00.840 --> 06:02.320] It's back to normal today. [06:04.240 --> 06:05.360] But let me start with, [06:05.360 --> 06:08.240] I'm gonna go ahead and turn the phone lines on. [06:08.240 --> 06:11.560] Start with a conversation I had. [06:11.560 --> 06:15.600] Those who listen, who've listened for a while, [06:15.600 --> 06:20.600] you may remember that I sued a justice of the peace [06:21.480 --> 06:25.440] in Victoria County because he wouldn't take [06:25.440 --> 06:27.680] some criminal complaints that I brought him. [06:29.320 --> 06:31.120] He said that since I wasn't a lawyer, [06:31.120 --> 06:32.520] he wouldn't even read them. [06:34.160 --> 06:36.440] And threw him down, stormed out of the room. [06:36.440 --> 06:41.280] So I called 911 and asked, [06:41.280 --> 06:44.160] they sent the Victoria Police Department [06:44.160 --> 06:46.040] and I asked the policeman that showed up [06:46.040 --> 06:47.520] to arrest the judge. [06:48.880 --> 06:51.520] Well, you can guess that this young policeman [06:51.520 --> 06:55.640] who's recently on the job was not happy about that. [06:57.560 --> 07:00.120] So I wound up suing the judge. [07:00.120 --> 07:03.720] He was, or he just didn't wanna do it. [07:03.720 --> 07:06.400] He was terrified, he didn't know what to do. [07:07.360 --> 07:11.120] And to the JP credit, he went in and talked to the JP [07:11.120 --> 07:13.840] and came out and said he would take my complaint. [07:15.600 --> 07:19.000] I think the JP did that to get this kid off the hook. [07:21.320 --> 07:26.320] Anyway, I sued him and then got a, [07:26.720 --> 07:29.800] they appointed a, the trial judge [07:29.800 --> 07:32.800] recused himself immediately and they appointed [07:32.800 --> 07:35.080] a judge to rule against me and I asked the bailiff [07:35.080 --> 07:36.400] to arrest that judge. [07:37.560 --> 07:41.960] But see, I went to this JP and he refused [07:41.960 --> 07:42.800] to take my complaints. [07:42.800 --> 07:45.280] The next time the JP sees me, [07:46.680 --> 07:49.480] he walks in the courtroom with his lawyers [07:50.800 --> 07:53.200] and I've sued him and drug him into court. [07:55.120 --> 07:58.360] He did not look anywhere near as arrogant this time [07:58.360 --> 07:59.640] as he did the first time. [07:59.640 --> 08:01.840] And he got to stand there and listen to me [08:01.840 --> 08:04.320] asking the bailiff to arrest the judge. [08:05.600 --> 08:09.160] So I got this guy's attention. [08:10.280 --> 08:13.840] So back to the odyssey of the airplane. [08:14.840 --> 08:17.480] We found that the guy who stole the airplane [08:17.480 --> 08:18.720] is trying to sell it. [08:19.920 --> 08:24.920] So I have a friend, well, he's probably listening [08:24.920 --> 08:27.960] to the show, so if I say something nice about him, [08:27.960 --> 08:32.960] he'll get the big head, but Robert was a policeman. [08:33.840 --> 08:37.320] He retired as a policeman and spent most of his time [08:37.320 --> 08:41.200] in the property room and he knows all about property. [08:42.960 --> 08:44.800] And I talked to him about the airplane [08:44.800 --> 08:49.800] and the path forward became clear. [08:51.160 --> 08:52.760] When you say the property room, [08:52.760 --> 08:55.440] are you talking about confiscated property [08:55.440 --> 08:59.120] that's evidence or room kind of a thing? [08:59.120 --> 09:02.840] Exactly, any property that comes into the possession [09:02.840 --> 09:06.440] of the police department having to do with a case. [09:07.640 --> 09:11.040] So you see this on TV where guys get in the property room [09:11.040 --> 09:14.080] and steal stuff and all kinds of stuff like that. [09:14.080 --> 09:16.440] Well, so he was the guy that headed it [09:17.520 --> 09:22.240] and he tells me that he can't release any property [09:22.240 --> 09:27.240] unless someone signs for it, so the lights came on. [09:29.920 --> 09:33.000] They arrested Dr. Joe, prosecuted him, [09:33.000 --> 09:37.640] threw him in jail, he gets out on bail, [09:37.640 --> 09:40.960] they send the feds down because he's got a bunch of guns [09:40.960 --> 09:43.320] and the feds throw him in jail [09:43.320 --> 09:46.400] for felony and possession of a firearm [09:46.400 --> 09:49.280] and then he gets COVID twice in jail [09:49.280 --> 09:52.280] and wound up with three strokes and darn near killed him. [09:53.720 --> 09:56.000] The court of appeals throws out everything [09:56.000 --> 09:58.520] because it never had jurisdiction from day one. [10:00.160 --> 10:03.920] And he's near dead, he can't function. [10:03.920 --> 10:08.040] And the prosecuting attorney releases the airplane. [10:10.080 --> 10:15.080] So Joe can go get it, but we thought, no, he can't. [10:15.080 --> 10:17.040] No, he can't. [10:19.240 --> 10:23.040] The prosecuting attorney released their hold on the airplane [10:25.400 --> 10:29.880] but it wasn't in the possession of the prosecuting attorney. [10:31.040 --> 10:34.400] It was in the possession of the police department. [10:34.400 --> 10:38.720] So this authorized the police department to release it [10:41.480 --> 10:44.320] but they could only release it to the person [10:44.320 --> 10:45.600] from whom they took it. [10:47.080 --> 10:49.160] Unless there was evidence before them [10:49.160 --> 10:51.000] that it belonged to somebody else [10:51.000 --> 10:53.040] and there was not evidence that it belonged [10:53.040 --> 10:54.200] to somebody else. [10:55.920 --> 10:58.880] So while Joe's trying to recover, [11:00.200 --> 11:04.040] the airplane was parked on the airport at Victoria Airport. [11:05.360 --> 11:07.000] The airplane went missing. [11:07.000 --> 11:12.000] And, you know, we had looked at it [11:12.360 --> 11:16.000] that the guy stole the airplane from Dr. Joe. [11:17.360 --> 11:20.240] Well, turns out, no, he didn't. [11:22.000 --> 11:25.400] He stole the airplane from Victoria Police Department. [11:27.920 --> 11:31.560] They were the one that had possession of it, not Dr. Joe. [11:32.600 --> 11:36.080] And they would have possession and responsibility for it [11:36.080 --> 11:39.160] until they put it back in Dr. Joe's hands. [11:39.160 --> 11:40.000] And he signed it. [11:40.000 --> 11:42.000] Interesting distinction. [11:42.000 --> 11:44.280] Yeah, he had signed for it. [11:44.280 --> 11:48.240] Now, if they had the place to put it, [11:48.240 --> 11:52.080] they would have put it in their own property room [11:52.080 --> 11:53.520] but it wouldn't fit in there. [11:54.920 --> 11:59.920] And, you know, they sometimes see semi-trucks and such [12:01.960 --> 12:03.920] and they put them in a garage or something. [12:03.920 --> 12:05.840] They just left this thing sitting out on it. [12:05.840 --> 12:09.360] On the ramp for about four or five years. [12:10.640 --> 12:12.160] Years? [12:12.160 --> 12:13.000] Yeah, it was not in good shape. [12:13.000 --> 12:15.400] Oh my gosh, how irresponsible. [12:15.400 --> 12:17.400] Yeah, so the guy who's come to steal it, [12:17.400 --> 12:19.000] they have to change the fuel out [12:20.320 --> 12:23.080] before they can clean it up, before they can fly it out. [12:24.360 --> 12:28.800] And the guy that owned the flight school where it was at [12:28.800 --> 12:30.680] told him that belonged Dr. Joe. [12:31.760 --> 12:35.320] And they said, no, they bought it and they left with it. [12:35.320 --> 12:37.000] We thought they stole it from Dr. Joe [12:37.000 --> 12:40.480] but on doing the research, [12:41.800 --> 12:44.200] turned out it wasn't in Dr. Joe's possession. [12:46.040 --> 12:51.040] He could not have taken it until it was released to him. [12:52.040 --> 12:53.880] That's just like going in their property room [12:53.880 --> 12:55.480] and stealing something out of it. [12:57.120 --> 13:01.560] So, we got a new chief in Victoria County [13:01.560 --> 13:03.080] and I had talked to this guy [13:03.080 --> 13:05.280] when he was an assistant chief. [13:06.760 --> 13:09.520] Do you remember me telling you about talking to a policeman [13:09.520 --> 13:12.480] and he told me that I should be teaching this subject? [13:13.920 --> 13:14.760] Yeah. [13:15.600 --> 13:16.600] This was the guy. [13:16.600 --> 13:19.240] And you're saying, as a matter of fact. [13:19.240 --> 13:20.080] I am. [13:21.240 --> 13:26.240] But I talked to him because a sergeant had referred him to me [13:26.320 --> 13:27.840] or referred me to him. [13:28.960 --> 13:30.640] And I told him when I talked to him [13:30.640 --> 13:35.320] that that sergeant was about as professional a policeman [13:35.320 --> 13:36.800] as I had ever encountered. [13:38.960 --> 13:41.800] If the guy had any kind of cop attitude, [13:41.800 --> 13:43.160] I could not tell it. [13:44.600 --> 13:47.920] And then I get this assistant chief and he was the same. [13:49.080 --> 13:54.080] Both of them treated me with absolute dignity and respect. [13:55.760 --> 13:57.400] And that was really unusual, [13:57.400 --> 14:02.400] especially for a department I was primed to go after. [14:05.240 --> 14:08.200] And whenever I get someone who's a pro like that, [14:09.600 --> 14:11.960] I got this little boy in the back of my head [14:11.960 --> 14:14.080] that says, watch yourself. [14:15.240 --> 14:18.840] Be careful messing with this guy because he's no chump. [14:20.720 --> 14:24.240] Like the Navy SEAL I ran into in Denton County. [14:24.240 --> 14:28.160] I didn't know at the time he was an ex-Navy SEAL, [14:28.160 --> 14:30.320] but when I was introduced to him, [14:30.320 --> 14:33.080] the way he comported himself, [14:33.080 --> 14:36.640] and he comported himself as a consummate professional. [14:38.680 --> 14:41.000] And the way he presented himself said to me, [14:41.000 --> 14:43.760] he said, self, don't mess with this guy. [14:44.880 --> 14:45.720] He's no chump. [14:45.720 --> 14:47.240] And that's what these two were. [14:47.240 --> 14:52.240] So now the assistant chief is now the chief. [14:52.240 --> 14:57.240] So I called him and I explained the situation to them. [14:57.560 --> 15:01.880] When he remembered, the reason I had talked to him [15:01.880 --> 15:05.000] was his officer didn't arrest the J.P. [15:05.000 --> 15:08.360] when I filed criminal charges against the J.P. [15:08.360 --> 15:10.200] And he remembered that conversation. [15:11.400 --> 15:12.840] I told him what I was doing down there [15:12.840 --> 15:14.640] was I was trying to get the J.P. [15:14.640 --> 15:17.840] the issue warrant against these guys that stole the airplane. [15:18.920 --> 15:19.960] And he wouldn't do it. [15:19.960 --> 15:24.960] So I was preparing to sue Victoria County, [15:24.960 --> 15:28.720] or the Victoria police, to get the airplane back. [15:29.760 --> 15:32.040] But I don't want to sue the Victoria police. [15:32.040 --> 15:32.880] And he said, well, that's good [15:32.880 --> 15:34.480] because we don't want to be sued. [15:35.360 --> 15:37.240] I said, well, I have an alternative. [15:38.640 --> 15:41.120] Since the airplane was in your custody [15:43.240 --> 15:46.280] and it was never released to Dr. Joe, [15:46.960 --> 15:48.960] the person from whom you see it, [15:48.960 --> 15:51.200] the person from whom you seized the airplane, [15:52.600 --> 15:54.480] it was still your responsibility. [15:56.000 --> 15:59.200] They didn't steal it from Dr. Joe, they stole it from you. [16:00.680 --> 16:04.160] So now we're coming to you to get the airplane back. [16:05.640 --> 16:08.400] Well, he said, well, what do you want me to do? [16:08.400 --> 16:10.320] I want you to go to the J.P. [16:10.320 --> 16:13.240] and we can tell you exactly where it's at. [16:14.840 --> 16:17.640] And have the J.P. issue a sequestration order. [16:17.640 --> 16:19.440] You go down there and seize it, [16:20.440 --> 16:22.760] then sign it over to Dr. Joe. [16:24.240 --> 16:27.040] And if that guy down there in Corpus Christi has an issue, [16:27.040 --> 16:28.880] he can take it up with Dr. Joe. [16:30.040 --> 16:33.240] But it's not your issue then, it's Dr. Joe's issue [16:33.240 --> 16:35.760] and you're out of this. [16:38.160 --> 16:39.840] So he's looking into that. [16:41.360 --> 16:43.120] And if he buys my story, [16:43.120 --> 16:46.320] he may call us and tell us to come get the airplane. [16:48.320 --> 16:50.520] Comes to join your homework. [16:50.520 --> 16:53.560] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [16:53.560 --> 17:20.560] the Root of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [17:24.160 --> 17:26.160] How to answer letters and phone calls. [17:26.160 --> 17:28.760] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [17:28.760 --> 17:30.680] How to turn the financial tables on them [17:30.680 --> 17:33.440] and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.440 --> 17:36.360] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution [17:36.360 --> 17:38.280] for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.280 --> 17:40.680] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.680 --> 17:44.040] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.040 --> 17:46.320] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.320 --> 17:49.080] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.080 --> 17:51.440] That's ruleoflawradio.com [17:51.440 --> 17:56.440] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:57.160 --> 17:59.680] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.280 --> 18:04.080] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [18:04.080 --> 18:06.400] and a better understanding of His word? [18:06.400 --> 18:09.480] Then tune into logosradio.com on Wednesdays [18:09.480 --> 18:12.720] from eight to 10 p.m. Central time for scripture talk, [18:12.720 --> 18:15.240] where Nana and her guests discussed the scriptures [18:15.240 --> 18:17.960] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:17.960 --> 18:20.320] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [18:20.320 --> 18:22.440] a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [18:22.440 --> 18:24.880] rightly dividing the word of truth. [18:24.880 --> 18:27.360] Starting in January, our first hour studies [18:27.360 --> 18:29.960] are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse [18:29.960 --> 18:32.440] and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.440 --> 18:35.320] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week [18:35.320 --> 18:37.160] with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.160 --> 18:39.480] and Christian character development. [18:39.480 --> 18:41.960] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing [18:41.960 --> 18:43.960] to all those with a hearing ear. [18:43.960 --> 18:45.840] Our goal is to strengthen our faith [18:45.840 --> 18:48.480] and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.480 --> 18:50.560] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.560 --> 18:54.240] So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [18:54.240 --> 18:56.440] Wednesdays from eight to 10 p.m. [18:56.440 --> 18:59.680] to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [19:01.040 --> 19:06.000] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:06.000 --> 19:08.800] logosradionetwork.com. [19:08.800 --> 19:18.800] Logosradionetwork.com. [19:38.800 --> 19:48.800] Logosradionetwork.com. [20:08.800 --> 20:18.800] Logosradionetwork.com. [20:38.800 --> 20:48.800] Logosradionetwork.com. [20:48.800 --> 20:54.800] Logosradionetwork.com. [20:54.800 --> 20:56.800] Okay, we are back. [20:56.800 --> 21:00.800] Randy Kelton, The Gret Fountain, Wheel of La Radio. [21:00.800 --> 21:05.360] And that's pretty exciting, might get the airplane back. [21:05.360 --> 21:11.760] I've been a pilot for 50 years, actually 53 years. [21:12.720 --> 21:15.920] I got my license in 69, 54 years. [21:17.120 --> 21:19.040] And haven't been up in 50 years. [21:20.000 --> 21:20.560] Oh, wow. [21:21.280 --> 21:22.160] But I'll do your little. [21:23.120 --> 21:24.160] Oh, it sticks with you. [21:24.160 --> 21:25.760] Medical check and. [21:25.760 --> 21:26.800] Yeah, they need a flight. [21:27.840 --> 21:28.240] Yeah. [21:28.240 --> 21:33.840] I was watching a program where they're taking off Tomcats [21:33.840 --> 21:37.120] from a aircraft carrier. [21:38.240 --> 21:42.800] And this guy, they launch him and just as he leaves the carrier, [21:43.440 --> 21:44.880] his right engine goes out. [21:46.240 --> 21:50.080] So he's got two engines on the fuselage right next to each other. [21:50.080 --> 21:53.440] Well, when the right one went out, he was getting uneven push. [21:54.160 --> 21:57.280] So the left end was pushing the aircraft, [21:57.280 --> 21:59.840] it pushed down and caused the aircraft to roll. [21:59.840 --> 22:03.120] I'm watching it, and as soon as the aircraft started to roll, [22:03.120 --> 22:06.240] my right foot hit the hit the floor. [22:08.000 --> 22:12.080] The aircraft rolled over and crashed in and they analyzed it. [22:12.080 --> 22:14.240] And they said that when the aircraft started to roll, [22:14.240 --> 22:15.840] he tried to correct with ailerons. [22:16.480 --> 22:18.320] That's the yolk that's in front of you. [22:19.680 --> 22:22.080] No, no, do not use ailerons. [22:23.200 --> 22:24.480] This guy was a fighter pilot. [22:24.480 --> 22:28.640] He should have knew that the tail is moving out from under the wing. [22:28.640 --> 22:33.680] It's moving out from under you because you've got an engine pushing from the side. [22:34.560 --> 22:38.320] You push the rudder in to shove the tail back underneath it, [22:38.320 --> 22:40.160] and that'll force the wings back level. [22:42.480 --> 22:45.600] Anyway, point is, it doesn't go away. [22:47.280 --> 22:48.560] It's like driving a car. [22:48.560 --> 22:50.720] Once you learn how to do it, your body does it. [22:51.600 --> 22:54.640] So I'm very much looking forward to getting back up. [22:54.640 --> 22:58.560] Okay, we got a couple of callers on the board. [22:59.680 --> 23:02.320] We're going to Ralph in Texas. [23:02.320 --> 23:03.040] Hello, Ralph. [23:04.160 --> 23:05.120] Hello, Randy. [23:06.560 --> 23:09.200] I got a couple of things, some of which you've already been over, [23:09.200 --> 23:12.320] so I hate to do it, but I'm gonna ask you things you've covered before. [23:13.280 --> 23:20.000] Give us a brief overview so everybody knows as a field for context. [23:20.000 --> 23:21.040] I must have missed something. [23:21.040 --> 23:21.540] What? [23:23.200 --> 23:26.800] Give us an idea of what you're talking, tell everybody a brief overview of what you're talking about. [23:27.680 --> 23:32.560] Okay, this would be judicial conduct complaints and bar grievances. [23:34.240 --> 23:36.560] One of our favorite subjects. [23:38.080 --> 23:39.280] Yeah, I guess so. [23:40.800 --> 23:43.040] I'm gonna start with the judge. [23:43.040 --> 23:46.240] The magistrate has given me the information. [23:46.240 --> 23:54.560] The judge, the magistrate has given me 14 days to respond to a motion, [23:55.520 --> 23:58.960] but I'm gonna read you the first sentence of the rule. [23:59.840 --> 24:05.040] If the respondent opposes a motion, he or she shall file a response, [24:05.760 --> 24:10.560] including opposing affidavits, memoranda, and such supporting documents [24:10.560 --> 24:16.640] as are then available within 21 days after service of the motion. [24:17.440 --> 24:20.880] Okay, that's simple enough, 21 days after service. [24:21.680 --> 24:22.180] Okay. [24:24.320 --> 24:29.520] Magistrate said was I have 14 days from the time it was filed. [24:32.480 --> 24:33.280] Big difference. [24:34.160 --> 24:36.320] Okay, is that a problem? [24:36.320 --> 24:41.040] Do you have a problem responding in that time? [24:42.160 --> 24:44.240] You think you might need the 21 days? [24:45.440 --> 24:52.560] Yeah, well, see about 14 days and they sent it the day after the judge sent us the, [24:53.840 --> 24:54.720] I got service. [24:56.160 --> 25:00.640] Okay, in short, this cuts my 14 days down to nine days. [25:02.080 --> 25:04.400] Well, the first question I'm asking, [25:04.400 --> 25:07.440] is this a fight you need to have at this time? [25:08.960 --> 25:11.120] Can you get your response in timely? [25:12.640 --> 25:14.480] Well, I don't know. [25:17.360 --> 25:18.800] I'm not even gonna respond to it. [25:20.000 --> 25:21.920] Bad idea, bad, bad idea. [25:22.720 --> 25:30.400] Well, it's a motion to compel discovery, because I failed to respond to discovery, [25:30.400 --> 25:31.920] lots of issues going on. [25:31.920 --> 25:34.000] Lots of issues going on. [25:34.000 --> 25:37.200] Okay, you need to respond to that. [25:40.800 --> 25:50.720] If nothing else, put in a motion that says that you object to the motion to compel discovery, [25:50.720 --> 25:51.200] file that. [25:53.120 --> 25:59.680] You wanna keep your options open, and then you file an opposition to the time limit [25:59.680 --> 26:05.600] and request enough time to set the motion, but make sure you get something filed. [26:06.880 --> 26:11.600] He said you gotta file within this time, file within this time, and then you can file an amended. [26:13.120 --> 26:13.600] Okay. [26:13.600 --> 26:20.800] Randy, do you think it would be wise for him to include in this opposition or raising exception [26:20.800 --> 26:21.600] to the timeframe? [26:21.600 --> 26:26.160] Do you think it'd be wise for him to include some wording about apparent [26:26.160 --> 26:32.960] bias or evident prejudice, because everybody else gets 21 days, and he's picking on me? [26:32.960 --> 26:34.720] No, no, that comes out whining. [26:35.760 --> 26:42.160] You do that with your judicious conduct complaint, or something. [26:42.160 --> 26:46.160] Right now, the first thing you do is maintain your case. [26:47.760 --> 26:54.080] Don't let this judge screw you out of your case while you're fighting for your case. [26:54.080 --> 26:57.680] While you're fighting his improper procedures. [26:58.880 --> 27:00.960] Okay, well, let me- [27:00.960 --> 27:04.240] If you can't get a complete objection in, just file an objection. [27:06.800 --> 27:14.960] File your objection to all of the discovery, and then file your motion for extension of time. [27:16.720 --> 27:21.200] Okay, I filed a motion for extension of time Monday. [27:21.200 --> 27:25.440] It depends on which time frame you go by. [27:26.240 --> 27:31.200] I got it in either a week early or I got it in three days early. [27:32.000 --> 27:36.240] Depending on what you go by, and that's if you go by the 14 days, [27:36.240 --> 27:40.560] but if you go by service instead of 14 days from the day it was filed. [27:43.360 --> 27:45.760] In that case, it won't matter what the judge does. [27:45.760 --> 27:50.560] Then you do an immediate interlocutory appeal. [27:51.920 --> 27:53.520] Okay, okay, good, good. [27:53.520 --> 27:56.880] Well, let me get just a little more information here. [27:56.880 --> 28:00.880] It's now, I didn't answer the discovery at all. [28:01.600 --> 28:04.400] Actually, I did send a letter to the opposing counsel, [28:04.400 --> 28:06.640] and I told him I'd be late, and then I wasn't late. [28:06.640 --> 28:09.280] I didn't answer for lots of reasons, okay? [28:09.280 --> 28:15.200] So I thought, well, okay, if I do anything, what I need to do is, [28:15.200 --> 28:17.840] answer is discovery, period. [28:18.720 --> 28:21.520] If I have to answer it with I object to this question, [28:21.520 --> 28:22.800] at least I'm answering it. [28:22.800 --> 28:26.080] So I'm trying to do that within the time limit, [28:26.080 --> 28:28.640] and then the motion to compel will be moved. [28:32.320 --> 28:37.840] I think, okay, so here's, and it gets stickier because [28:37.840 --> 28:41.680] when I got back into it, okay, I was out for three months, [28:41.680 --> 28:44.960] and when I got back into it, because of the motion to compel, [28:44.960 --> 28:46.480] he didn't send the motion to compel. [28:47.520 --> 28:50.640] He sent me motion to compel, but he didn't send me a letter [28:50.640 --> 28:52.160] saying, hey, where in the heck are you? [28:52.160 --> 28:53.600] Which I guess he doesn't have to, [28:53.600 --> 28:55.280] but it says it's supposed to show cause [28:55.280 --> 28:57.200] that he tried to get in touch with me. [28:57.200 --> 29:00.480] Well, if he just sent me a letter because I had computer issues [29:00.480 --> 29:03.200] and I wasn't on the computer even when it was working, [29:03.760 --> 29:06.160] and he never called and he never sent a letter. [29:06.160 --> 29:11.520] So maybe that's pointless, but I sent him Monday, [29:11.520 --> 29:15.840] the same day that I drove to the court to file a motion [29:15.840 --> 29:18.080] for a continuance or motion for extension time, [29:18.960 --> 29:23.840] I sent him a, oh, goodness, what's it called? [29:24.560 --> 29:25.440] Give me just a second. [29:29.120 --> 29:31.440] Agreed stipulation of protective orders. [29:32.800 --> 29:33.760] Are you familiar with that? [29:35.120 --> 29:38.720] Agreed stipulation of protective orders? [29:38.720 --> 29:43.440] Yes, that's to say that if I give you my medical records, [29:43.440 --> 29:44.880] you're not going to share them with anybody [29:44.880 --> 29:46.800] unless they sign this protective order. [29:46.800 --> 29:49.200] Oh, okay. That's pretty straightforward. [29:49.200 --> 29:49.680] Hang on. [29:50.720 --> 29:55.200] Randy Kelton, we're at Fountain, we'll be right back. [30:01.280 --> 30:04.000] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information [30:04.000 --> 30:06.000] and you may trust them to keep it safe, [30:06.000 --> 30:08.640] but it turns out that even the most trusted companies [30:08.640 --> 30:11.360] may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.360 --> 30:14.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. 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[30:51.360 --> 30:54.080] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.080 --> 30:55.520] It's not an idle question. [30:55.520 --> 30:57.120] According to a recent survey, [30:57.120 --> 31:00.880] a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security [31:00.880 --> 31:03.600] was breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.600 --> 31:06.000] That's one more reason you should trust your searches [31:06.000 --> 31:07.600] to Startpage.com. [31:07.600 --> 31:08.960] Unlike other search engines, [31:08.960 --> 31:11.760] Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:11.760 --> 31:14.000] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, [31:14.000 --> 31:16.080] there would be nothing for criminals to see. [31:16.080 --> 31:17.680] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.680 --> 31:20.720] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.360 --> 31:22.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.800 --> 31:35.120] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:52.800 --> 31:55.680] Justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son, [31:55.680 --> 31:57.920] go to buildingwatt.org. [31:57.920 --> 32:00.480] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:02.160 --> 32:03.840] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer [32:03.840 --> 32:05.360] the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:05.360 --> 32:07.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [32:07.680 --> 32:10.000] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.000 --> 32:12.880] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.880 --> 32:15.600] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:15.600 --> 32:17.360] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.360 --> 32:19.840] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.840 --> 32:22.400] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [32:22.400 --> 32:25.600] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.600 --> 32:28.720] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:28.720 --> 32:31.200] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.200 --> 32:33.520] that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.520 --> 32:35.440] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.440 --> 32:37.600] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:37.600 --> 32:40.800] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.800 --> 32:42.800] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:42.800 --> 32:45.360] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.360 --> 32:47.840] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.840 --> 32:50.800] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.800 --> 32:53.040] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [32:53.040 --> 32:55.680] from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, [32:55.680 --> 33:23.520] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:23.520 --> 33:26.160] I don't understand. [33:26.160 --> 33:29.200] Good job, you stupid thing, I deserve [33:29.200 --> 33:31.760] not be abused. [33:31.760 --> 33:34.640] I deserve. [33:34.640 --> 33:40.160] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [33:40.160 --> 33:45.680] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [33:45.680 --> 33:51.200] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [33:51.200 --> 33:56.560] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power. [33:56.560 --> 34:02.240] So please, Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse their power. [34:02.240 --> 34:07.840] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. [34:07.840 --> 34:13.120] Tell them to uphold the law, and please don't abuse their power. [34:13.120 --> 34:18.560] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour. [34:18.560 --> 34:21.200] So Mr. Officer. [34:21.200 --> 34:25.840] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [34:25.840 --> 34:33.120] Rule of Law Radio, on this, the 17th day of August, 2023. [34:33.120 --> 34:39.040] This Thursday, the 17th day of August, and we're talking to Ralph in Texas, [34:39.040 --> 34:45.920] and you're having an issue with them not giving you proper notice, [34:45.920 --> 34:52.080] I mean, with the judge limiting your time for discovery. [34:52.080 --> 34:53.360] Yes, sir. [34:53.360 --> 34:59.040] So this is a municipal court? [34:59.040 --> 35:02.080] No, this is a federal court. [35:02.080 --> 35:07.840] Oh, okay, is this a suit you filed? [35:07.840 --> 35:09.120] Yes. [35:09.120 --> 35:12.000] Oh, good. [35:12.000 --> 35:20.880] I filed it in April of last year, and we did the flurry of motions, [35:20.880 --> 35:33.280] and the judge set conference, set the conference for, [35:33.280 --> 35:36.320] let me think, it was April of this year. [35:36.320 --> 35:39.760] So she set the, this semester, the judge set the conference [35:39.760 --> 35:42.960] for the parties, the telephone conference, [35:42.960 --> 35:47.200] five months after the last motion was filed. [35:47.200 --> 35:50.640] And I wasn't in any hurry, so I didn't say anything. [35:50.640 --> 35:53.200] I thought it was kind of strange that she would do that. [35:53.200 --> 35:55.280] She said so far into the future. [35:55.280 --> 35:57.680] You'd think she'd said it within 30 days or something, [35:57.680 --> 36:00.320] but she said five months into the future. [36:00.320 --> 36:05.280] And so when I called for the conference, I called, [36:05.280 --> 36:08.080] and the judge eventually got on the phone, [36:08.080 --> 36:11.440] and then she said, she asked me to pause for a minute [36:11.440 --> 36:16.640] while she called the defense counsel, because he didn't call in. [36:16.640 --> 36:21.280] So I think they said it so far out, hoping I would not be there. [36:21.280 --> 36:23.120] So I may have surprised them. [36:23.120 --> 36:27.280] But the very next day, the defense counsel sends me his discovery. [36:27.280 --> 36:30.400] They just changed a couple words and hit the print button. [36:30.400 --> 36:32.960] So I didn't do anything with discovery. [36:32.960 --> 36:38.400] But now, the 14th, Monday, I drove to the court, [36:38.400 --> 36:40.880] filed a motion for extension of time, [36:41.520 --> 36:44.320] and I also mailed that stipulated protective orders. [36:44.320 --> 36:48.400] Now, stipulated protective orders has to be agreed upon by all three parties. [36:48.400 --> 36:51.440] That's the plaintiff, the defendant, and the judge. [36:52.400 --> 36:57.680] And so I've sent a copy to the defendant's counsel, [36:57.680 --> 37:01.920] emailed early, like 7.45, Monday morning. [37:01.920 --> 37:05.920] Well, I figured he'd get back to me within 24 hours, but he hasn't done anything. [37:06.400 --> 37:07.920] No, he's not going to, either. [37:08.640 --> 37:14.640] Before you file a motion for stipulated agreement, or a motion, [37:15.200 --> 37:19.680] you have to get agreement before you file the motion. [37:20.720 --> 37:21.600] I didn't file it. [37:21.600 --> 37:22.640] I sent him a copy. [37:23.520 --> 37:29.840] What I filed was a motion for extension of time to respond to his motion to compel. [37:29.840 --> 37:35.440] Okay, so you haven't filed the stipulated motion yet. [37:35.440 --> 37:37.040] You're still trying to get stipulation. [37:38.160 --> 37:38.640] Correct. [37:39.440 --> 37:40.160] Oh, okay. [37:40.160 --> 37:45.280] So I'll agree with him for not responding to me within 24 hours. [37:45.280 --> 37:49.280] If they don't respond to you, then you file it as not stipulated. [37:51.680 --> 37:53.680] I don't know what you mean by not stipulated. [37:53.680 --> 38:01.040] Well, then it's a matter in controversy. [38:02.640 --> 38:08.160] Well, when I sent it to him, I apologized for him to have to do a motion to compel. [38:08.880 --> 38:13.440] Okay, and then I sent him the copy of the stipulated orders, [38:13.440 --> 38:16.960] which I just typed out of the form book, like you suggested long ago. [38:17.840 --> 38:21.520] O'Connor's, I changed it a little bit, of course, but you know, [38:21.520 --> 38:23.920] it's right out of O'Connor's forms book. [38:23.920 --> 38:24.960] And I sent it to him. [38:24.960 --> 38:28.720] And I said, if you have any issues with this, let me know. [38:30.640 --> 38:34.080] And so I thought I was going out of my way, you know. [38:34.720 --> 38:38.160] So the judge has not ruled on the motion for extension. [38:38.720 --> 38:45.280] And according to her time constraints, my response was due today. [38:45.280 --> 38:50.800] But if you go by the time it was filed and not, if you go by the time it was served, [38:50.800 --> 38:56.560] and not by the time it was filed, then I have until next Tuesday. [38:56.560 --> 39:00.000] And if you go by the 21 days, I have until the 29th. [39:00.560 --> 39:05.280] So, you know, I guess that's near the here and the there. [39:05.920 --> 39:08.400] But I think that's grounds for a bar grievance. [39:08.400 --> 39:10.720] And it's grounds for a bar grievance. [39:10.720 --> 39:12.960] It's also grounds for interlocutory. [39:12.960 --> 39:18.080] And they're not going to like an interlocutory appeal. [39:18.080 --> 39:21.440] Well, I don't see the grounds for it. [39:22.800 --> 39:30.160] They entered a ruling that will have a negative effect on your ability to properly adjudicate [39:30.160 --> 39:30.800] your case. [39:33.280 --> 39:37.440] If you have to give them discovery that will be over burdensome, [39:37.440 --> 39:44.640] or discovery that they shouldn't have that will harm your case, [39:45.600 --> 39:47.520] then you can file an interlocutory. [39:48.960 --> 39:55.760] I'd ask for the Court of Appeals to overrule the trial judge. [39:55.760 --> 40:00.240] Okay, that's if she signs the order to compel. [40:00.240 --> 40:11.520] Well, yes, she signs the order to compel after denying you adequate time. [40:13.920 --> 40:21.440] If you had time, then it would not be a matter that you could do an interlocutory on. [40:21.440 --> 40:32.640] But if she moves things out of time, then that's a problem that puts the court outside the rules. [40:34.480 --> 40:37.520] As long as the court is within the rules, they're okay. [40:37.520 --> 40:42.240] But when they step outside the rules, that creates a harm for you that can't be fixed. [40:43.680 --> 40:46.480] And as far as I understand, that's a due process harm. [40:47.360 --> 40:50.320] Yeah, so it exactly is a due process harm. [40:50.320 --> 40:51.920] And it can't be fixed. [40:51.920 --> 40:53.520] So that's grounds for interlocutory. [40:54.400 --> 41:02.560] Okay, I think perhaps or perhaps a petition for Riddam and Damis asking the court to order [41:02.560 --> 41:04.400] the judge to give you sufficient time. [41:06.320 --> 41:12.800] Okay, now, but by the time that gets to the court, it will become moot because the time [41:12.800 --> 41:23.200] will have run, and you ask the court, you make sure you get your response in within [41:23.200 --> 41:24.880] the statutory time limit. [41:26.320 --> 41:39.760] And then you could do a petition for Riddam and Damis and ask the court to order the judge [41:39.760 --> 41:47.680] to accept your filing as timely, because it's within the scope of the rules. [41:48.880 --> 41:54.000] Okay, yes, that's what I was missing right there, how to communicate it to the appeals [41:54.000 --> 41:54.000] court. [41:55.200 --> 42:02.240] Yeah, and sometimes when I'm answering these questions, I'm thinking as I'm talking, [42:02.240 --> 42:11.920] interlocutory probably wouldn't be best, it would be more appropriate for a motion to [42:11.920 --> 42:19.360] compel, not a motion to compel, I'm sorry, a petition for Riddam and Damis ordering [42:19.360 --> 42:22.320] the trial judge to follow the rules. [42:23.920 --> 42:30.560] Okay, so I got some pretty good stuff here. [42:30.560 --> 42:32.560] I hope you don't mind spending a few more minutes on me. [42:36.160 --> 42:40.960] I either read it somewhere and cannot find it or I heard it from you guys, and I haven't [42:40.960 --> 42:42.080] found that note either. [42:42.720 --> 42:47.600] But I'm sure I read this that the law- [42:47.600 --> 42:51.760] Well, I can assure you, if I said it, you could find it. [42:51.760 --> 42:55.360] So if Brett said it, maybe he couldn't, you don't know about Brett. [42:55.360 --> 43:02.000] Okay. Because Brett's too busy eating that fresh pizza his wife made for him, and I'm [43:02.000 --> 43:03.040] sitting here for nothing. [43:04.400 --> 43:06.880] Not even those dry crackers you usually have? [43:07.920 --> 43:09.280] Not even those dry crackers. [43:10.560 --> 43:12.400] He's been punishing me on the break. [43:13.120 --> 43:15.360] Okay, I'm sorry, I distracted things. [43:16.960 --> 43:19.360] Well, it's members of the firm. [43:19.360 --> 43:24.880] I've read somewhere that the law firm is responsible for its members. [43:25.360 --> 43:28.320] So if a member violates the rule- [43:28.320 --> 43:29.680] Okay, hold on, hold on. [43:29.680 --> 43:31.680] Brett, you need to address that. [43:31.680 --> 43:35.680] It's not exactly the firm is not responsible. [43:37.280 --> 43:39.280] It is the individual members. [43:40.640 --> 43:46.160] Yeah, if somebody that is an attorney that works for that firm does something unethical [43:46.160 --> 43:47.680] to violate one of the rules. [43:47.680 --> 43:52.240] Then there's a good chance you can get the partner culpable. [43:52.240 --> 44:21.760] We're just about to go to sponsors and we'll continue about that afterwards. [44:21.760 --> 44:23.520] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.520 --> 44:26.800] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [44:26.800 --> 44:28.960] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:28.960 --> 44:31.120] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.120 --> 44:34.480] Now go to logosradionetwork.com. [44:34.480 --> 44:37.440] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.440 --> 44:43.120] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.120 --> 44:44.080] Do I pay extra? 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[45:23.040 --> 45:27.360] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:27.920 --> 45:33.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.400 --> 45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.280 --> 45:43.280] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.280 --> 45:47.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:47.840 --> 45:52.240] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.240 --> 46:20.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:52.240 --> 47:11.840] Okay, we are back. [47:11.840 --> 47:14.160] Brent Kelton, Brett Fountain, and Rule of Law Radio. [47:14.960 --> 47:17.840] And on the break, Brett and I were talking about Bargain Session. [47:17.840 --> 47:24.640] And one thing you can do, Ralph, is bar grieve everybody. [47:28.400 --> 47:34.480] So I got this lawsuit and I sued a bunch of judges and the heads of a bunch of [47:36.560 --> 47:44.000] government offices. And I got responses from the Texas Attorney General's Office. [47:44.000 --> 47:53.840] Well, since I'm suing the highest level judges in Texas, on the response on their suit, [47:54.880 --> 47:59.760] everybody's on there. The attorney who actually wrote the documents is the last one. [48:00.800 --> 48:08.800] And I got five above that. The first one is the interim director of the Attorney General's office. [48:08.800 --> 48:14.880] Or what do they call her, Brett? Anyway, she's standing in for the Attorney General. [48:14.880 --> 48:15.760] Pro Tem maybe. [48:16.800 --> 48:18.480] And then they got four more. [48:18.480 --> 48:21.120] But they all feel important if they put their name on there. [48:23.040 --> 48:24.880] This is the big deal right here. [48:25.520 --> 48:30.640] Yeah, they want the attorney, they want all these judges to see here I am, I'm covering your behind. [48:32.240 --> 48:33.600] So I bar grieved all of them. [48:33.600 --> 48:38.880] Mm-hm. They wrote almost, they wrote a different [48:41.680 --> 48:49.840] response to the direct, the presiding judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. [48:49.840 --> 48:54.560] They wrote one for her. But I accused her [48:54.560 --> 49:04.400] of criminally refusing to issue a warrant on a complaint against the presided, the [49:05.440 --> 49:11.040] chief justice of the Supreme Court, Jonathan Hetch. [49:13.600 --> 49:20.880] And the reason I asked her to issue a warrant against him is because he refused to issue a [49:20.880 --> 49:30.640] warrant against the governor. So I got a separate response on her issue. [49:32.480 --> 49:41.200] And on her issue, the only thing they argued was her failure to issue a warrant. [49:43.280 --> 49:47.200] I accused them all of an ongoing criminal enterprise. [49:47.200 --> 49:49.200] They didn't address that. They forgot to deny that. [49:49.840 --> 49:58.480] Yeah, they did. So if they throw out everything else, you can't throw out the one against her [49:59.280 --> 50:03.120] because she didn't object to it. But anyway, I'm getting on top. [50:03.120 --> 50:05.120] Failure to deny is deemed admission. [50:05.680 --> 50:10.960] Yes. So the point is I bar grieved everybody. [50:10.960 --> 50:19.200] So the point is I bar grieved everybody. For each individual for whom they filed a response, [50:20.000 --> 50:24.400] I made up one bar grievance because they all argued state immunity. [50:25.360 --> 50:29.440] And I accused them of violating a federal law, and they didn't address that. [50:30.240 --> 50:39.040] So I made up one bar grievance and built this big merged spreadsheet and put their names in for [50:39.040 --> 50:44.880] every separate document they filed, and bar grieved them all for each document. [50:46.560 --> 50:50.000] So I had a stack of bar grievances, over two inches tall. [50:54.960 --> 51:01.520] And each one had about five lawyers on it, starting with the interim director, [51:01.520 --> 51:09.280] the attorney general's office, and four more high level guys after that, and I grieved them all. [51:09.280 --> 51:10.800] Does that give you any idea, Ralph? [51:11.760 --> 51:13.120] Well, it's making me smile. [51:14.640 --> 51:19.680] Grieve them all and let God sort them out. Well, let the bar sort them out. [51:20.640 --> 51:26.000] I have trouble getting started. I usually try to pledge rise as much as I can, but [51:26.560 --> 51:30.560] oftentimes I just read other people's and then adapt it. [51:30.560 --> 51:31.600] Okay, hold on. [51:32.640 --> 51:33.120] That's good. [51:33.120 --> 51:37.600] Some words that I can use to include the members, because- [51:37.600 --> 51:39.200] Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. [51:41.280 --> 51:44.880] I included them because their name was signed at the bottom of the document. [51:46.320 --> 51:47.600] They were listed on the document. [51:47.600 --> 51:58.720] But get out the standards for professional conduct and read it, chapter three, four, five, and eight. [52:00.720 --> 52:07.520] Six and seven, that's between law firm stuff, selling law firms. [52:09.920 --> 52:15.920] The only thing that's really interesting in five is about that the partners can be held responsible [52:15.920 --> 52:21.520] for what the nonpartners did. Our supervisor can be held accountable. [52:21.520 --> 52:25.040] But yeah, five, there's nothing really interesting other than that in five anyway. [52:25.760 --> 52:35.760] So when you need verbiage for your bar agreements, I bar grieve them for failure to speak with candor [52:35.760 --> 52:46.640] to the court in violation of the American Bar Association model standards rule 3.3A2. [52:48.080 --> 52:53.920] And then I cited it, I quoted it, that a lawyer is required [52:53.920 --> 53:03.680] to give notice of contravening case law if the opposing party has not referenced it. [53:04.640 --> 53:11.200] And the Young Doctrine specifically said that if they are accused of violating a federal law, [53:12.240 --> 53:18.640] that the states cannot impart immunity to its public officials for violating a federal law. [53:18.640 --> 53:28.320] None of them mentioned Young Doctrine. I did in my response to their rule 12 motion, [53:29.360 --> 53:32.880] and then I bar grieve them for not bringing it up. [53:36.400 --> 53:44.160] I bar grieve themselves for not screwing themselves. Oh, gosh, that was so much fun. [53:44.160 --> 53:48.320] That's your pictures on their wall with darts around it. [53:49.360 --> 53:54.240] Oh, I had a friend of mine's son was a sheriff on the Tarrant County [53:55.200 --> 54:01.200] Sheriff's Department. And he got the grand jury duty. And I saw Jim and Jim said, [54:02.080 --> 54:08.240] Rick talked to me the other day and he wanted to know, what is your picture doing up in the grand [54:08.240 --> 54:18.480] jury room with a note that says, if you see this man called security? So, yeah, I've been there. [54:18.480 --> 54:22.480] And that'd be OK. They can use me as a dart board all they want to, [54:23.520 --> 54:27.520] because I'm taking pot shots at them on a regular basis. And the point is, [54:28.560 --> 54:33.520] it doesn't matter what you bar grieve them for. And they're going to throw it all down the drain. [54:33.520 --> 54:38.800] It doesn't matter what you bar grieve them for. And they're going to throw it all in the trash [54:38.800 --> 54:46.240] anyway. OK, so who cares? Who cares? But it looks better if you cite their own verbiage. [54:47.440 --> 54:54.640] I generally don't quote it specifically. I generally take the verbiage and weave it into a sentence. [54:54.640 --> 55:02.080] So, my sentence actually contains the verbiage of the standard. But that's just me playing with them. [55:03.520 --> 55:11.520] You do whatever you want to, but try to get the verbiage of the standard in there. [55:12.880 --> 55:19.120] OK, this next one, I heard you guys talk and I've been through it myself. When the bar [55:19.120 --> 55:26.400] grievance committee sent me back a response to the complaints I made before, to the grievances [55:26.400 --> 55:33.040] I made before, they said they could not take a grievance on an attorney in an ongoing case. [55:35.120 --> 55:41.280] And you and Brett talked about this before, and you said bar grieve the bar grieving committee. [55:41.280 --> 55:51.520] So how can I do that? I was on their website today and I got every one of them's name and position, [55:52.000 --> 55:59.200] the president, right on down. I think there's 13, 14 of them in this state bar grievance committee. [55:59.200 --> 56:04.320] So I just bar grieve the president for not training them properly, I think is the words you used [56:04.320 --> 56:08.720] before, whether they want to be properly trained if they can't accept the bar grievance during a [56:08.720 --> 56:14.160] lawsuit, that's ridiculous. OK, we tend to use the double lot buck approach. [56:16.800 --> 56:25.680] With double lot buck, you point and shoot. OK. Hit them all, let God sort them out. [56:27.760 --> 56:34.000] OK, I like it. I like it. OK, I've got more, but I'm going to save it for another day. And this is [56:34.000 --> 56:40.720] my last question, and I could look it up, but I'm going to ask you, where do I file a mandamus? [56:41.360 --> 56:48.800] Do I file it in my case? You file a mandamus with the court of appeals. [56:49.920 --> 56:56.240] Do I send a copy to the court? OK, let me take a step back. If you are in an inferior court, [56:56.240 --> 57:04.400] a municipal court or a justice of the peace court, then you file a mandamus with the county court. [57:06.720 --> 57:13.520] In all other cases, you file for the mandamus with the court of appeals. [57:16.080 --> 57:22.240] OK. And if you file with the county court, you don't get what you want, then you file [57:22.240 --> 57:28.160] against the county court with the court of appeals. And since you're in the federal court, [57:28.160 --> 57:36.720] you will file with the Fifth Circuit. OK. But I have to let the district court know [57:36.720 --> 57:43.760] so that they can either proceed or put it on hold. Yeah, you have to give them notice. [57:43.760 --> 57:50.240] You can file a motion to stay all proceedings based on your mandamus. You have to give [57:50.240 --> 57:55.120] everybody notice of the mandamus. The mandamus is actually against the judge. [57:56.720 --> 58:04.960] So you have to serve the judge with it and the other parties. And you include a motion [58:04.960 --> 58:10.160] for a stay of proceedings pending the mandamus. I haven't looked at the rules. They're probably [58:10.160 --> 58:15.680] automatically staying. But if it is, I can't tell you what that rule is. Do you know about that, Brett? [58:15.680 --> 58:22.480] I don't know. OK. You'd have to check the rules. But just ask for the stand, [58:22.480 --> 58:29.840] file a motion for a stay pending your mandamus. That's what I did when I did that in a municipal court. [58:34.560 --> 58:40.720] OK. Is that all for you? Yes, sir. Thank you much. OK. Thank you, Ralph. This is [58:40.720 --> 58:48.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. I call that number 512-646-1984. 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Is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online [59:45.280 --> 59:55.280] at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [59:56.240 --> 59:58.880] at logosradionetwork.com. [59:58.880 --> 01:00:06.400] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. They guarantee [01:00:06.400 --> 01:00:11.280] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [01:00:11.280 --> 01:00:15.280] Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [01:00:15.280 --> 01:00:21.440] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never [01:00:21.440 --> 01:00:27.440] get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.440 --> 01:00:33.520] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:00:33.520 --> 01:00:38.720] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:00:38.720 --> 01:00:44.720] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.160 --> 01:00:50.560] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find [01:00:50.560 --> 01:00:55.040] a third party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.040 --> 01:00:59.520] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was [01:00:59.520 --> 01:01:04.160] designed to prevent. It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:04.160 --> 01:01:09.360] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.360 --> 01:01:13.120] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:13.120 --> 01:01:17.360] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.360 --> 01:01:28.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.920 --> 01:01:36.240] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee [01:01:36.240 --> 01:01:41.120] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [01:01:41.120 --> 01:01:45.120] Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [01:01:45.120 --> 01:01:51.360] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never [01:01:51.360 --> 01:01:57.360] get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.360 --> 01:02:03.520] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:02:03.520 --> 01:02:08.720] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:02:08.720 --> 01:02:16.320] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:02:16.320 --> 01:02:20.800] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [01:02:20.800 --> 01:02:26.080] x-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from [01:02:26.080 --> 01:02:31.760] unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? Unfortunately, [01:02:31.760 --> 01:02:36.480] the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. Case in point, [01:02:36.480 --> 01:02:41.280] TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. When government employees demand [01:02:41.280 --> 01:02:46.320] to peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm [01:02:46.320 --> 01:02:50.800] bells. Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their [01:02:50.800 --> 01:02:56.480] googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [01:02:56.480 --> 01:03:07.280] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:26.480 --> 01:03:53.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with Lauridio, and we're going to Tina in California. [01:03:53.760 --> 01:03:59.440] We do have a couple of slots open on the board. So if you have a question or comment, give us a [01:03:59.440 --> 01:04:08.480] call. I call it number 512-646-1984. And if you have a really complex or difficult question, [01:04:09.280 --> 01:04:14.000] Brett will answer it for you. Okay, Tina, what do you have for us? [01:04:14.000 --> 01:04:28.400] You're kicking me out there. Okay, I have a complex question for you as the Texas [01:04:30.880 --> 01:04:41.120] you know, I've been asking the Texas Secretary of State for their files on the complaint [01:04:41.120 --> 01:04:48.000] and responses from the notary and the attorney that I was going against who reached across [01:04:48.000 --> 01:04:54.720] straight lines to persuade him not to give them. They said they only had a few of these records, [01:04:54.720 --> 01:05:01.200] my complaint, their letters to her, but none of her responses, none of the attorney's responses, [01:05:01.840 --> 01:05:08.000] and none of the things they said that the attorney sent in for her. So then I filed on the Brett's [01:05:08.000 --> 01:05:16.800] advice to get the server logs and file systems where the notary ledgers were to get an audit [01:05:16.800 --> 01:05:21.600] trial or chain of custody records showing her some of the above mentioned data. [01:05:21.600 --> 01:05:26.400] Well, okay, like I said, Brett, this is kind of your area. [01:05:26.400 --> 01:05:34.880] Yeah. All the hard questions in there. [01:05:34.880 --> 01:05:36.000] There's nothing hard about that. [01:05:36.880 --> 01:05:45.280] Well, it is. The computer makes the logs. The operating system will automatically [01:05:45.280 --> 01:05:47.680] have some metadata for she just asking for it. [01:05:49.280 --> 01:05:53.920] Yep. I even asked for records showing non-repudiation measures you have in place [01:05:53.920 --> 01:06:01.760] to ensure authenticity and integrity of changes to the above mentioned data, i.e. Michelle raised [01:06:01.760 --> 01:06:08.160] no religious related emails and phone logs, and for those access logs on the file service and VPN [01:06:08.160 --> 01:06:13.040] edge service. And all they say is a diligent search of the records of this office found [01:06:13.040 --> 01:06:16.480] no information and responsive to your request. So I sent them- [01:06:16.480 --> 01:06:16.980] Wow. [01:06:16.980 --> 01:06:28.660] As you're saying this, I'm thinking back on my response to Garza and Drummond. [01:06:31.300 --> 01:06:42.180] Garza and Drummond, for everybody else, Tina knows who that is. Jose Garza is the Travis [01:06:42.180 --> 01:06:50.900] County District Attorney, and Ron Drummond is the Assistant District Attorney who was handling [01:06:50.900 --> 01:07:00.820] the complaints sent in by Tina. And they chose to throw those in the trash. [01:07:02.900 --> 01:07:09.220] And I sued them for throwing those in the trash. And so you know, Tina, [01:07:09.220 --> 01:07:20.820] in their answer, that was the big deal. What I argued was, is that a prosecuting attorney [01:07:21.860 --> 01:07:32.020] does not have authority to dismiss a prosecution. And I specifically referenced your complaints [01:07:32.020 --> 01:07:41.940] to your complaints, and Drummond and Garza's dismissal of those complaints, that in their [01:07:41.940 --> 01:07:51.860] response, they said, Plaintiff Kalkin admitted that the prosecuting attorney's office, that the [01:07:51.860 --> 01:08:00.340] Travis County did not have jurisdiction. And yeah, it did. And they actually quoted that, [01:08:00.340 --> 01:08:06.340] I went on to say, that the prosecuting attorney had no power to make that determination. [01:08:09.140 --> 01:08:18.580] So part of the thing I would like everybody to keep in mind when we start going after public [01:08:18.580 --> 01:08:31.140] officials is your complaint is a therapeutic metaphor. You can go down to the police department [01:08:31.140 --> 01:08:37.300] or the jail or the court, and you can jump up and down and rail in righteous indignation. [01:08:38.020 --> 01:08:42.180] And they'll sit there patiently waiting for you to get through, and then they'll rule against you [01:08:42.180 --> 01:08:49.380] out of hand at every turn. Do that all the time. But when you sue them in the federal court, [01:08:51.460 --> 01:08:59.860] now you got their attention. And when I wrote my lawsuit, I wrote it from the perspective [01:08:59.860 --> 01:09:07.220] of how do I force this information into the mind of my reader? [01:09:07.220 --> 01:09:16.660] And I like to use Russell Mortland as an example. Russell Mortland's about six foot four or five and [01:09:16.660 --> 01:09:24.980] about 350, 400 pounds. Called him one day and took a long time to answer. And when he answered, [01:09:24.980 --> 01:09:34.900] he said, sorry I took so long, but I was in the shower. Oh God, Russell, tell me I'm not talking [01:09:34.900 --> 01:09:44.740] to you naked. He said, well, oh God, I'll never get that image scraped off the back of my eyeball. [01:09:46.740 --> 01:09:57.220] Would you sue them personally? And you know when you sue, these are judges and prosecutors. [01:09:58.100 --> 01:10:03.060] These are legal professionals. Yeah, they're going to hire, they're going to get an attorney [01:10:03.060 --> 01:10:09.060] to respond for them. But can you imagine these guys not reading the complaints themselves? [01:10:10.100 --> 01:10:16.500] Wow. It's hard to believe that they wouldn't. Yeah, you get to force this [01:10:17.460 --> 01:10:26.580] force exposure to this information. So that dictated how I wrote my [01:10:26.580 --> 01:10:36.420] complaint. And from that perspective, I put something down and then I looked at it and said, [01:10:36.420 --> 01:10:43.860] okay, this guy is gonna say something that goes to one of my rules. Never make a proactive [01:10:43.860 --> 01:10:51.460] statement of law out of your own mouth. Where the heck did you get that? And from my issue, [01:10:51.460 --> 01:10:58.020] I backed up and it backed me all the way up to the constitution. I did not intend to go there, [01:10:58.020 --> 01:11:04.740] but it forced me back to the constitution where the constitution says that in misdemeanors, [01:11:05.940 --> 01:11:16.100] the grand jury will send its true bill to the district court and the district court will [01:11:16.100 --> 01:11:21.540] certify the grand jury finding to the court of jurisdiction. [01:11:22.740 --> 01:11:27.460] I didn't intend to go there. That was an argument that I really wasn't intending to make. [01:11:28.500 --> 01:11:37.140] But in order to force these guys to look at the entire corpus juris body of law, [01:11:37.140 --> 01:11:47.620] it took me all the way back there. So we walked these litigants through every step in due process [01:11:48.420 --> 01:11:55.300] from the constitution all the way up to where they're at with the idea that [01:11:56.500 --> 01:12:03.540] that is an image they will never be able to scrape off the back of their eyeball, [01:12:03.540 --> 01:12:08.900] their mental eyeball. Right. They can't just go back to work the next day and do the exact [01:12:08.900 --> 01:12:13.380] same thing that they just finished reading about. That's why they're in all this hot water. [01:12:14.900 --> 01:12:21.220] They can't just not think about it. Exactly. And that's exactly what you're doing, Tina. [01:12:21.220 --> 01:12:32.980] Yeah. All of these appellate court judge threatened you with sanctions if you continued to litigate. [01:12:35.460 --> 01:12:41.940] And you just ignored him and landed right square on top of him. And where are the sanctions? [01:12:41.940 --> 01:12:49.700] Well, no sanctions. No, because I have to file for his impeachment. [01:12:51.700 --> 01:13:02.900] Yeah. See, this is a kind of thing. You know, if you turn on a water faucet in your sink [01:13:03.700 --> 01:13:08.420] and the faucet blows apart and scorch water in your face and makes a heck of a mess, [01:13:08.420 --> 01:13:15.380] you won't ever be able to go back to that faucet and turn it off again without having a little [01:13:15.380 --> 01:13:24.420] twinge that tells you to watch out, make sure that doesn't happen again. Twenty years down the road, [01:13:24.900 --> 01:13:32.260] you reach that faucet and you'll cringe. This is how we get change done. [01:13:32.260 --> 01:13:39.540] So where do I go from here with this case? Because he said, as you may know, [01:13:39.540 --> 01:13:46.340] the Public Information Act does not require a government entity to answer factual questions, [01:13:46.340 --> 01:13:50.980] perform legal research, or create new information in responding to a request. [01:13:52.340 --> 01:13:58.740] That's just boilerplate. Don't worry. That's just cookie cutter stuff. Just ignore it. [01:13:58.740 --> 01:14:04.660] Yeah, and you know that after you stuck it up them and broke it off in them, [01:14:06.500 --> 01:14:10.260] they kept ruling in properly against you, but you are all over them. [01:14:11.140 --> 01:14:17.220] Yes, I am. The next person that comes along, they're going to say, hold on, hold on. [01:14:19.380 --> 01:14:25.780] Let's not go there again. How can we do this different so we don't wind up in another [01:14:25.780 --> 01:14:34.260] Tina Coldbrook mess? For all of you, you file motions and pleadings and you file suits and [01:14:34.820 --> 01:14:39.940] you feel like they all rule against you and you don't make any difference. [01:14:42.500 --> 01:14:49.300] If you do what Tina's done, if you do what Brett's been doing and a lot of people that's [01:14:49.300 --> 01:15:01.060] calling into this show, you take them on and you take them on on their own rules in their home turf. [01:15:01.940 --> 01:15:10.500] Stick your boot up in their legal behind and take them to task. They don't forget that. [01:15:10.500 --> 01:15:18.260] That leaves its mark. I still can't think about Russell Morton without cringing. [01:15:20.740 --> 01:15:24.660] These judges are not gonna be able to think about Tina Coldbrook without cringing and [01:15:25.460 --> 01:15:32.660] they are not gonna want that to happen again. The next time a Tina Coldbrook issue comes up, [01:15:32.660 --> 01:15:41.140] these judges are gonna say, whoa, hold on a minute. We don't wanna go there again. [01:15:42.980 --> 01:15:47.620] It doesn't matter if they win at the end of the day. That's not the point. Our purpose [01:15:48.500 --> 01:15:59.140] is to change the system and human beings cannot not change when you affect them on a level that's [01:15:59.140 --> 01:16:06.500] essentially outside their awareness. That's exactly what Tina was doing. That's exactly what my [01:16:07.940 --> 01:16:16.820] lawsuit was designed to do. I claim that I'm arguing this issue, but what I'm really trying [01:16:16.820 --> 01:16:26.100] to do is stuff due process right square into their brains. So it's right there in front of [01:16:26.100 --> 01:16:34.980] them. The next time they get in front of a potential client, you and I, as singular individuals, [01:16:35.540 --> 01:16:43.060] we can have profound effects on the system. Now, it may well be that nobody knows you had that [01:16:43.060 --> 01:16:48.740] effect. And the Bible says, therefore, when they do a sonoms, we don't like the scribes and Pharisees [01:16:48.740 --> 01:16:54.580] who pray in the streets and synagogues to have glory of men. That was social wisdom, [01:16:54.580 --> 01:16:59.300] but the most powerful effects did come from that direction. Hang on. [01:17:00.740 --> 01:17:05.860] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his word? [01:17:05.860 --> 01:17:10.980] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from eight to 10 p.m. central time for [01:17:10.980 --> 01:17:16.820] scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2 15. [01:17:17.460 --> 01:17:22.020] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needed not to be ashamed, [01:17:22.020 --> 01:17:27.140] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [01:17:27.140 --> 01:17:32.740] book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour [01:17:32.740 --> 01:17:37.780] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character [01:17:37.780 --> 01:17:43.460] development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.460 --> 01:17:48.100] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of [01:17:48.100 --> 01:17:53.780] our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [01:17:53.780 --> 01:17:58.980] Wednesdays from eight to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [01:18:00.580 --> 01:18:05.620] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.620 --> 01:18:11.300] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won six cases [01:18:11.300 --> 01:18:16.100] in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win too. You'll get step by step [01:18:16.100 --> 01:18:21.140] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:18:21.140 --> 01:18:26.820] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:18:26.820 --> 01:18:31.380] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them [01:18:31.380 --> 01:18:37.540] and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to [01:18:37.540 --> 01:18:42.500] stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, [01:18:42.500 --> 01:18:47.700] please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email [01:18:47.700 --> 01:18:57.620] michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:18:57.620 --> 01:19:15.220] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. This is the Logos, Logos, Radio, Netradio, Netradio, Netradio, Netradio, Netradio. [01:19:15.220 --> 01:19:36.340] Ain't gonna blame me, don't blame me. Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.340 --> 01:19:46.580] I was blindsided, but now I can see your plan. You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand. [01:19:46.580 --> 01:19:54.900] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:54.900 --> 01:20:11.460] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:20:11.460 --> 01:20:25.060] Ain't gonna drop me with that same old trick again. I get it now, but then I must tell you. [01:20:25.060 --> 01:20:44.420] It's one thing that I'm discovering, where the real power to make change is. It's not in the cases that are won in the public and waved before the public like a red flag. [01:20:44.420 --> 01:20:59.860] That's not where real change occurs. Real change occurs down in the trenches. And if you're paying attention, when you file suit, especially if you file suit against them. [01:20:59.860 --> 01:21:15.140] You know, I sued these guys. Holy crap, this is so much fun. I got them doing what they forced me to do when they come after me. That's great fun. [01:21:15.140 --> 01:21:38.260] But in going after them, I'm not just in there trying to beat them up and make them feel bad. How do I use my motions and pleadings to pry their mind open and slide in the information I want stuck in there? [01:21:38.260 --> 01:21:45.860] And that goes back to this rule, never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:21:45.860 --> 01:21:54.020] If you make it out of your own mouth as they're reading it, they can mentally discount it. [01:21:54.020 --> 01:22:01.140] But if you make that statement out of the mouth of the courts or out of the mouth of the legislature. [01:22:01.140 --> 01:22:12.100] They can't discount that. They have to put a mental marker on that because this is likely to come back and haunt me. [01:22:12.100 --> 01:22:20.260] Yeah, it's something they have to grapple with. They can't just say, make this problem go away because it's not just you. It's the legislature. [01:22:20.260 --> 01:22:32.660] If anybody here has ever studied hypnosis, you should recognize that. That's how hypnosis really works. [01:22:32.660 --> 01:22:40.660] You talk to them about your issue, but while you're talking to them about your issue, [01:22:40.660 --> 01:22:52.100] you're having an underlying conversation about the law and how it's written and how it all fits together and then how it applies to your issue. [01:22:52.100 --> 01:23:05.540] In the process, you get to school them on the law as it applies to your case. And that's not something they can unread. [01:23:05.540 --> 01:23:13.460] And it's not something they can avoid reading. Every other thing you would write, they don't have to look at it. [01:23:13.460 --> 01:23:19.860] And if you look at my pleadings, I don't use footnotes. Footnotes really suck. [01:23:19.860 --> 01:23:27.220] Footnotes were necessary before we had word processors. [01:23:27.220 --> 01:23:36.260] Because if you try to develop a document with typewriters, it's difficult enough. [01:23:36.260 --> 01:23:46.340] But handwritten, you couldn't create a mental flow in writing with footnotes in it because you would get all screwed up. [01:23:46.340 --> 01:23:55.860] It was just a major mess trying to do that. But with the computers, you can cut and paste and rearrange, make it look like you want to. [01:23:55.860 --> 01:24:04.980] So instead of using a footnote, when I make a reference to law and then I give a footnote, [01:24:04.980 --> 01:24:12.260] OK, you can go down to the bottom of the page and read the footnote and the footnote will reference a case. [01:24:12.260 --> 01:24:18.500] Then you can go down to the legal library and pull that case and open the book and read it in the case. [01:24:18.500 --> 01:24:23.540] There is no mental continuity in that at all. [01:24:23.540 --> 01:24:31.460] So what I started doing is the first thing I do is at the beginning of the paragraph, [01:24:31.460 --> 01:24:38.820] I put a sentence or a title heading that says, this is what I'm going to talk about. [01:24:38.820 --> 01:24:50.340] And then I put in what I'm talking about. And when I refer a reference, a case right under that, I quote the case, the section from the case. [01:24:50.340 --> 01:25:00.500] And I shrink the font, I set it to italics, I indent both sides so it stands out on the page visually. [01:25:00.500 --> 01:25:12.660] So it helps the mind follow along. I read these legal documents and the guy quotes something and he sets it out with quotation marks. [01:25:12.660 --> 01:25:20.100] But it's in a sentence, a paragraph that's half a page long and he's buried in the middle of that paragraph. [01:25:20.100 --> 01:25:28.580] Yeah, they often do that. Sometimes they forget the other end of the quote, so you don't even know which part. [01:25:28.580 --> 01:25:33.780] When did the quote stop and they started talking themselves again? [01:25:33.780 --> 01:25:42.580] Yeah, that is a big, big problem. And even judges have that problem. Everybody has that problem. [01:25:42.580 --> 01:25:53.060] So where do I go with this? Yeah, I've always written my documents from perspective of neuro-linguistic programming. [01:25:53.060 --> 01:25:59.140] How do you write your document to manipulate the mind of your reader? [01:25:59.140 --> 01:26:11.220] If any of you haven't gotten my book on Legal 101, you might want to go get that because I have a whole large section on mental flow. [01:26:11.220 --> 01:26:27.780] How you grab the mind of your reader and move the mind of your reader from one issue to another without ever creating a question in the mind of your reader that you don't answer. [01:26:27.780 --> 01:26:35.700] Without ever stating something that has no referential index. [01:26:35.700 --> 01:26:42.980] I don't want my reader to ever think where in the heck did he come up with that? [01:26:42.980 --> 01:26:50.900] And without ever asking my reader to stop here, go somewhere else and then come back. [01:26:50.900 --> 01:26:57.220] Because when he comes back, he's completely lost context. [01:26:57.220 --> 01:27:04.740] We have an opportunity, all of us, we're taking these guys on and they expect us to be turds. [01:27:04.740 --> 01:27:09.540] Can I say turds on the air? Yeah, I think so. [01:27:09.540 --> 01:27:20.980] Okay, okay. They expect us to be turds and they don't expect us to be operating at a level that's not in their direct awareness. [01:27:20.980 --> 01:27:26.180] I've mentioned on the air that I do secret hypnosis. [01:27:26.180 --> 01:27:31.700] Guys, this is secret hypnosis. This is how it works. [01:27:31.700 --> 01:27:36.580] And it really does work. Okay, go ahead. Tina, I interrupted you. [01:27:36.580 --> 01:27:45.380] You went off on attention there. So in my response to him this morning, because that's when I put your response this morning is insufficient. [01:27:45.380 --> 01:27:55.060] The IT director's refusal to respond to me is a summary denial and your refusal to allow me to correspond directly with him is also a summary denial. [01:27:55.060 --> 01:27:59.540] Oh, wait. So this is not the IT director that's answering you? This is some lawyer? [01:27:59.540 --> 01:28:02.660] No, genuine counsel. [01:28:02.660 --> 01:28:13.940] Oh, okay. So that brings up an interesting point because some of those terms are probably not going to be widely understood by lawyers or by somebody else. [01:28:13.940 --> 01:28:21.620] Those terms like non-repudiation, that's an IT term. It's a term that refers to your login system. [01:28:21.620 --> 01:28:30.740] How do you keep track of whatever actions were taken so that you can track it to a person and the person can't say, no, that wasn't me? [01:28:30.740 --> 01:28:39.620] Yes, it was you. You logged in with your username and password and it sent something to your phone and you did the SMS confirmation. [01:28:39.620 --> 01:28:45.300] That's two factor authentication. It absolutely was you. You can't repudiate that action. [01:28:45.300 --> 01:28:52.580] And so the systems that they have set up are something that the IT director would understand. [01:28:52.580 --> 01:28:56.820] But if they hit a lawyer in the middle of it, then he doesn't understand them effectively. [01:28:56.820 --> 01:29:02.020] The lawyer is throwing the IT director under the bus saying he doesn't even have a login system. [01:29:02.020 --> 01:29:06.580] We have no records of any login system existing. [01:29:06.580 --> 01:29:17.300] That's what he's saying. So I said, I appeal yours and the IT director's decision and you cannot keep me from the appellate process by way of the right to know who is the appeals department. [01:29:17.300 --> 01:29:25.700] And I expect that information forthwith. That's where I sent back and I haven't had a response yet. [01:29:25.700 --> 01:29:31.460] But where do I go if they don't, they're still not going to respond. We've already answered your question. If you have questions about it. [01:29:31.460 --> 01:29:40.340] To the attorney general. Yeah, basically. No, that's the attorney general is the one that you go to to tattle. [01:29:40.340 --> 01:29:48.180] OK. So is it just a tort letter or just a request or what? [01:29:48.180 --> 01:29:57.620] No, it's a criminal complaint. A criminal complaint to the attorney general because they're not getting paid and they're not doing their job. [01:29:57.620 --> 01:30:02.740] Well, there's that. It's official. [01:30:02.740 --> 01:30:09.860] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.860 --> 01:30:16.500] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.500 --> 01:30:22.180] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.180 --> 01:30:27.220] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:30:27.220 --> 01:30:33.460] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself privacy. [01:30:33.460 --> 01:30:38.100] It's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by start page dot com. [01:30:38.100 --> 01:30:45.860] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with start page. [01:30:45.860 --> 01:30:52.620] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.620 --> 01:30:56.540] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.540 --> 01:31:04.300] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.300 --> 01:31:10.780] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.780 --> 01:31:15.980] That's the part of the brain that helps us away conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.980 --> 01:31:21.500] So take a deep breath and chill out. It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.500 --> 01:31:31.260] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for start page dot com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.260 --> 01:31:36.780] This is building seven, a forty seven story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.780 --> 01:31:43.780] The government says that fire brought it down. However, fifteen hundred architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.780 --> 01:31:46.620] Over six thousand of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.620 --> 01:31:50.820] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.820 --> 01:31:55.820] I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.820 --> 01:32:02.980] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. Go to remember building seven dot org today. [01:32:02.980 --> 01:32:06.140] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [01:32:06.140 --> 01:32:08.500] In today's America, we live in an us against them society. [01:32:08.500 --> 01:32:13.660] 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. [01:32:13.660 --> 01:32:20.660] 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. [01:32:20.660 --> 01:32:26.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.500 --> 01:32:36.220] Former 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 the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.220 --> 01:32:41.580] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.580 --> 01:32:48.580] 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, [01:32:48.580 --> 01:32:51.580] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.580 --> 01:32:55.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.500 --> 01:33:02.900] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.900 --> 01:33:12.900] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. Logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:12.900 --> 01:33:19.900] Yeah, who you want to chip? Who you take me for? Free Tully? Who you want to chip? Me no free Tully. You can't chip me. [01:33:19.900 --> 01:33:26.900] How I'ma say? Don't let them chip you in the morning. Chip you in the evening. Put a chip in your body. [01:33:26.900 --> 01:33:31.900] And anyway you go computer reading. You can't hide me safe from nobody. What me say? [01:33:31.900 --> 01:33:41.900] Chip in your mom. Chip in your daddy. Chip in your grandpa and the granny. Chip in me. Chip in your baby. Chip in your family, whole family. [01:33:41.900 --> 01:33:48.900] Chip in your dog and the cat around me. Chip in the beef and you still go eat it. Chip in the fish, them all in the sea. [01:33:48.900 --> 01:33:53.900] Chip in the shark and the whale around me. You know still mankind gone chip crazy. [01:33:53.900 --> 01:34:00.900] They the kind of thing man they want to read it. Social security, them go tell me. Number when they give me, them rip it up you see. [01:34:00.900 --> 01:34:07.900] Chip you in the morning. Chip you in the evening. Chip you all the dinner time. Experiment on mankind. [01:34:07.900 --> 01:34:14.900] But man you know say them blind. Well we don't want no chip. Man you have your body. Freedom or something. Man you fight for it. [01:34:14.900 --> 01:34:21.900] You should tell them them free reading. Constitution set us free. Man let them put no chip in your body. [01:34:21.900 --> 01:34:28.900] Put no chip in your dog or cat you see. No put no chip in your cow and go eat it. No put no chip in the fish and go eat it. [01:34:28.900 --> 01:34:33.900] All in the whale and the shark in the sea. Put the little chip in the little baby. [01:34:33.900 --> 01:34:38.900] Want to put the chip in a ground for you see. Want to put the little chip in a high man body. [01:34:38.900 --> 01:34:43.900] If me go hide in the Atlantic sea. Man did have to lie. Me say gone go find me. [01:34:43.900 --> 01:34:47.900] Satellite get mad. Satellite get angry. Two chip them use. Me say crash up you see. [01:34:47.900 --> 01:34:54.900] Me say chip in the morning. Chip in the evening. Chip in your body. Man don't let them come come chip me. [01:34:54.900 --> 01:35:01.900] That accent you're listening to is from Nice. The island of Nice. [01:35:01.900 --> 01:35:08.900] And Pat was a real character. OK. [01:35:08.900 --> 01:35:18.900] It is Thursday the 17th day of August two thousand and twenty three and we're talking to Miss Sweet Tina. [01:35:18.900 --> 01:35:23.900] Not to be confused with Charlie's Tina but Sweet Tina. [01:35:23.900 --> 01:35:50.900] And we were talking on the break Tina about how do we put together a set of requests that look like they were written by an IT tech who was intimately familiar with all of the hacking methods of getting into public records. [01:35:50.900 --> 01:35:56.900] So that when the lawyer reads it. [01:35:56.900 --> 01:36:05.900] He's going to have the same kind of reaction we get when we read legalese. [01:36:05.900 --> 01:36:08.900] What in the heck are they talking about? [01:36:08.900 --> 01:36:14.900] In other words, Randy likes it that these people you're dealing with have a lawyer in that position. [01:36:14.900 --> 01:36:17.900] He likes it. He wants to recreate it elsewhere. [01:36:17.900 --> 01:36:21.900] These guys got a hacker in their pocket. [01:36:21.900 --> 01:36:23.900] Well. [01:36:23.900 --> 01:36:31.900] So Tina you said you were you were reaching out to them and telling them that their response was insufficient. [01:36:31.900 --> 01:36:32.900] Correct. [01:36:32.900 --> 01:36:35.900] And then you were wondering what else can you do? [01:36:35.900 --> 01:36:38.900] Yes. [01:36:38.900 --> 01:36:47.900] So OK, hold on to as your purpose. I interrupted everybody and I interrupted myself. [01:36:47.900 --> 01:36:51.900] Can you bring us back to precisely where you were? [01:36:51.900 --> 01:36:54.900] So it would make sense to to me and everybody else. [01:36:54.900 --> 01:36:56.900] I assume everybody else. [01:36:56.900 --> 01:37:01.900] I've confused everybody else as much as I've confused myself. [01:37:01.900 --> 01:37:08.900] Well, I've asked for certain information that related to my complaint. [01:37:08.900 --> 01:37:22.900] And because there's an ongoing case, that information, according to their own documents, should be there because they're not allowed to destroy it if there's an ongoing case. [01:37:22.900 --> 01:37:26.900] And according to them, only half of the information. [01:37:26.900 --> 01:37:28.900] OK, hold on, hold on. [01:37:28.900 --> 01:37:43.900] This goes to your queries, your information requests to the Texas Secretary of State for records concerning your complaint against this notary. [01:37:43.900 --> 01:37:46.900] Is that correct? Am I in the right place? [01:37:46.900 --> 01:37:55.900] That's correct. You did not properly respond to my request, which I am entitled to get copies of their notary ledger. [01:37:55.900 --> 01:38:04.900] And then Tina filed a complaint about that and the Secretary of State looked all into it and they did some stuff. [01:38:04.900 --> 01:38:09.900] And now she's asking for the records of their inquiries and such. [01:38:09.900 --> 01:38:14.900] And they're giving her some crap saying they don't have it. [01:38:14.900 --> 01:38:18.900] So that's the crux of this situation. [01:38:18.900 --> 01:38:27.900] We got the Secretary of State of all people saying they don't have access to their own records, that they've somehow lost them or destroyed them. [01:38:27.900 --> 01:38:32.900] OK, am I correct in that synopsis? [01:38:32.900 --> 01:38:38.900] And so that's where I'm going next is you get the electronic version if they've lost the paper version. [01:38:38.900 --> 01:38:45.900] And they're saying they don't have any version, anything more than they've already sent me, which is basically what I sent them. [01:38:45.900 --> 01:38:52.900] And their response to her attorney, who is the same attorney who told her not to respond to me. [01:38:52.900 --> 01:39:01.900] OK, hold on, hold on. Brett, as an IT guy, what is the likelihood of that happening? [01:39:01.900 --> 01:39:04.900] The likelihood of which happening? [01:39:04.900 --> 01:39:12.900] Of the Secretary of State losing emails or internal documentation? [01:39:12.900 --> 01:39:20.900] It wouldn't happen. And it's not not because the Secretary of State, she's not that it's not because she's so amazing. [01:39:20.900 --> 01:39:29.900] It's because systems automatically keep things until you tell them to delete them or you, you know, do something with it. [01:39:29.900 --> 01:39:33.900] So you you wouldn't just have something disappear. [01:39:33.900 --> 01:39:36.900] It would be that someone deleted it. [01:39:36.900 --> 01:39:44.900] Yes, I once asked the district, the county, I'm sorry, the district clerk of Victoria County. [01:39:44.900 --> 01:39:54.900] I want a list of all of the people who who have been called up for grand jury duty for the last three years. [01:39:54.900 --> 01:40:03.900] The response I got was, oh, well, we changed our systems last year and all that information was lost. [01:40:03.900 --> 01:40:08.900] What is the likelihood, Brett, of that actually happening? [01:40:08.900 --> 01:40:14.900] Yeah, I'd say that's actually pretty plausible, depending on what system. [01:40:14.900 --> 01:40:20.900] If they went to a system that it doesn't allow them to pull certain queries in that way, [01:40:20.900 --> 01:40:26.900] then people that are looking at the front end might think that the data is gone on the back end. [01:40:26.900 --> 01:40:29.900] You know, maybe it got migrated. Maybe it didn't get migrated. [01:40:29.900 --> 01:40:35.900] Maybe the new database doesn't even have a place for whatever they migrated from and to doesn't even have a they can't map that over. [01:40:35.900 --> 01:40:39.900] But sometimes it's a budget issue. [01:40:39.900 --> 01:40:43.900] They say you're operating a database. [01:40:43.900 --> 01:40:47.900] You're the guy that you're migrating between one database to another. [01:40:47.900 --> 01:40:49.900] What is the light? [01:40:49.900 --> 01:40:54.900] Decisions and budget decisions that say we're not going to mess with all of that. [01:40:54.900 --> 01:40:59.900] All we need is these three features. Nobody's ever going to need to go back and get this and that. [01:40:59.900 --> 01:41:02.900] So let's just migrate this. And sometimes that's what they do. [01:41:02.900 --> 01:41:08.900] OK, when you do the migration, the system from which you migrated from, [01:41:08.900 --> 01:41:14.900] what is the likelihood that you're going to destroy that data? [01:41:14.900 --> 01:41:18.900] Depends if it's kept. [01:41:18.900 --> 01:41:25.900] Keep in mind, this is a government agency. [01:41:25.900 --> 01:41:30.900] And we have laws on that kind of thing. [01:41:30.900 --> 01:41:36.900] Well, you might be working from an assumption that all the data is right there in the building. [01:41:36.900 --> 01:41:44.900] And a lot of them have cloud services and things that they set up that it's keeping things off site. [01:41:44.900 --> 01:41:49.900] And when they stop paying for the service the next month, they're done paying with it. [01:41:49.900 --> 01:41:52.900] Everything they were storing there is gone. [01:41:52.900 --> 01:41:58.900] So it depends on the data and how it goes. [01:41:58.900 --> 01:42:04.900] OK, good, good. Those are great questions to ask. [01:42:04.900 --> 01:42:10.900] We're talking to government agencies that are supposed to maintain their records. [01:42:10.900 --> 01:42:14.900] Talking to the Secretary of State for crying out loud. [01:42:14.900 --> 01:42:18.900] Yeah, it's our records. She's hired to maintain our records. [01:42:18.900 --> 01:42:26.900] If they're using, what do you call it, outside services. [01:42:26.900 --> 01:42:31.900] This is not like me putting my information on the cloud. [01:42:31.900 --> 01:42:38.900] This is the state putting official records on the cloud. [01:42:38.900 --> 01:42:40.900] They do it all the time, every day. [01:42:40.900 --> 01:42:48.900] Yeah, if I am the clerk or the custodian of the record who's required to maintain these records. [01:42:48.900 --> 01:42:57.900] Well, before I put something on the cloud, I have to know for certain these records are not going to disappear. [01:42:57.900 --> 01:43:02.900] That's not her response. That's not her expertise. [01:43:02.900 --> 01:43:04.900] She doesn't know. She doesn't understand. [01:43:04.900 --> 01:43:10.900] She looks at her browser and she looks at the little padlock and she thinks everything's safe. [01:43:10.900 --> 01:43:19.900] She doesn't really understand the scope of what it is, which things are protecting what. [01:43:19.900 --> 01:43:24.900] OK, we'll have to do that. I'm sorry, Tina, let's go back to you. [01:43:24.900 --> 01:43:30.900] This brings up a question that has come up relatively often. [01:43:30.900 --> 01:43:37.900] Brett and I need to talk about this off the air to figure out how to ask the right questions. [01:43:37.900 --> 01:43:41.900] OK, I'm sorry, Tina, I'll shut up now and go back to you. [01:43:41.900 --> 01:43:44.900] You were running me off the click. [01:43:44.900 --> 01:43:52.900] Yeah, that was my plan. I was watching the clock. I was going to toss you right off the edge. [01:43:52.900 --> 01:43:54.900] I knew you would. [01:43:54.900 --> 01:43:59.900] OK, you did that once before and I didn't know how you did it. [01:43:59.900 --> 01:44:00.900] Dang, cookies. [01:44:00.900 --> 01:44:02.900] Cookies? Me love cookies. [01:44:02.900 --> 01:44:05.900] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:05.900 --> 01:44:08.900] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:44:08.900 --> 01:44:11.900] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:44:11.900 --> 01:44:13.900] No, can't eat it? [01:44:13.900 --> 01:44:16.900] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.900 --> 01:44:17.900] These have apples. [01:44:17.900 --> 01:44:20.900] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.900 --> 01:44:22.900] Yummy apple. [01:44:22.900 --> 01:44:26.900] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.900 --> 01:44:32.900] I'm going to click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.900 --> 01:44:34.900] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.900 --> 01:44:40.900] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side. [01:44:40.900 --> 01:44:46.900] Bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:46.900 --> 01:44:48.900] New cookies? For me? [01:44:48.900 --> 01:44:50.900] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.900 --> 01:44:56.900] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [01:44:56.900 --> 01:44:57.900] Fee is for cookie. [01:44:57.900 --> 01:44:59.900] Fee is for classified. [01:44:59.900 --> 01:45:03.900] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.900 --> 01:45:06.900] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:06.900 --> 01:45:14.900] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.900 --> 01:45:18.900] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.900 --> 01:45:22.900] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.900 --> 01:45:27.900] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:27.900 --> 01:45:33.900] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:33.900 --> 01:45:42.900] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.900 --> 01:45:51.900] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.900 --> 01:46:13.900] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.900 --> 01:46:36.900] Okay, we are back. [01:46:36.900 --> 01:46:39.900] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:39.900 --> 01:46:41.900] We're talking to Tina in California. [01:46:41.900 --> 01:46:45.900] Tina, I guess I need to apologize to you. [01:46:45.900 --> 01:46:54.900] I've used you to help me examine some issues that I found compelling. [01:46:54.900 --> 01:46:57.900] And I've used up your time. [01:46:57.900 --> 01:47:00.900] You have. [01:47:00.900 --> 01:47:03.900] I will finish with one thing to show you. [01:47:03.900 --> 01:47:07.900] You know, I'm going to go further with this and I'll contact you later. [01:47:07.900 --> 01:47:23.900] But in my appeal part, in my demand for oral argument and rule to show cause, I finished it with a justice who violates any of the standards may be removed from office, making the person no longer eligible for election by the voters. [01:47:23.900 --> 01:47:28.900] Would it be worth it for the court to keep allowing this criminal to get away with defying justice? [01:47:28.900 --> 01:47:32.900] Is attorney McGinnity too big for the court to fathom his own downfall? [01:47:32.900 --> 01:47:40.900] The question now is, is McGinnity and his crew above the law? And if so, why? [01:47:40.900 --> 01:47:43.900] That's a good question. [01:47:43.900 --> 01:47:48.900] You would do well with new linguistic programming. [01:47:48.900 --> 01:47:54.900] Yeah, I think you phrased that really well, stepped right through it and there's no exit. [01:47:54.900 --> 01:48:00.900] Yeah, new linguistic programming is how to get into the mind of your listener. [01:48:00.900 --> 01:48:06.900] And you seem to have a way of doing that. [01:48:06.900 --> 01:48:19.900] So yeah, that will be interesting to see what the oral argument that comes down because now I'm waiting for them to give me the date. [01:48:19.900 --> 01:48:22.900] And I would invite you all on to listen. [01:48:22.900 --> 01:48:25.900] Oh, yes, send us links. [01:48:25.900 --> 01:48:27.900] Oh, I'd love to do that. [01:48:27.900 --> 01:48:33.900] But you still got to write me an affidavit for judicial disqualification. [01:48:33.900 --> 01:48:42.900] Yes, and I told Brett that I felt bad about that because I didn't get to it today. And I do want to do that. [01:48:42.900 --> 01:48:50.900] Because I was hoping to send them in tomorrow, but I'm going to wait till Monday till I can get a couple of others in that are promised. [01:48:50.900 --> 01:48:59.900] And then I'll have about six or seven and then it's going to everybody and they're going to know that I'm demanding impeachment. [01:48:59.900 --> 01:49:05.900] OK, will you send me an email reminding me to prepare your document? [01:49:05.900 --> 01:49:10.900] Because when I get up early in the morning, I sometimes get up two or three or four o'clock in the morning. [01:49:10.900 --> 01:49:14.900] I'm old. I have to get up and go pee. [01:49:14.900 --> 01:49:19.900] That's the best time for me. And that'll remind me to get that put together. [01:49:19.900 --> 01:49:26.900] OK, I will do that. And thank you and we'll talk soon and just keep going. [01:49:26.900 --> 01:49:30.900] OK, thank you, Tina. OK, we were real short on time. [01:49:30.900 --> 01:49:36.900] We've got nine minutes left and we have a first time caller, Timothy in Texas and in New York. [01:49:36.900 --> 01:49:39.900] If you will call back tomorrow night, we'll take you early. [01:49:39.900 --> 01:49:44.900] I apologize for not getting to you, but we only have two hours. [01:49:44.900 --> 01:49:48.900] So tomorrow night we have four hours. So if you call in tomorrow night early, we'll take you first. [01:49:48.900 --> 01:49:53.900] We're going to a first time caller. [01:49:53.900 --> 01:49:58.900] And if you are in the four, six, nine area code. [01:49:58.900 --> 01:50:04.900] Talk to us. Give us a first name. It looks like you're in California. [01:50:04.900 --> 01:50:11.900] No, that's Texas. Hello, hello. [01:50:11.900 --> 01:50:14.900] Yes. How are you doing? We're doing good. [01:50:14.900 --> 01:50:19.900] Give me a first name. Are you actually in California? [01:50:19.900 --> 01:50:23.900] No, I'm in Texas. In Texas. Oh, yes. [01:50:23.900 --> 01:50:27.900] OK, so see, we have to understand the dialect. [01:50:27.900 --> 01:50:32.900] So I know we're going to be speaking redneck. OK. [01:50:32.900 --> 01:50:36.900] And what's a first name we can call you? [01:50:36.900 --> 01:50:40.900] My first name is Ephraim. Ephraim. OK. [01:50:40.900 --> 01:50:44.900] Your middle name is not Zimbalist, is it? [01:50:44.900 --> 01:50:49.900] No, but OK. I was told that a lot. [01:50:49.900 --> 01:50:58.900] OK, for those of you who missed that joke, Ephraim Zimbalist Jr. [01:50:58.900 --> 01:51:04.900] Famous star back in the old days, but Ephraim is a really unusual first name. [01:51:04.900 --> 01:51:09.900] OK, what do you have for us today? [01:51:09.900 --> 01:51:14.900] I'm dealing with a homeowner's association. [01:51:14.900 --> 01:51:20.900] And they're basically trying to steal my property. [01:51:20.900 --> 01:51:24.900] Trying to steal it. [01:51:24.900 --> 01:51:29.900] Yeah, because what's happening is that [01:51:29.900 --> 01:51:33.900] I can't get the rules from them, certain things I can't get. [01:51:33.900 --> 01:51:36.900] And then when they say they'll give it to me, [01:51:36.900 --> 01:51:39.900] then they do everything. They sued me. [01:51:39.900 --> 01:51:41.900] They sued me and won a case. [01:51:41.900 --> 01:51:45.900] OK, hold on, hold on. Too many pronouns. [01:51:45.900 --> 01:51:51.900] We hate pronouns. Who is they? [01:51:51.900 --> 01:51:56.900] The homeowners association. [01:51:56.900 --> 01:51:59.900] Homeowners association. [01:51:59.900 --> 01:52:06.900] The homeowners association sued you and now they want to take your property? [01:52:06.900 --> 01:52:08.900] Well, what they basically doing it there. [01:52:08.900 --> 01:52:14.900] They tied me up with different nonsense things and making and then. [01:52:14.900 --> 01:52:18.900] And what happened to us is a long story. [01:52:18.900 --> 01:52:24.900] OK, hold on, hold on, Ephraim. Are you alone in this problem? [01:52:24.900 --> 01:52:27.900] Yes, that's the problem. I'm happy. [01:52:27.900 --> 01:52:30.900] Hold on, hold on. [01:52:30.900 --> 01:52:37.900] The homeowners associations, in my experience, are notoriously corrupt. [01:52:37.900 --> 01:52:42.900] We have people who work their way into homeowners associations [01:52:42.900 --> 01:52:49.900] so they can use the homeowners association covenants to steal people's properties. [01:52:49.900 --> 01:52:56.900] So in your homeowners association, [01:52:56.900 --> 01:53:04.900] are there any actions going on against other members of the homeowners association [01:53:04.900 --> 01:53:08.900] similar to what they're doing to you? [01:53:08.900 --> 01:53:10.900] No. [01:53:10.900 --> 01:53:20.900] OK, OK, I guess your accent that I hear forces me to ask another question. [01:53:20.900 --> 01:53:27.900] You got a white guy, a black guy in a white neighborhood. [01:53:27.900 --> 01:53:29.900] You kind of cut off, Randy. What were you saying? [01:53:29.900 --> 01:53:35.900] White guy, black guy, white neighborhood. [01:53:35.900 --> 01:53:37.900] Am I back? [01:53:37.900 --> 01:53:43.900] Check your mic, buddy. [01:53:43.900 --> 01:53:46.900] OK, Brett, can you hear me? [01:53:46.900 --> 01:53:52.900] Well, Ephraim, I think he was going to ask if you're being somehow targeted. [01:53:52.900 --> 01:53:54.900] I think that's where he was headed with that. [01:53:54.900 --> 01:53:59.900] Yeah, that's a better way to phrase it. I know I am because what they sued me for, [01:53:59.900 --> 01:54:03.900] I can show you videos of people that's on the board. [01:54:03.900 --> 01:54:06.900] Their situation is worse than mine. [01:54:06.900 --> 01:54:10.900] In a worse situation, and all I was trying to do was build a house, [01:54:10.900 --> 01:54:13.900] and they wouldn't approve my plan. [01:54:13.900 --> 01:54:17.900] So that's what they used. Now they're wanting, now the county approved this, [01:54:17.900 --> 01:54:21.900] and I'm in the county. This is not in the city. This is in the county. [01:54:21.900 --> 01:54:27.900] The county approved the plans that I submitted, came out, and the county I'm in, [01:54:27.900 --> 01:54:31.900] you have to locate, the county has to locate where the house is going to be, [01:54:31.900 --> 01:54:33.900] and you have to do the measurements for them, [01:54:33.900 --> 01:54:36.900] and then they come out and verify it, and they give you a permit. [01:54:36.900 --> 01:54:40.900] They gave me the permit. They wouldn't approve the plans, [01:54:40.900 --> 01:54:45.900] and they run the 190, 180 days out. [01:54:45.900 --> 01:54:49.900] Then they came back and they sued me for the fence not being up. [01:54:49.900 --> 01:54:51.900] Well, I explained to them, well, I'm trying to build a house, [01:54:51.900 --> 01:54:54.900] so when the equipment and stuff start coming in, [01:54:54.900 --> 01:54:56.900] it'll be easy for those trucks to come in with the equipment, [01:54:56.900 --> 01:55:00.900] and then once we build a house, we'll put a brand new fence up. [01:55:00.900 --> 01:55:04.900] Okay, hold on. Can you hear me now? [01:55:04.900 --> 01:55:06.900] Yeah, I can. [01:55:06.900 --> 01:55:17.900] Is there must be in the homeowners association rules a provision for construction? [01:55:17.900 --> 01:55:20.900] Yes. [01:55:20.900 --> 01:55:28.900] Is the homeowners association violating any of the homeowners association rules? [01:55:28.900 --> 01:55:34.900] Well, you see, that's something that I can only get certain things from them, [01:55:34.900 --> 01:55:39.900] because what they say is on email or you have to get it by email or whatever, [01:55:39.900 --> 01:55:42.900] and then when I go to look for it, I can't get it. [01:55:42.900 --> 01:55:48.900] Have you sent them a notice of intent to sue? [01:55:48.900 --> 01:55:55.900] No, no, I haven't, because I don't have a lawyer. [01:55:55.900 --> 01:56:01.900] Okay, this is a show about the rule of law, but we're not naive, [01:56:01.900 --> 01:56:04.900] and we understand at the end of the day everything's political. [01:56:04.900 --> 01:56:07.900] Do you ever play poker? [01:56:07.900 --> 01:56:09.900] I have. [01:56:09.900 --> 01:56:12.900] This is poker. [01:56:12.900 --> 01:56:17.900] Send them a notice of intent to sue that they're denying you, [01:56:17.900 --> 01:56:20.900] and you figure out what they're not doing right, [01:56:20.900 --> 01:56:22.900] and send them a notice of intent to sue. [01:56:22.900 --> 01:56:26.900] The one thing they don't like is being sued. Cost them a lot of money. [01:56:26.900 --> 01:56:34.900] Do you have a copy of the homeowners association bylaws? [01:56:34.900 --> 01:56:38.900] No, not at this time, and I request that information. [01:56:38.900 --> 01:56:43.900] I can't get it, or when I've even emailed for that information, [01:56:43.900 --> 01:56:46.900] and the email doesn't come back with anything, [01:56:46.900 --> 01:56:50.900] and then as I even send a letter to the mailbox that they use, [01:56:50.900 --> 01:56:55.900] they use a public mailbox for their information, [01:56:55.900 --> 01:56:58.900] and I haven't received it from that email. [01:56:58.900 --> 01:57:03.900] Okay, Ian, there are some tools. [01:57:03.900 --> 01:57:07.900] Generally, we're a show about law, [01:57:07.900 --> 01:57:15.900] but we understand that in dealing with law, everything's about the politics, [01:57:15.900 --> 01:57:21.900] and the politics is the homeowners association does not want to be sued, [01:57:21.900 --> 01:57:25.900] especially if they're corrupt. [01:57:25.900 --> 01:57:30.900] So one thing, never talk to them on the phone. [01:57:30.900 --> 01:57:35.900] Either do it by snail mail, by written documentation, or email. [01:57:35.900 --> 01:57:42.900] Email is probably better, because if these guys are real criminals, [01:57:42.900 --> 01:57:46.900] they're probably ignorant of how pervasive email is. [01:57:46.900 --> 01:57:51.900] They can take and delete an email, and it goes away. [01:57:51.900 --> 01:57:53.900] Not exactly. [01:57:53.900 --> 01:57:56.900] Make everything documented. [01:57:56.900 --> 01:58:03.900] The first thing you need is the covenants, the homeowners association bylaws. [01:58:03.900 --> 01:58:08.900] You need to read them twice. [01:58:08.900 --> 01:58:10.900] Call us back tomorrow night. We're out of time. [01:58:10.900 --> 01:58:16.900] This is a really good subject, because homeowners associations are a real problem. [01:58:16.900 --> 01:58:23.900] They're a place where people know they can come in and steal people's homes. [01:58:23.900 --> 01:58:26.900] Like you have property there, they may jerk you around [01:58:26.900 --> 01:58:29.900] and try to force you to sell the property to them. [01:58:29.900 --> 01:58:32.900] It's a great place for scams. [01:58:32.900 --> 01:58:34.900] Call in tomorrow night. We'll have more time. [01:58:34.900 --> 01:58:37.900] We're out of time tonight. [01:58:37.900 --> 01:58:41.900] Anne, I'm sorry we didn't get to you. We'll try to get to you tomorrow night. 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