[00:00.000 --> 00:29.660] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [00:29.660 --> 00:31.660] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:31.660 --> 00:33.660] Bad boys, bad boys [00:33.660 --> 00:34.660] Whatcha gonna do? [00:34.660 --> 00:37.660] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:37.660 --> 00:39.660] When you were eight and you had bad traits [00:39.660 --> 00:42.660] You go to school and learn the golden rule [00:42.660 --> 00:45.660] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [00:45.660 --> 00:48.660] If you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.660 --> 00:49.660] Bad boys, bad boys [00:49.660 --> 00:50.660] Whatcha gonna do? [00:50.660 --> 00:53.660] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:53.660 --> 00:55.660] Bad boys, bad boys [00:55.660 --> 00:56.660] Whatcha gonna do? [00:56.660 --> 00:58.660] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:58.660 --> 01:00.660] You chuck it on that one [01:00.660 --> 01:01.660] You chuck it on this one [01:01.660 --> 01:02.660] You chuck it on your mother [01:02.660 --> 01:04.660] And you chuck it on your father [01:04.660 --> 01:05.660] You chuck it on your brother [01:05.660 --> 01:07.660] And you chuck it on your sister [01:07.660 --> 01:08.660] You chuck it on that one [01:08.660 --> 01:09.660] And you chuck it on me! [01:09.660 --> 01:11.660] Bad boys, bad boys [01:11.660 --> 01:12.660] Whatcha gonna do? [01:12.660 --> 01:13.660] Whatcha gonna do [01:13.660 --> 01:15.660] When they come for you? [01:15.660 --> 01:16.660] Bad boys, bad boys [01:16.660 --> 01:17.660] Whatcha gonna do? [01:17.660 --> 01:20.660] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:20.660 --> 01:22.660] Bad boys, bad boys [01:22.660 --> 01:23.660] Whatcha gonna do? [01:23.660 --> 01:24.660] Whatcha gonna do? [01:24.660 --> 01:26.660] When they come for you? [01:26.660 --> 01:27.660] Bad boys, bad boys [01:27.660 --> 01:32.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [01:32.660 --> 01:36.660] Nobody now give you no break. Police now give you no break. [01:36.660 --> 01:42.660] That old soldier man now give you no break. Not even your IG now give you no breaks. [01:42.660 --> 01:48.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [01:59.660 --> 02:05.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [02:23.660 --> 02:32.660] Why did you have to act so mean? Don't you know you're a human being? [02:32.660 --> 02:37.660] Born of a mother with a lover, father, father. Reflection comes and reflection goes. [02:37.660 --> 02:47.660] I know sometimes you wanna let go. Hey, hey, hey. I know sometimes you wanna let go. [02:47.660 --> 02:53.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [02:53.660 --> 02:58.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [02:58.660 --> 03:09.660] You're too bad, you're too rude. You're too bad, you're too rude. [03:09.660 --> 03:15.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:15.660 --> 03:20.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:20.660 --> 03:26.660] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one. You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father. [03:26.660 --> 03:31.660] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister. You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me. [03:31.660 --> 03:36.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:36.660 --> 03:42.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:45.660 --> 04:04.660] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain on this Thursday, the 26th day of September 2024. [04:04.660 --> 04:09.660] Wow, already at the end of the third quarter. [04:10.660 --> 04:20.660] My mom warned me about this. She said it's gonna get faster and faster and it certainly has. [04:20.660 --> 04:27.660] But anyway, you were doing something with driver's licenses. [04:27.660 --> 04:31.660] Brett, will you turn the phones on? I don't have my page up yet. [04:31.660 --> 04:40.660] Sure, we can go ahead and get that on. Anybody that wants to call in, it's 512-646-1984. [04:40.660 --> 04:43.660] And the phone lines are on already. [04:43.660 --> 04:46.660] So yeah, driver's license. [04:46.660 --> 04:58.660] So for anybody who has been having trouble with a driver's license being either revoked or suspended [04:58.660 --> 05:09.660] or the threat of such actions, one option you might consider is moving. [05:09.660 --> 05:17.660] And I mean that in a technical paperwork way. Of course, everybody can have multiple residence addresses. [05:17.660 --> 05:36.660] And out of the 50 states of America, we've got 48 of them are involved in some kind of data sharing compact with each other. [05:36.660 --> 05:42.660] There are four different compacts and one of them involves all 50. [05:42.660 --> 05:56.660] But that particular data sharing is only for the level of whether a driver's license has been issued or whether the person is eligible for having one issued. [05:56.660 --> 05:59.660] That much is going to be shared no matter what. [05:59.660 --> 06:09.660] But the other three data sharing compacts involve various other kinds of reciprocity. [06:09.660 --> 06:25.660] For example, if you get a ticket in one state that's not your home state, then your home state may cause you to pay that ticket or depending on which compact, [06:25.660 --> 06:43.660] they may assess points against your home state license or they may charge you with the offense, the parallel or correlating offense in your home state. [06:43.660 --> 06:52.660] So you might end up with points being assessed. You might end up with your insurance getting raised. [06:52.660 --> 06:56.660] And then, of course, that's if everything goes perfectly. [06:56.660 --> 07:04.660] And we all know that sometimes government employees are not the ones who care the most about getting everything just right. [07:04.660 --> 07:15.660] What? What? Are you down disparaging our super efficient public officials? [07:15.660 --> 07:19.660] Well, you know, I can't say it's all of them. [07:19.660 --> 07:27.660] OK, I know some of them care about doing the right thing, but there are sometimes mistakes and it sure is a pain to get them to straighten their mistakes out. [07:27.660 --> 07:35.660] Anyway, I actually knew one about 15 years ago. [07:35.660 --> 07:42.660] One what? One public official who really wanted to do things right. [07:42.660 --> 07:49.660] Cool. He didn't do things right, but he wanted to. [07:49.660 --> 07:51.660] Good intentions and all that. [07:51.660 --> 07:57.660] I'll stop him. He was like most of the rest of them. He did it the way he was trained. [07:57.660 --> 07:59.660] Exactly. [07:59.660 --> 08:03.660] Even though I put the law right in front of it. [08:03.660 --> 08:15.660] I've met three of those judges and justices lately who I believe they really would do the right thing if they had the right training. [08:15.660 --> 08:22.660] But since they've had the wrong training, they just can't get over that hump and actually look at what the law says. [08:22.660 --> 08:28.660] This has been all worked out by attorneys and those people are smarter than me and beyond my pay grade and all that. [08:28.660 --> 08:33.660] Let me distract you for a minute from what you were talking about. [08:33.660 --> 08:37.660] Let's talk about that part. You were. [08:37.660 --> 08:40.660] Talking to a. [08:40.660 --> 08:42.660] Entity was it. [08:42.660 --> 08:45.660] Is that a. [08:45.660 --> 08:47.660] Company that. [08:47.660 --> 08:50.660] The one that trains. [08:51.660 --> 08:57.660] Yes, they call themselves T.J.C.T.C. [08:57.660 --> 09:00.660] Texas Justice Courts Training Center. [09:00.660 --> 09:04.660] And it's a part of the Texas State University. [09:04.660 --> 09:07.660] Oh, good. [09:07.660 --> 09:10.660] Perfect. [09:10.660 --> 09:13.660] It's in the president of the university. [09:13.660 --> 09:15.660] The president. [09:15.660 --> 09:21.660] Yeah, I sued him personally in his individual capacity for this. [09:21.660 --> 09:23.660] So I don't know about the president. [09:23.660 --> 09:25.660] I haven't talked at all. [09:25.660 --> 09:26.660] Downhouse. [09:26.660 --> 09:27.660] The president. [09:27.660 --> 09:34.660] I've been dealing with the administrative director who is appointed by the governor. [09:34.660 --> 09:37.660] And her name is Thea Whalen. [09:37.660 --> 09:38.660] Theodora. [09:38.660 --> 09:41.660] Thea Whalen is. [09:41.660 --> 09:43.660] An appointed director. [09:43.660 --> 09:49.660] And there's a board of directors who is going to be. [09:49.660 --> 09:52.660] Apparently, I'm going to have to escalate. [09:52.660 --> 10:02.660] Because this Thea started out very helpful and friendly and so ready to have a conversation with me about. [10:02.660 --> 10:06.660] What would need to change about their training? [10:06.660 --> 10:14.660] I wanted to schedule a time that we can sit down face to face and go over some of these things. [10:14.660 --> 10:18.660] And I say face to face because. [10:18.660 --> 10:21.660] I'm willing to drive to Austin, Texas. [10:21.660 --> 10:28.660] To get this done in the most efficient way that I think it could be. [10:28.660 --> 10:30.660] It's a long drive, but you know what? [10:30.660 --> 10:31.660] It's worth it. [10:31.660 --> 10:37.660] Face to face is better because I don't know what preconceptions they have. [10:37.660 --> 10:43.660] I know I've met a lot of different attorneys who. [10:43.660 --> 10:46.660] For example, the complaint is the information. [10:46.660 --> 10:48.660] The complaint is the charging instrument. [10:48.660 --> 10:49.660] It's equal. [10:49.660 --> 10:50.660] It's the same thing. [10:50.660 --> 10:54.660] Well, that's a common misunderstanding. [10:55.660 --> 10:58.660] Not all of them may think that, but. [10:58.660 --> 11:03.660] Enough of them that I know we're going to have to deal with that. [11:03.660 --> 11:07.660] A lot of things that they have that are not in common. [11:07.660 --> 11:09.660] What were you going to say? [11:09.660 --> 11:12.660] The Kelly Damp House. [11:12.660 --> 11:18.660] Kelly Damp House is the president of Texas State University. [11:18.660 --> 11:23.660] OK, he is very familiar with this particular argument. [11:24.660 --> 11:29.660] Because I sued him in his personal capacity in the federal court. [11:29.660 --> 11:31.660] So, well, cool. [11:31.660 --> 11:34.660] Since you're dealing with these people. [11:34.660 --> 11:38.660] And you're on that exact issue. [11:38.660 --> 11:42.660] Might copy him. [11:42.660 --> 11:44.660] Not necessarily. [11:44.660 --> 11:47.660] Include him directly. [11:47.660 --> 11:53.660] But copy him on some of your communications. [11:53.660 --> 11:54.660] OK. [11:54.660 --> 11:59.660] And see if that doesn't get you better. [11:59.660 --> 12:02.660] Communication from this agency. [12:02.660 --> 12:05.660] And what was the agency again? [12:05.660 --> 12:11.660] The Texas Justice Court Training Center. [12:11.660 --> 12:14.660] But that's the TJCTC. [12:14.660 --> 12:22.660] And they are, I guess you could say, a peer or a parallel to the TMCEC. [12:22.660 --> 12:25.660] Municipal Courts Education Center. [12:25.660 --> 12:29.660] They both handle these lowest, the Class C misdemeanors. [12:29.660 --> 12:31.660] All the traffic stuff. [12:31.660 --> 12:33.660] And they treat it like criminal. [12:33.660 --> 12:36.660] And they skip all of the due process that goes with criminal. [12:36.660 --> 12:39.660] Because, oh, that's just how we do it. [12:40.660 --> 12:46.660] I'm thinking about how this is put together. [12:46.660 --> 12:50.660] You know, I accused him of an ongoing criminal enterprise. [12:50.660 --> 13:00.660] Because you gave me the statute that said that the Texas Court of Administration. [13:00.660 --> 13:04.660] The OCH? [13:04.660 --> 13:08.660] Shall, in consultation with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. [13:08.660 --> 13:19.660] So how did this training get from the Office of Court Administration to Texas State University? [13:19.660 --> 13:21.660] That's a good question. [13:21.660 --> 13:24.660] I do intend to follow the money, as they say. [13:24.660 --> 13:30.660] I think that the connection is there between OCA and Texas State University. [13:30.660 --> 13:36.660] But I haven't gone and researched it yet. [13:36.660 --> 13:38.660] Okay. [13:38.660 --> 13:43.660] This is good. [13:43.660 --> 13:44.660] Okay. [13:44.660 --> 13:49.660] I'll just say that we'll talk on the other side about this and some more. [13:49.660 --> 13:58.660] And I will explain a little bit more about how the things are changing when they find out what I want to talk about. 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[14:38.660 --> 14:47.660] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [14:47.660 --> 14:58.660] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [14:59.660 --> 15:04.660] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [15:04.660 --> 15:10.660] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [15:10.660 --> 15:15.660] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [15:15.660 --> 15:22.660] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. [15:23.660 --> 15:30.660] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [15:30.660 --> 15:37.660] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [15:37.660 --> 15:42.660] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [15:42.660 --> 15:48.660] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [15:48.660 --> 15:58.660] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [16:19.660 --> 16:23.660] Look what we've got [16:23.660 --> 16:26.660] Who reacts? The Christians [16:26.660 --> 16:28.660] Who know what they're hiding? [16:28.660 --> 16:31.660] They don't have the answer [16:31.660 --> 16:33.660] Open up eyes [16:33.660 --> 16:36.660] Who reacts? The Christians [16:36.660 --> 16:38.660] Look what we've got [16:38.660 --> 16:41.660] And they don't have the answer [16:41.660 --> 16:43.660] Soap and slip and slide [16:44.660 --> 16:46.660] Look what we've got [16:46.660 --> 16:48.660] Who reacts? The Christians [16:48.660 --> 16:50.660] Who know what they're hiding? [16:50.660 --> 16:52.660] They don't have the answer [16:52.660 --> 16:54.660] Open up eyes [16:54.660 --> 16:56.660] Who reacts? The Christians [16:56.660 --> 16:58.660] Look what we've got [16:58.660 --> 17:00.660] And they don't have the answer [17:00.660 --> 17:02.660] Open up eyes [17:02.660 --> 17:04.660] Who reacts? The Christians [17:04.660 --> 17:06.660] Look what we've got [17:06.660 --> 17:08.660] And they don't have the answer [17:08.660 --> 17:10.660] Open up eyes [17:10.660 --> 17:12.660] Who reacts? The Christians [17:13.660 --> 17:15.660] Who know what they're hiding? [17:15.660 --> 17:17.660] They don't have the answer [17:17.660 --> 17:19.660] Open up eyes [17:19.660 --> 17:21.660] Who reacts? The Christians [17:21.660 --> 17:23.660] Look what we've got [17:23.660 --> 17:25.660] And they don't have the answer [17:25.660 --> 17:27.660] Soap and slip and slide [17:27.660 --> 17:29.660] They don't have the answer [17:29.660 --> 17:31.660] They don't have the answer [17:31.660 --> 17:33.660] They don't have the answer [17:33.660 --> 17:35.660] They don't have the answer [17:35.660 --> 17:41.660] Okay, we are back. This is the Rule of Law Radio. Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [17:42.660 --> 17:48.660] The training that's coming out of it that needs to be improved [17:48.660 --> 17:57.660] We're seeing common problems with justices of the peace and judges all across Texas [17:57.660 --> 18:00.660] Everybody knows we've been talking about these problems [18:00.660 --> 18:11.660] When I first initiated contact with the director of this training center [18:11.660 --> 18:22.660] She was open and she was friendly and she was ready to schedule an in-person meeting for us to look over these things [18:22.660 --> 18:29.660] And then that shifted to, oh, actually, it's going to have to be [18:29.660 --> 18:37.660] I'm sorry, we're going to have to do this next Thursday. I've got a window from noon to two [18:37.660 --> 18:48.660] I'm sorry, it has to wait, but I've got so many meetings where we're planning about the new curriculum that's coming out [18:49.660 --> 18:53.660] And I've got all these meetings, so many curriculum planning meetings [18:53.660 --> 18:57.660] And I said, great, I'm thinking about the Open Meetings Act, of course [18:57.660 --> 19:01.660] I said, great, I'd like to attend these meetings [19:01.660 --> 19:06.660] And she's like, you're not part of any of our committees [19:06.660 --> 19:23.660] And I said, well, I've identified over 20 distinct major issues with the training that's coming from TJCTC [19:23.660 --> 19:34.660] And it is facilitating judges and justices all across Texas breaking the law and all breaking the law in the same way [19:34.660 --> 19:42.660] So I think we really need to do this and discuss these things [19:42.660 --> 19:46.660] And it needs to happen before you get your next wave of curriculum going out [19:46.660 --> 19:50.660] Well, now she doesn't want to talk to me [19:50.660 --> 19:54.660] She doesn't want to have a meeting, not Zoom, not anything, not even on the phone [19:54.660 --> 20:00.660] Now she wants me to talk to her attorney [20:00.660 --> 20:06.660] She's got a general counsel person who can handle this, supposedly going to handle me [20:06.660 --> 20:21.660] And then in just a couple of interactions back and forth there, it became clear that that person is also unwilling to have a conversation [20:22.660 --> 20:34.660] That has shifted from why don't you just email me with your bar card number so that we can prepare for how we address this [20:34.660 --> 20:44.660] And email me your specific issue that you have with the page number and so forth [20:44.660 --> 20:52.660] And oh, and supply the statute or rule that you have an issue with our interpretation of [20:52.660 --> 20:56.660] So I had to describe, look, I've got a lot of issues [20:56.660 --> 21:03.660] And I don't see how you knowing about my bar association details is relevant [21:03.660 --> 21:05.660] So let's not go there, not yet [21:05.660 --> 21:07.660] If you really need it, we'll deal with that later [21:07.660 --> 21:14.660] But let's look at the issues that need to be handled here [21:14.660 --> 21:19.660] For example, and I gave him one about examining trials [21:19.660 --> 21:25.660] And I laid it out there in great detail, crickets [21:25.660 --> 21:33.660] Randy, I can't get any response back from these guys at this point [21:33.660 --> 21:38.660] Maybe their email server went down [21:38.660 --> 21:41.660] Oh, that might be it, right [21:41.660 --> 21:45.660] Generally, it's the easiest answer [21:45.660 --> 21:48.660] That's got to be it [21:48.660 --> 21:55.660] Or maybe their ISP got struck by lightning [21:55.660 --> 22:00.660] They just can't get online yet [22:00.660 --> 22:03.660] Well, yeah, these [22:03.660 --> 22:08.660] Speaking of online, our phone lines are open [22:08.660 --> 22:17.660] And if you're online, you can get on the phone and call us at 512-646-1984 [22:17.660 --> 22:19.660] Phone lines are open [22:19.660 --> 22:21.660] We have a full empty caller board [22:21.660 --> 22:26.660] So give us a call and ask Brett a really hard question [22:26.660 --> 22:28.660] Okay, I'll shut up now [22:28.660 --> 22:32.660] Okay, Brett [22:32.660 --> 22:34.660] A really hard question [22:34.660 --> 22:41.660] Why do men not understand their wives? [22:41.660 --> 22:43.660] We understand them [22:43.660 --> 22:46.660] You do what you're told when you're told [22:46.660 --> 22:53.660] And the only thing you can say about it is yes, dear [22:53.660 --> 22:58.660] Okay, so this should be interesting [22:58.660 --> 23:01.660] Based on what you're doing [23:01.660 --> 23:06.660] I would really like to be a fly on the wall to some of these meetings they're having [23:06.660 --> 23:09.660] Exactly, and they're preventing me from that [23:09.660 --> 23:13.660] Now I'm finding out from records requests [23:13.660 --> 23:15.660] Because she's saying no, you're not allowed to come [23:15.660 --> 23:17.660] So I've made an official records request [23:17.660 --> 23:21.660] I said I want all the records that show me when these meetings are [23:21.660 --> 23:25.660] And where they're being held in the URLs where I can join them [23:25.660 --> 23:27.660] I want those records, show me all of them [23:27.660 --> 23:35.660] So she had a duty to go into her calendar program and hit print or export or something [23:35.660 --> 23:40.660] Instead, she says, oh, there are no such responsive records to your request [23:40.660 --> 23:43.660] We don't have any records, there are no meetings [23:43.660 --> 23:45.660] What meetings? [23:45.660 --> 23:51.660] All these meetings that she says she was having over the next several weeks [23:51.660 --> 23:55.660] It's going to be so packed, suddenly they don't exist [23:55.660 --> 23:59.660] As soon as she found out that I knew about the Open Meetings Act [23:59.660 --> 24:01.660] And that I want to attend these meetings [24:01.660 --> 24:03.660] Suddenly they all evaporated [24:03.660 --> 24:07.660] And there's no records responsive to my request [24:07.660 --> 24:08.660] How about that, Randy? [24:08.660 --> 24:12.660] How do you think that's going to look to a jury of her peers? [24:12.660 --> 24:19.660] I was wondering how it would look to the nearest justice of the peace [24:19.660 --> 24:25.660] In a complaint of official misconduct, 3903 Penal Code [24:25.660 --> 24:28.660] Yep, and to the Attorney General who seems to care a lot about [24:28.660 --> 24:32.660] Enforcement of the Open Meetings and Open Records [24:32.660 --> 24:35.660] No, he doesn't [24:35.660 --> 24:40.660] Which gets me to a response to an Open Records request I got today [24:40.660 --> 24:44.660] That's really a piece of garbage [24:44.660 --> 24:48.660] The last couple of responses I got from the Attorney General [24:48.660 --> 24:54.660] It appears as though the Attorney General is trying to deny us access to everything [24:54.660 --> 24:56.660] What? [24:56.660 --> 25:00.660] We'll get to my letter in a minute [25:00.660 --> 25:03.660] Shoot, he's been so good in the past [25:03.660 --> 25:07.660] I've been very pleased with his gung-ho attitude [25:07.660 --> 25:11.660] And how I quickly get a copy of his... [25:14.660 --> 25:16.660] Excuse me [25:16.660 --> 25:24.660] Well, I've had two. The last one, the one before this, I asked for some court records [25:24.660 --> 25:31.660] And his response was that the records that I asked for didn't fall under the Open Records Act [25:31.660 --> 25:35.660] Well, I didn't request them under the Open Records Act [25:35.660 --> 25:36.660] Ah [25:36.660 --> 25:38.660] I simply requested them [25:38.660 --> 25:45.660] And he told the District Attorney that he could restrict those records from me [25:45.660 --> 25:48.660] Because they didn't fall under the Open Records Act [25:48.660 --> 25:55.660] And it didn't say anything about all courts shall be public [25:55.660 --> 26:03.660] Yeah, and the Texas Rules of Judicial Administration, Rule 12, which enforces that [26:04.660 --> 26:08.660] But yeah, I've had good luck with him in the past [26:08.660 --> 26:10.660] He sends me a copy [26:10.660 --> 26:19.660] When he sends out a letter spanking the police chief or whomever was trying to withhold records improperly [26:19.660 --> 26:24.660] He'll send them a letter and send me a copy of it, so that's been good [26:24.660 --> 26:27.660] Well, he sent me a copy of the letter [26:28.660 --> 26:41.660] I put in a request for all of the property records for the intake of property by the city police department [26:42.660 --> 26:48.660] And the attorney asked for an opinion. She claimed that she didn't have to release those [26:48.660 --> 26:53.660] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, we'll be right back [26:58.660 --> 27:04.660] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information, and you may trust them to keep it safe [27:04.660 --> 27:09.660] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets [27:09.660 --> 27:13.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with details [27:13.660 --> 27:15.660] Privacy is under attack [27:15.660 --> 27:19.660] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [27:19.660 --> 27:23.660] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [27:24.660 --> 27:29.660] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself [27:29.660 --> 27:31.660] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [27:31.660 --> 27:35.660] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com [27:35.660 --> 27:39.660] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing [27:39.660 --> 27:41.660] Start over with Startpage [27:43.660 --> 27:49.660] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information [27:49.660 --> 27:52.660] But what happens if it escapes their control? [27:52.660 --> 27:54.660] It's not an idle question [27:54.660 --> 28:02.660] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year [28:02.660 --> 28:06.660] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com [28:06.660 --> 28:10.660] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you [28:10.660 --> 28:14.660] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see [28:14.660 --> 28:16.660] The cupboard would be bare [28:16.660 --> 28:19.660] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way [28:19.660 --> 28:24.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [28:49.660 --> 28:51.660] And believe there is more to the story [28:51.660 --> 28:54.660] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son [28:54.660 --> 28:56.660] Go to buildingwatt.org [28:56.660 --> 28:59.660] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do [29:01.660 --> 29:04.660] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar [29:04.660 --> 29:06.660] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [29:06.660 --> 29:11.660] 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 [29:11.660 --> 29:14.660] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place [29:14.660 --> 29:18.660] The right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law [29:18.660 --> 29:23.660] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [29:23.660 --> 29:29.660] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [29:29.660 --> 29:33.660] That will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law [29:33.660 --> 29:39.660] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today [29:39.660 --> 29:43.660] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [29:43.660 --> 29:49.660] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material [29:49.660 --> 29:53.660] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [29:53.660 --> 29:58.660] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve [30:13.660 --> 30:16.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:16.660 --> 30:19.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:19.660 --> 30:22.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:22.660 --> 30:25.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:25.660 --> 30:28.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:28.660 --> 30:31.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:31.660 --> 30:34.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:34.660 --> 30:37.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:37.660 --> 30:40.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:40.660 --> 30:43.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [30:43.660 --> 30:46.660] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're power [31:10.660 --> 31:14.660] He was in the terminal at the Victoria Airport. [31:14.660 --> 31:21.660] He had a airplane parked at a fixed base operator on the airport. [31:21.660 --> 31:26.660] Victoria Wings, the other side of the airport. [31:26.660 --> 31:33.660] Well, they arrested Dr. Joe, and he had a pilot there who flew the airplane. [31:33.660 --> 31:39.660] The Victoria police would not let the pilot fly the airplane out. [31:40.660 --> 31:42.660] On what grounds? [31:42.660 --> 31:44.660] That's a good question. [31:44.660 --> 31:50.660] Did they ever say there was some search warrant that they needed to go get something out of the plane? [31:50.660 --> 31:52.660] No, they didn't. [31:52.660 --> 31:56.660] There was no warrant to seize the plane. [31:56.660 --> 32:00.660] And several months later, the... [32:00.660 --> 32:07.660] What in the world kind of connection could they draw to say that the plane is connected to the person that they're arresting? [32:07.660 --> 32:10.660] Yeah, that's a good question. [32:10.660 --> 32:17.660] So, today I mailed out a tort letter. [32:17.660 --> 32:26.660] And I said either the police officer, James Poe, stole this airplane. [32:26.660 --> 32:30.660] Or the city of Victoria stole the airplane. [32:30.660 --> 32:38.660] Because once all the charges were dropped against Dr. Joe, once they finally... [32:38.660 --> 32:41.660] He was still in federal lockup. [32:41.660 --> 32:46.660] And they let him out, and he had had COVID twice in two strokes. [32:46.660 --> 32:50.660] And he was unable to take care of his business. [32:50.660 --> 32:57.660] Once he recovered enough that he could take care of his business, the airplane was gone. [32:58.660 --> 33:02.660] Now, it was parked on this FOB. [33:02.660 --> 33:08.660] And for those of you who don't fly, FOB means fixed base operator. [33:08.660 --> 33:17.660] It was parked on this guy's property, but nobody had made a deal with him to store the airplane on his property. [33:17.660 --> 33:22.660] So, when somebody came to take the airplane, he saw the guy. [33:22.660 --> 33:27.660] And told him, you need to leave that alone. This belongs to Dr. Joe. [33:27.660 --> 33:29.660] And they took it anyway. [33:29.660 --> 33:35.660] But it wasn't his place to get into any kind of altercation with these guys. [33:35.660 --> 33:45.660] It turned out that the district attorney released the airplane to Dr. Joe's ex-girlfriend. [33:45.660 --> 33:56.660] Dr. Joe's ex-girlfriend had filed a document with the court stating she had no interest or ownership in the airplane. [33:56.660 --> 34:00.660] That was the only reference to her in the whole court case. [34:00.660 --> 34:07.660] With her disavowing any interest in the airplane, but she gave it to her anyway. [34:07.660 --> 34:13.660] And she sold it. She sold a $75,000 airplane for $10,000. [34:13.660 --> 34:15.660] Whoa. [34:15.660 --> 34:19.660] And friends of Dr. Joe knew they were doing that. [34:19.660 --> 34:27.660] And sent a letter to the guy buying it and to the woman selling it saying, do not sell this airplane. [34:27.660 --> 34:35.660] This does not belong to Esther and she has no authority to sell it. [34:35.660 --> 34:49.660] Now, Dr. Joe had tried to put the airplane in a trust to transfer it out of his name into this woman Esther's name as the trustee of a trust. [34:49.660 --> 34:53.660] And the FAA disallowed it. [34:53.660 --> 34:58.660] So that put her name in the records of the FAA. [34:58.660 --> 35:02.660] But the FAA disallowed the transfer. [35:02.660 --> 35:07.660] And then later the FAA allowed her to transfer it to somebody else's name. [35:07.660 --> 35:17.660] And the one she transferred it to had a used auto sales facility. [35:17.660 --> 35:21.660] He had an auto parts place and he sold his cars. [35:21.660 --> 35:23.660] That made him a dealer. [35:23.660 --> 35:32.660] You are a dealer and you purchase a vehicle that has a title issue. [35:32.660 --> 35:38.660] It is presumed that he know about it. [35:38.660 --> 35:43.660] Oh yeah, plus he was explicitly informed. [35:43.660 --> 35:45.660] Or even without that. [35:45.660 --> 35:53.660] He is by law presumed to know about any title issue that comes along. [35:53.660 --> 36:00.660] Being a dealer, he is held responsible for knowing that whether he does or not. [36:00.660 --> 36:04.660] But that aside, we're not taking on that issue right now. [36:04.660 --> 36:10.660] The city of Victoria or their police officer James Poe stole this airplane. [36:10.660 --> 36:15.660] They had no warrant to seize, but they seized the airplane anyway. [36:15.660 --> 36:18.660] And we sent an information request. [36:18.660 --> 36:21.660] Maybe they didn't expect Dr. Joe to live. [36:21.660 --> 36:28.660] Maybe they didn't expect him to be able to make it through that gauntlet. [36:28.660 --> 36:30.660] That seems to be the case. [36:30.660 --> 36:31.660] There's more. [36:31.660 --> 36:34.660] This problem is worse. [36:34.660 --> 36:39.660] That airplane was, you know, they went after Joe like crazy. [36:39.660 --> 36:54.660] The judge turned down a $300 million bond for a charge of violation of a third degree felony. [36:54.660 --> 36:59.660] It was thrown out because the Court of Criminal Appeals said it wasn't a third degree felony. [36:59.660 --> 37:04.660] The statute that made it a third degree felony could not be interpreted this way. [37:04.660 --> 37:10.660] As it would have rendered, the statute that made it a Class A misdemeanor is superfluous. [37:10.660 --> 37:13.660] The court could not rule this way. [37:13.660 --> 37:19.660] The rule that they never had jurisdiction from the beginning. [37:19.660 --> 37:25.660] But that aside, the district court did not seize his airplane. [37:25.660 --> 37:33.660] City of Victoria seized the airplane, or James Poe stole the airplane. [37:33.660 --> 37:41.660] Later on, the district court filed a motion to seize, but they already had it. [37:41.660 --> 37:43.660] It had it a long time. [37:43.660 --> 37:46.660] So I wanted to see the records. [37:46.660 --> 37:48.660] Wait, who filed that motion? [37:48.660 --> 37:51.660] The district attorney. [37:51.660 --> 37:53.660] How crazy. [37:53.660 --> 38:07.660] So I wanted to see the property records where the airplane had been logged into the property department of the Victoria Police Department. [38:07.660 --> 38:10.660] Uh-oh. [38:10.660 --> 38:17.660] Either it was logged into property in the Victoria Police Department, or James Poe stole it. [38:17.660 --> 38:20.660] One of the two. [38:20.660 --> 38:31.660] Because James Poe forced this pilot to have somebody drive down and pick him up from Dallas to drive him home. [38:31.660 --> 38:35.660] Wouldn't let him fly the airplane home. [38:35.660 --> 38:38.660] So I want to see these records now. [38:38.660 --> 38:44.660] And the attorney filed an opinion with the state attorney general to delay us. [38:44.660 --> 38:46.660] Yes, so I get this. [38:46.660 --> 38:54.660] I went to file the tort letter against this city and pick this letter up. [38:54.660 --> 39:00.660] This letter shows a date of the 16th of September. [39:00.660 --> 39:08.660] That was almost exactly 10 days ago. [39:08.660 --> 39:10.660] Wow. [39:10.660 --> 39:14.660] So for all this time, the documents didn't exist. [39:14.660 --> 39:16.660] Now all of a sudden, poof, they're materializing. [39:16.660 --> 39:18.660] No, they haven't yet. [39:18.660 --> 39:26.660] Today's her last day to respond to this is the opinion of the state attorney general. [39:26.660 --> 39:28.660] Last day? [39:28.660 --> 39:30.660] Oh, you're talking about the 10th business day. [39:30.660 --> 39:32.660] Yes. [39:32.660 --> 39:38.660] So that's another issue that I think needs to be corrected in their training. [39:38.660 --> 39:41.660] They do not have 10 business days. [39:41.660 --> 39:45.660] 10 business days, they need to do it promptly. [39:45.660 --> 39:49.660] If it's going to take them 15 minutes, then 15 minutes is how long they have. [39:49.660 --> 39:51.660] Exactly. [39:51.660 --> 39:53.660] No unnecessary delay. [39:53.660 --> 40:02.660] 10 business days is just when the presumption changes from we assume they're doing the right thing to now you're officially a criminal. [40:02.660 --> 40:12.660] So what this does is gives me grounds to sue the city of Victoria. [40:12.660 --> 40:18.660] So it puts me on when we sue, my name is on the lawsuit. [40:18.660 --> 40:26.660] But anyway, what we want to do, we're suing them pretty heavy, is we want them to make a deal. [40:26.660 --> 40:38.660] And what I'm trying to do is keep this issue completely separate from the issue of the illegal and improper prosecution. [40:38.660 --> 40:41.660] All we're talking about is the airplane here. [40:41.660 --> 40:42.660] Yeah. [40:42.660 --> 40:44.660] Give us the airplane. [40:44.660 --> 40:47.660] Who spirited away and on what grounds? [40:47.660 --> 40:50.660] Where did you have to do that? [40:50.660 --> 40:51.660] Exactly. [40:51.660 --> 40:52.660] Hang on. [40:52.660 --> 40:53.660] Randy Kelton. [40:53.660 --> 40:54.660] Brent Fountain. [40:54.660 --> 40:56.660] We'll be right back. [41:20.660 --> 41:22.660] We'll be right back. [41:50.660 --> 41:59.660] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [41:59.660 --> 42:02.660] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [42:02.660 --> 42:13.660] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4 CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [42:13.660 --> 42:17.660] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [42:17.660 --> 42:21.660] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [42:21.660 --> 42:26.660] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [42:26.660 --> 42:32.660] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [42:32.660 --> 42:41.660] 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. [42:41.660 --> 42:50.660] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [42:50.660 --> 42:58.660] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [43:11.660 --> 43:18.660] If you did not have any problem, where are you going to look for one? [43:18.660 --> 43:24.660] If you could not wait anybody too long, would you purposefully die? [43:24.660 --> 43:27.660] Such a sentiment that's all true. [43:27.660 --> 43:31.660] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [43:31.660 --> 43:39.660] On this Thursday, the 26th day of September 2024. [43:39.660 --> 43:44.660] And our phone lines are open, 512-646-1984. [43:44.660 --> 43:54.660] And we're talking about Victoria County, the city of Victoria, and Dr. Joe and the infamous case down there. [43:54.660 --> 43:59.660] What I'm trying to do is thread a needle. [43:59.660 --> 44:09.660] We had the city of Victoria, they initiated the original arrest based on a warrant issued by a Justice of the Peace there. [44:09.660 --> 44:22.660] And this Justice of the Peace who issued the warrant for his arrest did not issue a warrant to seize any property. [44:22.660 --> 44:29.660] They seized a whole bunch of property and they wouldn't let Dr. Joe's pilot fly the airplane home. [44:29.660 --> 44:42.660] Although he wasn't in the airplane at the time and there was no evidence to indicate that he used the airplane in the commission of the alleged crime. [44:42.660 --> 44:49.660] But the police officer, James Poe, took it anyway. [44:49.660 --> 44:55.660] And the pilot had to have somebody drive down from Victoria and pick him up, take him home. [44:55.660 --> 45:12.660] So the plane was left on this fixed base operator's lot with no agreement with the fixed base operator that would make the fixed base operator responsible for the airplane. [45:12.660 --> 45:19.660] They just parked it on his property and he didn't care about it. People did that all the time. [45:19.660 --> 45:24.660] He allowed that just as a courtesy to the airport. [45:24.660 --> 45:35.660] And then he saw these people come down and taking it, taking it and he knew whose it was and he knew Dr. Joe was in jail and he went out and told them that long Dr. Joe not to take it. [45:35.660 --> 45:39.660] But they took it anyway. [45:39.660 --> 45:51.660] So the problem is, is the city of Victoria was not involved in the prosecution of Dr. Joe. [45:51.660 --> 46:01.660] That was based on a warrant issued by the justice of the peace, Whitaker. [46:01.660 --> 46:17.660] And I went to that justice of the peace with four criminal complaints, two each against the two guys who actually took the airplane, a guy named Mendez and Gowerslaw. [46:17.660 --> 46:25.660] And that's the one where he said that since I was an attorney, wasn't an attorney, he wasn't even going to read them. [46:25.660 --> 46:30.660] So I sued him personally in the county court. [46:30.660 --> 46:37.660] And when he got to the county court, he definitely had himself a whole different attitude. [46:37.660 --> 46:46.660] So now I'll go back with felony theft charges against Poe. [46:46.660 --> 46:57.660] I wanted the city of Victoria to essentially tell us whether or not the city of Victoria seized this airplane. [46:57.660 --> 46:58.660] Yeah. [46:58.660 --> 47:04.660] And they haven't produced any records to indicate that they seized this airplane. [47:04.660 --> 47:10.660] So now starts to point straight at the officer, James Poe. [47:10.660 --> 47:23.660] So now I'll file prepare a felony complaint against Poe, accusing him of felony theft of an airplane. [47:23.660 --> 47:44.660] And since the airplane is gone, and since it is an airplane, if you steal a vehicle and move that vehicle across a state line, that's a federal issue. [47:44.660 --> 47:55.660] So I don't have actual hard evidence that he moved the airplane across the state line. [47:55.660 --> 48:11.660] But I have reason to believe and do believe that since he's out of Corpus Christi, the guy who's got it, that he was using it to traffic drugs out of Mexico. [48:11.660 --> 48:26.660] He may or may not have been, but if you're flying airplanes and you're out of Corpus Christi, the odds are those airplanes are used to traffic drugs from Mexico up to Texas. [48:26.660 --> 48:43.660] Take off from Texas, pull out over the water and drop down to about 50 feet, scoot in under our FDIZ zone, the Federal Defense Identification Zone, and scoot right on up to Corpus. [48:43.660 --> 48:47.660] Now that FDIZ zone is a big deal. [48:47.660 --> 48:52.660] I was flying an airplane out in Miami once. [48:52.660 --> 49:02.660] That's when Nixon was the president. He had a Bimini White House. He had a big location on the island of Bimini. [49:02.660 --> 49:12.660] And I had one, I'm sorry, not Bimini, Miami Beach. They called it the Bimini White House. [49:12.660 --> 49:15.660] So I'm flying across Biscayne Bay. [49:15.660 --> 49:23.660] Biscayne Bay is between Miami and Miami Beach. Miami Beach is essentially a coral reef, pretty big one. [49:23.660 --> 49:27.660] They built a whole town on it. And the bay is in between. [49:27.660 --> 49:31.660] I'm halfway across the bay. I'm flying about 800 feet. [49:31.660 --> 49:36.660] And I hear somebody say, you, you and the aircraft. [49:36.660 --> 49:40.660] Somebody is screaming at me from outside the airplane. [49:40.660 --> 49:47.660] I look to my right and there is a Huey, a military helicopter. [49:47.660 --> 49:50.660] I look to my left and there's another one. [49:50.660 --> 49:55.660] And he gives me one, I think 1.123 hand signals. [49:55.660 --> 50:05.660] And I turn to that channel and he tells me I am approaching restricted airspace, that I am to change directions immediately. [50:05.660 --> 50:10.660] I looked over to one pilot, gave him a thumbs up, shoved the nose down. [50:10.660 --> 50:13.660] Drove straight down at the water. [50:13.660 --> 50:17.660] These two helicopters just duck down and come right with me. [50:17.660 --> 50:23.660] When I got up as much speed as I could, I was about 300 feet off the water, I hauled back on it. [50:23.660 --> 50:30.660] I pulled it up. If you do that, if you haul back on your stick and stand the airplane on its tail, [50:30.660 --> 50:36.660] it'll begin to lose airspeed. As soon as the nose comes above the horizon, it loses airspeed. [50:36.660 --> 50:40.660] So I'm losing airspeed and the stall warning buzzer comes on. [50:40.660 --> 50:46.660] And just as I feel the wings begin to break, it will always break to the high side. [50:46.660 --> 50:50.660] If I'm turning to my right slightly, it'll break to the left. [50:50.660 --> 50:54.660] So as I heard it begin to break, I eased the stick to the right. [50:54.660 --> 50:59.660] And when it broke, it fell over to the left, the left wing dropped. [50:59.660 --> 51:03.660] The plane nosed in, and that's what they call a hammerhead stall. [51:03.660 --> 51:09.660] If you fly into a blind cavern, a blind valley or something, [51:09.660 --> 51:13.660] you fly into this valley and you've got a sheer wall right in front of you. [51:13.660 --> 51:15.660] What do you do? [51:15.660 --> 51:19.660] When you haul back on the stick and stand the airplane on its tail, [51:19.660 --> 51:28.660] and then when it loses enough airspeed, it'll stall, fall off on the wing and just rotate 90 degrees. [51:28.660 --> 51:30.660] Now you're pointing straight down. [51:30.660 --> 51:34.660] As it dives, you pull out on the stick and you're going in the opposite direction. [51:34.660 --> 51:42.660] So I was 19 at the time and I'm in the military, I'm a trained man killer. [51:42.660 --> 51:46.660] I said, okay guys, you want to dance? Let's dance. [51:46.660 --> 51:53.660] So I did the hammerhead and when it rolled over the top, as I was rotating off the wing, [51:53.660 --> 52:01.660] I saw these two helicopters cross one another above me as they rotated, they changed sides. [52:01.660 --> 52:06.660] When I come out the other side, I had a helicopter on each side of me. [52:06.660 --> 52:12.660] This pilot looked over at me like chomp. [52:12.660 --> 52:14.660] I thought I was cool. [52:14.660 --> 52:20.660] And that's when I figured out that Bubba, you are out of your league here. [52:20.660 --> 52:22.660] But they thought it was cool. [52:22.660 --> 52:26.660] They just gave me a thumbs up and I took off. [52:26.660 --> 52:32.660] But anyway, ADIZ zone, you enter the ADIZ zone. [52:32.660 --> 52:39.660] If you had not gotten prior permission, you will wind up with a couple fighter jets off your wingtips. [52:39.660 --> 52:46.660] I actually was escorted into Miami International once with a F-4 Phantom off each wingtip [52:46.660 --> 52:51.660] because the pilot had strayed out past the 12-mile limit. [52:51.660 --> 52:58.660] He exited the ADIZ zone and when he turned around, came back in, he got fighters on his wingtips. [52:58.660 --> 53:01.660] Anyway, that's separate. [53:01.660 --> 53:04.660] So what was he doing with the airplane? [53:04.660 --> 53:11.660] I have reason to believe that he flew this airplane out of the state. [53:11.660 --> 53:16.660] And as soon as I get the flight logs of the airplane, I'll be able to prove it. [53:16.660 --> 53:21.660] And that gives federal jurisdiction. [53:21.660 --> 53:24.660] So I get to sue him in the federal court. [53:24.660 --> 53:36.660] I want to be careful and not mix up this issue with the issue of him being prosecuted by the county and the district court. [53:36.660 --> 53:39.660] Yeah, keep it nice and clean. [53:39.660 --> 53:46.660] So as far as we can tell, the city of Victoria had no power to take that airplane. [53:46.660 --> 53:58.660] Now, a few months later, there was a motion filed in the district court asking for authorization to seize this airplane. [53:58.660 --> 54:00.660] And it was granted. [54:00.660 --> 54:01.660] Too late. [54:01.660 --> 54:08.660] The problem was somebody had already seized the airplane. [54:08.660 --> 54:09.660] And they hadn't done this. [54:09.660 --> 54:14.660] They hadn't filed a motion with the court to seize. [54:14.660 --> 54:22.660] They hadn't filed a petition with a justice of the peace to issue a warrant to seize. [54:22.660 --> 54:25.660] They already had it. [54:25.660 --> 54:29.660] But they're trying to get retroactive support. [54:29.660 --> 54:30.660] Exactly. [54:30.660 --> 54:38.660] So what we're trying to do is treat that as if it's a whole separate issue. [54:38.660 --> 54:46.660] The county seized the airplane later on. [54:46.660 --> 54:47.660] Well, OK. [54:47.660 --> 54:50.660] I put in this information request. [54:50.660 --> 55:05.660] I wanted to see the records of the property department of the city of Victoria showing where they entered this aircraft into property and under the protection of the city of Victoria. [55:05.660 --> 55:08.660] That's what I asked for. [55:08.660 --> 55:25.660] And the lawyer put in a request for an opinion from the state attorney general claiming that these were records having to do with the detection and investigation of crime. [55:25.660 --> 55:29.660] Well, how does that work? [55:29.660 --> 55:40.660] In my request, I said either the city of Victoria stole the airplane or James Poe stole the airplane because there wasn't a warrant. [55:40.660 --> 55:42.660] Which one of you stole it? [55:42.660 --> 55:44.660] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [55:44.660 --> 55:48.660] We'll be right back. [55:48.660 --> 55:56.660] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [55:56.660 --> 56:04.660] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [56:04.660 --> 56:07.660] Enter the recovery version. [56:07.660 --> 56:16.660] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. [56:16.660 --> 56:25.660] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [56:25.660 --> 56:30.660] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [56:30.660 --> 56:45.660] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [56:45.660 --> 56:48.660] That's freestudybible.com. [56:48.660 --> 56:58.660] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [56:58.660 --> 57:04.660] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [57:04.660 --> 57:07.660] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [57:07.660 --> 57:09.660] Our liberty depends on it. [57:09.660 --> 57:15.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [57:15.660 --> 57:17.660] Privacy is under attack. [57:17.660 --> 57:20.660] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [57:20.660 --> 57:25.660] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [57:25.660 --> 57:27.660] So protect your rights. [57:27.660 --> 57:31.660] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [57:31.660 --> 57:33.660] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [57:33.660 --> 57:41.660] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [57:41.660 --> 57:44.660] Start over with Startpage. [57:44.660 --> 57:47.660] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [57:47.660 --> 57:50.660] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [57:50.660 --> 57:53.660] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [57:53.660 --> 57:59.660] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [57:59.660 --> 58:05.660] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [58:05.660 --> 58:08.660] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [58:08.660 --> 58:16.660] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the Third Amendment. [58:16.660 --> 58:20.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [58:30.660 --> 58:34.660] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [58:34.660 --> 58:39.660] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [58:39.660 --> 58:45.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [58:45.660 --> 58:51.660] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [58:51.660 --> 58:56.660] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [58:56.660 --> 59:01.660] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [59:01.660 --> 59:03.660] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [59:03.660 --> 59:11.660] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [59:11.660 --> 59:14.660] Start over with Startpage. [59:14.660 --> 59:20.660] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [59:20.660 --> 59:26.660] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [59:26.660 --> 59:29.660] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [59:29.660 --> 59:33.660] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [59:33.660 --> 59:38.660] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [59:38.660 --> 59:45.660] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [59:45.660 --> 59:52.660] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [59:52.660 --> 59:56.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [59:59.660 --> 01:00:03.660] Yeah! [01:00:03.660 --> 01:00:06.660] They want to charge on Babylon. [01:00:06.660 --> 01:00:08.660] And burn down my whole nation. [01:00:08.660 --> 01:00:11.660] Both of them operate the land wrong. [01:00:11.660 --> 01:00:14.660] Almost a Republican and they must scratch, man. [01:00:14.660 --> 01:00:16.660] Tell them I'm a libertarian. [01:00:16.660 --> 01:00:18.660] Them say we're bound to lose, but we're bound to win. [01:00:18.660 --> 01:00:19.660] Come rock, Howard! [01:00:19.660 --> 01:00:21.660] Child of justice and [01:00:21.660 --> 01:00:24.660] Child of rules [01:00:24.660 --> 01:00:26.660] Howard we say [01:00:26.660 --> 01:00:28.660] Child for our worst [01:00:28.660 --> 01:00:30.660] God update. [01:00:30.660 --> 01:00:32.660] Child of power [01:00:32.660 --> 01:00:35.660] When I I [01:00:35.660 --> 01:00:37.660] Child justice and [01:00:37.660 --> 01:00:39.660] Child of rules [01:00:39.660 --> 01:00:41.660] Hey we are back! [01:00:41.660 --> 01:00:44.660] Randy Kelvin. Brett Fountain from U. R. Radio. [01:00:44.660 --> 01:00:51.660] On this Thursday, the 26th day of September, two thousand and sixty-four. [01:00:51.660 --> 01:00:55.660] And we were kind of kicking this around over the break. [01:00:55.660 --> 01:01:01.620] Grant, will you explain about this grant? [01:01:01.620 --> 01:01:06.660] Well, I don't have a lot yet to explain. [01:01:06.660 --> 01:01:14.740] I just discovered that there is a grant that's coming from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, [01:01:14.740 --> 01:01:21.000] and they are funding this Texas State University. [01:01:21.000 --> 01:01:22.740] So I can't tell yet. [01:01:22.740 --> 01:01:26.940] But I do want to go and follow the money and figure out exactly what's going on. [01:01:26.940 --> 01:01:28.660] I know this is a big money. [01:01:28.660 --> 01:01:31.260] It's a huge, huge revenue change. [01:01:31.260 --> 01:01:35.580] If the proper training were going out, and these guys were following the law, and all [01:01:35.580 --> 01:01:41.980] of a sudden all the justices and judges across Texas were doing what the law says already, [01:01:41.980 --> 01:01:44.940] oh my goodness. [01:01:44.940 --> 01:01:50.560] All of these municipalities and counties would have a huge, their revenue would fall off [01:01:50.560 --> 01:01:51.820] a cliff. [01:01:51.820 --> 01:01:57.980] They would go so dramatically down, and all of a sudden the incarceration rate would [01:01:57.980 --> 01:02:00.340] go down. [01:02:00.340 --> 01:02:05.480] Because there wouldn't be all this pre-trial holding people for months in jail without [01:02:05.480 --> 01:02:06.480] any charges. [01:02:06.480 --> 01:02:09.300] All of that would get fixed. [01:02:09.300 --> 01:02:14.340] So 11.9 billion a year in pre-trial incarceration. [01:02:14.340 --> 01:02:21.300] So I know we're dealing with a very charged issue here. [01:02:21.300 --> 01:02:28.040] The issue of getting proper training in front of our judiciary is a very financially charged [01:02:28.040 --> 01:02:29.040] issue. [01:02:29.040 --> 01:02:30.040] I get it. [01:02:30.040 --> 01:02:35.300] This is not just somebody's preference of what color of carpet to put in the lobby. [01:02:35.300 --> 01:02:38.420] This is a whole lot of money. [01:02:38.420 --> 01:02:39.420] Holy mackerel. [01:02:39.900 --> 01:02:42.900] Something just occurred to me, and you're saying that. [01:02:42.900 --> 01:02:51.060] Let's say I'm the head of this particular division under the Texas State University [01:02:51.060 --> 01:02:57.940] operating under a grant from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:02:57.940 --> 01:03:04.540] And I got this chump give me a hard time claiming that my training is not in accordance with [01:03:04.540 --> 01:03:06.300] law. [01:03:07.140 --> 01:03:18.380] The university had just got sued for 20 million bucks over this exact issue. [01:03:18.380 --> 01:03:21.380] So what do I do now? [01:03:21.380 --> 01:03:24.700] Do I fix it? [01:03:24.700 --> 01:03:27.600] What happens if I fix it? [01:03:27.600 --> 01:03:38.640] If I fix it, then I've got 50 years of jurisprudence that my fixing it acts as a tacit admission [01:03:38.640 --> 01:03:41.200] that what we were doing was wrong. [01:03:41.200 --> 01:03:44.560] Yeah, that it needed fixing. [01:03:44.560 --> 01:03:45.560] Yeah. [01:03:45.560 --> 01:03:53.520] And that means that all these people we prosecuted previously were improperly prosecuted. [01:03:53.520 --> 01:03:54.520] So you're talking- [01:03:54.520 --> 01:03:57.360] That's a fact. [01:03:57.360 --> 01:04:02.280] We know, but if they fix it, do it right? [01:04:02.280 --> 01:04:12.840] So that they don't have this chump from Podunk, Texas, nobody citizen in a republic coming [01:04:12.840 --> 01:04:13.840] after them. [01:04:13.840 --> 01:04:21.480] Then they admit that everybody else they prosecuted, they did it properly. [01:04:21.480 --> 01:04:26.280] If you're the head of this particular agency, what do you do? [01:04:26.280 --> 01:04:28.880] You're right on the head of a dime. [01:04:28.880 --> 01:04:32.280] Kind of damned if you do, damned if you don't. [01:04:32.280 --> 01:04:35.360] Now they're going to know that they're already been sued for this. [01:04:35.360 --> 01:04:43.840] And if they're in all this conference about curricula, it may well be that they're already [01:04:43.840 --> 01:04:47.240] dancing on the head of this pen. [01:04:47.240 --> 01:04:48.240] And you know what? [01:04:48.240 --> 01:04:55.480] I think today I actually got a hint of that actually being the case. [01:04:55.480 --> 01:05:05.360] Today I got a response from their public information coordinator, Ms. Kara Holsinger. [01:05:05.360 --> 01:05:11.600] And I told her, look, Ms. Holsinger, I feel like I'm getting the run around, not only [01:05:11.600 --> 01:05:16.480] from Mrs. Whalen, but now also from you. [01:05:16.480 --> 01:05:24.220] And she reassured me that all of the curriculum development meetings, now she stuck the word [01:05:24.340 --> 01:05:25.340] development in there. [01:05:25.340 --> 01:05:27.820] I said nothing about development. [01:05:27.820 --> 01:05:35.700] I used in my records request, I used verbatim the words that Ms. Whalen had used. [01:05:35.700 --> 01:05:43.780] She called them information, curriculum information and planning meetings. [01:05:43.780 --> 01:05:54.340] Now I'm getting this, no records responsive to your request about curriculum development [01:05:54.340 --> 01:05:56.140] meetings. [01:05:56.140 --> 01:06:04.580] And she reassured me that all the development had already happened long ago. [01:06:04.580 --> 01:06:10.580] So what are all of these tizzy of meetings they're having all of a sudden if the curriculum's [01:06:10.580 --> 01:06:11.580] already developed? [01:06:12.260 --> 01:06:16.780] And why do they have to have so many of these information and planning meetings all of a [01:06:16.780 --> 01:06:18.340] sudden? [01:06:18.340 --> 01:06:22.780] I would think you would want to see the minutes of all of these meetings. [01:06:22.780 --> 01:06:29.260] Yeah, but since she was being obtuse with me, I asked for all of the emails. [01:06:29.260 --> 01:06:30.260] I want to see them all. [01:06:30.260 --> 01:06:35.900] Show me all of the calendar, all the records of all of the meetings and all of the names [01:06:35.900 --> 01:06:40.700] and titles and email addresses of the participants. [01:06:40.700 --> 01:06:41.700] All of them. [01:06:41.700 --> 01:06:43.900] I'll figure it out. [01:06:43.900 --> 01:06:48.100] You want to show me a haystack, I'll find the natal. [01:06:48.100 --> 01:06:57.460] I'm putting myself in the shoes of their attorney, their counsel, who has has to be aware of [01:06:57.460 --> 01:07:03.220] a $20 million lawsuit against the president of the university in his personal capacity [01:07:03.220 --> 01:07:05.300] in the federal court. [01:07:05.300 --> 01:07:08.900] That's got to be a sensitive subject. [01:07:08.900 --> 01:07:14.220] And now they're almost certainly trying to figure out a way to keep this from happening [01:07:14.220 --> 01:07:15.220] again. [01:07:15.220 --> 01:07:23.780] And then they got you standing on them. [01:07:23.780 --> 01:07:25.740] You don't reckon they're very comfortable right now? [01:07:25.740 --> 01:07:34.780] Yeah, I like to turn to one thing I try not to do to get too comfortable myself. [01:07:35.660 --> 01:07:45.700] If you ever six moves in to a chess game and turn the chessboard around, it's really harder [01:07:45.700 --> 01:07:46.700] than it appears. [01:07:46.700 --> 01:07:48.700] That's why I use the chessboard analogy. [01:07:48.700 --> 01:07:54.340] If you've ever played chess, get four or five moves in and you've got looking at all of [01:07:54.340 --> 01:07:58.060] these different pieces that move in all kind of different directions. [01:07:58.060 --> 01:08:03.820] Try to put them in your head and extrapolate what the other side's going to do when you [01:08:03.860 --> 01:08:04.860] make a move. [01:08:04.860 --> 01:08:08.740] They have all these variables. [01:08:08.740 --> 01:08:16.220] And you think that side of the board can sort this out. [01:08:16.220 --> 01:08:23.460] Take that board and turn it around and the two players switch sides, down at that board [01:08:23.460 --> 01:08:26.860] it will be totally different. [01:08:26.900 --> 01:08:34.260] So how do we look at it from the side of the director of this agency? [01:08:34.260 --> 01:08:40.620] I know we can't actually, but just by thinking of it from that perspective it would give [01:08:40.620 --> 01:08:43.260] us a different way of considering it. [01:08:43.260 --> 01:08:50.220] How do we defend ourselves against this jack leg that's coming in here, getting into our [01:08:50.220 --> 01:08:58.980] business, knowing that our boss got sued for being a buck's personal, dancing on the [01:08:58.980 --> 01:09:04.540] head of a pen, afraid that, likely to do the same thing to them? [01:09:04.540 --> 01:09:07.540] What did you do? [01:09:07.540 --> 01:09:09.540] Oh, and guess what? [01:09:09.540 --> 01:09:18.540] I found out that none of them have had the statutorily mandated training in open meetings. [01:09:19.540 --> 01:09:27.140] The attorney general requires them to have this training and to keep it up. [01:09:27.140 --> 01:09:30.820] Every year they have to refresh their training. [01:09:30.820 --> 01:09:31.820] And it's very specific. [01:09:31.820 --> 01:09:39.100] The attorney general tells them how the content and the length of the training and everything [01:09:39.100 --> 01:09:40.100] about it. [01:09:40.100 --> 01:09:42.620] And they don't have any of it. [01:09:42.620 --> 01:09:48.140] So no wonder when I asked the director, hey, I'd like to attend these meetings, she says, [01:09:48.340 --> 01:09:51.340] oh, but you're not part of any of our committees. [01:09:51.340 --> 01:09:53.140] She's clueless. [01:09:53.140 --> 01:09:55.980] She hasn't had the training. [01:09:55.980 --> 01:09:58.860] That was going to be a question. [01:09:58.860 --> 01:10:03.300] I'm a government agency hero. [01:10:03.300 --> 01:10:09.180] And we have to meet with members of the agency all the time to correct the business of the [01:10:09.180 --> 01:10:12.180] agency. [01:10:12.220 --> 01:10:23.940] Am I required to make every meeting that we have and I post the meeting have to post public [01:10:23.940 --> 01:10:25.740] meetings? [01:10:25.740 --> 01:10:33.380] Can the department hold meetings that are not public? [01:10:33.380 --> 01:10:37.980] There are some exceptions that are carved out for what they call closed meetings. [01:10:37.980 --> 01:10:43.340] When they have certain requirements that have to be met before they can go into a closed [01:10:43.340 --> 01:10:47.860] meeting and the purpose of the closed meeting and what they have to do and disclose after [01:10:47.860 --> 01:10:50.020] the closed meeting. [01:10:50.020 --> 01:10:54.620] So they can, but it's all about transparency even then. [01:10:54.620 --> 01:10:59.540] We, the people don't give our government officials the ability to tell us what's good for us [01:10:59.540 --> 01:11:02.700] to know and what's not good for us to know, period. [01:11:02.700 --> 01:11:11.220] Even then, a public meeting that's closed to the public, that closed session must be [01:11:11.220 --> 01:11:17.020] posted, publicly posted, at least 72 hours before the meeting. [01:11:17.020 --> 01:11:23.420] But that tends to go to agents. [01:11:23.420 --> 01:11:32.180] Does the Act apply to every inter-agency meeting? [01:11:32.660 --> 01:11:43.780] If I'm going to, if I need to meet team members on an issue, I have to post that 72 hours. [01:11:43.780 --> 01:11:55.860] There has to be some kind of facility so that I can effectively operate department, not [01:11:55.860 --> 01:12:00.100] have to post every meeting 72 hours. [01:12:00.100 --> 01:12:01.740] But they need to go to the training. [01:12:01.740 --> 01:12:05.860] There's some mandatory training that they are required to have so that they can navigate [01:12:05.860 --> 01:12:07.460] these kinds of questions. [01:12:07.460 --> 01:12:08.460] They haven't gone to the training. [01:12:08.460 --> 01:12:09.460] They have no idea. [01:12:09.460 --> 01:12:16.020] They're not even to the starting line. [01:12:16.020 --> 01:12:23.460] That is going to be such a question to ask. [01:12:23.460 --> 01:12:27.300] Such experiences I have dealing with this kind of stuff. [01:12:27.300 --> 01:12:31.660] This is not something I've ever considered before. [01:12:32.580 --> 01:12:45.580] Does that mean this public personnel in formats of a duty, does all that have to be, is all [01:12:45.580 --> 01:12:48.580] of it public? [01:12:48.580 --> 01:12:59.580] One spatcher, station spatcher, is that a public? [01:13:00.500 --> 01:13:07.500] If I'm the director of an agency and I have a secretary, a panel that's working on an [01:13:07.500 --> 01:13:24.420] issue, a panel to be posted 72 hours before the public, then I think that's a good thing. [01:13:24.420 --> 01:13:30.340] Is that good? [01:13:30.340 --> 01:13:35.340] I think we're at the opening. [01:13:35.340 --> 01:13:38.340] Say that again? [01:13:38.340 --> 01:13:40.340] A little bit of a beating, Zach. [01:13:40.340 --> 01:13:55.260] I can see what it says about entities and under what circumstances. [01:13:55.260 --> 01:13:56.260] Hang on. [01:13:56.260 --> 01:13:59.260] I'll be right back. [01:13:59.260 --> 01:14:04.260] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his [01:14:04.260 --> 01:14:05.260] word? [01:14:06.180 --> 01:14:07.180] Thank you. [01:14:07.180 --> 01:14:08.180] Thank you. [01:14:08.180 --> 01:14:09.180] Thank you. [01:14:09.180 --> 01:14:10.180] Thank you. [01:14:10.180 --> 01:14:11.180] Thank you. [01:14:11.180 --> 01:14:12.180] Thank you. [01:14:12.180 --> 01:14:13.180] Thank you. [01:14:13.180 --> 01:14:14.180] Thank you. [01:14:14.180 --> 01:14:15.180] Thank you. [01:14:16.100 --> 01:14:21.100] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [01:14:21.100 --> 01:14:23.100] dividing the word of truth. [01:14:23.100 --> 01:14:27.100] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [01:14:27.100 --> 01:14:30.100] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [01:14:30.100 --> 01:14:35.100] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:14:35.100 --> 01:14:37.100] and Christian character development. [01:14:37.100 --> 01:14:42.100] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:14:43.020 --> 01:14:47.020] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [01:14:47.020 --> 01:14:49.020] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:14:49.020 --> 01:14:56.020] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [01:14:56.020 --> 01:14:59.020] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:14:59.020 --> 01:15:04.020] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:15:04.020 --> 01:15:08.020] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:15:08.940 --> 01:15:12.940] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:15:12.940 --> 01:15:13.940] can win too. [01:15:13.940 --> 01:15:18.940] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:15:18.940 --> 01:15:23.940] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:15:23.940 --> 01:15:28.940] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:15:28.940 --> 01:15:32.940] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:15:32.940 --> 01:15:37.940] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:15:38.860 --> 01:15:40.860] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:15:40.860 --> 01:15:45.860] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:15:45.860 --> 01:15:48.860] or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [01:15:48.860 --> 01:15:58.860] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:15:58.860 --> 01:16:05.780] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:16:29.780 --> 01:16:34.780] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:16:34.780 --> 01:16:39.780] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan. [01:16:39.780 --> 01:16:44.780] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my hand. [01:16:44.780 --> 01:16:47.780] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:16:48.700 --> 01:16:57.700] I just checked the caller board. [01:16:57.700 --> 01:17:08.700] I think everybody is so interested in what we have to say that all of their issues seem so minor in comparison that they're just enthralled. [01:17:08.700 --> 01:17:11.700] I was just going to say that. [01:17:11.700 --> 01:17:16.700] I'm looking at 551 government. [01:17:17.620 --> 01:17:30.620] The thing I'm trying to figure out is how does an agency conduct its business in a timely and efficient manner. [01:17:30.620 --> 01:17:42.620] If every meeting of members of a governmental agency has to be held open to the public under the Open Meetings Act, [01:17:43.540 --> 01:17:54.540] that means it has to be posted 72 hours before the meeting, prominent place, and can't be closed. [01:17:54.540 --> 01:17:59.540] There are specific conditions under which one can be closed and it limits. [01:17:59.540 --> 01:18:04.540] Well, it does specifically define the meeting that they're talking about. [01:18:05.460 --> 01:18:14.460] This meeting means a deliberation between a quorum of a governmental body or between that quorum and another person [01:18:14.460 --> 01:18:23.460] during which public business or public policy is discussed or considered or the body takes formal action. [01:18:23.460 --> 01:18:34.460] So it doesn't include some kind of either having a social function or there's something with no public business going on. [01:18:35.380 --> 01:18:42.380] So they say a quorum means a majority of the governmental body. [01:18:42.380 --> 01:18:51.380] That's an issue that we've come across before where a number of the members are at a party. [01:18:51.380 --> 01:18:58.380] There are enough members at that party to constitute a quorum. It cannot happen. [01:18:59.300 --> 01:19:08.300] Yeah, and the attorney general has even addressed this issue of the governmental officials [01:19:08.300 --> 01:19:15.300] trying to skirt around the requirements of Open Meetings Act [01:19:15.300 --> 01:19:23.300] by making sure they only have quorum minus one people involved in any kind of deliberation [01:19:24.220 --> 01:19:31.220] and then they communicate in some other way, send an email or do something separate that was not part of that meeting. [01:19:32.220 --> 01:19:35.220] And then they can say, oh, well, that wasn't really an official meeting. [01:19:35.220 --> 01:19:38.220] That wasn't according to the meeting that it requires a quorum. [01:19:38.220 --> 01:19:40.420] That wasn't it. And they do this on purpose. [01:19:40.420 --> 01:19:43.420] And the attorney general has called them out for that. [01:19:43.540 --> 01:19:54.540] That's what I think. We're dealing with some stuff here that I haven't heard defined, assuming that we know what these terms mean. [01:19:54.540 --> 01:20:07.540] And one of the things I'm developing a set of specs for is I want a tool that I can feed this statute into. [01:20:07.660 --> 01:20:18.660] It will look at every word in the document and then look at this library of legal dictionaries that I have. [01:20:18.660 --> 01:20:23.660] It's got just about every legal dictionary ever created in it. [01:20:23.660 --> 01:20:28.660] See if this term occurs in that dictionary. [01:20:28.780 --> 01:20:40.780] If it does occur in the dictionary, then it'll highlight the word, give it a slightly color, maybe a dim, faded color [01:20:40.780 --> 01:20:43.780] so that eye sees it at different. [01:20:43.780 --> 01:20:48.780] Mouse over and it'll pop up a box with these meanings in it. [01:20:48.780 --> 01:20:54.780] This is something I've wanted for a very long time because of absolute meaning. [01:20:54.900 --> 01:20:59.900] We need this case in order to sort this out. [01:20:59.900 --> 01:21:01.900] Absolutely. [01:21:01.900 --> 01:21:08.900] It's because depending on the context in which we're considering an issue, we will use these terms. [01:21:11.900 --> 01:21:16.900] Clear, defined terms. [01:21:16.900 --> 01:21:18.900] You know what we're talking about. [01:21:19.020 --> 01:21:28.020] I just went some plotter paper at a public auction for the city of Weatherford. [01:21:28.020 --> 01:21:35.020] And I went down there to pick it up, and now this is a governmental agency here. [01:21:35.020 --> 01:21:48.020] This guy selling the paper, he got this paper from other members, other offices within the city of Weatherford. [01:21:49.020 --> 01:21:52.020] And they meet to organize all of this. [01:21:52.020 --> 01:21:53.020] Is that a public? [01:21:59.020 --> 01:22:00.020] What is public? [01:22:00.020 --> 01:22:02.020] And when do I have a right? [01:22:02.020 --> 01:22:06.020] They're going to meet to decide how they're going to sell this paper. [01:22:06.020 --> 01:22:09.020] Do I have a right to sit in on that meeting? [01:22:09.020 --> 01:22:10.020] Is that? [01:22:10.020 --> 01:22:11.020] Absolutely. [01:22:11.140 --> 01:22:20.140] Where is it defined what a public meeting is? [01:22:20.140 --> 01:22:27.140] Right there in 551.001, those terms are defined. [01:22:27.140 --> 01:22:40.140] And in 551.005, it requires each one of these elected or appointed officials to complete a certain kind of training. [01:22:40.260 --> 01:22:43.260] And they have to have, it has some very specific things about it. [01:22:43.260 --> 01:22:46.260] They have to complete it within X number of time. [01:22:46.260 --> 01:22:53.260] It has to be at least one hour, not more than two. [01:22:53.260 --> 01:23:01.260] They have some very specific things about this training that they're required to take. [01:23:01.260 --> 01:23:06.260] These training requirements are not optional. [01:23:06.380 --> 01:23:14.380] Well, I'm looking at 551.002, open meetings requirement. [01:23:14.380 --> 01:23:21.380] Every regular, special, called meeting of a governmental body shall be open to the public. [01:23:21.380 --> 01:23:24.380] Except as provided by this chapter. [01:23:24.380 --> 01:23:27.380] Meeting of a governmental body. [01:23:27.380 --> 01:23:33.380] Yeah, both of those terms are defined above, the governmental body and meeting. [01:23:33.500 --> 01:23:36.500] Those are both defined up in 001. [01:23:44.500 --> 01:23:50.500] And there it is, a board commission, governmental body means a board commission. [01:23:50.500 --> 01:23:57.500] Department committee or agency within the executive or legislative branch. [01:23:57.620 --> 01:24:00.620] A county commissioner's court, a municipal governing body. [01:24:00.620 --> 01:24:05.620] A deliberative body that has rulemaking or quasi-judicial. [01:24:05.620 --> 01:24:08.620] School district or board. [01:24:08.620 --> 01:24:16.620] County board, a county board of school trustees, county board of education. [01:24:16.740 --> 01:24:23.740] Governing board, local workforce development commission. [01:24:23.740 --> 01:24:30.740] That is eligible to receive funds under the federal community services block. [01:24:30.740 --> 01:24:40.740] Non-profit corporation created under section 22.07 transportation. [01:24:40.860 --> 01:24:45.860] A board of directors of the investment zone. [01:24:50.860 --> 01:25:04.860] A meeting, a deliberation between a quorum of a governmental body and another person. [01:25:04.980 --> 01:25:11.980] During which public business or public policy over which the governmental body has supervision, [01:25:11.980 --> 01:25:20.980] control is discussed or considered, body takes formal action. [01:25:22.980 --> 01:25:31.980] That so far would seem to exclude the meetings you're talking about with the members of this [01:25:32.100 --> 01:25:39.100] agency who are developing this curriculum, such as otherwise provided by this subdivision, [01:25:39.100 --> 01:25:46.100] a gathering that is conducted by the governmental body from which the governmental body is responsible, [01:25:46.100 --> 01:25:51.100] at which a quorum of the members of the governmental body is present. [01:25:51.100 --> 01:25:57.100] It has been called by the governmental body and at which the members receive information, [01:25:57.220 --> 01:26:04.220] give information to, ask questions of or receive questions from any third person including [01:26:04.460 --> 01:26:11.460] an employee of the governmental body about the public business or public policy of supervision. [01:26:12.820 --> 01:26:15.020] That seems to capture it. [01:26:15.020 --> 01:26:22.020] If they're developing curriculum that they're going to use to train government employees, [01:26:22.940 --> 01:26:29.940] then a meeting at which the members receive information, this does not go to a quorum. [01:26:31.940 --> 01:26:38.940] They receive the information and ask questions and receive questions from third persons. [01:26:39.940 --> 01:26:50.940] Hang on, Red Fountain, 15, I got 10 seconds, say something really intuitive and insightful. [01:26:52.940 --> 01:26:59.940] How about 5, 1, 2, 6, 4, 6, 1984? [01:27:01.940 --> 01:27:07.740] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:27:07.740 --> 01:27:11.740] on growing, but now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:27:11.740 --> 01:27:15.980] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:27:15.980 --> 01:27:17.700] Privacy is under attack. [01:27:17.700 --> 01:27:21.300] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:27:21.300 --> 01:27:26.300] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:27:26.300 --> 01:27:31.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:27:31.500 --> 01:27:34.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:27:34.080 --> 01:27:39.700] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:27:39.700 --> 01:27:41.420] Yahoo and Bing. [01:27:41.420 --> 01:27:43.420] Start over with Startpage. [01:27:43.420 --> 01:27:47.980] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:27:47.980 --> 01:27:53.300] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again, all that stress [01:27:53.300 --> 01:27:55.540] might be eating your brain. [01:27:55.540 --> 01:28:00.140] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:28:00.140 --> 01:28:03.700] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:28:03.700 --> 01:28:07.640] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:28:07.640 --> 01:28:09.940] in their prefrontal cortex. [01:28:09.940 --> 01:28:15.100] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:28:15.100 --> 01:28:17.340] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:28:17.340 --> 01:28:19.980] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:28:19.980 --> 01:28:25.380] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:28:30.380 --> 01:28:35.740] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:28:35.740 --> 01:28:37.900] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:28:37.900 --> 01:28:42.820] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:28:42.820 --> 01:28:45.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:28:45.660 --> 01:28:48.260] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:28:48.260 --> 01:28:49.740] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:28:49.740 --> 01:28:50.740] I'm a structural engineer. [01:28:50.740 --> 01:28:52.100] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:28:52.100 --> 01:28:53.100] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:28:53.100 --> 01:28:54.700] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:28:54.700 --> 01:28:57.300] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:28:57.300 --> 01:29:00.100] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:29:01.900 --> 01:29:05.020] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:29:05.020 --> 01:29:08.660] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [01:29:08.660 --> 01:29:12.540] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:29:12.540 --> 01:29:15.300] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [01:29:15.300 --> 01:29:18.940] The right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process [01:29:18.940 --> 01:29:19.940] of law. [01:29:19.940 --> 01:29:23.700] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:29:23.700 --> 01:29:25.100] our rights through due process. [01:29:25.100 --> 01:29:29.060] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:29:29.060 --> 01:29:32.820] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:29:32.820 --> 01:29:35.220] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:29:35.220 --> 01:29:39.220] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:29:39.220 --> 01:29:40.540] ordering your copy today. [01:29:40.540 --> 01:29:43.900] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:29:44.900 --> 01:29:49.460] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful [01:29:49.460 --> 01:29:50.460] resource material. [01:29:50.460 --> 01:29:53.940] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:29:53.940 --> 01:29:58.940] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:29:58.940 --> 01:30:07.940] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:31:07.980 --> 01:31:32.980] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with our radio and we're doing some stuff here that I really [01:31:32.980 --> 01:31:33.980] enjoy doing. [01:31:33.980 --> 01:31:35.980] This is the kind of stuff I like. [01:31:36.020 --> 01:31:40.020] We're taking apart the code in little pieces. [01:31:40.020 --> 01:31:50.020] Under the Code Construction Act, it is construed that every single word included in a statute [01:31:50.020 --> 01:31:55.020] was carefully crafted and intentionally put there by the legislature. [01:31:55.020 --> 01:32:01.020] So no word can be ignored. [01:32:01.060 --> 01:32:06.060] So we're looking at, trying to figure out, you got this agency developing curriculum [01:32:06.060 --> 01:32:16.060] for the training of public officials in the setting of, training of magistrates in the [01:32:16.060 --> 01:32:18.060] setting of bail and other duties. [01:32:18.060 --> 01:32:23.060] That's 17 point, is it 0224, 024? [01:32:23.060 --> 01:32:24.060] Yes. [01:32:24.060 --> 01:32:29.060] That requires the Office of Court Administration to do that. [01:32:29.100 --> 01:32:38.100] So it appears here that we have an agency doing this that is not specifically authorized [01:32:38.100 --> 01:32:41.100] to do it. [01:32:41.100 --> 01:32:44.100] This is required to be done by the Office of Court Administration. [01:32:44.100 --> 01:32:53.100] So how is the Texas State University doing it, or this agency that is formalized under [01:32:53.100 --> 01:32:58.100] the authority of the Texas State University? [01:32:58.140 --> 01:33:01.140] First, how do they get authority to do this at all? [01:33:01.140 --> 01:33:15.140] And second, when they do this, clearly doing this under statute, when they sit down to [01:33:15.140 --> 01:33:25.140] a gathering at which the members receive information from, give information to, ask questions [01:33:25.180 --> 01:33:32.180] of, or receive questions from any third person, including an employee of the governmental [01:33:32.180 --> 01:33:39.180] body, about the public business or public policy over which the governmental body has [01:33:39.180 --> 01:33:42.180] supervision or control. [01:33:42.220 --> 01:34:04.220] This is section 551.001, definitions, meeting means, and 541.002, open meetings requirement. [01:34:04.220 --> 01:34:10.220] Every regular, special, called meeting of a governmental body shall be open to the public. [01:34:10.260 --> 01:34:26.260] Up here, and the meetings are described under 551.001, paragraph 4, subparagraph B, subparagraph [01:34:26.260 --> 01:34:38.260] 4, except as otherwise provided by this subdivision, a gathering at which the members receive [01:34:38.300 --> 01:34:40.300] information to. [01:34:40.300 --> 01:34:51.300] Now, these guys are sitting down for the purpose of determining the curriculum for the magistrate [01:34:51.300 --> 01:34:58.300] for the setting of bail and other duties, as specifically delegated to the Office of [01:34:58.300 --> 01:35:05.300] Court Administration by 17, Code of Criminal Procedure 17.024. [01:35:05.340 --> 01:35:08.340] This is the governmental function. [01:35:08.340 --> 01:35:16.340] That governmental function is given to the Office of Court Administration, not to Texas [01:35:16.340 --> 01:35:18.340] State University. [01:35:20.340 --> 01:35:29.340] Texas State University could be considered, in one sense, they are a governmental body [01:35:29.380 --> 01:35:30.380] to which this applies. [01:35:30.380 --> 01:35:37.380] In another sense, they are the third person with whom another governmental body is having [01:35:37.380 --> 01:35:43.380] these conversations, these meetings to give information, receive questions, and so forth. [01:35:43.380 --> 01:35:53.380] It appears as though Texas State University, while they may provide this training, I don't [01:35:53.420 --> 01:36:00.420] see anything that authorizes them to generate this training. [01:36:00.420 --> 01:36:06.420] That's a duty specifically delegated to the Office of Court Administration. [01:36:06.420 --> 01:36:14.420] Texas State University is a totally separate office and not a part of the Texas Office [01:36:14.420 --> 01:36:16.420] of Court Administration. [01:36:16.420 --> 01:36:22.420] So what the heck are they doing developing this criteria when the legislature ordered [01:36:22.460 --> 01:36:26.460] the Court of Administration to do it? [01:36:26.460 --> 01:36:33.460] Why aren't they taking what the Office of Court Administration gives them and teaching [01:36:33.460 --> 01:36:34.460] that? [01:36:34.460 --> 01:36:41.460] It creates a real problem, because I sued half a dozen agencies. [01:36:41.460 --> 01:36:46.460] All of them are essentially giving this same training. [01:36:46.500 --> 01:36:58.500] So does each one of them develop their own take on the training, or did the legislature [01:36:58.500 --> 01:37:04.500] intend that this be formalized into one office so that it's consistent? [01:37:04.540 --> 01:37:16.540] That sounds like a good argument to go to Damp House and these people and say, what [01:37:16.540 --> 01:37:20.540] the heck are you doing developing curriculum? [01:37:20.540 --> 01:37:25.540] You're not supposed to be doing that at all. [01:37:25.540 --> 01:37:31.540] Where is the curriculum that was given to you by the Office of Court Administration [01:37:31.580 --> 01:37:35.580] that they create in consultation? [01:37:35.580 --> 01:37:43.580] They may think that one of these Court Administration or the Court of Criminal Appeals may be under [01:37:43.580 --> 01:37:51.580] the impression that they are able to delegate that, just like some of these municipalities [01:37:51.580 --> 01:37:59.580] who think they can create law because they got delegated something that had no power [01:37:59.620 --> 01:38:01.620] to be delegated. [01:38:01.620 --> 01:38:03.620] I want to see that delegation. [01:38:03.620 --> 01:38:09.620] Yeah, but they may be under that impression because you see that they're doing these [01:38:09.620 --> 01:38:13.620] quasi-judicial function of teaching judges how to be judges. [01:38:13.620 --> 01:38:21.620] These guys are not judges, and they decide themselves how to teach judges to be judges? [01:38:21.620 --> 01:38:23.620] How does that work? [01:38:23.620 --> 01:38:25.620] Pretty crazy, right? [01:38:25.660 --> 01:38:33.660] I can see these questions making them crazy, but this isn't exactly the kind of stuff [01:38:33.660 --> 01:38:43.660] that I and other citizens need to do to keep our public officials in line. [01:38:43.660 --> 01:38:49.660] I'm going to suggest here that all these public officials, no bad guys here. [01:38:49.700 --> 01:38:57.700] I think none of what they're doing is done from an evil mind or a bad purpose. [01:38:57.700 --> 01:39:04.700] They're just not following the rules, not scrupulously following. [01:39:04.700 --> 01:39:08.700] Let's go back to H.G. Wells and his outline of history. [01:39:08.740 --> 01:39:14.740] When speaking to the corruption of the Polks during the Dark Ages, [01:39:18.740 --> 01:39:21.740] it stows the law allegiance. [01:39:21.740 --> 01:39:26.740] Of all beings, he should behave as though the law compels him. [01:39:26.740 --> 01:39:32.740] It's the actual feeling of mankind at what we're given to administer. [01:39:32.780 --> 01:39:44.780] It appears as though Texas State University, being an office of higher education, [01:39:44.780 --> 01:39:52.780] seems to think that they can take over the administration. [01:39:52.820 --> 01:39:56.820] They can't do it. [01:39:56.820 --> 01:40:00.820] They can't determine this curriculum. [01:40:02.820 --> 01:40:04.820] Yeah, there's that thing that you were just describing. [01:40:04.820 --> 01:40:06.820] They presume they own it. [01:40:06.820 --> 01:40:08.820] Yeah. [01:40:08.820 --> 01:40:14.820] We can't just do this thing because it's administratively convenient. [01:40:14.860 --> 01:40:20.860] We can't just do this thing because it's administratively convenient. [01:40:24.860 --> 01:40:32.860] I can do anything I want to unless I, through my legislature, [01:40:32.860 --> 01:40:36.860] have passed laws to prevent me from doing so. [01:40:36.860 --> 01:40:40.860] Public officials, we don't have that. [01:40:40.900 --> 01:40:42.900] Exactly. [01:40:42.900 --> 01:40:46.900] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:40:46.900 --> 01:40:50.900] I'm not even going to give out the calling number. [01:40:50.900 --> 01:40:56.900] John from New York, what the heck are you doing on at the last segment? [01:41:10.900 --> 01:41:14.900] How would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan [01:41:14.900 --> 01:41:16.900] by lowering the claims cost? 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[01:42:33.020 --> 01:42:35.020] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [01:42:35.020 --> 01:42:38.020] you can learn what everyone should understand [01:42:38.020 --> 01:42:40.020] about the principles and practices [01:42:40.020 --> 01:42:42.020] that control our American courts. [01:42:42.020 --> 01:42:44.020] You'll receive our audio classroom, [01:42:44.020 --> 01:42:48.020] video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:42:48.020 --> 01:42:51.020] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:42:51.020 --> 01:42:55.020] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:42:55.020 --> 01:42:59.020] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:43:03.020 --> 01:43:07.020] MUSIC [01:43:07.020 --> 01:43:09.020] Hello. [01:43:09.020 --> 01:43:12.020] Oh, man, you're in jail. [01:43:12.020 --> 01:43:14.020] You got busted, man. [01:43:14.020 --> 01:43:16.020] Oh, man, I'm broke, dude. [01:43:22.020 --> 01:43:26.020] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:43:26.020 --> 01:43:30.020] Some things I realize fully [01:43:30.060 --> 01:43:34.060] Somebody's on a police, a policeman [01:43:34.060 --> 01:43:38.060] Somebody's on a police, a bully [01:43:38.060 --> 01:43:43.060] There's always a room at the top of the hill [01:43:43.060 --> 01:43:47.060] Here through the grapevine and it's lonely left still [01:43:47.060 --> 01:43:51.060] They're wishing it was more than a position to fill [01:43:51.060 --> 01:43:54.060] They know that if they don't do it [01:43:54.060 --> 01:43:56.060] Somebody will [01:43:56.100 --> 01:44:00.100] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:44:00.100 --> 01:44:04.100] Some things I realize fully [01:44:06.100 --> 01:44:08.100] OK, we are back. [01:44:08.100 --> 01:44:11.100] I'm Randy Kelton from Rule of Law Radio. [01:44:11.100 --> 01:44:14.100] And frankly, I've really enjoyed this show [01:44:14.100 --> 01:44:19.100] because it's not often we get to do this kind of thing [01:44:19.100 --> 01:44:23.100] where we get to go into legal issues [01:44:23.140 --> 01:44:28.140] and exercise thinking critically. [01:44:30.140 --> 01:44:34.140] It's often hard to extract ourselves [01:44:34.140 --> 01:44:38.140] from what we think we know. [01:44:38.140 --> 01:44:41.140] And a good portion of the problems we have in law [01:44:41.140 --> 01:44:44.140] and other areas of life [01:44:44.140 --> 01:44:47.140] we have because of the things [01:44:47.140 --> 01:44:51.140] that we think we already know. [01:44:51.180 --> 01:44:54.180] And I have read the Open Meetings Act [01:44:54.180 --> 01:44:57.180] a number of times over the years. [01:44:57.180 --> 01:45:00.180] I was reading the Open Meetings Act [01:45:00.180 --> 01:45:03.180] when it was 6252-17A [01:45:03.180 --> 01:45:06.180] before it was codified into 551. [01:45:06.180 --> 01:45:08.180] Oh, wow. [01:45:08.180 --> 01:45:11.180] But I haven't looked at it in this kind of... [01:45:11.180 --> 01:45:14.180] Back when they were using clay tablets and... [01:45:14.180 --> 01:45:17.180] Yeah, you got this little bud tablet [01:45:17.180 --> 01:45:20.180] and this little chisel and you press it in [01:45:20.220 --> 01:45:23.220] and it's cutiform. [01:45:23.220 --> 01:45:27.220] But I haven't taken it apart in this finer detail. [01:45:27.220 --> 01:45:30.220] And we need to. [01:45:30.220 --> 01:45:34.220] These people in these offices performing these duties, [01:45:34.220 --> 01:45:37.220] they need to do this. [01:45:37.220 --> 01:45:39.220] Something we talked about on the break, [01:45:39.220 --> 01:45:42.220] I don't know if we talked about here, [01:45:42.220 --> 01:45:49.220] but 17.024 tells the Office of Court Administration [01:45:49.260 --> 01:45:51.260] that they will develop curriculum [01:45:51.260 --> 01:45:53.260] for the training of magistrates [01:45:53.260 --> 01:45:56.260] in the setting of bail and other duties. [01:45:56.260 --> 01:45:59.260] So the question was, [01:45:59.260 --> 01:46:02.260] what the heck is the Texas State University [01:46:02.260 --> 01:46:09.260] and this Texas Justice Training Center, [01:46:09.260 --> 01:46:13.260] what are they doing developing this curricula? [01:46:13.260 --> 01:46:16.260] They weren't authorized to do this. [01:46:16.300 --> 01:46:17.300] Right. [01:46:17.300 --> 01:46:20.300] Office of Court Administration was. [01:46:20.300 --> 01:46:23.300] So they're doing these things [01:46:23.300 --> 01:46:26.300] to facilitate the adjudicative, [01:46:26.300 --> 01:46:30.300] the expediency of operating the office. [01:46:30.300 --> 01:46:34.300] But it appears to me as though [01:46:34.300 --> 01:46:38.300] it was the Office of Court Administration [01:46:38.300 --> 01:46:41.300] that was to develop this curricula. [01:46:41.300 --> 01:46:43.300] I sued a number of agencies [01:46:43.340 --> 01:46:46.340] that trained public officials. [01:46:46.340 --> 01:46:49.340] So where did they get their training? [01:46:49.340 --> 01:46:52.340] Who developed this training? [01:46:52.340 --> 01:46:56.340] This is a bunch of people who are not judges. [01:46:56.340 --> 01:46:58.340] Exactly. [01:46:58.340 --> 01:47:01.340] How do you think that's going to look? [01:47:01.340 --> 01:47:05.340] They get called up and the jury is looking at them [01:47:05.340 --> 01:47:08.340] and waiting for their explanation [01:47:08.340 --> 01:47:11.340] of how they came up with this training [01:47:11.380 --> 01:47:12.380] and how they're even authorized [01:47:12.380 --> 01:47:15.380] to come up with training in the first place. [01:47:15.380 --> 01:47:17.380] What do you think they're going to say? [01:47:17.380 --> 01:47:18.380] The Office of Court Administration, [01:47:18.380 --> 01:47:19.380] they're not judges either, [01:47:19.380 --> 01:47:22.380] but they were ordered to develop this [01:47:22.380 --> 01:47:27.380] in consultation with the Texas. [01:47:29.380 --> 01:47:31.380] The Court of Criminal Appeals [01:47:31.380 --> 01:47:34.380] and the Court of Criminal Appeals is judges. [01:47:34.380 --> 01:47:36.380] The panel of nine judges [01:47:36.380 --> 01:47:37.380] and they really ought to know [01:47:37.380 --> 01:47:39.380] what the law says and means. [01:47:39.420 --> 01:47:41.420] The highest criminal judges in the state of Texas, [01:47:41.420 --> 01:47:42.420] they're the ones [01:47:42.420 --> 01:47:44.420] that were supposed to develop this. [01:47:44.420 --> 01:47:45.420] Exactly. [01:47:45.420 --> 01:47:47.420] The Office of Court Administration, [01:47:47.420 --> 01:47:49.420] the Court Administration didn't give it [01:47:49.420 --> 01:47:51.420] to these agencies. [01:47:51.420 --> 01:47:52.420] Now these agencies are down here [01:47:52.420 --> 01:47:53.420] doing it themselves. [01:47:53.420 --> 01:47:54.420] What the heck is that? [01:47:54.420 --> 01:47:56.420] And now they're trying to keep bread [01:47:56.420 --> 01:47:57.420] out of their meetings [01:47:57.420 --> 01:47:58.420] where they're figuring out [01:47:58.420 --> 01:47:59.420] how to do this themselves. [01:47:59.420 --> 01:48:02.420] And I doubt that any of them are judges [01:48:02.420 --> 01:48:06.420] or have any judicial experience. [01:48:06.420 --> 01:48:08.420] Regardless. [01:48:08.460 --> 01:48:09.460] I mean, they're probably not, [01:48:09.460 --> 01:48:10.460] but even if they were, [01:48:10.460 --> 01:48:12.460] I don't care if they're attorneys [01:48:12.460 --> 01:48:16.460] and if they're retired ambassadors, [01:48:16.460 --> 01:48:17.460] it doesn't matter. [01:48:17.460 --> 01:48:19.460] They have to have lawful authority [01:48:19.460 --> 01:48:22.460] to develop this training material. [01:48:22.460 --> 01:48:24.460] John, what do you think of that? [01:48:26.460 --> 01:48:28.460] Boy, everything is over my head. [01:48:28.460 --> 01:48:30.460] I've been listening most of the night [01:48:30.460 --> 01:48:34.460] and so far I'm beginning to see [01:48:34.460 --> 01:48:36.460] where you're going with this. [01:48:36.500 --> 01:48:38.500] Yeah, we're just reading [01:48:38.500 --> 01:48:42.500] the clear language of the code. [01:48:44.500 --> 01:48:46.500] Which part is not making sense, John, [01:48:46.500 --> 01:48:48.500] because I thought it was kind of clear, [01:48:48.500 --> 01:48:50.500] but what is it that's not [01:48:50.500 --> 01:48:52.500] making sense to you? [01:48:52.500 --> 01:48:55.500] Well, not that it's not making sense. [01:48:55.500 --> 01:48:58.500] I don't really know [01:48:58.500 --> 01:49:02.500] any of this particular area. [01:49:02.500 --> 01:49:04.500] If I know a little bit about [01:49:04.540 --> 01:49:06.540] traffic courts, [01:49:06.540 --> 01:49:08.540] I know a little bit about other things, [01:49:08.540 --> 01:49:09.540] but this I don't really know [01:49:09.540 --> 01:49:10.540] anything about. [01:49:10.540 --> 01:49:11.540] OK, hold on, John. [01:49:11.540 --> 01:49:12.540] What we're talking about... [01:49:12.540 --> 01:49:13.540] I'll put it this way. [01:49:13.540 --> 01:49:16.540] The judges are doing wrong. [01:49:16.540 --> 01:49:18.540] They're all doing it wrong [01:49:18.540 --> 01:49:19.540] in the same way. [01:49:19.540 --> 01:49:22.540] Somebody taught them to do it wrong [01:49:22.540 --> 01:49:24.540] in that same way. [01:49:24.540 --> 01:49:26.540] I'm asking for the people [01:49:26.540 --> 01:49:29.540] who came up with the training [01:49:29.540 --> 01:49:32.540] to fix their training. [01:49:32.540 --> 01:49:33.540] And they're saying [01:49:33.580 --> 01:49:35.580] they don't have to [01:49:35.580 --> 01:49:37.580] include me in their meetings [01:49:37.580 --> 01:49:38.580] or they don't have to [01:49:38.580 --> 01:49:40.580] address any of their issues. [01:49:40.580 --> 01:49:42.580] They can just invent [01:49:42.580 --> 01:49:43.580] whatever training they want [01:49:43.580 --> 01:49:45.580] and they're not responsible [01:49:45.580 --> 01:49:47.580] to follow the law. [01:49:47.580 --> 01:49:50.580] How does that sound to you? [01:49:50.580 --> 01:49:51.580] Well, that sounds like [01:49:51.580 --> 01:49:52.580] par for the course. [01:49:52.580 --> 01:49:53.580] That's what's been going on [01:49:53.580 --> 01:49:55.580] for the last 75 years. [01:49:55.580 --> 01:49:59.580] OK, we may be at the core [01:49:59.580 --> 01:50:01.580] of how to get this fixed. [01:50:01.620 --> 01:50:04.620] You call in complaining about [01:50:04.620 --> 01:50:05.620] all of these behaviors [01:50:05.620 --> 01:50:06.620] of these public officials [01:50:06.620 --> 01:50:08.620] and we're all looking at all [01:50:08.620 --> 01:50:09.620] these public officials, [01:50:09.620 --> 01:50:10.620] all of them doing it wrong [01:50:10.620 --> 01:50:12.620] and wondering, [01:50:12.620 --> 01:50:15.620] is everybody corrupt? [01:50:15.620 --> 01:50:18.620] I mean, how many people listening [01:50:18.620 --> 01:50:19.620] know someone who's [01:50:19.620 --> 01:50:22.620] a police officer personally? [01:50:22.620 --> 01:50:23.620] Heck, I don't know [01:50:23.620 --> 01:50:24.620] a single police officer [01:50:24.620 --> 01:50:26.620] who wants to be a bad guy. [01:50:26.620 --> 01:50:27.620] And there may be some, [01:50:27.620 --> 01:50:29.620] but every police officer I know [01:50:29.620 --> 01:50:30.620] wants to be a good guy. [01:50:30.660 --> 01:50:31.660] They became a policeman [01:50:31.660 --> 01:50:32.660] to be a good guy, [01:50:32.660 --> 01:50:35.660] but now we all perceive them [01:50:35.660 --> 01:50:36.660] as bad guys. [01:50:36.660 --> 01:50:38.660] What the heck is going on here? [01:50:38.660 --> 01:50:41.660] It can't be the policeman. [01:50:41.660 --> 01:50:43.660] There's something structured. [01:50:43.660 --> 01:50:44.660] Then we wanted to blame [01:50:44.660 --> 01:50:45.660] the prosecutors, [01:50:45.660 --> 01:50:47.660] we wanted to blame the judges, [01:50:47.660 --> 01:50:49.660] and where breath's going [01:50:49.660 --> 01:50:51.660] is saying it's none of them. [01:50:51.660 --> 01:50:53.660] They're not the bad guys. [01:50:53.660 --> 01:50:55.660] And even these people [01:50:55.660 --> 01:50:58.660] developing this training [01:50:58.700 --> 01:50:59.700] they think this is [01:50:59.700 --> 01:51:01.700] their job function. [01:51:03.700 --> 01:51:04.700] You and I, [01:51:04.700 --> 01:51:06.700] citizens in the Republic [01:51:06.700 --> 01:51:08.700] haven't gone to them [01:51:08.700 --> 01:51:09.700] and straightened them out [01:51:09.700 --> 01:51:10.700] on this. [01:51:10.700 --> 01:51:13.700] They need direction [01:51:13.700 --> 01:51:15.700] and guidance. [01:51:15.700 --> 01:51:17.700] We need to give it to them. [01:51:19.700 --> 01:51:22.700] They don't have to like it, [01:51:22.700 --> 01:51:25.700] but what I've found [01:51:25.740 --> 01:51:26.740] out, John, [01:51:26.740 --> 01:51:27.740] is when I'm dealing [01:51:27.740 --> 01:51:30.740] with a public agency, [01:51:30.740 --> 01:51:33.740] that is the worst thing [01:51:34.740 --> 01:51:37.740] is to have this third-party ringer, [01:51:37.740 --> 01:51:40.740] this no-to-bit, [01:51:40.740 --> 01:51:42.740] no-nothing ordinary citizen [01:51:42.740 --> 01:51:43.740] come in [01:51:43.740 --> 01:51:44.740] and tell them [01:51:44.740 --> 01:51:46.740] how to do their jobs. [01:51:47.740 --> 01:51:48.740] Well, we need [01:51:48.740 --> 01:51:49.740] a little more of that. [01:51:49.740 --> 01:51:52.740] Yes, we do. [01:51:52.740 --> 01:51:53.740] And for that, [01:51:53.780 --> 01:51:56.780] they're putting these guys [01:51:56.780 --> 01:51:58.780] up on a legal dime [01:51:58.780 --> 01:52:00.780] and they're dancing around on it [01:52:00.780 --> 01:52:01.780] trying to figure out [01:52:01.780 --> 01:52:03.780] how to get off of it. [01:52:03.780 --> 01:52:05.780] And that forces them [01:52:05.780 --> 01:52:06.780] to look more closely [01:52:06.780 --> 01:52:08.780] at what they're doing. [01:52:08.780 --> 01:52:10.780] And regardless of what happens [01:52:10.780 --> 01:52:11.780] at the end of the day, [01:52:11.780 --> 01:52:13.780] I suspect this training [01:52:13.780 --> 01:52:15.780] will be better off for it. [01:52:15.780 --> 01:52:17.780] OK, you were going to say [01:52:17.780 --> 01:52:19.780] something really insightful [01:52:19.780 --> 01:52:20.780] and intelligent. [01:52:20.780 --> 01:52:21.780] Oh, yeah. [01:52:21.780 --> 01:52:22.780] I am. [01:52:22.820 --> 01:52:24.820] It's too convenient [01:52:24.820 --> 01:52:27.820] to not know what the law is [01:52:27.820 --> 01:52:28.820] for judges. [01:52:28.820 --> 01:52:31.820] They think they can get away [01:52:31.820 --> 01:52:32.820] with that. [01:52:32.820 --> 01:52:33.820] But for us, [01:52:33.820 --> 01:52:34.820] ignorance of the law [01:52:34.820 --> 01:52:36.820] is no excuse. [01:52:36.820 --> 01:52:39.820] Funny how that works. [01:52:39.820 --> 01:52:42.820] It's convenient for them [01:52:42.820 --> 01:52:45.820] because they're making money [01:52:45.820 --> 01:52:47.820] for their court. [01:52:47.820 --> 01:52:48.820] They're looking good. [01:52:48.820 --> 01:52:50.820] The cops are looking good. [01:52:50.860 --> 01:52:53.860] And we're looking disgusted. [01:52:53.860 --> 01:52:54.860] Why? [01:52:54.860 --> 01:52:55.860] Because they violate our... [01:52:55.860 --> 01:52:56.860] Before you even get [01:52:56.860 --> 01:52:57.860] into the traffic court, [01:52:57.860 --> 01:52:58.860] for example, [01:52:58.860 --> 01:53:00.860] they have violated your rights [01:53:00.860 --> 01:53:01.860] at least once [01:53:01.860 --> 01:53:02.860] and you haven't even [01:53:02.860 --> 01:53:05.860] entered court yet. [01:53:05.860 --> 01:53:07.860] So it's convenient. [01:53:07.860 --> 01:53:09.860] It's all too convenient [01:53:09.860 --> 01:53:11.860] not to know the law. [01:53:11.860 --> 01:53:12.860] OK, John, [01:53:12.860 --> 01:53:14.860] how did they get there? [01:53:14.860 --> 01:53:15.860] How did the system [01:53:15.860 --> 01:53:18.860] get in this big a mess? [01:53:18.900 --> 01:53:19.900] It's a combination [01:53:19.900 --> 01:53:20.900] of three things. [01:53:20.900 --> 01:53:21.900] Number one, [01:53:21.900 --> 01:53:23.900] too many people [01:53:23.900 --> 01:53:24.900] called Americans [01:53:24.900 --> 01:53:27.900] have been concerned with [01:53:27.900 --> 01:53:29.900] the latest trollop [01:53:29.900 --> 01:53:30.900] that Charlie Sheen [01:53:30.900 --> 01:53:31.900] is going out with [01:53:31.900 --> 01:53:33.900] and Kim Kardashian's [01:53:33.900 --> 01:53:35.900] spray-on Capri pants [01:53:35.900 --> 01:53:37.900] and the latest hamburger [01:53:37.900 --> 01:53:38.900] at McDonald's. [01:53:38.900 --> 01:53:39.900] That's number one. [01:53:39.900 --> 01:53:40.900] Number two, [01:53:40.900 --> 01:53:43.900] the judges are making money. [01:53:43.900 --> 01:53:44.900] What? [01:53:44.940 --> 01:53:45.940] I'm sorry. [01:53:45.940 --> 01:53:48.940] Did you say spraying pants? [01:53:48.940 --> 01:53:49.940] Yeah. [01:53:49.940 --> 01:53:50.940] Kim Kardashian's [01:53:50.940 --> 01:53:53.940] spray-on Capri pants. [01:53:54.940 --> 01:53:56.940] I don't know what that means. [01:53:56.940 --> 01:53:57.940] That must be [01:53:57.940 --> 01:53:59.940] a celebrity thing. [01:53:59.940 --> 01:54:00.940] Must be. [01:54:00.940 --> 01:54:01.940] Yeah. [01:54:01.940 --> 01:54:04.940] So what's the remedy, John? [01:54:04.940 --> 01:54:05.940] The remedy? [01:54:05.940 --> 01:54:08.940] Well, the remedy is [01:54:08.940 --> 01:54:11.940] arse-jacking. [01:54:11.940 --> 01:54:12.940] Arse-jacking. [01:54:12.980 --> 01:54:14.980] Because they're going to use [01:54:14.980 --> 01:54:15.980] the excuse, [01:54:15.980 --> 01:54:16.980] well, we were never [01:54:16.980 --> 01:54:17.980] trained right, [01:54:17.980 --> 01:54:18.980] it's all too convenient. [01:54:18.980 --> 01:54:19.980] The second part of it [01:54:19.980 --> 01:54:20.980] is it's too convenient [01:54:20.980 --> 01:54:22.980] because they're making money. [01:54:22.980 --> 01:54:23.980] So, John, [01:54:23.980 --> 01:54:27.980] I think the whole point [01:54:27.980 --> 01:54:30.980] of this whole thing is [01:54:30.980 --> 01:54:32.980] this can only happen [01:54:32.980 --> 01:54:33.980] because we're not [01:54:33.980 --> 01:54:35.980] paying attention. [01:54:35.980 --> 01:54:36.980] Exactly. [01:54:36.980 --> 01:54:37.980] We're paying attention [01:54:37.980 --> 01:54:39.980] to Kim Kardashian's [01:54:39.980 --> 01:54:41.980] spray-on pants. [01:54:42.020 --> 01:54:43.020] Wait a minute, [01:54:43.020 --> 01:54:44.020] I really want to know [01:54:44.020 --> 01:54:45.020] more about those [01:54:45.020 --> 01:54:46.020] spray-on pants. [01:54:46.020 --> 01:54:47.020] Heck with the law, [01:54:47.020 --> 01:54:48.020] I want to know [01:54:48.020 --> 01:54:50.020] about these spray-on pants. [01:54:50.020 --> 01:54:51.020] We've got to get [01:54:51.020 --> 01:54:53.020] our priorities straight here. [01:54:53.020 --> 01:54:54.020] Okay. [01:54:54.020 --> 01:54:55.020] I have a question [01:54:55.020 --> 01:54:56.020] before we go. [01:54:56.020 --> 01:54:59.020] We've got 40 seconds. [01:54:59.020 --> 01:55:01.020] Can an uncle [01:55:01.020 --> 01:55:04.020] because a nephew [01:55:04.020 --> 01:55:06.020] got a COVID shot [01:55:06.020 --> 01:55:07.020] and he got [01:55:07.020 --> 01:55:08.020] turbo-cancer [01:55:08.020 --> 01:55:10.020] and it killed him. [01:55:10.020 --> 01:55:11.020] Can an uncle [01:55:11.060 --> 01:55:14.060] kill on behalf [01:55:14.060 --> 01:55:15.060] of the family? [01:55:15.060 --> 01:55:16.060] No. [01:55:16.060 --> 01:55:17.060] Not unless he was [01:55:17.060 --> 01:55:20.060] a guardian or custodian. [01:55:20.060 --> 01:55:21.060] Oh, I see. [01:55:21.060 --> 01:55:24.060] He has no standing. [01:55:24.060 --> 01:55:26.060] How about a mother? [01:55:26.060 --> 01:55:28.060] How about the family? [01:55:28.060 --> 01:55:29.060] A mother can. [01:55:29.060 --> 01:55:31.060] Unless the child was [01:55:31.060 --> 01:55:34.060] of the age of majority. [01:55:34.060 --> 01:55:37.060] Oh, he was 53. [01:55:37.060 --> 01:55:39.060] It would take a wife [01:55:39.060 --> 01:55:40.060] or a child. [01:55:40.100 --> 01:55:41.100] Okay. [01:55:41.100 --> 01:55:42.100] See you tomorrow night. [01:55:42.100 --> 01:55:44.100] Thank you all for listening. [01:55:44.100 --> 01:55:45.100] Good night. [01:56:10.100 --> 01:56:11.100] Call us toll free [01:56:11.100 --> 01:56:15.100] at 888-551-0102 [01:56:15.100 --> 01:56:16.100] or visit us online [01:56:16.100 --> 01:56:19.100] at bfa.org [01:56:19.100 --> 01:56:20.100] This translation [01:56:20.100 --> 01:56:21.100] is highly accurate [01:56:21.100 --> 01:56:22.100] and it comes [01:56:22.100 --> 01:56:23.100] with over 13,000 [01:56:23.100 --> 01:56:24.100] cross references [01:56:24.100 --> 01:56:26.100] plus charts and maps [01:56:26.100 --> 01:56:27.100] and an outline [01:56:27.100 --> 01:56:28.100] for every book of the Bible. [01:56:28.100 --> 01:56:30.100] This is truly a Bible [01:56:30.100 --> 01:56:31.100] you can understand. [01:56:31.100 --> 01:56:32.100] To get your free copy [01:56:32.100 --> 01:56:33.100] of the New Testament [01:56:33.100 --> 01:56:34.100] recovery version [01:56:34.100 --> 01:56:35.100] call us toll free [01:56:35.100 --> 01:56:39.100] at 888-551-0102 [01:56:39.140 --> 01:56:43.140] That's 888-551-0102 [01:56:43.140 --> 01:56:44.140] or visit us online [01:56:44.140 --> 01:56:47.140] at bfa.org [01:56:50.140 --> 01:56:51.140] You're listening [01:56:51.140 --> 01:56:53.140] to the Logos Radio Network [01:56:54.140 --> 01:56:57.140] at logosradionetwork.com [01:57:00.140 --> 01:57:01.140] The law of rights [01:57:01.140 --> 01:57:02.140] contains the first [01:57:02.140 --> 01:57:03.140] 10 amendments [01:57:03.140 --> 01:57:04.140] of our Constitution. [01:57:04.140 --> 01:57:05.140] They guarantee [01:57:05.140 --> 01:57:06.140] the specific freedoms [01:57:06.140 --> 01:57:07.140] Americans should know [01:57:07.140 --> 01:57:08.140] and protect. [01:57:08.180 --> 01:57:09.180] Our liberty depends on it. [01:57:09.180 --> 01:57:11.180] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [01:57:11.180 --> 01:57:12.180] and I'll be right back [01:57:12.180 --> 01:57:13.180] with an unforgettable way [01:57:13.180 --> 01:57:14.180] to remember your [01:57:14.180 --> 01:57:15.180] First Amendment rights. [01:57:15.180 --> 01:57:17.180] Privacy is under attack. [01:57:17.180 --> 01:57:18.180] When you give up data [01:57:18.180 --> 01:57:19.180] about yourself [01:57:19.180 --> 01:57:20.180] you'll never get it back again. [01:57:20.180 --> 01:57:22.180] And once your privacy is gone [01:57:22.180 --> 01:57:23.180] you'll find your freedoms [01:57:23.180 --> 01:57:25.180] will start to vanish too. [01:57:25.180 --> 01:57:27.180] So protect your rights. [01:57:27.180 --> 01:57:28.180] Say no to surveillance [01:57:28.180 --> 01:57:29.180] and keep your information [01:57:29.180 --> 01:57:30.180] to yourself. [01:57:30.180 --> 01:57:32.180] Privacy, it's worth [01:57:32.180 --> 01:57:33.180] hanging on to. [01:57:33.180 --> 01:57:34.180] This public service announcement [01:57:34.180 --> 01:57:35.180] is brought to you [01:57:35.180 --> 01:57:36.180] by startpage.com [01:57:36.220 --> 01:57:37.220] The private search [01:57:37.220 --> 01:57:38.220] engine alternative [01:57:38.220 --> 01:57:40.220] to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:57:40.220 --> 01:57:42.220] Start over with startpage. [01:57:44.220 --> 01:57:46.220] Spar, it's what fighters do. [01:57:46.220 --> 01:57:47.220] It's also how I remember [01:57:47.220 --> 01:57:48.220] the five guarantees [01:57:48.220 --> 01:57:49.220] of the First Amendment. [01:57:49.220 --> 01:57:50.220] If you plan to take away [01:57:50.220 --> 01:57:51.220] my rights [01:57:51.220 --> 01:57:52.220] I'm going to spar with you. [01:57:52.220 --> 01:57:54.220] SPAR with an extra P. [01:57:54.220 --> 01:57:57.220] S for speech, P for press, [01:57:57.220 --> 01:57:58.220] another P for petition, [01:57:58.220 --> 01:58:00.220] A for assembly, [01:58:00.220 --> 01:58:01.220] and R for religion. [01:58:01.220 --> 01:58:02.220] Most Americans are familiar [01:58:02.220 --> 01:58:03.220] with the First Amendment [01:58:03.220 --> 01:58:05.220] guarantees of free speech, [01:58:05.260 --> 01:58:06.260] press, assembly, [01:58:06.260 --> 01:58:07.260] and religion. [01:58:07.260 --> 01:58:08.260] But petition for redress [01:58:08.260 --> 01:58:09.260] is another matter. [01:58:09.260 --> 01:58:10.260] We have the right [01:58:10.260 --> 01:58:11.260] to petition the government [01:58:11.260 --> 01:58:13.260] for a redress of grievances. [01:58:13.260 --> 01:58:14.260] It means that if we're unhappy [01:58:14.260 --> 01:58:15.260] with what's going on [01:58:15.260 --> 01:58:16.260] in our government [01:58:16.260 --> 01:58:17.260] we can spell out the reasons [01:58:17.260 --> 01:58:18.260] without fear of being [01:58:18.260 --> 01:58:19.260] thrown into jail. [01:58:19.260 --> 01:58:21.260] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:58:21.260 --> 01:58:22.260] More news and information [01:58:22.260 --> 01:58:24.260] at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:58:29.260 --> 01:58:30.260] The Bill of Rights [01:58:30.260 --> 01:58:31.260] contains the first [01:58:31.260 --> 01:58:32.260] 10 amendments [01:58:32.260 --> 01:58:33.260] of our Constitution. [01:58:33.260 --> 01:58:34.260] They guarantee [01:58:34.300 --> 01:58:35.300] the specific freedoms [01:58:35.300 --> 01:58:36.300] Americans should know [01:58:36.300 --> 01:58:37.300] and protect. [01:58:37.300 --> 01:58:38.300] Our liberty depends on it. [01:58:38.300 --> 01:58:39.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht [01:58:39.300 --> 01:58:40.300] and I'll be right back [01:58:40.300 --> 01:58:41.300] with an unforgettable way [01:58:41.300 --> 01:58:42.300] to remember [01:58:42.300 --> 01:58:43.300] one of your [01:58:43.300 --> 01:58:44.300] constitutional rights. [01:58:45.300 --> 01:58:47.300] Privacy is under attack. [01:58:47.300 --> 01:58:48.300] When you give up data [01:58:48.300 --> 01:58:49.300] about yourself [01:58:49.300 --> 01:58:50.300] you'll never get it back again. [01:58:50.300 --> 01:58:52.300] And once your privacy is gone [01:58:52.300 --> 01:58:53.300] you'll find your freedoms [01:58:53.300 --> 01:58:55.300] will start to vanish too. [01:58:55.300 --> 01:58:56.300] So protect your rights. [01:58:56.300 --> 01:58:58.300] Say no to surveillance [01:58:58.300 --> 01:58:59.300] and keep your information [01:58:59.300 --> 01:59:00.300] to yourself. [01:59:00.300 --> 01:59:01.300] Privacy. [01:59:01.300 --> 01:59:03.300] It's worth hanging onto. [01:59:03.340 --> 01:59:04.340] This public service [01:59:04.340 --> 01:59:05.340] announcement [01:59:05.340 --> 01:59:06.340] is brought to you [01:59:06.340 --> 01:59:07.340] by StartPage.com [01:59:07.340 --> 01:59:08.340] the private search engine [01:59:08.340 --> 01:59:09.340] alternative to Google, [01:59:09.340 --> 01:59:10.340] Yahoo and Bing. [01:59:10.340 --> 01:59:13.340] Start over with StartPage. [01:59:14.340 --> 01:59:15.340] When I think of [01:59:15.340 --> 01:59:16.340] the Second Amendment [01:59:16.340 --> 01:59:17.340] I visualize myself [01:59:17.340 --> 01:59:18.340] wrapping my two arms [01:59:18.340 --> 01:59:19.340] around the Bill of Rights [01:59:19.340 --> 01:59:20.340] in a big old bear hug. [01:59:20.340 --> 01:59:21.340] It's how I remember [01:59:21.340 --> 01:59:22.340] that the Second Amendment [01:59:22.340 --> 01:59:23.340] guarantees us [01:59:23.340 --> 01:59:24.340] the right to bear arms. [01:59:24.340 --> 01:59:26.340] Arms that embrace our freedoms [01:59:26.340 --> 01:59:27.340] and won't let anyone [01:59:27.340 --> 01:59:28.340] take them away [01:59:28.340 --> 01:59:29.340] without a fight. [01:59:29.340 --> 01:59:30.340] Get it? [01:59:30.340 --> 01:59:31.340] Two arms? [01:59:31.340 --> 01:59:32.340] Bear hug? [01:59:32.380 --> 01:59:33.380] The late Senator [01:59:33.380 --> 01:59:34.380] Hubert Humphrey [01:59:34.380 --> 01:59:35.380] captured the spirit [01:59:35.380 --> 01:59:36.380] of the Second Amendment [01:59:36.380 --> 01:59:37.380] so well when he said [01:59:37.380 --> 01:59:38.380] the right of the citizens [01:59:38.380 --> 01:59:39.380] to bear arms [01:59:39.380 --> 01:59:40.380] is just one guarantee [01:59:40.380 --> 01:59:42.380] against arbitrary government. [01:59:42.380 --> 01:59:43.380] One more safeguard [01:59:43.380 --> 01:59:44.380] against the tyranny [01:59:44.380 --> 01:59:45.380] which now appears [01:59:45.380 --> 01:59:46.380] remote in America [01:59:46.380 --> 01:59:47.380] but which historically [01:59:47.380 --> 01:59:48.380] has proved [01:59:48.380 --> 01:59:49.380] to always be possible. [01:59:49.380 --> 01:59:51.380] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:59:51.380 --> 01:59:52.380] More news and information [01:59:52.380 --> 01:59:54.380] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:00:02.380 --> 02:00:04.380] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:00:04.380 --> 02:00:06.380] More news and information [02:00:06.380 --> 02:00:08.380] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:00:32.380 --> 02:00:34.380] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:00:34.380 --> 02:00:36.380] More news and information [02:00:36.380 --> 02:00:38.380] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:01:02.340 --> 02:01:03.380] Wow! [02:01:32.380 --> 02:01:35.380] Music [02:01:35.380 --> 02:01:38.380] Music [02:01:38.380 --> 02:01:41.380] Music [02:01:41.380 --> 02:01:44.380] Music [02:01:44.380 --> 02:01:47.380] Music [02:01:47.380 --> 02:01:50.380] Music [02:01:50.380 --> 02:01:53.380] Music [02:01:53.380 --> 02:01:56.380] Music [02:01:56.380 --> 02:01:59.380] Music [02:01:59.380 --> 02:02:00.420] Music