[00:00.000 --> 00:28.180] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do? [00:28.180 --> 00:31.900] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:31.900 --> 00:37.580] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:37.580 --> 00:42.980] When you were eight and you had bad traits You go to school and learn the golden rule [00:42.980 --> 00:48.380] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? If you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.380 --> 00:53.820] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:53.820 --> 00:59.420] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:59.420 --> 01:02.220] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [01:02.220 --> 01:05.020] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [01:05.020 --> 01:07.620] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister [01:07.620 --> 01:10.220] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me [01:10.220 --> 01:15.620] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:15.620 --> 01:21.220] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:21.220 --> 01:26.820] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:26.820 --> 01:32.420] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:32.420 --> 01:37.220] Nobody now give you no break Police now give you no break [01:37.220 --> 01:43.220] That old soldier man now give you no break Not even your agent now give you no breaks [01:43.220 --> 01:48.820] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:48.820 --> 01:54.420] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:54.420 --> 02:00.020] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [02:00.020 --> 02:06.420] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [02:18.820 --> 02:35.180] Don't you know you're a human being Born of a mother with a lover for father [02:35.180 --> 02:42.340] Reflection comes and reflection goes I know sometimes you wanna let go [02:42.340 --> 02:48.340] Hey, hey, hey, I know sometimes you wanna let go [02:48.340 --> 02:59.340] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do What you gonna do when they come for you [02:59.340 --> 03:06.340] You're too bad, you're too rude You're too bad [03:12.340 --> 03:20.340] The ninth day of May 2025, and we have a very special guest again, Mr. Davis Toulis [03:20.340 --> 03:30.340] out of Tennessee, Chattanooga, Tennessee, and he is suing the state of Tennessee [03:30.340 --> 03:36.340] over their automotive insurance policies. Will you tell us where you're at on that? [03:36.340 --> 03:39.340] Apparently you're in the appeal process. [03:39.340 --> 03:45.340] Well, the appeal process, Randall, is in my federal case to end traffic stops [03:45.340 --> 03:51.340] as we know them by forcing them into the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act [03:51.340 --> 03:57.340] and to decriminalize them. That's a separate case. The insurance case is in the [03:57.340 --> 04:03.340] I'm in three venues in that case, one federal, and in the federal case the [04:03.340 --> 04:09.340] judge is deciding whether to delay the case while the state matters are proceeding, [04:09.340 --> 04:14.340] so we're waiting a ruling from him on that. It's called the Younger Doctrine. [04:14.340 --> 04:18.340] In the state, I'm in Chan Street Court. [04:18.340 --> 04:20.340] Young or Younger? [04:20.340 --> 04:22.340] It's called the Younger Doctrine. [04:22.340 --> 04:26.340] There's two of them. One is the Young Doctrine, and that's the one that allows you [04:26.340 --> 04:33.340] to sue an official for acting outside scope, and then there's the Younger Doctrine. [04:33.340 --> 04:40.340] Right. Younger is abstention in respect of states' rights and state proceedings. [04:40.340 --> 04:41.340] Oh, okay. [04:41.340 --> 04:46.340] That's the Younger one. So Younger may hit my federal case, but that'll be hanging [04:46.340 --> 04:52.340] over the Commissioner's head while he dithers in the state case. In state, it's [04:52.340 --> 04:57.340] Chan Street Court, which is a court of record, equity court, and then I also have [04:57.340 --> 05:04.340] two cases in agency in the Department of Revenue, and what I found, Randall, is that [05:04.340 --> 05:10.340] no one has read this law for 23 years. No one's ever read it. No one's ever challenged it. [05:10.340 --> 05:15.340] The defense bar, we have 18,000 lawyers in Tennessee. Not one has read the statute to see [05:15.340 --> 05:22.340] what's going on, and when I was revoked in my tag on my 2000 Honda Odyssey minivan, [05:22.340 --> 05:27.340] well, guess what? I did what any ordinary person would do of good sense, and that's [05:27.340 --> 05:32.340] start reading the statute, starting with the citations in the final notice of [05:32.340 --> 05:41.340] revocation, and that made my car, turned my car back into a pumpkin. My minivan had been [05:41.340 --> 05:47.340] a motor vehicle. Now it's just a regular automobile or private conveyance, and I can't [05:47.340 --> 05:52.340] use it for commerce, so I'm suing in agency and in these other venues to get back the [05:52.340 --> 05:57.340] privilege. I'm suing for the privilege that I have a right to have. Now you say, what [05:57.340 --> 06:02.340] kind of patriot would be doing that screwy thing like that, Randall, right? [06:02.340 --> 06:07.340] Well, you're preaching to the gallery here. [06:07.340 --> 06:13.340] Well, but you know, there's no sin in having a privilege, okay? And I'm suing because [06:13.340 --> 06:21.340] all I have is an automobile, this 330,000 mile Honda Odyssey minivan. I'm trying to [06:21.340 --> 06:27.340] convert it back into a motor vehicle, as the trooper would say, and that's because I want [06:27.340 --> 06:34.340] to be able to use it under tag and as a licensee of my Department of Safety so I can use it [06:34.340 --> 06:39.340] for carrying goods and people for hire. That's why anybody would get a driver's license [06:39.340 --> 06:45.340] and why anybody would get their car registered as an instrumentality of commerce with their [06:45.340 --> 06:50.340] revenue departments. That is so they can use it for private profit and gain in which your [06:50.340 --> 06:57.340] place of business is the roadway, the thoroughfare, the highway itself. And so the most recent [06:57.340 --> 07:05.340] thing, the most hot action in the past 10 days has been in Chancery. One is a motion [07:05.340 --> 07:13.340] for interlocutory appeal. The judge ruled against an injunction that I had proposed [07:13.340 --> 07:20.340] without sufficient judicial grounds. She ruled against it on grounds of effect upon two [07:20.340 --> 07:26.340] agencies managing this gigantic fraud out of Nashville and the disturbance that would [07:26.340 --> 07:31.340] cause. So she didn't have a ruling based on the statute, which she had plenty of time [07:31.340 --> 07:37.340] to look at. And so I've got interlocutory appeal and then one week from today in Nashville [07:37.340 --> 07:45.340] I'll be showing up in the morning for a motions hearing. The two commissioners, the monsters [07:45.340 --> 07:52.340] in fraud have a motion for dismissal. So there, and maybe you want to hear about this, [07:52.340 --> 07:57.340] and that's the question of sovereignty and sovereign immunity. And the argument in a [07:57.340 --> 08:03.340] nutshell that we've determined is that the cases that require the state's permission [08:03.340 --> 08:09.340] to sue, which means you can sue through agency under the Uniform and Miscreant Procedures [08:09.340 --> 08:14.340] Act or you can sue through the Claims Commission, those are when the government is operating [08:14.340 --> 08:20.340] normally. And so you can't sue the state under sovereign immunity doctrine in probably [08:20.340 --> 08:28.340] most states. Same way here, but when the commissioners are apart from the law and outside the law [08:28.340 --> 08:33.340] and effectively making revolution against the people, they don't have that immunity. [08:33.340 --> 08:35.340] And that's one of my arguments. [08:35.340 --> 08:43.340] What the case law says in the suit I did against the state of Texas is I have case law that [08:43.340 --> 08:52.340] says that the sovereign cannot be sued and the sovereign can do no wrong. And since the [08:52.340 --> 08:59.340] sovereign can do no wrong, the sovereign cannot authorize someone else to do wrong. So when [08:59.340 --> 09:05.340] a policeman stops you or any public official does anything, that's not the sovereign doing [09:05.340 --> 09:11.340] it, that's a human being doing it because the sovereign doesn't really exist, it's [09:11.340 --> 09:19.340] just a legal fiction. So legal fictions can't do anything. Human beings do things. And if [09:19.340 --> 09:26.340] a human being does something that violates a law or a constitutional right, he does not [09:26.340 --> 09:32.340] do that in the name of the sovereign because the sovereign cannot authorize a human being [09:32.340 --> 09:40.340] to do wrong. So therefore if he does wrong, he does so outside of scope and he has no [09:40.340 --> 09:49.340] immunity. Now if a backhoe operator is working on the side of the highway and he swings a [09:49.340 --> 09:57.340] backhoe out and whacks your window as you're driving past, that's a torch. And people can do [09:57.340 --> 10:03.340] torch without violating the sovereign. When they violated law. [10:10.340 --> 10:15.340] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. Michael Mears has won six [10:15.340 --> 10:20.340] cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too. You'll get step-by-step [10:20.340 --> 10:25.340] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [10:25.340 --> 10:30.340] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. How to answer letters and phone [10:30.340 --> 10:35.340] calls. How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. How to turn the financial tables on [10:35.340 --> 10:41.340] them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution [10:41.340 --> 10:46.340] for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more [10:46.340 --> 10:51.340] information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or [10:51.340 --> 11:00.340] email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [11:00.340 --> 11:08.340] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the [11:08.340 --> 11:12.340] Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, [11:12.340 --> 11:16.340] the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our [11:16.340 --> 11:20.340] own rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [11:20.340 --> 11:24.340] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [11:24.340 --> 11:28.340] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [11:28.340 --> 11:32.340] our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of [11:32.340 --> 11:36.340] Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you [11:36.340 --> 11:40.340] understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own [11:40.340 --> 11:45.340] copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [11:45.340 --> 11:48.340] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law [11:48.340 --> 11:53.340] Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and [11:53.340 --> 11:57.340] other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [11:57.340 --> 12:02.340] from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all [12:02.340 --> 12:05.340] want and deserve. [12:27.340 --> 12:54.340] Okay, when we went out, I was running my mouth again. David, are you familiar with that sovereign [12:54.340 --> 13:05.340] immunity? I may be wasting your time talking about that. Wait, I don't know, David, your mic is shut [13:05.340 --> 13:10.340] off. [13:10.340 --> 13:12.340] Okay, can you hear me now? [13:12.340 --> 13:14.340] Now we can hear you, yes. [13:14.340 --> 13:20.340] Okay, most people when they sue a commissioner for some breach of law on public, they're going to come [13:20.340 --> 13:25.340] up with the question of sovereign immunity. I've had that question thrown at me in the federal case and [13:25.340 --> 13:29.340] the state has immunity and I did not answer sufficiently the question, the objection on sovereign [13:29.340 --> 13:34.340] immunity. So I may have to lose the state as one of my defendants in the federal case. But in the state [13:34.340 --> 13:42.340] case, I did my reading and I read the cases on when and how the state allows itself to be sued. And [13:42.340 --> 13:47.340] the certainly in the cases that were cited by the other side, always read the cases cited by the other [13:47.340 --> 13:53.340] side because often they are double-tongued. They may have something to offer the other side, but they [13:53.340 --> 13:59.340] probably have something to offer you. Just for example of that, on that point, when we were [13:59.340 --> 14:07.340] interested in covering the secret judicial conference in Nashville, we were told, well, here's a [14:07.340 --> 14:13.340] case that you need to read. And the case didn't secure the secrecy of the judicial conference at [14:13.340 --> 14:21.340] all. In fact, it made it clear it was open for us to cover it. So of course, that was when my radio [14:21.340 --> 14:28.340] station, mid-state bureau chief and I went to that event and sort of crashed it, got in and caused a [14:28.340 --> 14:39.340] huge ruckus. So cases have two faces and often cases are used for a quote or a point and the case is [14:39.340 --> 14:44.340] really much stronger in your favor if you just read the cases used by the other side. Always start [14:44.340 --> 14:50.340] your reading in your litigation with what the other side has to say and read their cases from their [14:50.340 --> 14:56.340] perspective and then you'll see that, well, it's not unalloyed what they're drawing from it in the way [14:56.340 --> 14:59.340] of point or proof or argument. [14:59.340 --> 15:06.340] It's very, very important that you read the other side's cases. First reason is they can give you [15:06.340 --> 15:14.340] your first case on point because they don't make these rulings in a vacuum. They say, we have this [15:14.340 --> 15:21.340] ruling on one side over here and this ruling on the other side over here and we're making this [15:21.340 --> 15:28.340] distinction between the two of those. So in that kind of an argument, they give you cases slightly off [15:28.340 --> 15:35.340] point so you can use their case to find your cases on point. And the other thing is, it's the lawyers [15:35.340 --> 15:43.340] always get it wrong. Sometimes I think they practice getting it wrong. [15:43.340 --> 15:51.340] Well, it's important to understand the peril of using a case. If you use a case, you invite the [15:51.340 --> 15:57.340] other side to look at that case and have them argue that, well, you're misusing the case, you're [15:57.340 --> 16:03.340] misrepresenting the case, you're borrowing the dicta from the case, you're using something that's [16:03.340 --> 16:10.340] convenient but doesn't really prove your case. And the case, in fact, has strong suggestions against [16:10.340 --> 16:14.340] your position. [16:14.340 --> 16:24.340] My favorite story on that is a friend of mine was in the federal court on an IRS lien issue. [16:24.340 --> 16:32.340] And he called up all disconnubulated because they had brought in these two cases he never saw. [16:32.340 --> 16:39.340] And we told him, well, read them. He read them. He called back next week, chuckling and laughing. [16:39.340 --> 16:49.340] And what the lawyers did was look at the case notes. And the case note had this exact quote they used. [16:49.340 --> 16:59.340] But when he looked in the case itself, it said, this used to be the seminal position, but this case [16:59.340 --> 17:06.340] changed that to something else. Both cases did the same thing. They just read the head note and [17:06.340 --> 17:08.340] didn't read the case. [17:08.340 --> 17:14.340] Well, that kind of mistake, remember, was made by people like you, the listener, when a good friend of yours [17:14.340 --> 17:20.340] on Facebook sends you a bunch of cases dealing with magnificent quotes about liberty, right, or the [17:20.340 --> 17:25.340] disability of a commissioner or an official and what they have to do and how you can show them that [17:25.340 --> 17:33.340] you're right. Well, some cases that are passed around like that are false. They're just apocryphal. [17:33.340 --> 17:42.340] They're passed along as if they're from the mouth of James Madison himself. And they didn't come from that. [17:42.340 --> 17:46.340] Some clever person wanted someone to say that, and then they just made it up. [17:46.340 --> 17:54.340] Eddie Craig called me once and he said, have you read the Hernandez case? I'm sorry, Garcia case. [17:54.340 --> 18:01.340] This was a case everybody in Texas used for traffic. And I said, well, no, everybody uses it. [18:01.340 --> 18:09.340] I hadn't read it. He said, you need to read it. The Supreme Court cited that case, and it did not have [18:09.340 --> 18:22.340] anything to do with traffic. But the first lawyer apparently told his paralegal what case to cite, [18:22.340 --> 18:28.340] and she got the case wrong. But they trusted this lawyer, well-known lawyer, and everybody trusted him. [18:28.340 --> 18:35.340] So they didn't double-check his citing. And it got to the appellate court, and the appellate court accepted it. [18:35.340 --> 18:40.340] And the Supreme Court, because it had got through the appellate court, they accepted it. [18:40.340 --> 18:46.340] It was bad case law from the beginning. David's absolutely right. [18:46.340 --> 18:54.340] Let me get back to this thing about insurance, because every state has some kind of scheme for automobile insurance. [18:54.340 --> 19:00.340] The thing that we found in Tennessee is this, that the financial responsibility law pivots. [19:01.340 --> 19:09.340] All the financial responsibility law states have, I promise you, the same machinery that works inside. [19:09.340 --> 19:16.340] The machinery is actually very simple. It's four words. And in our state, it's motor vehicle liability policy. [19:16.340 --> 19:21.340] Now, that is a special kind of high-risk insurance that comes with a certificate. [19:21.340 --> 19:26.340] And in Texas and all the other states have the same one. It's called the SR-22. [19:26.340 --> 19:33.340] And there are different forms, but that's the industry verbiage for what is a state-certified, state-recognized certificate [19:33.340 --> 19:41.340] that that insurance that you have as a high-risk person, a suspendee who gets the privilege back, [19:41.340 --> 19:52.340] unconditioned precedent of your buying this high-risk policy, that's the machinery that these insurance, [19:52.340 --> 19:57.340] these financial responsibility insurance states have. Now, other states have mandatory insurance. [19:57.340 --> 20:03.340] In other words, you can't register your car. You can't even get a driver's license unless you have POFR, [20:03.340 --> 20:07.340] proof of financial responsibility or financial security. [20:07.340 --> 20:17.340] The states like mine that are voluntary insurance states have the obligation for insurance, [20:18.340 --> 20:23.340] or let's say for financial responsibility, look two ways. One way looks backwards in time, [20:23.340 --> 20:31.340] which is to say you have an accident, a qualifying accident, and you have to show financial responsibility under a deadline. [20:31.340 --> 20:40.340] Here's 20 days. And that is to show the commissioner of safety or your sort of overseer of transportation [20:40.340 --> 20:44.340] that you can make good on the accident in which you're involved. [20:44.340 --> 20:50.340] The forward-looking type of financial security or financial responsibility is this policy. [20:50.340 --> 20:55.340] And that's because you have had an accident, you have been convicted of DUI, reckless driving, [20:55.340 --> 21:03.340] you have an unpaid civil court judgment and a traffic case. Those are grounds for suspension of your privileges. [21:03.340 --> 21:10.340] And you can get that privilege back, sir, but you have to have insurance, let's say, up to four years. [21:10.340 --> 21:16.340] And so you get the privilege back, tag and license, but you have to have this high-risk policy. [21:16.340 --> 21:22.340] And the whole financial responsibility scheme runs on that. The whole thing is about that, [21:22.340 --> 21:27.340] secured and the surveillance of that type of insurance on those people who have to have it. [21:27.340 --> 21:35.340] Again, it's a condition requisite for the privilege of using and driving a motor vehicle, [21:35.340 --> 21:43.340] because that's a commercial thing. And they can use your privilege coercively, again, in the public interest. [21:43.340 --> 21:51.340] There's even a moral reason for this system is to have the authority over the occupation of driving and operating. [21:51.340 --> 21:59.340] It's an occupation and a privilege. They can use their coercive machinery to look out for people [21:59.340 --> 22:06.340] forcing the high-risk person to have this protective forward-looking coverage. [22:06.340 --> 22:12.340] Okay. And on the surface, that sounds reasonable. [22:12.340 --> 22:23.340] Yes. And so what's happened here in the suit that I have in these venues is to say, [22:24.340 --> 22:28.340] well, hey, you're forcing me to buy just regular insurance. [22:28.340 --> 22:38.340] And it is an industry capture of two departments of our state, $2 billion a year in free premiums going to these insurers. [22:38.340 --> 22:51.340] And in a five-year period, I calculated $152 million in taxes collected on these fraudulently coerced premiums by the state. [22:51.340 --> 22:57.340] And so the state is defrauding everybody and prosecuting the poor. [23:07.340 --> 23:12.340] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively affected our health? [23:12.340 --> 23:19.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [23:19.340 --> 23:25.340] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [23:25.340 --> 23:30.340] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [23:30.340 --> 23:35.340] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [23:35.340 --> 23:38.340] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [23:38.340 --> 23:45.340] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [23:45.340 --> 23:48.340] Start over with Startpage. [23:49.340 --> 23:52.340] Cell phones emit radiofrequency energy. It's a fact. [23:52.340 --> 23:57.340] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [23:57.340 --> 24:02.340] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [24:02.340 --> 24:07.340] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [24:07.340 --> 24:16.340] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [24:16.340 --> 24:21.340] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any chances. [24:21.340 --> 24:25.340] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [24:25.340 --> 24:30.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [24:47.340 --> 24:51.340] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [24:51.340 --> 24:55.340] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [24:55.340 --> 24:57.340] and believe there is more to the story. [24:57.340 --> 25:00.340] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [25:00.340 --> 25:02.340] Go to buildingwhat.org. [25:02.340 --> 25:05.340] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [25:05.340 --> 25:11.340] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [25:11.340 --> 25:17.340] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for scripture talk, [25:17.340 --> 25:22.340] where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [25:22.340 --> 25:29.340] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. [25:29.340 --> 25:37.340] 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. [25:37.340 --> 25:44.340] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [25:44.340 --> 25:49.340] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [25:49.340 --> 25:55.340] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [25:55.340 --> 26:05.340] 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. [26:08.340 --> 26:15.340] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com [26:16.340 --> 26:34.340] Yeah, I got a warrant, and I'm gonna solve them, to the head government them, prosecute them. Okay. [26:34.340 --> 26:43.340] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of the Radio, and we have some college on the board. [26:43.340 --> 26:50.340] I'm gonna go to Tina. We haven't seen Tina in quite a while. I'm sorry, I haven't heard from Tina in quite a while. [26:50.340 --> 26:55.340] Tina, do you have a question on point? [26:55.340 --> 26:59.340] I do have a question. [26:59.340 --> 27:02.340] Okay, hold on, Tina. You're very, very soft. [27:02.340 --> 27:07.340] Hold on a second. Let me have a question. [27:07.340 --> 27:08.340] Take the Bluetooth off. [27:08.340 --> 27:29.340] No, Tina, you're so soft, we can barely hear you. [27:29.340 --> 27:41.340] Well, we got that part fixed. They updated our security certificate, and now you can, there was a way to do it before that, but it was a little complicated. [27:41.340 --> 27:45.340] So now that's not a problem. So you should be able to hear us okay. [27:45.340 --> 27:51.340] Wonderful. I didn't want to get on and ask a question when I didn't have one. I didn't want to tie up a phone line to listen. [27:51.340 --> 28:00.340] So anyway, my question today is, I've seen in this, you know, loads of money by... [28:00.340 --> 28:12.340] Wait, wait, Tina, Tina, I'm having a terrible time hearing you. Can you imagine that you're upset at your husband? Use that voice. [28:12.340 --> 28:18.340] Or your partner. [28:18.340 --> 28:30.340] Well, I don't find the... Let me take this as a battery charging in the background. So maybe that's interfering with the phone. I'll take that off. [28:30.340 --> 28:32.340] Maybe that's better. [28:32.340 --> 28:34.340] No, that didn't help. [28:34.340 --> 28:35.340] Oh. [28:35.340 --> 28:40.340] But go ahead. I'll put you in the hearing aid. Can you hear her all right, David? [28:40.340 --> 28:43.340] I can, I can, I can, it'll work. Go ahead. [28:43.340 --> 28:45.340] Okay. [28:45.340 --> 28:59.340] So these people in this business, they filed a bankruptcy in late 2023, Chapter 7, having thousands and thousands of dollars. [28:59.340 --> 29:06.340] They put me down as owing me the money. They put me down as a creditor. I filed an adversary proceeding, [29:07.340 --> 29:18.340] with, you know, informal paupers, which the judge did not like. It took him three months to decide on my informal paupers status. [29:18.340 --> 29:28.340] And the day he approved it, he dismissed my case. This is the one with the attorney. So I never got a chance to amend. [29:28.340 --> 29:39.340] He just dismissed it saying, I can't possibly collect on this debt. It's time barred outside the statute of limitations, never proven that the guy owes it. [29:39.340 --> 29:45.340] And so I appealed it. They denied it. So now I'm going to appeal the appellate court. [29:45.340 --> 29:57.340] Because, you know, if a party pays on a debt, no matter how small a payment they make, that restarts the clock. [29:57.340 --> 30:07.340] Well, the judge is basically ignoring that. He's saying, well, this is from 2012. And even though they've, you know, been paying you a little bit at a time, [30:07.340 --> 30:12.340] that doesn't restart the clock, when the law says it does. [30:12.340 --> 30:19.340] And he also said that, you know, I haven't proven this particular party is part of the business. [30:19.340 --> 30:28.340] Well, emails came from him and his partner. Two of the checks had his name on it as the remittal. [30:28.340 --> 30:34.340] So how does that prove that he was a party to it and he's admitting the debt? [30:34.340 --> 30:49.340] Is there something I'm missing here? Or is the judge just biased against me because I'm pro se, the other party has an attorney, and I'm not paying their court fees because I'm in formal purpose? [30:49.340 --> 31:01.340] Judge, it's hard to say. This is complex. And has the judge clarified why he's taking the position he's taken? [31:01.340 --> 31:11.340] Generally, they give you chapter and verse in case law in support of their position. Have you received findings of fact and conclusions? [31:11.340 --> 31:23.340] Not exactly, no. I've just filed for reconsideration of the appellate court's decision, and that was two days ago. [31:23.340 --> 31:30.340] And then today I filed an appeal against the appellate court decision going up to the next level. [31:30.340 --> 31:36.340] He just says that I'm tired, you know, and I haven't proven it. [31:36.340 --> 31:56.340] But the law says that if a debtor pays any amount, no matter how small, if they admit to the debt, either in writing or verbally, then the statute of limitations is reset from that time. [31:56.340 --> 32:03.340] If the party receiving the payment accepts the payment? [32:03.340 --> 32:06.340] And I did. [32:06.340 --> 32:20.340] They can refuse to accept a payment if it's not something that brings them up to date, or if it's insufficient amount of payment, they can refuse it. [32:20.340 --> 32:26.340] But if they didn't, then that should be on them. [32:26.340 --> 32:31.340] Yeah, I accepted the payment. I'm the creditor. I accepted their small payments. [32:31.340 --> 32:37.340] Now, the strange thing is this particular party has been investigated by the FTC. [32:37.340 --> 32:44.340] They were apparently able to purchase a luxury home in 2022. [32:44.340 --> 32:53.340] It's just surprisingly enough in time for them to then two years later or a year later fire for Chapter 7. [32:53.340 --> 33:04.340] But because of the laws of Tennessee, they're able to keep their home, even though it's a luxury home, and two luxury vehicles, one $73,000 vehicle. [33:04.340 --> 33:18.340] That's similar. In Texas, we had an ex-governor bankrupted, and he was able to keep his home in 25 attached acres. [33:18.340 --> 33:25.340] Well, his home happened to be about a 40-room mansion. [33:25.340 --> 33:31.340] But under our homestead laws, they couldn't take his home from him, and they couldn't take it. [33:31.340 --> 33:37.340] He had to leave him with automobiles sufficient that he and his wife could move around and do what they need. [33:37.340 --> 33:43.340] Now, the fact that those automobiles are very expensive, the law didn't address that. [33:43.340 --> 33:50.340] It didn't say you can only keep a Conqueror or a cheap old beater. [33:50.340 --> 33:55.340] It says you can keep your automobile, and it sounds like what you're dealing with. [33:55.340 --> 34:01.340] David, you're in Tennessee. Do you have any perspective on this? [34:01.340 --> 34:12.340] No, I'm afraid I don't, though I have dealt with lenders, and one of my cases is against lenders, and the controversy is over the usury statute. [34:12.340 --> 34:17.340] I'm bereft of any wisdom or insight. [34:17.340 --> 34:29.340] Okay. I have some, but Tina, you're in California, and you're saying this debt is out of Tennessee? [34:29.340 --> 34:33.340] Correct. The business was out of Tennessee. [34:33.340 --> 34:38.340] So I take it you're in the federal court? [34:38.340 --> 34:43.340] Well, I was in the bankruptcy court, because they filed it. [34:43.340 --> 34:46.340] Okay, that's a federal bankruptcy. [34:46.340 --> 34:50.340] Okay. Did you bankrupt, or did another party bankrupt? [34:50.340 --> 34:55.340] They bankrupt. They filed a Chapter 7 to avoid… [34:55.340 --> 35:00.340] Okay. You're talking about that consignment issue? [35:00.340 --> 35:02.340] No, totally different. [35:02.340 --> 35:04.340] Oh, okay. [35:04.340 --> 35:12.340] The consignment issue is done. I got them far from filing bankruptcy ever again, so I'm good on that one. [35:12.340 --> 35:20.340] Tina is someone you do not want after you. [35:20.340 --> 35:23.340] No, you don't. [35:23.340 --> 35:39.340] She actually beat them up in California, and the judge threatened her if she continued to file appeals, and she filed them anyway. [35:39.340 --> 35:43.340] So this one's totally different. I'm not familiar with this one. [35:43.340 --> 35:46.340] No, it's a totally different debt. [35:46.340 --> 36:02.340] And, you know, it's just appalling to me that this party can be under investigation by the FTC for criminology, and owes millions of dollars, basically, and just, you know, he's earning enough money. [36:03.340 --> 36:17.340] He was able to purchase this house, but he can't remember how much he put down, and his bankruptcy filing, oh, he was paying $400 a month to charity, but he wasn't paying his creditors. [36:17.340 --> 36:20.340] Well, that's interesting. [36:20.340 --> 36:31.340] Yeah, you know, I'm not letting it go. I'm going up to the next level, and if I don't get anywhere here, I'm just going to file a ripoff report and tell everybody and see if I can get the police to do an investigation. [36:31.340 --> 36:43.340] Probably they don't want to because they're lazier a lot of the times, but, you know, it's made before there's this many people, they should have a criminal case against them. [36:43.340 --> 36:44.340] Correct? [36:44.340 --> 36:46.340] Don't run me off the hook, Randy. [36:46.340 --> 36:56.340] Well, you have Doge right now, and you have a new attorney general. [36:56.340 --> 36:59.340] They're very, very busy, however. [36:59.340 --> 37:04.340] They're very, very busy. [37:04.340 --> 37:08.340] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [37:08.340 --> 37:12.340] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [37:12.340 --> 37:16.340] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [37:16.340 --> 37:23.340] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the claims cost? [37:23.340 --> 37:38.340] The CHAMP plan is a Section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero copay. [37:38.340 --> 37:44.340] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [37:44.340 --> 37:50.340] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [37:50.340 --> 37:56.340] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. [37:56.340 --> 38:05.340] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [38:05.340 --> 38:08.340] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [38:08.340 --> 38:19.340] 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. [38:19.340 --> 38:23.340] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [38:23.340 --> 38:27.340] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [38:27.340 --> 38:32.340] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [38:32.340 --> 38:38.340] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [38:38.340 --> 38:47.340] 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. [38:47.340 --> 38:56.340] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [38:56.340 --> 39:05.340] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [39:17.340 --> 39:22.340] Thank you for watching. [39:47.340 --> 39:52.340] Thank you for watching. [40:17.340 --> 40:28.340] Okay, Tina, Tina, I'm still having trouble hearing you. [40:28.340 --> 40:30.340] Oh, you are? [40:30.340 --> 40:35.340] It's wonderful when they work, but when they don't work, it's horrible. [40:35.340 --> 40:39.340] Yeah, have you tried the screaming cuss method? [40:39.340 --> 40:42.340] Have I tried the what? [40:43.340 --> 40:49.340] When I have trouble with electronics, I tend to use the screaming cuss method. [40:49.340 --> 40:54.340] You see, the problem is you never know which one's going to work. [40:54.340 --> 41:00.340] So you have to run through the whole litany, and the louder you use them, the better they work. [41:00.340 --> 41:04.340] My wife never understood that. [41:04.340 --> 41:06.340] My cell phone doesn't understand it either. [41:06.340 --> 41:11.340] It doesn't even understand the Queen's English because it changes all my words when I send a text. [41:11.340 --> 41:14.340] Yeah. [41:14.340 --> 41:19.340] Tina works us over with the Queen's, with the King's English. [41:19.340 --> 41:27.340] When we don't use the language correctly, she gets, what's the word, Tina, churlish? [41:27.340 --> 41:31.340] I don't get churlish, you do. [41:31.340 --> 41:36.340] And I've been sending you the English in joy with Thomas, and you haven't responded yet. [41:36.340 --> 41:43.340] There was one that was actually two that were very apropos for you and your little wolf. [41:43.340 --> 41:46.340] So I'm going to re-send them again so that you look at them. [41:46.340 --> 41:49.340] Yeah, please do that. [41:49.340 --> 41:54.340] I'm always kind of impressed when I talk to people from England, [41:54.340 --> 42:03.340] because the English pay a lot more attention to the use, the structure and use of language than Americans do. [42:03.340 --> 42:10.340] Americans are horribly sloppy with language, but the English are not. [42:10.340 --> 42:19.340] Well, I'm learning something from English in Joy with Thomas, and if I'm learning something, you could learn a lot. [42:19.340 --> 42:24.340] Ouch. [42:24.340 --> 42:27.340] She's being churlish. [42:27.340 --> 42:30.340] Okay. [42:30.340 --> 42:39.340] I'm sorry, Tina, I can't address your issue because I'm not hearing enough to be able to put all the pieces together. [42:39.340 --> 42:42.340] Well, maybe I'll do some tomorrow. [42:42.340 --> 42:44.340] It's time to listen. [42:44.340 --> 42:49.340] But, you know, I am going to, I am considering, by the way, going to Doge [42:49.340 --> 42:58.340] and trying to resurrect that crime of Mnuchin, seeing as he did defraud the government and got well paid, [42:58.340 --> 43:04.340] I'm considering writing a lengthy letter to them asking them to investigate that. [43:04.340 --> 43:07.340] I think that's a good idea. [43:07.340 --> 43:08.340] Yes. [43:08.340 --> 43:12.340] Cash Patel would probably be a good one for that. [43:12.340 --> 43:14.340] Well, that's a good idea. [43:14.340 --> 43:20.340] Because he's well aware of the foreclosure fraud. [43:20.340 --> 43:24.340] That really screwed up so many people. [43:24.340 --> 43:33.340] He may like the idea of being able to go back after these banks who stole all these assets from all these people [43:33.340 --> 43:41.340] and maybe get the public back, you know, all those people that have been foreclosed on [43:41.340 --> 43:44.340] and all of their relatives. [43:44.340 --> 43:51.340] What Trump is doing right now is he's playing to his base. [43:51.340 --> 43:59.340] He's making sure that at the next election, the Republicans are going to trounce what's left of the Democrats. [43:59.340 --> 44:10.340] So they may be sensitive to, especially Mnuchin, director of the Treasury, bank president. [44:10.340 --> 44:13.340] He may be a really good one for them to go after. [44:13.340 --> 44:16.340] So you never know what they're going to pick up. [44:16.340 --> 44:17.340] Well, I was interested. [44:17.340 --> 44:24.340] I saw a little video where Trump is saying one of the things he hates a liar, you know, [44:24.340 --> 44:27.340] and he can forgive some of the things, but a liar, he can't. [44:27.340 --> 44:31.340] And so Mnuchin lied to him, the bank lied to the government. [44:31.340 --> 44:37.340] So I'm going to remind him of what he said in this little, you know, vignette video and say, [44:37.340 --> 44:39.340] well, here's something for you to go after. [44:39.340 --> 44:42.340] You said you hate liars. [44:42.340 --> 44:48.340] And one of the things about that, whether they do anything or not, [44:48.340 --> 44:56.340] if you go after someone with these guys and you notice the people that you're going after that you're doing it, [44:56.340 --> 45:00.340] it scares the bejesus out of them. [45:00.340 --> 45:04.340] Whether the government actually comes for them or not, [45:04.340 --> 45:11.340] we have a government right now that the perception of the public is, [45:11.340 --> 45:13.340] is that they're trying to do the right thing. [45:13.340 --> 45:17.340] And if you're a bad guy, they'll come after you. [45:17.340 --> 45:21.340] Whether they will or not, you know, we're small potatoes for the most part. [45:21.340 --> 45:25.340] But Mnuchin's not small potatoes. [45:25.340 --> 45:29.340] He has a nice big name and he's probably screwed a whole bunch of people. [45:29.340 --> 45:36.340] So if Cash Patel takes a shot at Mnuchin, all those people he screwed over are going to vote for Trump. [45:36.340 --> 45:44.340] Yes, if Trump puts him, the only thing is Trump appointed him the Treasury Secretary. [45:44.340 --> 45:48.340] But will he look back and say, that was a mistake I made. [45:48.340 --> 45:53.340] I didn't realize he wasn't qualified because he lied to people and lied to me. [45:53.340 --> 45:55.340] Or is he going to back him up? [45:55.340 --> 45:57.340] No, that's what he's been doing. [45:57.340 --> 46:03.340] He said his first term, he didn't really understand how the swamp worked. [46:03.340 --> 46:12.340] And he came back in his second term and people he appointed in the first term, he fired them immediately. [46:12.340 --> 46:17.340] So I don't think that'll be an issue. [46:17.340 --> 46:24.340] Well, I will find some time to start writing this up and write it very carefully. [46:24.340 --> 46:32.340] And I will send it registered mail to the President and to Cash Patel and copies to a bunch of others that I can think of too. [46:32.340 --> 46:35.340] That would be good. [46:35.340 --> 46:38.340] That would be good. [46:38.340 --> 46:56.340] And you have a style of writing legal pleadings that while you are a pro se, when I read your pleadings, they do not look like they were written by a pro se. [46:56.340 --> 46:57.340] Thank you. [46:57.340 --> 47:02.340] And that's generally what it takes to get their attention. [47:02.340 --> 47:04.340] Yes, that's true. [47:04.340 --> 47:05.340] Good luck with it. [47:05.340 --> 47:07.340] We have another caller that I really want to get to. [47:07.340 --> 47:09.340] Marty Shea. [47:09.340 --> 47:12.340] He's in Florida now, but he used to be in Tennessee. [47:12.340 --> 47:13.340] That's right. [47:13.340 --> 47:14.340] I remember listening to him. [47:14.340 --> 47:15.340] He's very good. [47:15.340 --> 47:20.340] Yes, he is and happens to be from Tennessee. [47:20.340 --> 47:21.340] Clarksville. [47:21.340 --> 47:24.340] David, you know where Clarksville is? [47:24.340 --> 47:25.340] Yes, West Tennessee. [47:25.340 --> 47:27.340] Yes. [47:27.340 --> 47:35.340] I was living and taking care of my mom at the time in Dresden and I was about 100 miles from Clarksville. [47:35.340 --> 47:49.340] The first time I went to Clarksville, I stopped to ask directions and I walked into this liquor store because I didn't know where I needed to go to get to the court. [47:49.340 --> 47:57.340] And I looked up and they had this 101st Airborne banner all the way across the back of the store. [47:57.340 --> 48:10.340] And it was tough because I was in a place once where they used to fly us around to repair weapons and the place got overrun. [48:10.340 --> 48:15.340] And 101st Airborne came in in helicopters. [48:15.340 --> 48:20.340] And this was just like something out of a John Wayne movie. [48:20.340 --> 48:27.340] You got these guys rappelling down on a rope out of this helicopter, four or five of them. [48:27.340 --> 48:31.340] And they'd fire at one side of them and it would spin them. [48:31.340 --> 48:35.340] And then they'd turn the weapon and fire at guys on the other side and spin them back. [48:36.340 --> 48:41.340] And the sky was just filled with flak. [48:41.340 --> 48:48.340] And I'm thinking these guys are absolutely certifiably insane. [48:48.340 --> 48:50.340] They got my behind out of there. [48:50.340 --> 48:59.340] An Air America helicopter came in and got us out while the 101st was doing this crazy stunt they did. [48:59.340 --> 49:04.340] And I never got opportunity to thank them. [49:05.340 --> 49:10.340] So we went to Clarksville and that's where the 101st is out of. [49:10.340 --> 49:12.340] But anyway, Martichet was there. [49:12.340 --> 49:15.340] Okay, Tina, I'm going to go to Martichet if that's okay. [49:15.340 --> 49:20.340] Yes, I'm going to go on the listen line. [49:20.340 --> 49:22.340] Okay, thank you, Tina. [49:22.340 --> 49:28.340] Okay, now we're going to Martichet Olivier. [49:28.340 --> 49:32.340] Where in the heck have you been? [49:32.340 --> 49:36.340] Working, trying to get things together? [49:36.340 --> 49:43.340] Well, you need to come on our show because you have all this information that we need other people to get. [49:43.340 --> 49:47.340] And Martichet, let me introduce you to David Tulis. [49:47.340 --> 49:54.340] David Tulis used to have an FM radio station in Chattanooga. [49:54.340 --> 50:01.340] And he's taking on Tennessee right now on traffic. [50:01.340 --> 50:05.340] And I'm hoping that's why you called in. [50:05.340 --> 50:09.340] Yeah, kind of sort of. [50:09.340 --> 50:12.340] It deals with traffic in a way. [50:12.340 --> 50:29.340] But I think it's more of a global awareness or bringing awareness to how things work on a bigger aspect than what we're looking at. [50:29.340 --> 50:41.340] And I think I was able to get that perspective because, one, of how I got into trouble in listening to the show and my research ability, [50:41.340 --> 50:55.340] I've come to find out that we're kind of segmented in what we know and don't really understand how it attaches and applies to each other. [50:55.340 --> 51:16.340] And the fact that the system is a lot older than we are, it has a great advantage over manipulating us and taking control over how it affects our life. [51:16.340 --> 51:21.340] We've got the radio, the brakes, about to come off. [51:21.340 --> 51:25.340] Wait, I'm having a little trouble hearing you. You're a little soft. [51:25.340 --> 51:26.340] You're breaking back. [51:26.340 --> 51:30.340] Okay. [51:30.340 --> 51:32.340] Oh, commercial brakes coming up. [51:32.340 --> 51:35.340] Oh, you can hear that? I can't hear that. [51:35.340 --> 51:36.340] Yeah, I can hear it. [51:36.340 --> 51:37.340] Okay. [51:37.340 --> 51:39.340] Yeah, it's coming up. [51:39.340 --> 51:42.340] Yeah, I don't hear the music at all. [51:42.340 --> 51:44.340] We're using a different system. [51:44.340 --> 51:55.340] Okay, so hang on, Randy Kelton, Root of the Law Radio, and we'll be right back. [51:55.340 --> 51:59.340] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [51:59.340 --> 52:06.340] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [52:06.340 --> 52:11.340] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [52:11.340 --> 52:18.340] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [52:18.340 --> 52:23.340] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [52:23.340 --> 52:32.340] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [52:32.340 --> 52:38.340] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [52:38.340 --> 52:45.340] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [52:45.340 --> 52:49.340] That's 888-551-0102. [52:49.340 --> 52:54.340] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [52:55.340 --> 53:00.340] Live Free Speech Radio, logosradionetwork.com [53:06.340 --> 53:10.340] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [53:10.340 --> 53:15.340] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [53:15.340 --> 53:21.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [53:21.340 --> 53:27.340] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [53:27.340 --> 53:32.340] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [53:32.340 --> 53:37.340] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [53:37.340 --> 53:40.340] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [53:40.340 --> 53:47.340] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [53:47.340 --> 53:50.340] Start over with Startpage. [53:51.340 --> 53:57.340] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [53:57.340 --> 54:00.340] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [54:00.340 --> 54:06.340] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [54:06.340 --> 54:12.340] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [54:12.340 --> 54:15.340] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [54:15.340 --> 54:18.340] Enter a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging. [54:18.340 --> 54:22.340] Tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [54:22.340 --> 54:27.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [54:37.340 --> 54:40.340] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [54:40.340 --> 54:44.340] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [54:44.340 --> 54:45.340] Our liberty depends on it. [54:45.340 --> 54:51.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [54:51.340 --> 54:57.340] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [54:57.340 --> 55:02.340] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [55:02.340 --> 55:07.340] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [55:07.340 --> 55:10.340] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [55:10.340 --> 55:17.340] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [55:17.340 --> 55:21.340] Start over with StartPage. [55:21.340 --> 55:27.340] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [55:27.340 --> 55:32.340] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [55:32.340 --> 55:36.340] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [55:36.340 --> 55:40.340] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [55:40.340 --> 55:44.340] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [55:44.340 --> 55:51.340] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [55:51.340 --> 55:58.340] 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. [55:58.340 --> 56:03.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [56:06.340 --> 56:17.340] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [56:17.340 --> 56:24.340] I read his book and he says he cares not for the unsightly. [56:24.340 --> 56:33.340] These warmongers come by that term rightly. [56:33.340 --> 56:36.340] I won't pay for the war with my body. [56:36.340 --> 56:40.340] Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. [56:40.340 --> 56:43.340] I won't pay for the fun with my body. [56:43.340 --> 56:46.340] Their plans wicked and their logic shoddy. [56:46.340 --> 56:50.340] Ain't gonna pay for the oil with my body. [56:50.340 --> 56:53.340] I won't pay for the boys with my money. [56:53.340 --> 56:57.340] Ain't gonna pay for the kids with my body. [56:57.340 --> 57:01.340] Their whole agenda smells funny. [57:01.340 --> 57:07.340] I wanna fight in a war of my own. [57:07.340 --> 57:14.340] That one would be less accident prone. [57:14.340 --> 57:21.340] I wanna pay for a war of my own. [57:21.340 --> 57:28.340] They live in glass houses so I can watch them throw bones. [57:28.340 --> 57:31.340] I wanna fight in a war I can win. [57:31.340 --> 57:34.340] I can never win the one they laid out me in. [57:34.340 --> 57:38.340] That one I lose long before it begins. [57:38.340 --> 57:41.340] I wanna pay for a war I can win. [57:41.340 --> 57:48.340] When I'm fighting in my own war. [57:48.340 --> 57:55.340] It's such a peaceful feeling. [57:55.340 --> 58:02.340] When I'm paying for my own war. [58:02.340 --> 58:12.340] I take time for the healing. [58:12.340 --> 58:19.340] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [58:19.340 --> 58:26.340] I read his book and he says he cares not for the unsightly. [58:26.340 --> 58:35.340] These fear mongers come by that term right. [58:50.340 --> 58:53.340] We will be taking your calls all night. [58:53.340 --> 58:55.340] We have some room on the caller board. [58:55.340 --> 58:58.340] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [58:58.340 --> 59:02.340] 512-646-1984. [59:02.340 --> 59:06.340] And we have a very special guest, David Tulis out of Tennessee. [59:06.340 --> 59:13.340] And we're talking to Martiché Olivier out of Florida. [59:13.340 --> 59:17.340] He's in Florida now, but when I first met him, he was in Tennessee. [59:17.340 --> 59:22.340] And Martiché, when you were in Tennessee, [59:22.340 --> 59:28.340] you talked about the difference between the right to travel [59:28.340 --> 59:34.340] and the right to freedom of locomotion. [59:34.340 --> 59:37.340] Will you address that for us? [59:37.340 --> 59:39.340] Right. [59:39.340 --> 59:44.340] The right to travel is different between the right to locomotion [59:44.340 --> 59:50.340] as far as right to travel is the government or say some entity [59:50.340 --> 01:00:00.340] creating a circumstance where you cannot freely move through a certain area. [01:00:00.340 --> 01:00:04.340] That puts some kind of restriction, regulation, which is... [01:00:04.340 --> 01:00:09.340] I think we're talking about a fundamental misunderstanding [01:00:09.340 --> 01:00:13.340] about the nature of the United States. [01:00:13.340 --> 01:00:18.340] People, for the most part, think of the United States as a country. [01:00:18.340 --> 01:00:21.340] And it's not. [01:00:21.340 --> 01:00:30.340] The United States is an agreement between 50 sovereign nations [01:00:30.340 --> 01:00:37.340] that these 50 sovereign nations, sovereign states, [01:00:37.340 --> 01:00:44.340] agree to act in the general interest of all 50 states [01:00:44.340 --> 01:00:46.340] under certain circumstances. [01:00:46.340 --> 01:00:53.340] And it was originally created so that these original 13 small colonies [01:00:53.340 --> 01:00:56.340] who were struggling to get started, [01:00:56.340 --> 01:01:00.340] that they couldn't fight off the British or anybody else. [01:01:00.340 --> 01:01:04.340] So they said, okay, let's put together this union [01:01:04.340 --> 01:01:07.340] so that if anybody attacks one of us, [01:01:07.340 --> 01:01:12.340] all of us will help fund an army to push them out. [01:01:12.340 --> 01:01:14.340] And we did that. [01:01:14.340 --> 01:01:16.340] And it worked really well. [01:01:16.340 --> 01:01:18.340] And we added more states. [01:01:18.340 --> 01:01:27.340] And people began to think of state as a subdivision of the United States. [01:01:27.340 --> 01:01:31.340] Like a county is a subdivision of a state. [01:01:31.340 --> 01:01:35.340] No, guys, that is not how this works. [01:01:35.340 --> 01:01:38.340] State is not county. [01:01:38.340 --> 01:01:42.340] State means sovereign nation. [01:01:42.340 --> 01:01:49.340] And right to travel is the right to travel from one sovereign nation to another. [01:01:49.340 --> 01:01:52.340] This is what Brexit was all about. [01:01:52.340 --> 01:01:57.340] Brexit was an agreement just like the United States have. [01:01:57.340 --> 01:02:04.340] So that all of these sovereign nations would have some common interests, [01:02:04.340 --> 01:02:06.340] some interests in common. [01:02:06.340 --> 01:02:09.340] Am I making sense, David? [01:02:09.340 --> 01:02:13.340] Well, I think you mean the European Union, right, Randall? [01:02:13.340 --> 01:02:19.340] Brexit was Britain exiting the Union for its oppressive regulation. [01:02:19.340 --> 01:02:21.340] Yeah, you're right. I got that wrong. [01:02:21.340 --> 01:02:23.340] The European Union. [01:02:23.340 --> 01:02:30.340] Yeah, that was a group of separate individual sovereign nations that had common interests. [01:02:30.340 --> 01:02:35.340] And it started with coal, coal use and transportation and mining. [01:02:35.340 --> 01:02:42.340] And then it gradually spread to other areas of common interest based on our market. [01:02:42.340 --> 01:02:48.340] So when we think about Europe, we don't think about Europe as a country. [01:02:48.340 --> 01:02:53.340] When we think about the United States, we think about the United States as a country. [01:02:53.340 --> 01:02:56.340] It's not. [01:02:56.340 --> 01:02:58.340] All of these states are sovereign. [01:02:58.340 --> 01:03:06.340] And that's why this right to travel was important because the same thing they did in the European Union [01:03:06.340 --> 01:03:15.340] is they allowed people to move from one sovereign nation to another sovereign nation freely. [01:03:15.340 --> 01:03:18.340] That's exactly what the United States did. [01:03:18.340 --> 01:03:26.340] Fifty sovereign nations, and they said you cannot interfere with the right to travel. [01:03:26.340 --> 01:03:36.340] And right to travel meant right to travel from one sovereign nation to another sovereign nation. [01:03:36.340 --> 01:03:39.340] Which, that aside, we're looking at transportation code. [01:03:39.340 --> 01:03:42.340] That's not about the right to travel. [01:03:42.340 --> 01:03:55.340] That's about the right to freely move around within the sovereign nation in which you are currently residing. [01:03:55.340 --> 01:03:59.340] And Marta Shea, explain that to us. [01:03:59.340 --> 01:04:08.340] Well, the right to travel also includes the right to move within that sovereign nation. [01:04:08.340 --> 01:04:11.340] I haven't found that case law. [01:04:11.340 --> 01:04:19.340] Well, the difference between the right to travel and the right to locomotion is [01:04:19.340 --> 01:04:25.340] right to travel is moving away, but right to locomotion is using your personal, [01:04:25.340 --> 01:04:43.340] lawful property to travel on the road without having to, without being burdened to pay or get taxed for it. [01:04:43.340 --> 01:04:45.340] Right. [01:04:45.340 --> 01:04:51.340] The original, this original issue came up between Pennsylvania and New Jersey. [01:04:51.340 --> 01:05:02.340] There's a bridge between Pennsylvania and New Jersey and these carriage drivers would take customers across the bridge. [01:05:02.340 --> 01:05:08.340] And New Jersey's decided, well, we ought to start taxing these guys. [01:05:08.340 --> 01:05:14.340] So these carriage drivers pick up someone on one side of the bridge and they take them to the other side of the bridge. [01:05:14.340 --> 01:05:22.340] And the state you're going into wants to tax them for coming in. [01:05:22.340 --> 01:05:34.340] And that's what this issue of right to travel was about, that the courts said that under the American Union, [01:05:34.340 --> 01:05:46.340] people must be able to travel freely from one state to another state, as it was absolutely critical to interstate commerce. [01:05:46.340 --> 01:05:48.340] Randall? [01:05:48.340 --> 01:05:49.340] Yes. [01:05:49.340 --> 01:05:56.340] The case that you may have been talking with your caller about could have been state versus Booher in 1997. [01:05:56.340 --> 01:06:03.340] And in that, there's a trick sentence in there and I think it might be worth just hearing a couple sentences. [01:06:03.340 --> 01:06:11.340] There's a trick sentence that the court wrote very connivingly knowing that it would be misread. [01:06:11.340 --> 01:06:16.340] In other words, they wrote a sentence about travel and locomotion and migration, [01:06:16.340 --> 01:06:21.340] which is they're talking about interstate travel is migration, the change of domicile. [01:06:21.340 --> 01:06:24.340] And this one sentence, which is a work of art. [01:06:24.340 --> 01:06:33.340] I mean, it is a high level, a bit of Jesuit casuistry almost that says one thing, [01:06:33.340 --> 01:06:36.340] but is intended to be misread by all the DAs and they've all misread it. [01:06:36.340 --> 01:06:42.340] And every lawyer I know and DAs I've talked to, they all misread it. [01:06:42.340 --> 01:06:49.340] And it says this, it says travel in the case is state versus Booher. [01:06:49.340 --> 01:06:52.340] How do you spell Booher? [01:06:52.340 --> 01:06:59.340] Yeah, B-O-O-H-E-R 1997. I don't have the site in front of me, but it says travel in the constitutional sense, [01:06:59.340 --> 01:07:02.340] however, means more than locomotion. [01:07:02.340 --> 01:07:05.340] It means migration with the intent to settle and abide. [01:07:05.340 --> 01:07:07.340] OK, that's the trick sentence right there. [01:07:07.340 --> 01:07:14.340] And it goes on to say, thus, any American is free to travel from state to state and to change his state of residence or employment [01:07:14.340 --> 01:07:19.340] whenever he desires unrestricted by unreasonable government interference or regulation. [01:07:19.340 --> 01:07:25.340] So what those two sentences do is they create in the misreading of them the idea that, [01:07:25.340 --> 01:07:29.340] well, travel does exist in Tennessee except interstate change of domicile. [01:07:29.340 --> 01:07:31.340] That's what that says. [01:07:31.340 --> 01:07:37.340] And again, the sentence that's so artfully written says travel in the constitutional sense, [01:07:37.340 --> 01:07:41.340] however, means more than locomotion. OK, it means migration. [01:07:41.340 --> 01:07:47.340] When you misread it, you read it to say, well, travel is not locomotion. [01:07:47.340 --> 01:07:52.340] Travel is migration with the intent to settle and abide in another state. [01:07:52.340 --> 01:07:56.340] But more than that means it's that plus, right? [01:07:56.340 --> 01:07:59.340] It's locomotion plus migration. [01:07:59.340 --> 01:08:06.340] And so we have in Tennessee this kind of, you know, it's like constipation. [01:08:06.340 --> 01:08:12.340] You can't clear, you just can't clear the pipe with this sentence blocking the way. [01:08:13.340 --> 01:08:21.340] And in many cases in Tennessee, make it very clear that the regulatory machinery applies to trucking. [01:08:21.340 --> 01:08:26.340] These are the trucking cases from the 30s and 40s. [01:08:26.340 --> 01:08:34.340] And here we have a case in the 1990s with a patriotic person who turns back in his license, [01:08:34.340 --> 01:08:38.340] turns back in his registration and says, I'm not going to be driving anymore. [01:08:38.340 --> 01:08:41.340] I'm not going to be operating. I'm going to be traveling. [01:08:41.340 --> 01:08:47.340] And he shot down and we don't have the paperwork and we can't find the man who was involved in this case. [01:08:47.340 --> 01:08:51.340] But it's possible that he had an excellent defense. [01:08:51.340 --> 01:08:55.340] It was just misrepresented in the ruling against him. [01:08:55.340 --> 01:09:01.340] But locomotion is a word that focuses on the method of the movement. [01:09:01.340 --> 01:09:03.340] Travel is the activity of the movement. [01:09:03.340 --> 01:09:07.340] So there's a slight difference in the two words. [01:09:07.340 --> 01:09:13.340] But I would say probably that your caller would say that, you know, they're very similar. [01:09:13.340 --> 01:09:19.340] You know, movement is ingress egress. [01:09:19.340 --> 01:09:27.340] Cal Anthony, one of the gnomes in Oregon who was one of the researchers of the Jefferson mining district, [01:09:27.340 --> 01:09:31.340] he says travel is based on land. [01:09:31.340 --> 01:09:38.340] The fact that we all live on land, whether we own it, live, rent it, live in an apartment complex, live in a tower, [01:09:38.340 --> 01:09:45.340] you know, live on a farm or a rancher or on a trailer. [01:09:45.340 --> 01:09:51.340] That is that gives us this ingress egress right, the right to leave and the right to come back. [01:09:51.340 --> 01:09:53.340] OK, hang on. [01:09:53.340 --> 01:10:01.340] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:10:01.340 --> 01:10:05.340] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method. [01:10:05.340 --> 01:10:11.340] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:10:11.340 --> 01:10:16.340] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court. [01:10:16.340 --> 01:10:22.340] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:10:22.340 --> 01:10:25.340] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:10:25.340 --> 01:10:30.340] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:10:30.340 --> 01:10:35.340] The Michael Maris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:10:35.340 --> 01:10:38.340] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:10:38.340 --> 01:10:40.340] For more information, visit www.fema.gov. [01:10:46.340 --> 01:10:51.340] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner [01:10:51.340 --> 01:10:54.340] or email michaelmaris at yahoo.com. [01:10:54.340 --> 01:11:02.340] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:11:02.340 --> 01:11:05.340] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:11:05.340 --> 01:11:06.340] I love logos. [01:11:06.340 --> 01:11:09.340] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:11:09.340 --> 01:11:12.340] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:11:12.340 --> 01:11:13.340] I need my truth fixed. [01:11:13.340 --> 01:11:15.340] I'd be lost without logos. [01:11:15.340 --> 01:11:18.340] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:11:18.340 --> 01:11:21.340] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite [01:11:21.340 --> 01:11:25.340] and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:11:25.340 --> 01:11:27.340] How can I help logos? [01:11:27.340 --> 01:11:29.340] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:11:29.340 --> 01:11:32.340] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:11:32.340 --> 01:11:34.340] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:11:34.340 --> 01:11:36.340] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:11:36.340 --> 01:11:39.340] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:11:39.340 --> 01:11:42.340] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:11:42.340 --> 01:11:45.340] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link [01:11:45.340 --> 01:11:48.340] and logos gets a few pesos. [01:11:48.340 --> 01:11:49.340] Do I pay extra? [01:11:49.340 --> 01:11:50.340] No. [01:11:50.340 --> 01:11:52.340] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:11:52.340 --> 01:11:53.340] No. [01:11:53.340 --> 01:11:54.340] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:11:54.340 --> 01:11:55.340] No. [01:11:55.340 --> 01:11:56.340] I mean, yes. [01:11:56.340 --> 01:11:59.340] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:11:59.340 --> 01:12:00.340] This is perfect. [01:12:00.340 --> 01:12:02.340] Thank you so much. [01:12:02.340 --> 01:12:03.340] You're welcome. [01:12:03.340 --> 01:12:05.340] Happy holidays, logos. [01:12:12.340 --> 01:12:40.340] Okay, we're talking to, we have a special guest, [01:12:40.340 --> 01:12:44.340] David Tulis, and we're talking to Mardishe. [01:12:44.340 --> 01:12:48.340] When we went out, we were talking about the difference between travel [01:12:48.340 --> 01:12:51.340] and locomotion. [01:12:51.340 --> 01:12:57.340] When we went out there, David, you mentioned this distinction. [01:12:57.340 --> 01:13:01.340] Can you address the distinction that you're making between travel [01:13:01.340 --> 01:13:05.340] and locomotion? [01:13:05.340 --> 01:13:08.340] Well, we would like to hear what the guest has to say making further [01:13:08.340 --> 01:13:09.340] comment about that. [01:13:09.340 --> 01:13:15.340] But travel is the effect of locomotion. [01:13:15.340 --> 01:13:20.340] Locomotion is a word that focuses on the thing of the conveyance. [01:13:20.340 --> 01:13:26.340] It's a word that touches closely upon the movement of the vehicle [01:13:26.340 --> 01:13:32.340] or the object or the property or the wheeled device. [01:13:32.340 --> 01:13:35.340] But travel is the thing that you do in that. [01:13:35.340 --> 01:13:40.340] You know, with that movement, you travel, which is the larger context. [01:13:40.340 --> 01:13:41.340] But both are free. [01:13:41.340 --> 01:13:46.340] Both are words that describe the free person in his exercise of rights [01:13:46.340 --> 01:13:51.340] and enjoyment of rights on the public road. [01:13:51.340 --> 01:13:55.340] But, you know, driving and operating clearly, as the listener knows, [01:13:55.340 --> 01:13:59.340] are the words that describe the commercial for profit, profit, [01:13:59.340 --> 01:14:04.340] profit and gain use of the public's property for private gain. [01:14:04.340 --> 01:14:07.340] It's a different operation, different act. [01:14:07.340 --> 01:14:12.340] Marta Shea, is that your perspective on the difference between [01:14:12.340 --> 01:14:15.340] locomotion and travel? [01:14:15.340 --> 01:14:16.340] Right. [01:14:16.340 --> 01:14:26.340] Locomotion is the means which you use to travel. [01:14:26.340 --> 01:14:33.340] Right to travel is saying that they cannot put up restrictions, [01:14:33.340 --> 01:14:39.340] barriers, standards, taxes, fees, [01:14:39.340 --> 01:14:46.340] which will restrict you from traveling through an area freely. [01:14:46.340 --> 01:14:47.340] Okay. [01:14:47.340 --> 01:14:57.340] So my perspective on travel then is limited, incomplete. [01:14:57.340 --> 01:15:04.340] You're saying that travel is more than traveling from one state to another state. [01:15:04.340 --> 01:15:07.340] It's also travel within the state. [01:15:07.340 --> 01:15:08.340] Right. [01:15:08.340 --> 01:15:13.340] So let's say if they quarter off a section around a McDonald's [01:15:13.340 --> 01:15:20.340] and they say that only people who make more than $25,000 [01:15:20.340 --> 01:15:26.340] can drive through the streets because they have an influx of traffic [01:15:26.340 --> 01:15:31.340] and they're trying to create some, you know, traffic. [01:15:31.340 --> 01:15:35.340] They're trying to create some things to help with the traffic. [01:15:35.340 --> 01:15:39.340] No, I have the right to travel. [01:15:39.340 --> 01:15:40.340] You cannot. [01:15:40.340 --> 01:15:41.340] That's awful. [01:15:41.340 --> 01:15:43.340] You cannot create some kind of subgroup [01:15:43.340 --> 01:15:47.340] and then restrict me from driving through this area [01:15:47.340 --> 01:15:53.340] because it's going to add an extra two hours to get to my home or whatever. [01:15:53.340 --> 01:15:59.340] So now I can come to this whoever, whatever agency for my right to travel [01:15:59.340 --> 01:16:01.340] because you are blocking off a section. [01:16:01.340 --> 01:16:07.340] You are creating parameters which is restricting me from coming through [01:16:07.340 --> 01:16:11.340] through your area with my locomotion. [01:16:11.340 --> 01:16:13.340] So even if I'm... [01:16:13.340 --> 01:16:15.340] ...with my locomotion to come to your area. [01:16:15.340 --> 01:16:18.340] That's my right to travel because you are restricting me, [01:16:18.340 --> 01:16:22.340] you're making me take some kind of fine which is not reasonable, [01:16:22.340 --> 01:16:24.340] a tax that's not reasonable. [01:16:24.340 --> 01:16:30.340] You are restricting me from going along and doing what I make you do. [01:16:30.340 --> 01:16:36.340] So you're saying even if I am a traveler from a different state [01:16:36.340 --> 01:16:43.340] and these roads that were built were not built with any of my tax dollars [01:16:43.340 --> 01:16:47.340] that I still have the same right to travel on these roads [01:16:47.340 --> 01:16:53.340] as if they were roads built by my tax dollars. [01:16:53.340 --> 01:16:54.340] Yes. [01:16:54.340 --> 01:16:55.340] Is that correct? [01:16:55.340 --> 01:16:59.340] Yes. [01:16:59.340 --> 01:17:05.340] So I live in one state and that state I pay taxes to [01:17:05.340 --> 01:17:10.340] and anybody from any other state can come and use the roads in my state [01:17:10.340 --> 01:17:12.340] that they didn't pay for. [01:17:12.340 --> 01:17:13.340] Right. [01:17:13.340 --> 01:17:17.340] And in terms of reciprocity, [01:17:17.340 --> 01:17:22.340] I can travel through your state on roads I didn't pay for. [01:17:22.340 --> 01:17:23.340] Right. [01:17:23.340 --> 01:17:28.340] As long as I'm not doing commercials, I'm not using the roads for private gain. [01:17:28.340 --> 01:17:33.340] If I'm using the roads for private gain, then those people can be taxed [01:17:33.340 --> 01:17:42.340] and paid where we have the right to regulate you underneath our contract. [01:17:42.340 --> 01:17:45.340] We're operating in the commercial capacity. [01:17:45.340 --> 01:17:46.340] We regulate that. [01:17:46.340 --> 01:17:50.340] That is something that the federal government allows us to regulate. [01:17:50.340 --> 01:17:52.340] That's the contract we have. [01:17:52.340 --> 01:17:56.340] The license that you have verifies that contract. [01:17:56.340 --> 01:18:01.340] Your Social Security number, all that paperwork verifies that contract [01:18:01.340 --> 01:18:02.340] that you have with us. [01:18:02.340 --> 01:18:08.340] And that's what we are not understanding who's being taught in their school. [01:18:08.340 --> 01:18:09.340] We're not understanding that. [01:18:09.340 --> 01:18:15.340] We're automatically put into their jurisdiction without knowing it. [01:18:15.340 --> 01:18:19.340] And then wonder, hey, why are we getting slapped with fines and stuff? [01:18:19.340 --> 01:18:23.340] Because when you really get to learn the system, [01:18:23.340 --> 01:18:28.340] you realize, oh, if this is correct, then I am operating [01:18:28.340 --> 01:18:34.340] because I have two ways to operate, in the public and the private. [01:18:34.340 --> 01:18:42.340] In the public, which is controlled and regulated by the state, [01:18:42.340 --> 01:18:47.340] they can regulate the public roads, the transportation and all that. [01:18:47.340 --> 01:18:54.340] We don't understand that when you get that license, you are stealing the contract. [01:18:54.340 --> 01:18:57.340] And they can legally take you to court and manipulate you in other ways. [01:18:57.340 --> 01:19:02.340] But they didn't teach us in school how to operate in the private. [01:19:02.340 --> 01:19:08.340] But now that I'm helping build up this business and learning about IUL [01:19:08.340 --> 01:19:10.340] and what's the other word for it? [01:19:10.340 --> 01:19:14.340] And annuities and how to protect the aspects. [01:19:14.340 --> 01:19:17.340] And I'm starting to realize, like, wait a minute, all these entities, [01:19:17.340 --> 01:19:20.340] and if I'm putting everything together, then I was making a picture. [01:19:20.340 --> 01:19:21.340] It's like, wait a minute. [01:19:21.340 --> 01:19:24.340] We're making all these arguments and fighting in court and everything. [01:19:24.340 --> 01:19:29.340] But if we cut the line that they have of jurisdiction, [01:19:29.340 --> 01:19:39.340] and you don't, when you buy a car, you take the car, you sell it to your truck. [01:19:39.340 --> 01:19:45.340] But no one ever taught us how to create trust because that's what separates, [01:19:45.340 --> 01:19:52.340] gives us that protection from the lower legal system, which we call the state. [01:19:52.340 --> 01:19:57.340] But they don't teach you that in school because that's going to cause you to have power. [01:19:57.340 --> 01:20:03.340] Now, once you sell that to your truck, it brings it, now that vehicle, [01:20:03.340 --> 01:20:06.340] whatever it is, is personal property. [01:20:06.340 --> 01:20:10.340] Now you take that information that you have from the trust, [01:20:10.340 --> 01:20:18.340] and you go record it into the state as this is my automobile, [01:20:18.340 --> 01:20:22.340] owned by this truck. [01:20:22.340 --> 01:20:28.340] And I, whoever the beneficiary is, but as long as that process is made, [01:20:28.340 --> 01:20:36.340] you have sufficiently removed yourself out of the public realm, [01:20:36.340 --> 01:20:40.340] and you have put yourself in the private sector. [01:20:40.340 --> 01:20:47.340] Now, when they pull your information, it's not going to come up in the commercial system. [01:20:47.340 --> 01:20:52.340] It's not going to come up as a private trust. [01:20:52.340 --> 01:20:56.340] So now there's no tie that they can use to bring you into court. [01:20:56.340 --> 01:20:59.340] They have to release you. [01:20:59.340 --> 01:21:04.340] So I wanted to make a comment about what he was saying earlier [01:21:04.340 --> 01:21:08.340] about the other individuals who were born in court who were native to the license. [01:21:08.340 --> 01:21:13.340] Yes, but what I realized with assessing this new information is that, [01:21:13.340 --> 01:21:20.340] yeah, through his will and how he feels, he did that, [01:21:20.340 --> 01:21:23.340] but he does it in the wrong way because he threw it away [01:21:23.340 --> 01:21:25.340] and said he was going to fight the system, [01:21:25.340 --> 01:21:34.340] but they honor contracts and lawful jurisdiction. [01:21:34.340 --> 01:21:39.340] So he didn't have to go in there and do all that if he understood that, [01:21:39.340 --> 01:21:43.340] hey, take my vehicle, I put it in the trust. [01:21:43.340 --> 01:21:47.340] Every family should have a trust, but they don't want us to know that [01:21:47.340 --> 01:21:52.340] because they're going to give us too much power and we're going to dominate this land. [01:21:52.340 --> 01:21:57.340] These sovereign states, that's how they got control of us. [01:21:57.340 --> 01:22:02.340] We're over here trying to fight them in the system and not understanding that, [01:22:02.340 --> 01:22:07.340] hey, you opted out, you put us into the system, and we didn't know. [01:22:07.340 --> 01:22:09.340] No, that's what the jurisdiction is about. [01:22:09.340 --> 01:22:13.340] All we have to do is get out, which you would technically say, [01:22:13.340 --> 01:22:16.340] hey, we figure out the jurisdiction, the jurisdiction is important, [01:22:16.340 --> 01:22:20.340] but I don't have to argue jurisdiction if my paperwork already shows you that. [01:22:20.340 --> 01:22:23.340] There is no contract. This is a private trust. [01:22:23.340 --> 01:22:28.340] There's no way that you can get me with a commercial code. [01:22:28.340 --> 01:22:33.340] This is a private property. It's recorded in the state. [01:22:33.340 --> 01:22:35.340] If I get pulled over in New York, [01:22:35.340 --> 01:22:41.340] your job to go call Florida and see if it's being recorded properly, [01:22:41.340 --> 01:22:45.340] if it's recorded properly, there's no way you can put me under the commercial code [01:22:45.340 --> 01:22:52.340] because it's not registered as a vehicle to be regulated underneath that code, [01:22:52.340 --> 01:22:55.340] but we don't understand that. [01:22:55.340 --> 01:23:00.340] So, how do we come to understand that? [01:23:00.340 --> 01:23:05.340] We have to learn how to trust and how to operate in the private. [01:23:05.340 --> 01:23:10.340] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:23:10.340 --> 01:23:14.340] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight [01:23:14.340 --> 01:23:16.340] than people who avoid the stuff. [01:23:16.340 --> 01:23:18.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment [01:23:18.340 --> 01:23:21.340] with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:23:21.340 --> 01:23:23.340] Privacy is under attack. [01:23:23.340 --> 01:23:27.340] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:23:27.340 --> 01:23:32.340] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:23:32.340 --> 01:23:37.340] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:23:37.340 --> 01:23:40.340] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:23:40.340 --> 01:23:43.340] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:23:43.340 --> 01:23:47.340] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:23:47.340 --> 01:23:50.340] Start over with StartPage. [01:23:50.340 --> 01:23:56.340] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong. [01:23:56.340 --> 01:24:01.340] Researchers at UTC in Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:24:01.340 --> 01:24:05.340] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines [01:24:05.340 --> 01:24:08.340] five times more than no soda at all. [01:24:08.340 --> 01:24:11.340] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:24:11.340 --> 01:24:15.340] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:24:15.340 --> 01:24:18.340] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, [01:24:18.340 --> 01:24:21.340] which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:24:21.340 --> 01:24:24.340] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:24:24.340 --> 01:24:29.340] and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:24:29.340 --> 01:24:35.340] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:24:35.340 --> 01:24:41.340] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:24:41.340 --> 01:24:43.340] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:24:43.340 --> 01:24:48.340] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:24:48.340 --> 01:24:51.340] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:24:51.340 --> 01:24:53.340] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:24:53.340 --> 01:24:55.340] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:24:55.340 --> 01:24:58.340] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:24:58.340 --> 01:25:02.340] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:25:02.340 --> 01:25:06.340] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:25:06.340 --> 01:25:10.340] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:25:10.340 --> 01:25:12.340] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:25:12.340 --> 01:25:14.340] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:25:14.340 --> 01:25:17.340] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:25:17.340 --> 01:25:20.340] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:25:20.340 --> 01:25:22.340] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:25:22.340 --> 01:25:24.340] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:25:24.340 --> 01:25:27.340] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:25:27.340 --> 01:25:30.340] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:25:30.340 --> 01:25:33.340] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:25:33.340 --> 01:25:36.340] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:25:36.340 --> 01:25:38.340] that will help you understand what due process is [01:25:38.340 --> 01:25:40.340] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:25:40.340 --> 01:25:42.340] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:25:42.340 --> 01:25:45.340] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:25:45.340 --> 01:25:47.340] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:25:47.340 --> 01:25:50.340] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:25:50.340 --> 01:25:52.340] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:25:52.340 --> 01:25:55.340] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:25:55.340 --> 01:25:57.340] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:25:57.340 --> 01:25:59.340] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:25:59.340 --> 01:26:01.340] Order your copy today, and together we can have [01:26:01.340 --> 01:26:04.340] the free society we all want and deserve. [01:26:07.340 --> 01:26:10.340] Looking for some truth? You found it. [01:26:10.340 --> 01:26:13.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:20.340 --> 01:26:23.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:23.340 --> 01:26:26.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:27.340 --> 01:26:30.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:30.340 --> 01:26:33.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:33.340 --> 01:26:36.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:36.340 --> 01:26:39.340] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:26:46.340 --> 01:26:49.340] Hey, look here. [01:26:49.340 --> 01:26:52.340] Ok, we are back. [01:26:52.340 --> 01:26:54.340] We're talking to Marty Shea in Florida [01:26:54.340 --> 01:26:59.460] And we're talking about the, when we went out, [01:26:59.460 --> 01:27:01.940] Mardishe was talking about trust. [01:27:03.620 --> 01:27:05.180] And I put together a trust. [01:27:06.180 --> 01:27:12.220] So tell me, Mardishe, how do we handle trust [01:27:12.900 --> 01:27:19.060] so that it gets us separated from our supposed contract with the state? [01:27:19.060 --> 01:27:29.380] Okay. From what I'm understanding, the trust is more regulated on a federal level, [01:27:31.060 --> 01:27:41.860] and it gives us protection from the lower state level action contract. [01:27:41.860 --> 01:27:43.260] So how do you want to look at it? [01:27:43.660 --> 01:27:58.380] So a trust, you can, a trust can own assets for a beneficiary, [01:28:00.460 --> 01:28:07.820] and the trust has certain protections, and the trust can operate in the private. [01:28:08.380 --> 01:28:15.820] And then private, you have certain rights and that you don't have in the public. [01:28:16.860 --> 01:28:20.140] But I was looking over, I was looking over there, I'm like, wait, these are just, [01:28:20.140 --> 01:28:22.380] all this stuff looks like law to me. [01:28:23.100 --> 01:28:25.820] You know, I just sat there, just kept on running it through my head. [01:28:25.820 --> 01:28:33.260] Then I'm like, wait a minute, this is a perfect formula for the problem that we're having. [01:28:33.340 --> 01:28:40.380] And it also educated me that, okay, we have a gap of knowledge of understanding that [01:28:42.300 --> 01:28:45.340] there's a difference between private and public, [01:28:47.100 --> 01:28:53.180] but then we don't understand that everything that we do is acting in the public, [01:28:53.180 --> 01:28:58.940] which gives them the jurisdiction and the right to do and sanction us in all these ways. [01:28:59.900 --> 01:29:04.460] Now we grew up reading the law saying that we got the right to do this and the right to look [01:29:04.460 --> 01:29:10.380] a motion, and your automobile, your car is not a vehicle, it's an automobile, [01:29:11.660 --> 01:29:14.140] and a car is a vehicle at the same time. [01:29:14.140 --> 01:29:15.900] So all those things are true. [01:29:15.900 --> 01:29:20.060] And I'm thinking to myself, how does this, how does this exist? [01:29:20.060 --> 01:29:25.180] And now I see how they exist, because that same vehicle or that same car, [01:29:25.660 --> 01:29:33.020] once you put it underneath the trust, and it becomes private, that car is an automobile. [01:29:35.020 --> 01:29:37.980] There's no ties to no vehicle code. [01:29:38.780 --> 01:29:46.220] It's an automobile that is protected with all the personal property protections that the federal [01:29:46.940 --> 01:29:49.020] laws provide. [01:29:51.100 --> 01:30:01.740] But when that car is registered to the state, that means that that car is intended use [01:30:02.380 --> 01:30:03.900] is for commercial purposes. [01:30:04.620 --> 01:30:05.820] That's what we don't understand. [01:30:09.100 --> 01:30:12.860] When you register to the state, we don't own it, the state owns it. [01:30:12.860 --> 01:30:15.420] You are a user of it. [01:30:16.460 --> 01:30:22.860] That's why the state can regulate it, tell you how to do it, because they got that power from [01:30:22.860 --> 01:30:23.820] the federal government. [01:30:26.140 --> 01:30:33.020] But we don't understand that once we register our vehicle, our car, personal properties, [01:30:33.020 --> 01:30:38.300] with the state that's telling the state, hey, here's my personal property that I want to [01:30:39.420 --> 01:30:44.780] use to do transportation and make money and get paid and do all these rules. [01:30:44.780 --> 01:30:48.060] I understand I have to protect everybody's rights and everything. [01:30:48.060 --> 01:30:53.900] I take the test, I do all this so I can pass, and boom, now I got my license. [01:30:53.900 --> 01:30:56.060] Now I am in your system. [01:30:56.060 --> 01:30:57.420] You have the right to pull me over. [01:30:59.020 --> 01:31:08.140] I am no longer operating in locomotion because I have registered it to the state. [01:31:10.300 --> 01:31:11.180] Let me ask you a question. [01:31:11.180 --> 01:31:15.980] Let me ask a question to the caller. [01:31:16.700 --> 01:31:21.660] Is it possible to have a tag on the back of your car and have a license in your billfold [01:31:21.660 --> 01:31:28.460] and to be moving on the public right away without being an operator at that time or [01:31:28.460 --> 01:31:29.100] a driver? [01:31:29.100 --> 01:31:33.900] Can you be off the license or do you have to always be on the license? [01:31:34.540 --> 01:31:43.180] No, what you're doing is determined if you need the license or not. [01:31:44.300 --> 01:31:53.340] If you're making money, you need to ensure other's property that's in the vehicle or [01:31:53.340 --> 01:31:55.020] in your car, you need a license. [01:31:55.500 --> 01:32:04.940] But the big determination and with the plate, well, in theory, no, what you're saying, no, [01:32:04.940 --> 01:32:09.580] but they're going to use that since you have the plate and license, they're going to pull [01:32:09.580 --> 01:32:18.860] you into their system and say, you have a contract, you owe us, but if you're not in [01:32:18.860 --> 01:32:22.620] transportation, by law, they don't have the right to do that. [01:32:23.340 --> 01:32:24.860] May I amplify your point? [01:32:24.860 --> 01:32:28.700] I think you're half making a point, which I think I would want to make with you. [01:32:29.420 --> 01:32:34.620] And it's this, if you're a licensee with a driver's license and you also have your [01:32:34.620 --> 01:32:39.020] car registered as a motor vehicle for the use as a motor vehicle. [01:32:39.580 --> 01:32:39.900] All right. [01:32:39.900 --> 01:32:44.620] But let's say you're going to church or let's say you're taking children to basketball [01:32:44.620 --> 01:32:50.300] practice and then you're going shopping for personal necessities and then you're going [01:32:50.300 --> 01:32:51.660] to go and vote. [01:32:51.660 --> 01:32:57.740] Let's say those exercising rights all in one trip away from your property at your home. [01:32:58.860 --> 01:33:05.980] You have all these appartenances of commerce, but I think, as you said, is the use that [01:33:06.620 --> 01:33:07.900] makes a requirement. [01:33:07.900 --> 01:33:17.180] If I'm using my automobile as a motor vehicle for private hire and gain, well, then I better [01:33:17.180 --> 01:33:19.180] have everything in order, license and tag. [01:33:19.180 --> 01:33:25.260] If I'm not, though I'm a licensee and though there's a tag, if I'm not doing those things [01:33:25.260 --> 01:33:32.620] in the activity, in the privileged taxable activity, then I don't have to have those [01:33:32.620 --> 01:33:34.780] evidences and I'm not on the evidence. [01:33:34.780 --> 01:33:41.180] Like, you know, the woman who runs a stylist shop when she's doing her nephew's long locks [01:33:41.180 --> 01:33:46.940] at the house, at the family house on Saturday, she's not on her hairstylist license. [01:33:46.940 --> 01:33:48.060] She's doing it privately. [01:33:50.140 --> 01:33:54.700] Let me speak to what I'm doing on that exact issue. [01:33:55.740 --> 01:34:04.700] I had made some custom license plates that read deadheading. [01:34:06.300 --> 01:34:10.220] Now, I have current license registration on my vehicle. [01:34:10.220 --> 01:34:13.900] I have insurance, all the stuff I need to be to be perfectly legal. [01:34:13.900 --> 01:34:21.260] So, over my license, I put these plates that said deadheading. [01:34:22.540 --> 01:34:28.220] First day I put them on, DPS pulled me over and I asked him, why did you stop me? [01:34:28.220 --> 01:34:31.820] Well, you're not displaying the proper license plates. [01:34:33.020 --> 01:34:34.780] And I said, okay, so what? [01:34:34.780 --> 01:34:36.700] You know what deadheading means. [01:34:37.740 --> 01:34:39.900] And he just kind of stuttered and stammered. [01:34:40.860 --> 01:34:46.540] I said, I gave you notice that I am not operating in commerce. [01:34:47.420 --> 01:34:49.420] So, why did you pull me over? [01:34:52.860 --> 01:34:54.620] He stuttered and stammered. [01:34:55.980 --> 01:34:57.660] He knew I had him. [01:34:59.420 --> 01:35:02.060] This is the argument I want to bring. [01:35:02.060 --> 01:35:12.780] I'm saying that by forcing me to enter into a commercial contract with the state, [01:35:13.980 --> 01:35:22.540] that's exactly what it is, and force me to pay a flat rate road use tax, [01:35:24.140 --> 01:35:31.980] then you have converted the public highways into commercial use only. [01:35:33.020 --> 01:35:38.220] So, I gave you notice I'm not operating under those license plates. [01:35:38.940 --> 01:35:41.900] Even if you can see them, there's two problems with this. [01:35:42.460 --> 01:35:49.500] One is you're forcing me to give up my right to privacy of my papers. [01:35:51.580 --> 01:35:56.540] You're forcing me to give public notice that I have entered into [01:35:56.540 --> 01:35:58.540] a commercial contract with the state. [01:35:58.540 --> 01:36:02.300] And that violates the fourth. [01:36:03.900 --> 01:36:10.620] And then you have converted the public roadways into commercial use only. [01:36:12.700 --> 01:36:14.380] So, you're stolen my highways from me. [01:36:14.940 --> 01:36:17.420] That's an argument I want to take to the Supreme. [01:36:21.260 --> 01:36:23.580] Marty Shea, how can they get by that? [01:36:25.820 --> 01:36:27.340] How can they get by your argument? [01:36:28.060 --> 01:36:28.560] Yeah. [01:36:29.980 --> 01:36:36.060] They can get by your argument by saying that the vehicle is registered. [01:36:38.140 --> 01:36:39.500] The vehicle is registered. [01:36:39.500 --> 01:36:40.700] It's legally registered. [01:36:42.860 --> 01:36:50.620] The only thing that I'm doing is I'm not publicly displaying my contract with the state. [01:36:52.620 --> 01:36:53.120] Right. [01:36:54.000 --> 01:36:55.520] I got insurance. [01:36:55.520 --> 01:36:57.040] I got registration. [01:36:58.000 --> 01:36:59.040] I'll break it coming up. [01:37:01.280 --> 01:37:02.480] So, I got everything I need. [01:37:05.120 --> 01:37:08.480] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [01:37:08.480 --> 01:37:12.400] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [01:37:12.400 --> 01:37:16.560] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [01:37:16.560 --> 01:37:22.400] Or how would you like to save in premium cost on a current major medical plan by lowering [01:37:22.400 --> 01:37:23.760] the claims cost? [01:37:23.760 --> 01:37:29.360] The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan [01:37:29.360 --> 01:37:34.640] that provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, [01:37:34.640 --> 01:37:38.560] and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero co-pay. [01:37:38.560 --> 01:37:44.640] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [01:37:44.640 --> 01:37:50.800] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [01:37:50.800 --> 01:37:57.200] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. [01:37:57.200 --> 01:38:05.040] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [01:38:20.800 --> 01:38:24.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:38:24.480 --> 01:38:27.600] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:38:28.400 --> 01:38:33.200] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:38:33.200 --> 01:38:39.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:38:39.760 --> 01:38:44.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:38:44.240 --> 01:38:48.640] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:38:48.640 --> 01:38:54.880] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:38:54.880 --> 01:38:57.520] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:38:57.520 --> 01:39:05.520] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:39:18.720 --> 01:39:20.400] Good and good to follow you [01:39:24.800 --> 01:39:27.760] Yeah baby Jerry, see the reality [01:39:32.480 --> 01:39:35.440] I can't come as lurking around the clock [01:39:35.440 --> 01:39:37.040] Sing Jerry, come! [01:39:37.040 --> 01:39:44.400] As we sow, so shall we reap [01:39:44.400 --> 01:39:49.920] So many crucial words get put on, oh, while we see [01:39:51.920 --> 01:39:56.880] Try as we win, just hurt small steps to try and meet [01:39:56.880 --> 01:39:59.440] Remember what goes around comes around [01:39:59.440 --> 01:40:03.520] As we sow, so shall we reap [01:40:03.520 --> 01:40:06.080] Okay, Marty Shea, hang on. [01:40:07.040 --> 01:40:09.920] David's only going to be with us for another segment. [01:40:10.640 --> 01:40:16.400] He's in Tennessee and you're also in Florida, so you're in the Eastern time zone. [01:40:17.040 --> 01:40:19.760] So it's going to, it's getting late for David. [01:40:21.360 --> 01:40:26.240] Okay, David, you want to give us a, there's one issue you wanted to address. [01:40:26.240 --> 01:40:28.560] Yes, well, Randall, thanks for having me. [01:40:28.560 --> 01:40:30.080] Really honored to be on the show. [01:40:31.440 --> 01:40:35.520] I think you will want to hear the premise of my case. [01:40:36.160 --> 01:40:41.600] This, the work that I've done in areas of occupational privilege is very important. [01:40:43.120 --> 01:40:48.160] In every state, the same line of thinking and reading, I think, will be very profitable [01:40:48.720 --> 01:40:56.560] for someone who wants to get around the artifice and the fraud and the misrepresentation of [01:40:56.560 --> 01:41:01.440] district attorneys and government officials about our rights of movement. [01:41:01.440 --> 01:41:07.120] Movement is absolutely essential and you know when there's a tyrant operating as in, [01:41:08.880 --> 01:41:15.280] as the IDF operates in Palestine and Gaza, you have continual blockages of movement. [01:41:15.280 --> 01:41:18.800] There, I mean, travel in Gaza is almost impossible. [01:41:18.800 --> 01:41:19.920] There are roadblocks everywhere. [01:41:20.560 --> 01:41:23.680] Everything is fractured and shattered and that's what, that's what police, [01:41:24.720 --> 01:41:28.640] police patrols and deputy patrols and pre-tax stops do. [01:41:28.800 --> 01:41:30.240] They break society. [01:41:30.240 --> 01:41:35.680] They break amity among people and they generate crime. [01:41:35.680 --> 01:41:41.200] So my case is over a false imprisonment, a false arrest in November 2023. [01:41:41.920 --> 01:41:43.840] And I had set my arrest up. [01:41:43.840 --> 01:41:48.080] I had done this work in advance by two administrative notices. [01:41:48.080 --> 01:41:50.000] One of them is a 20-page [01:41:50.960 --> 01:41:58.080] and freed us on all the cases and all the statutes that indicate limits in the authority of the [01:41:58.080 --> 01:42:03.760] motor vehicle statute and also the protections that are afforded in the constitution and also [01:42:03.760 --> 01:42:08.000] in the statutes themselves, you know, because when statutes give a limitation on what the [01:42:08.000 --> 01:42:13.040] officers can do and what the duties are, there's an implied limit, right? [01:42:13.040 --> 01:42:17.600] In the granting of an authority, there is obviously a limit as to the range of, [01:42:18.240 --> 01:42:22.720] range of activity required by that law or prohibited by that law. [01:42:22.720 --> 01:42:26.000] So in the statutes themselves, we have, if we understand them, [01:42:26.000 --> 01:42:32.880] we can see how far they go and what limits they reach to beyond which there is the thing called [01:42:32.880 --> 01:42:40.320] liberty and freedom and, you know, the free, the exercise of free will and private genius that [01:42:40.320 --> 01:42:42.240] you represent as the listener. [01:42:42.960 --> 01:42:49.200] So my premise is the officer did not have probable cause to arrest me. [01:42:49.760 --> 01:42:53.760] He didn't have probable cause to stop me for a damage to the functioning tail light, [01:42:53.760 --> 01:42:59.280] number one, and then he didn't have authority and probable cause to seize me because I refused [01:43:00.000 --> 01:43:02.480] to exhibit ID or driver's license. [01:43:02.480 --> 01:43:08.960] We have a, we have an exhibit on demand statute for parties who are in the privilege [01:43:09.680 --> 01:43:14.560] and I refused to do that because he had before I could do that, he had, [01:43:14.560 --> 01:43:18.880] he had sort of shot himself in the foot by saying, well, you're not in commerce, [01:43:18.880 --> 01:43:22.800] you're not in commerce, not in commerce, which was his pretended authority to begin with, [01:43:22.800 --> 01:43:26.720] to stop me for the equipment damage, right? [01:43:26.720 --> 01:43:28.000] That's under the mode of vehicle law. [01:43:28.960 --> 01:43:31.440] Again, that's a commercial, that's commercial regulation. [01:43:32.080 --> 01:43:36.640] So I didn't show the license and then he arrested me for failure to show ID, [01:43:36.640 --> 01:43:39.760] even though he and all the cops knew who I was since I'm a radio, [01:43:39.760 --> 01:43:44.640] I'm a radio reporter long on the air talking about these very issues of the show. [01:43:45.920 --> 01:43:53.200] And so the suit says, because driving, the suit makes the argument, you'll like this Randall, [01:43:53.920 --> 01:43:57.040] driving an operating mode vehicle is a privilege. [01:43:58.000 --> 01:44:01.600] And it's, when it's a privilege, that means to say it's an occupation, just like [01:44:02.240 --> 01:44:08.160] a scrap metal dealing or plumbing or embalming, those are all privileges. [01:44:08.880 --> 01:44:16.160] And why is this single privilege in my law, the only one where enforcement is [01:44:16.160 --> 01:44:19.760] under criminal authority, not administrative authority? [01:44:20.400 --> 01:44:27.520] And why is it always the threat of arrest and jailing and criminal prosecution at the first [01:44:27.520 --> 01:44:33.600] instance, when we have in every state, we have a uniform administrative procedures act, [01:44:34.320 --> 01:44:38.720] and there's the doctrine of the exhaustion of administrative remedies. [01:44:38.720 --> 01:44:41.680] When the cop pulls you over, he's the pretended agent of the state. [01:44:42.560 --> 01:44:48.560] And if the state has a duty and you have a right in their duty, right? [01:44:48.560 --> 01:44:53.520] They have a duty and you have in that duty on them, a right and that right is that you [01:44:54.480 --> 01:45:00.880] can be free from a criminal prosecution until the state, the moving party exhausts [01:45:00.880 --> 01:45:06.480] its administrative remedies by taking you before the tribunal or the commissioner who [01:45:06.480 --> 01:45:09.280] oversees your license and who granted you a license. [01:45:10.560 --> 01:45:15.840] And that's my, my premise is criminal authority, which is peacekeeping oriented. [01:45:16.720 --> 01:45:19.280] Your sheriff's statute has the details on that. [01:45:20.240 --> 01:45:22.320] He is a peak, he is a peacekeeper. [01:45:22.320 --> 01:45:24.320] His job is not administrative. [01:45:24.320 --> 01:45:25.440] It's criminal. [01:45:25.440 --> 01:45:32.080] It is peacekeeping and maintenance and prevention of riots and affrays [01:45:32.960 --> 01:45:34.720] and, and to enforce the laws. [01:45:34.720 --> 01:45:37.040] That's the chair of duties in your statute. [01:45:37.840 --> 01:45:44.720] And that, that authority cannot be transmogrified into being administrative, [01:45:44.720 --> 01:45:46.720] which is what the department of safety does. [01:45:46.720 --> 01:45:50.720] It has the authority to administer the driver's license and the, and the tag [01:45:51.280 --> 01:45:55.120] and the use of the motor vehicle under the license. [01:45:55.120 --> 01:46:00.640] So if there's a speeding issue or DUI or your tag light is out or your indicator [01:46:00.640 --> 01:46:05.040] didn't work or you, you know, you went the wrong way on a one-way street, [01:46:05.040 --> 01:46:10.000] things like that, that are offenses, those are not crimes. [01:46:10.000 --> 01:46:14.080] And if it's, since these are under license, since everybody seems to have a license, [01:46:15.040 --> 01:46:17.360] well, we need to civilize the system. [01:46:17.360 --> 01:46:20.880] We need to make these, these proceedings civil in nature [01:46:22.320 --> 01:46:24.480] and under, under the UAPA. [01:46:24.480 --> 01:46:29.280] So what happens is you suddenly shoot down the entire criminalization of [01:46:30.240 --> 01:46:37.040] occupational errors or glitches or faults or wrongdoing. [01:46:37.040 --> 01:46:37.680] Okay. [01:46:37.680 --> 01:46:39.120] And that's, that's the premise of my case. [01:46:39.120 --> 01:46:42.480] And I'm saying, well, this case, if I properly argue it, [01:46:43.120 --> 01:46:47.600] we'll try to get around the sovereign citizen, federal, [01:46:49.760 --> 01:46:55.280] well, you might say a barricade that the courts have raised against us by saying, [01:46:55.280 --> 01:46:59.520] well, your arguments on direct travel is all soft-sit stuff. [01:46:59.520 --> 01:47:00.880] This is just an ideology. [01:47:01.520 --> 01:47:06.000] And they've all been trained to think this way from Southern Poverty Law Center and other, [01:47:06.720 --> 01:47:10.000] you know, right-wing or left-wing groups that are sort of hate groups. [01:47:10.880 --> 01:47:15.600] And so they've, they've raised many cases that talk about sovereign citizen thinking. [01:47:15.600 --> 01:47:19.520] And in fact, they are the ones who are the sovereign citizens because they [01:47:19.520 --> 01:47:20.640] would say they're above the law. [01:47:20.640 --> 01:47:29.520] So my case is trying to decriminalize traffic stops and also overcome another hurdle in the cases, [01:47:30.560 --> 01:47:33.280] which are probably, I mean, they're very, very high. [01:47:33.920 --> 01:47:36.800] And that is that we can make an arrest on the spot at any time. [01:47:37.360 --> 01:47:41.840] Effectively, we have general warrants operating in our states. [01:47:41.840 --> 01:47:45.600] Tennessee has an excellent constitutional provision against that, saying that they, [01:47:46.720 --> 01:47:51.360] general warrants where on the spot arrests take place are, you know, [01:47:51.360 --> 01:47:54.160] are unsafe for liberty and ought not to be granted. [01:47:55.120 --> 01:47:58.960] But the Supreme Court has high, high statements that say, well, [01:47:58.960 --> 01:48:02.640] the Fourth Amendment protections, the content doesn't change. [01:48:03.200 --> 01:48:06.000] And so we effectively are overriding all state [01:48:07.040 --> 01:48:10.080] statutes that give more protection than the Fourth Amendment does, [01:48:10.080 --> 01:48:14.320] which Tennessee's constitution and statutes do give more protection. [01:48:15.360 --> 01:48:19.680] So again, the premise is that driving and operating a car [01:48:20.320 --> 01:48:22.720] as a motor vehicle is a privilege. [01:48:22.720 --> 01:48:24.080] It's an occupational privilege. [01:48:24.720 --> 01:48:31.600] And we as licensees have a right to be dealt with not criminally with arrest threat, [01:48:31.600 --> 01:48:32.720] but civilly. [01:48:32.720 --> 01:48:35.600] In other words, the deputy should have contacted the Department of Safety and [01:48:35.600 --> 01:48:42.400] referred my breach, my sin to that agency and let them handle it. [01:48:42.400 --> 01:48:46.960] After you know, these sheriff's department is not on the safety department payroll. [01:48:46.960 --> 01:48:51.440] So why is the sheriff doing its work for it with no reimbursement? [01:48:54.320 --> 01:48:58.000] It's a very unusual case and it's very novel and it goes deeper than [01:48:58.000 --> 01:49:01.440] many other travel cases that are ruled against. [01:49:01.440 --> 01:49:08.160] And I'm trying to get around the easy fix, the quick fix by the courts against us. [01:49:09.200 --> 01:49:11.360] There's something specific in Texas law. [01:49:12.880 --> 01:49:19.120] In Texas law, we have police officers and we have peace officers. [01:49:19.680 --> 01:49:22.560] This is exactly what you were speaking to. [01:49:23.600 --> 01:49:27.040] The Department of Public Safety are police officers. [01:49:28.160 --> 01:49:30.560] They police the transportation code. [01:49:32.320 --> 01:49:40.320] The statute, the law that created the Department of Public Safety, [01:49:40.320 --> 01:49:45.840] right at the beginning it says the Department of Public Safety shall not enforce the criminal laws [01:49:46.880 --> 01:49:51.840] except at the request of and under the direction of local law enforcement. [01:49:52.640 --> 01:49:56.640] That's because they did not want a state police. [01:49:58.480 --> 01:50:06.640] Now we have these politicians trying to turn transportation code and the [01:50:07.840 --> 01:50:12.320] traffic police, the highway patrol into a state police. [01:50:13.680 --> 01:50:16.640] And our founders absolutely forbid it. [01:50:16.640 --> 01:50:24.320] Every state breaks up policing into individual counties so that we don't have a state police [01:50:24.960 --> 01:50:28.080] because that's the one that will take over the country. [01:50:28.080 --> 01:50:32.880] So they broke it up by counties and they come along and put in the [01:50:32.880 --> 01:50:38.400] transportation code and put in highway patrol and they patrol the whole state. [01:50:39.920 --> 01:50:48.160] Gradually removing highway patrol from only forcing the transportation code into enforcing. [01:50:50.640 --> 01:50:53.040] That is horribly problematic. [01:50:53.040 --> 01:50:54.240] Very dangerous, yes. [01:50:55.520 --> 01:50:59.360] When COVID came along, Governor Abbott said, [01:50:59.360 --> 01:51:06.320] I'm going to take the highway patrol and I'm going to use them against you guys. [01:51:06.320 --> 01:51:11.200] I'm going to turn them into a militia, my own personal militia, [01:51:12.320 --> 01:51:14.720] and use them to police my citizens with. [01:51:15.520 --> 01:51:21.600] Well, James Adams and Jefferson were terrified of that. [01:51:23.040 --> 01:51:26.560] They went to great lengths to keep that kind of thing from happening [01:51:27.200 --> 01:51:31.120] because that's the force that will take over the whole government. [01:51:31.120 --> 01:51:35.520] So traffic enforcement has to be separated [01:51:35.520 --> 01:51:40.720] and your proposal that it should be administrative, I think, is absolutely on point. [01:51:40.720 --> 01:51:44.960] Well, in a way, I don't like the idea because in an administrative court, [01:51:44.960 --> 01:51:50.320] you have a preponderance of evidence standard, which is lower than beyond a reasonable doubt. [01:51:50.320 --> 01:51:52.800] On the other hand, we need, hang on, we got three seconds. [01:51:55.360 --> 01:51:58.480] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:51:59.040 --> 01:52:02.720] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:52:03.440 --> 01:52:06.880] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:52:06.880 --> 01:52:11.120] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:52:12.000 --> 01:52:13.760] Enter the recovery version. [01:52:14.400 --> 01:52:18.480] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:52:18.480 --> 01:52:22.640] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:52:23.280 --> 01:52:27.440] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:52:27.440 --> 01:52:32.480] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:52:33.120 --> 01:52:37.840] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:52:38.400 --> 01:52:44.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free [01:52:44.000 --> 01:52:52.800] at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:52:52.800 --> 01:52:55.120] That's freestudybible.com. [01:52:56.320 --> 01:53:01.360] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:53:07.120 --> 01:53:10.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. [01:53:10.880 --> 01:53:14.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:53:14.560 --> 01:53:16.160] Our liberty depends on it. [01:53:16.160 --> 01:53:17.520] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht, [01:53:17.520 --> 01:53:21.680] and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [01:53:21.680 --> 01:53:23.600] Privacy is under attack. [01:53:23.600 --> 01:53:27.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:53:27.200 --> 01:53:32.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:53:32.000 --> 01:53:37.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:53:37.280 --> 01:53:39.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:53:39.760 --> 01:53:43.360] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:53:43.360 --> 01:53:47.440] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:53:47.440 --> 01:53:49.360] Start over with Startpage. [01:53:50.960 --> 01:53:52.880] Spar, it's what fighters do. [01:53:52.880 --> 01:53:56.400] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [01:53:56.400 --> 01:53:59.520] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [01:53:59.520 --> 01:54:01.840] S-P-A-R with an extra P. [01:54:01.840 --> 01:54:08.080] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:54:08.080 --> 01:54:12.240] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:54:12.240 --> 01:54:13.600] assembly, and religion. [01:54:13.600 --> 01:54:16.000] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:54:16.000 --> 01:54:19.680] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:54:19.680 --> 01:54:22.640] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:54:22.640 --> 01:54:25.840] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:54:26.480 --> 01:54:27.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:54:27.840 --> 01:54:30.720] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:54:30.720 --> 01:54:39.920] The Bill of Rights contains the First Ten Amendments of our Constitution. [01:54:39.920 --> 01:54:43.360] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:54:43.360 --> 01:54:44.960] Our liberty depends on it. [01:54:44.960 --> 01:54:48.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:54:48.400 --> 01:54:50.720] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:54:51.520 --> 01:54:53.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:54:53.440 --> 01:54:57.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:54:57.200 --> 01:55:01.840] Once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:55:01.840 --> 01:55:07.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:55:07.120 --> 01:55:09.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:55:09.600 --> 01:55:13.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:55:13.200 --> 01:55:17.280] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:55:17.280 --> 01:55:19.200] Start over with Startpage. [01:55:21.040 --> 01:55:25.040] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms [01:55:25.040 --> 01:55:27.360] around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [01:55:27.360 --> 01:55:31.760] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [01:55:31.760 --> 01:55:35.760] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [01:55:35.760 --> 01:55:36.400] Get it? [01:55:36.400 --> 01:55:39.040] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [01:55:39.040 --> 01:55:42.960] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [01:55:42.960 --> 01:55:44.000] when he said, [01:55:44.000 --> 01:55:48.800] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [01:55:48.800 --> 01:55:52.800] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, [01:55:52.800 --> 01:55:56.240] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [01:55:56.240 --> 01:55:57.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:55:57.600 --> 01:56:00.400] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:56:22.800 --> 01:56:49.200] The [01:56:49.200 --> 01:56:51.760] point that the Federal Courts reject, [01:56:51.840 --> 01:56:58.800] and I think the arguments made in so many cases against soft-sits and soft-sit ideology, [01:57:02.320 --> 01:57:06.640] these are prejudicial rulings, and I intend to point out that this is a prejudice that the courts [01:57:07.200 --> 01:57:11.280] cannot allow to continue because the underlying issues are valid. [01:57:12.720 --> 01:57:18.080] Because my case goes back to the very origin in Article 2, Section 28 in our state of [01:57:18.080 --> 01:57:19.440] where privileges come from. [01:57:19.440 --> 01:57:25.840] They're a constitutional taxing power that you can't just blow it off and say, [01:57:25.840 --> 01:57:30.960] well, all travel is effectively commercial, and that's what they've done. [01:57:32.480 --> 01:57:39.760] The Federal Court rulings against travel have created a kind of presumptive commercialization [01:57:39.760 --> 01:57:44.000] of the use of the road which prohibits the exercise of your rights. [01:57:45.520 --> 01:57:47.280] I'm arrested on press business. [01:57:47.520 --> 01:57:53.760] Here's a reporter and journalist in the morning going to the studio arrested before daylight [01:57:54.800 --> 01:57:58.400] for breaking a law that he's not subject to because he's not involved in the [01:58:00.720 --> 01:58:05.280] privileged taxable activity of commerce or hauling or transporting. [01:58:05.280 --> 01:58:06.160] That's not his business. [01:58:08.080 --> 01:58:14.400] I'm going to push the issue, and this is a very bold, you might say suicidal or quixotic [01:58:15.360 --> 01:58:20.640] kind of case, but I'm giving them the chance to undo it by saying, look, you can't have [01:58:21.600 --> 01:58:27.520] this gloss of sovereign citizen as a threat to democracy and that kind of thing and shoot down [01:58:27.520 --> 01:58:33.760] cases that have valid political reasoning, and you're doing it prejudicially and with bias. [01:58:35.440 --> 01:58:39.520] You don't do that to Nazis marching in Skokie or to Muslims or anybody else. [01:58:39.600 --> 01:58:46.640] The courts are supposed to be neutral and not have prejudice in favor of any one group or [01:58:46.640 --> 01:58:47.760] this favor of any one group. [01:58:50.400 --> 01:58:56.800] There are numerous in your state and in mine, many cases that talk about who owns the roads. [01:58:56.800 --> 01:59:02.720] For example, one case I just want to mention from 1942 is called Dunlap versus Dixie Greyhound. [01:59:02.720 --> 01:59:08.320] It says, a regulated monopoly in the motor carrier field is not authorized by chapter so and so. [01:59:09.200 --> 01:59:11.920] Here's the part that's in an italic type underlined. [01:59:11.920 --> 01:59:15.600] It says the highways of the state belong to the people of the state. [01:59:16.880 --> 01:59:20.320] Many of these highways have been improved at large cost to taxpayers. [01:59:20.320 --> 01:59:22.560] It is the convenience and necessity. [01:59:22.560 --> 01:59:24.160] Those are two very important words for you. [01:59:24.800 --> 01:59:25.920] Convenience and necessity. [01:59:25.920 --> 01:59:30.160] I'm in my car privately exercising my convenience and necessity. [01:59:30.800 --> 01:59:34.880] It is the convenience and necessity of the people of the state that must be given a [01:59:34.880 --> 01:59:39.280] prominent predominant consideration by the commission and not that of contending motor [01:59:39.280 --> 01:59:41.600] carriers operating free over these highways. [01:59:42.320 --> 01:59:45.520] So notice the purpose of the roads are the people and their pleasure. [01:59:46.400 --> 01:59:49.600] Very important concept that the roads are for your pleasure, [01:59:50.480 --> 01:59:52.880] which means you don't have to explain what you're doing. [01:59:52.880 --> 01:59:55.120] You don't have to say where you came from, where you're going. [01:59:55.120 --> 01:59:57.360] Nothing is for your pleasure. [01:59:58.000 --> 02:00:04.000] And so these rights that we have through which the right of movement or as [02:00:04.560 --> 02:00:05.840] your guest says, locomotion. [02:00:06.800 --> 02:00:10.640] Those rights are the means whereby we exercise all of our other rights, [02:00:10.640 --> 02:00:16.240] religion or press or conscience, assembly, redress of grievance. [02:00:16.240 --> 02:00:20.960] Those are all things that, you know, harmlessness and occupations. [02:00:22.400 --> 02:00:26.640] Those are all things that are by right and they can be private. [02:00:26.640 --> 02:00:32.160] You know, healthy Henkel from 1904 makes it very clear that you have an absolute right [02:00:32.160 --> 02:00:33.600] to contract or not contract. [02:00:34.400 --> 02:00:38.080] And if you're doing anything privately, as your guest rightly says, [02:00:39.040 --> 02:00:41.440] you are to be held, not to be held to account. [02:00:42.320 --> 02:00:46.560] And there's another, there's a case in Tennessee called Sun River County versus [02:00:46.560 --> 02:00:47.840] interurban transportation. [02:00:48.480 --> 02:00:53.360] This is a public road is a way open to all the people without distinction. [02:00:53.360 --> 02:00:59.280] In other words, they can't raise an attainder against your guest or against your caller [02:00:59.360 --> 02:01:04.080] that says, okay, if you are this group of private travelers, you are outlawed. [02:01:04.080 --> 02:01:04.720] That's what they've done. [02:01:04.720 --> 02:01:06.160] They've created an attainder. [02:01:06.160 --> 02:01:13.520] That's the word for a prejudgment of a person or group prior to trial or adjudication. [02:01:13.520 --> 02:01:15.440] You're outlawed as a class. [02:01:16.480 --> 02:01:17.840] And so that's not right. [02:01:17.840 --> 02:01:22.320] The public road, it says, is a way open to all the people without distinction. [02:01:23.040 --> 02:01:28.000] So whether you're in commerce or private for passage and repassage at their pleasure. [02:01:29.280 --> 02:01:33.840] And then it goes on to say definitions in other terms have been given, but they mean [02:01:33.840 --> 02:01:37.040] substantially the same as that one just stated. [02:01:37.040 --> 02:01:41.600] The authorities make it clear that any road, which is not for the use of the people, [02:01:41.600 --> 02:01:42.800] is not a public road. [02:01:43.520 --> 02:01:49.680] The fact that it is for the benefit of the public destroys the thought that there can [02:01:49.680 --> 02:01:51.920] be a private ownership of the road. [02:01:51.920 --> 02:01:54.800] And just one quick point before I let you go. [02:01:55.600 --> 02:02:01.360] When you leave your driveway and turn right or left, go down towards the stop sign or [02:02:01.360 --> 02:02:07.920] the light and then onto the main thoroughfare, you don't have to stop every time at every [02:02:07.920 --> 02:02:15.520] house and go in, knock on the door and say, could I use your part of the public road to [02:02:15.520 --> 02:02:16.880] get to the next person's house? [02:02:16.880 --> 02:02:21.040] And then I can stop there and ask that person, knock, knock, knock. [02:02:21.120 --> 02:02:25.280] Do you mind if I use your part of the road to get to the next lot? [02:02:26.560 --> 02:02:29.040] You don't have to stop at every person's house to ask permission. [02:02:29.840 --> 02:02:31.280] They had to give the road. [02:02:31.280 --> 02:02:37.440] The road land used to belong to them, but the road was built either they were paid for [02:02:37.440 --> 02:02:41.120] it or they was condemned and they were paid by court order. [02:02:42.160 --> 02:02:47.920] But either way, they yielded the road and now their former property belongs to the public. [02:02:48.480 --> 02:02:53.920] And so because your listener is on the public road, which he has a right to be there for [02:02:53.920 --> 02:03:01.680] his pleasure, he doesn't have to stop at every lot line at every house and ask permission [02:03:01.680 --> 02:03:08.640] to use that person's former property to go to the next person's edge line of property [02:03:08.640 --> 02:03:09.680] and ask that person. [02:03:09.680 --> 02:03:12.000] No, you just go down the road because it's public. [02:03:13.120 --> 02:03:17.360] Your movement can't be interrupted or abrogated by anybody, the former owner [02:03:17.360 --> 02:03:18.240] or the cops. [02:03:20.240 --> 02:03:22.400] Yes, the cops asking as the owner. [02:03:22.400 --> 02:03:27.920] The original case on right to travel, that's exactly what it went to. [02:03:28.560 --> 02:03:35.920] The state of New Jersey was saying, we own that bridge or at least the half of the bridge [02:03:35.920 --> 02:03:40.960] on our side, so we can charge you to use that half of the bridge. [02:03:42.480 --> 02:03:45.520] And the feds said, absolutely not. [02:03:47.360 --> 02:03:50.320] Okay, right. [02:03:50.320 --> 02:03:52.160] Thank you very much, David. [02:03:52.160 --> 02:03:53.520] Thank you, Randall. [02:03:53.520 --> 02:03:56.720] You are absolutely welcome any time you want to come on. [02:03:57.520 --> 02:03:58.320] It's a great honor. [02:03:58.320 --> 02:03:59.440] Thank you, sir. [02:04:00.080 --> 02:04:00.560] Thank you. [02:04:00.560 --> 02:04:02.640] Okay, now we're going back to Marty Shea. [02:04:04.640 --> 02:04:10.080] Marty Shea, your comment on what David just presented. [02:04:10.800 --> 02:04:22.400] The only thing I'm afraid of is them sidestepping and pulling something out like, because I know [02:04:22.400 --> 02:04:28.080] in Florida, I know he said that he got pulled over for equipment, defective equipment, [02:04:28.720 --> 02:04:29.920] taillight or something like that. [02:04:30.560 --> 02:04:30.800] Yes. [02:04:31.520 --> 02:04:44.000] So in Florida, the taillight law states that if there's two lights that are operating, [02:04:45.680 --> 02:04:53.520] then there was not an infraction and the stop was invalid. [02:04:57.280 --> 02:04:59.200] Texas has something similar. [02:04:59.200 --> 02:05:03.760] I was once thrown in jail all night for driving with a headlight out. [02:05:05.200 --> 02:05:12.640] But what the law said was, at the time, you must have at least two lamps lighted to the front, [02:05:13.920 --> 02:05:15.520] one of which must be white. [02:05:17.520 --> 02:05:18.640] I was driving a truck. [02:05:18.640 --> 02:05:19.680] I had 13. [02:05:21.120 --> 02:05:23.520] One of my headlights had went out, but I couldn't tell. [02:05:25.200 --> 02:05:26.640] And they arrested me for that. [02:05:29.680 --> 02:05:32.320] That's what started this fight. [02:05:33.760 --> 02:05:36.800] They arrested you for being smart or your headlights going out? [02:05:38.720 --> 02:05:41.520] Yeah, I spent the night in jail. [02:05:41.520 --> 02:05:42.800] I mean, it was outrageous. [02:05:47.280 --> 02:05:53.120] Tell us about what Florida did in revoking your license. [02:06:00.160 --> 02:06:01.920] And what you did to them. [02:06:08.800 --> 02:06:19.120] The way that Florida revoked my license, they revoked it for these confines and costs. [02:06:19.120 --> 02:06:33.680] And in one of my last cases I had, I submitted information arguing that [02:06:37.120 --> 02:06:43.200] they unlawfully suspended my license because they suspended it without having to refuse [02:06:43.200 --> 02:06:54.080] it and having a determination hearing to figure if I had the ability to pay. [02:06:57.280 --> 02:07:03.760] And that started up a legal battle. [02:07:03.920 --> 02:07:20.800] And in that time everything was happening, I see the council members and the police [02:07:21.760 --> 02:07:31.200] and the officers stopped me from fighting. [02:07:37.040 --> 02:07:42.240] I didn't want to take a trial because I was risking going to prison at the time [02:07:43.680 --> 02:07:48.640] while I was starting to help my brother with his business. [02:07:49.360 --> 02:07:58.080] So I figured that it was better to start the business than going to sit down for a long time [02:07:58.080 --> 02:08:01.280] trying to fight a case and deal with the situation. [02:08:01.280 --> 02:08:11.120] But I learned a lot through the situation and learned how to press the politics to get a [02:08:12.480 --> 02:08:17.920] more decisive answer or result in what you want. [02:08:18.720 --> 02:08:28.480] And that's why from all this experience, everybody has a fact, but the thing is [02:08:29.120 --> 02:08:36.720] getting reality to react to your fact or your situation and getting results. [02:08:37.680 --> 02:08:46.240] And that's why I've been doing the business and trying to learn how to protect the assets, [02:08:46.240 --> 02:08:52.640] the business. I realized that the jurisdiction that you was always talking about is very important [02:08:53.600 --> 02:09:06.160] and that the jurisdiction between private and public is what has the system of matrix [02:09:07.360 --> 02:09:14.320] have control over because we don't understand the difference between operating in public [02:09:14.320 --> 02:09:18.240] and operating in private. We were not educated about that. [02:09:19.280 --> 02:09:27.200] So in public school, you're not going to get that education because they need you in order to process [02:09:27.200 --> 02:09:39.760] and work. So they're not going to teach you about the lawful things that really provide you your [02:09:39.760 --> 02:09:43.200] right. [02:09:58.960 --> 02:10:03.200] There we go. Somebody muted my mic when I wasn't looking. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [02:10:10.400 --> 02:10:16.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won six cases [02:10:16.000 --> 02:10:20.800] in federal court against debt collectors. And now you can win too. You'll get step-by-step [02:10:20.800 --> 02:10:25.840] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [02:10:25.840 --> 02:10:31.520] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [02:10:31.520 --> 02:10:36.160] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them [02:10:36.160 --> 02:10:42.320] and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to [02:10:42.320 --> 02:10:47.200] stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, [02:10:47.200 --> 02:10:52.400] please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email [02:10:52.400 --> 02:11:02.320] michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [02:11:02.320 --> 02:11:09.120] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law [02:11:09.120 --> 02:11:13.120] traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us against them society. And if we, the people, [02:11:13.120 --> 02:11:17.520] are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [02:11:17.520 --> 02:11:21.200] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own [02:11:21.200 --> 02:11:25.600] private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us [02:11:25.600 --> 02:11:30.320] the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [02:11:30.320 --> 02:11:34.320] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most [02:11:34.320 --> 02:11:38.400] comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how [02:11:38.400 --> 02:11:42.560] to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going [02:11:42.560 --> 02:11:47.280] to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [02:11:47.280 --> 02:11:51.360] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original [02:11:51.360 --> 02:11:56.080] 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight [02:11:56.080 --> 02:12:00.400] for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today [02:12:00.400 --> 02:12:03.440] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [02:12:17.920 --> 02:12:22.080] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the Father can deliver you. [02:12:22.880 --> 02:12:27.840] So don't let bad-minded people hurt you until Satan get behind you. [02:12:33.280 --> 02:12:37.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton and Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [02:12:37.680 --> 02:12:41.200] and we're talking to Marty Shea in Florida. Okay, Marty Shea, [02:12:42.080 --> 02:12:50.400] you, what was the end result? You took them on claiming that they were routinely [02:12:52.400 --> 02:13:00.400] revoking people's license without having, holding a proper hearing. How did that end up? [02:13:11.440 --> 02:13:30.080] Okay, I get that. I have about a dozen things I need to be doing. [02:13:31.760 --> 02:13:39.280] I filed criminal charges against the Fifth Circuit judges for not giving me a proper appeal. [02:13:39.920 --> 02:13:44.480] I've got criminal charges to file against some judges for treating my [02:13:45.200 --> 02:13:54.640] complaints against the Fifth Circuit judges as a lawsuit. I got more stuff than I can get to. [02:13:55.280 --> 02:14:03.120] That kind of sounds like where you were at. Right. And life has a way of doing that to us. [02:14:03.920 --> 02:14:09.920] So I kind of hijacked you. What did you call in to talk about? [02:14:11.680 --> 02:14:16.160] Speak a little bit louder if you can. This is a new system we're using, [02:14:16.880 --> 02:14:20.640] and I don't have it quite balanced out yet, so you're a little soft. [02:14:22.080 --> 02:14:29.520] Okay. Well, I'm calling to talk about the fact that the experiences of going through all that [02:14:30.160 --> 02:14:36.560] made me learn different aspects of law and how it works and the real understanding of it [02:14:37.200 --> 02:14:43.680] about all the facts and theories and the rights that we have, but coming to find out through [02:14:43.680 --> 02:14:56.640] everything that I went through, is how you apply it. It's going to matter of the effectiveness [02:14:56.640 --> 02:15:04.480] of it and what information you have is going to help with how effective it is. [02:15:05.040 --> 02:15:11.440] So through all this research and all the arguments and seeing how people argue and what the court [02:15:11.440 --> 02:15:19.920] says and everything, I'm coming to realize that there's another branch of law that we were not [02:15:19.920 --> 02:15:26.720] taught. We are speaking to it in theory and right. We're saying it, but we're not actually [02:15:26.720 --> 02:15:36.560] enforcing it because we don't understand how to initiate it on paper. Once you have a legal [02:15:36.560 --> 02:15:46.720] contract now, then once you have a legal contract, that's the law. Everything is within the contract, [02:15:46.720 --> 02:15:53.520] and when this legal contract is protected federally, now they really don't want to touch [02:15:53.520 --> 02:16:02.160] it because now it's on paper, it's removed from the public spectrum. So they have to show how [02:16:02.160 --> 02:16:08.720] did you get this private property into this public spectrum world when it's lawfully [02:16:09.520 --> 02:16:12.720] adopted and when it's lawfully obtained. [02:16:12.720 --> 02:16:18.720] Are you speaking to something like condemning private property and the state taking it? [02:16:19.040 --> 02:16:25.040] There's been a lot of talk over the years about titles. [02:16:25.280 --> 02:16:29.440] Title is not a [02:16:30.160 --> 02:16:45.180] general public comment, I mean [02:16:45.180 --> 02:16:51.540] is not a deed. [02:16:51.540 --> 02:16:56.820] And with cars, I think you spoke to that earlier. [02:16:56.820 --> 02:17:01.180] You buy a car, you don't get actual ownership of the car. [02:17:01.180 --> 02:17:04.300] You get a title. [02:17:04.300 --> 02:17:10.140] And where that came from is originally, [02:17:10.140 --> 02:17:13.700] the government, once they got, like for Texas, for instance, [02:17:13.700 --> 02:17:15.460] they got Texas. [02:17:15.460 --> 02:17:19.540] And they had all this land out here, all over the place. [02:17:19.540 --> 02:17:22.300] And they wanted to bring people into Texas, [02:17:22.300 --> 02:17:25.460] so they sold them land. [02:17:25.460 --> 02:17:30.340] But for the most part, the people coming in [02:17:30.340 --> 02:17:33.220] didn't have the money to pay for the whole plot of land [02:17:33.220 --> 02:17:34.980] all at once. [02:17:34.980 --> 02:17:38.380] So they said, OK, we'll make you this deal. [02:17:38.380 --> 02:17:42.300] Instead of giving you a warranty deed to the property, [02:17:42.300 --> 02:17:43.340] we'll give you a title. [02:17:46.060 --> 02:17:50.500] And that title is conditional on your paying [02:17:50.500 --> 02:17:53.660] a certain amount of money over a certain amount of time [02:17:53.660 --> 02:17:54.540] back to the state. [02:17:57.420 --> 02:18:00.860] Once the payments were completed, [02:18:00.860 --> 02:18:05.100] you would have had to go in and have that title removed [02:18:05.100 --> 02:18:10.180] from the public record, because it was no longer valid, [02:18:10.180 --> 02:18:14.380] because the mortgage had been paid off. [02:18:14.380 --> 02:18:17.780] But people didn't do that. [02:18:17.780 --> 02:18:21.900] They left them in the public record. [02:18:21.900 --> 02:18:27.740] And the upshot was is that title gave the state [02:18:27.740 --> 02:18:29.740] a claim against the property. [02:18:29.740 --> 02:18:32.620] And we had someone here in Texas who was helping people [02:18:32.620 --> 02:18:34.620] get off the tax rolls. [02:18:34.660 --> 02:18:40.220] And the way he did it was he have them send in a request [02:18:40.220 --> 02:18:43.420] to the county recorder's office or the county tax assessor [02:18:43.420 --> 02:18:50.380] collector and say, are there any claims against this property? [02:18:50.380 --> 02:18:55.540] Does the state have any claim against this property? [02:18:55.540 --> 02:18:58.060] And property had been paid off to the state [02:18:58.060 --> 02:19:00.580] for probably 150 years. [02:19:00.580 --> 02:19:03.740] And they'll get a response back saying, [02:19:03.740 --> 02:19:07.420] no, the state does not have a claim against your property. [02:19:07.420 --> 02:19:12.180] That renders the title now essentially void. [02:19:12.180 --> 02:19:16.900] So then you file with the state asking the state [02:19:16.900 --> 02:19:20.940] to take you from the commercial tax rolls [02:19:20.940 --> 02:19:29.620] and move your property from the commercial to the private. [02:19:29.620 --> 02:19:33.260] And once it's private, it's not taxed anymore. [02:19:33.260 --> 02:19:36.700] It's only taxed when it has a title. [02:19:36.700 --> 02:19:40.260] And the title, all it says is the government [02:19:40.260 --> 02:19:42.340] has a claim against your property. [02:19:42.340 --> 02:19:44.980] And as long as there is a claim against your property, [02:19:44.980 --> 02:19:48.580] the government can tax you. [02:19:48.580 --> 02:19:51.380] Cars the same way. [02:19:51.380 --> 02:19:56.900] So you don't get proof of ownership of the car. [02:19:56.900 --> 02:20:00.260] You get a title. [02:20:00.260 --> 02:20:03.340] But in cars, the state doesn't have [02:20:03.340 --> 02:20:05.980] any claim against your car. [02:20:05.980 --> 02:20:08.940] It never did. [02:20:08.940 --> 02:20:10.540] But it gave them a way to tax it. [02:20:13.660 --> 02:20:15.540] Does that make sense? [02:20:15.540 --> 02:20:17.060] Right. [02:20:17.060 --> 02:20:18.540] So we're saying the same thing. [02:20:18.540 --> 02:20:20.900] So it's operating. [02:20:20.900 --> 02:20:22.740] And that's how I know it will work, [02:20:22.740 --> 02:20:26.820] because it's operating the same method, the same thing [02:20:26.820 --> 02:20:30.180] if you just said about the title about the houses, [02:20:30.180 --> 02:20:34.100] it's the same way that it works with the automobile. [02:20:34.100 --> 02:20:37.420] Because right now, when you get the automobile, [02:20:37.420 --> 02:20:39.820] they're throwing around titles. [02:20:39.820 --> 02:20:42.980] And you are forced to deal with a title. [02:20:42.980 --> 02:20:46.020] But they never educated you what the title is [02:20:46.020 --> 02:20:50.540] and how to remove it from having the title. [02:20:50.540 --> 02:20:53.500] The easiest way that I've realized [02:20:53.500 --> 02:20:58.820] is by getting the trust. [02:20:58.820 --> 02:21:00.460] All families should have a trust. [02:21:00.460 --> 02:21:05.500] But we are not educated in wealth and finance, [02:21:05.500 --> 02:21:08.180] because that's the part that's a real loss. [02:21:08.180 --> 02:21:10.540] Once you study wealth and finance [02:21:10.540 --> 02:21:13.180] and you learn how to protect yourself, [02:21:13.180 --> 02:21:16.020] now you've become how to remove everything out of public [02:21:16.020 --> 02:21:18.060] and put it into private. [02:21:18.060 --> 02:21:21.220] So that's what they mean that your automobile [02:21:21.220 --> 02:21:23.260] is private property. [02:21:23.260 --> 02:21:25.740] Because essentially, when you buy an automobile, [02:21:25.740 --> 02:21:26.940] you don't buy it to do work. [02:21:26.940 --> 02:21:29.740] You buy it to travel, locomotion. [02:21:29.740 --> 02:21:32.260] So the courses are saying it correctly, [02:21:32.260 --> 02:21:34.460] but it's so complex. [02:21:34.460 --> 02:21:37.900] There's so many levels of understanding, [02:21:37.900 --> 02:21:40.060] understanding what has to be done [02:21:40.060 --> 02:21:41.980] in order to have those rights. [02:21:41.980 --> 02:21:43.420] See, they ain't say that. [02:21:43.420 --> 02:21:46.460] They ain't say, hey, we don't want to have those rights. [02:21:46.460 --> 02:21:49.820] You know, the state or some legal fiction [02:21:49.820 --> 02:21:51.340] is going to make you think, so you've [02:21:51.340 --> 02:21:55.060] got to have paperwork that says that this automobile is [02:21:55.060 --> 02:21:59.460] a private automobile. [02:21:59.460 --> 02:22:01.220] Then when they pull it up, there's [02:22:01.220 --> 02:22:03.460] no way for them to put any kind of words [02:22:03.460 --> 02:22:06.180] or put you in private jurisdiction, [02:22:06.180 --> 02:22:09.460] because the tax collectors that you live in [02:22:09.460 --> 02:22:15.060] has it recorded as some trust, which [02:22:15.060 --> 02:22:21.700] is protected by federal law, own this private automobile, [02:22:21.700 --> 02:22:26.420] and these people have access to it, [02:22:26.420 --> 02:22:30.940] and they have the right to locomotion. [02:22:30.940 --> 02:22:33.180] See, now it's more concrete. [02:22:33.180 --> 02:22:35.340] The state is not going to want to fight that. [02:22:35.340 --> 02:22:38.460] When the cops pull you over, and they run that, [02:22:38.460 --> 02:22:40.340] they're going to come back to this one, like, oh, [02:22:40.340 --> 02:22:42.660] you better let him go. [02:22:42.660 --> 02:22:49.860] So is there a methodology for removing the title [02:22:49.860 --> 02:22:53.060] from your automobile? [02:22:53.060 --> 02:22:59.020] Once the truck owns it, it somehow [02:22:59.020 --> 02:23:00.620] removes it from the public. [02:23:06.180 --> 02:23:08.940] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, [02:23:08.940 --> 02:23:10.980] but you might not know that the way you walk [02:23:10.980 --> 02:23:13.620] could predict how long you're going to live. [02:23:13.620 --> 02:23:15.020] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll [02:23:15.020 --> 02:23:18.420] be back to tell you more about walking prognostication [02:23:18.420 --> 02:23:19.500] in just a moment. [02:23:19.500 --> 02:23:21.460] Privacy is under attack. [02:23:21.460 --> 02:23:23.380] When you give up data about yourself, [02:23:23.380 --> 02:23:25.060] you'll never get it back again. [02:23:25.060 --> 02:23:27.100] And once your privacy is gone, you'll [02:23:27.100 --> 02:23:29.860] find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [02:23:29.860 --> 02:23:32.780] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [02:23:32.780 --> 02:23:35.100] and keep your information to yourself. [02:23:35.100 --> 02:23:37.660] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:23:37.660 --> 02:23:39.740] This public service announcement is brought to you by [02:23:39.740 --> 02:23:43.100] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative [02:23:43.100 --> 02:23:45.220] to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:23:45.220 --> 02:23:48.780] Start over with StartPage. [02:23:48.780 --> 02:23:51.020] New research shows how fast you walk [02:23:51.020 --> 02:23:53.260] could predict how long you're going to live. [02:23:53.260 --> 02:23:55.460] The Journal of the American Medical Association [02:23:55.460 --> 02:23:58.620] reports that older adults who walk one meter per second [02:23:58.620 --> 02:24:01.060] or faster live longer than expected. [02:24:01.060 --> 02:24:03.180] In case you're wondering, one meter per second [02:24:03.180 --> 02:24:05.540] is about 2 and 1 quarter miles per hour. [02:24:05.540 --> 02:24:08.060] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed [02:24:08.060 --> 02:24:10.260] were as good at predicting life expectancy [02:24:10.260 --> 02:24:12.620] as more traditional statistical measures. [02:24:12.620 --> 02:24:15.500] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [02:24:15.500 --> 02:24:18.300] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [02:24:18.300 --> 02:24:20.380] It only takes a stopwatch, some space [02:24:20.380 --> 02:24:21.780] to walk, and a few minutes. [02:24:21.780 --> 02:24:25.180] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients [02:24:25.180 --> 02:24:26.940] who need special care. [02:24:26.940 --> 02:24:28.140] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:24:28.140 --> 02:24:31.140] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:24:31.140 --> 02:24:35.580] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, [02:24:35.580 --> 02:24:36.580] 2001. [02:24:36.580 --> 02:24:38.940] Most people don't know that a third tower [02:24:38.940 --> 02:24:40.260] fell on September 11. [02:24:40.260 --> 02:24:43.180] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, [02:24:43.180 --> 02:24:44.540] was not hit by a plane. [02:24:44.540 --> 02:24:46.180] Although the official explanation [02:24:46.180 --> 02:24:48.260] is that fire brought down Building 7, [02:24:48.260 --> 02:24:51.020] over 1,200 architects and engineers [02:24:51.020 --> 02:24:52.780] have looked into the evidence and believed [02:24:52.780 --> 02:24:54.060] there is more to the story. [02:24:54.060 --> 02:24:57.300] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [02:24:57.300 --> 02:24:58.700] Go to the hospital. [02:24:58.700 --> 02:25:00.860] My son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [02:25:00.860 --> 02:25:03.060] Go to buildingwhat.org. [02:25:03.060 --> 02:25:07.060] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [02:25:07.060 --> 02:25:09.860] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [02:25:09.860 --> 02:25:12.180] and a better understanding of His word? [02:25:12.180 --> 02:25:15.260] Then tune in to logosradio.com on Wednesdays [02:25:15.260 --> 02:25:18.500] from 8 to 10 PM Central Time for scripture talk, [02:25:18.500 --> 02:25:21.020] where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [02:25:21.020 --> 02:25:23.700] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [02:25:23.700 --> 02:25:26.100] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [02:25:26.100 --> 02:25:28.220] a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [02:25:28.220 --> 02:25:30.620] rightly dividing the word of truth. [02:25:30.620 --> 02:25:33.100] Starting in January, our first hour studies [02:25:33.100 --> 02:25:35.660] are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse [02:25:35.660 --> 02:25:38.180] and discuss the true gospel message. [02:25:38.180 --> 02:25:41.020] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week [02:25:41.020 --> 02:25:42.900] with discussions on sound doctrine [02:25:42.900 --> 02:25:45.220] and Christian character development. [02:25:45.220 --> 02:25:47.700] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing [02:25:47.700 --> 02:25:49.700] to all those with a hearing ear. [02:25:49.700 --> 02:25:51.580] Our goal is to strengthen our faith [02:25:51.580 --> 02:25:54.220] and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [02:25:54.220 --> 02:25:56.260] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [02:25:56.300 --> 02:25:59.980] So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [02:25:59.980 --> 02:26:02.980] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 PM to inspire [02:26:02.980 --> 02:26:05.460] and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [02:26:07.780 --> 02:26:12.100] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [02:26:12.100 --> 02:26:16.020] Lyrics. [02:26:42.100 --> 02:26:50.260] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountainbrew of our radio on this Friday the 9th day of [02:26:50.260 --> 02:27:00.220] May 2025. Hard to believe we're already a quarter of the way through us this the [02:27:00.220 --> 02:27:07.700] century of the new millennium. I remember when we were when I was in school we [02:27:07.700 --> 02:27:17.740] read 1984 and that seemed like it was forever in the future and now it's way [02:27:17.740 --> 02:27:22.820] back there in the past. I must be getting old. Okay we're talking to [02:27:23.260 --> 02:27:36.180] Okay, where were we when we dropped out? Martichae? Trust? Go ahead. [02:27:36.180 --> 02:27:46.060] We were talking about how a way to remove the title from our vehicle is to take it [02:27:46.060 --> 02:27:54.540] lawfully. From what I'm understanding, you get a trust. When you have a family [02:27:54.540 --> 02:28:04.180] trust or obtain a trust, you can sell your vehicle to the trust. If you sell your [02:28:04.180 --> 02:28:15.260] vehicle to the trust, a document is created. A legal fiction is created. Now you take [02:28:15.260 --> 02:28:26.460] that legal paperwork and you record it with the county tax assessor. Whatever the [02:28:26.460 --> 02:28:32.060] state number you want put on it, you know, so you're recording it. You're not [02:28:32.060 --> 02:28:42.140] registered. You're recording that this trust owns this private property and [02:28:42.620 --> 02:28:48.380] here's the information. So it's recorded. So when officers pull you over, you know [02:28:48.380 --> 02:28:53.900] what I'm saying, they can pay you. You don't have your place being come up. You [02:28:53.900 --> 02:29:00.060] hand the paperwork. Well, here's the paperwork. Do your job. Well, I don't know. [02:29:00.940 --> 02:29:06.700] Here's the paperwork. Go do your job. Take the paperwork. They go contact people and then [02:29:06.700 --> 02:29:12.620] they find out that, hey, this is listed as a private automobile, not in commerce. [02:29:15.020 --> 02:29:19.660] There's no argument. There's no going back and forth. You're saying everything is [02:29:20.700 --> 02:29:28.700] legally written down and is already federally protected. But now they can't say that [02:29:29.420 --> 02:29:39.660] we need a license for what? I'm in a private automobile. It is recorded within the state [02:29:40.940 --> 02:29:48.380] as a private automobile. So why are you asking me for commerce credentials? [02:29:51.420 --> 02:29:58.060] Now that is interesting. Do you have any paperwork on that that I can study? [02:29:59.660 --> 02:30:11.740] I'm trying to work on getting a trust together now to start the process. This is what all the [02:30:11.740 --> 02:30:18.300] repays that I've obtained before starting the process. And I realized like, wait a minute, [02:30:18.300 --> 02:30:28.460] this is a loss. This is real loss. This is why we were suffering and not getting the result that [02:30:29.260 --> 02:30:39.580] we want. We don't understand the private side of law where we've been born and taught to operate [02:30:39.580 --> 02:30:48.540] in the public press room from day one. And I'm pretty bright. And I was shocked. Wait, I'm 42. [02:30:48.540 --> 02:30:57.900] And I just realized this. Wait a minute, I'm 75 and I'm still realizing stuff. So I would expect [02:30:57.900 --> 02:31:06.620] that to get better. I know, but I care. But I care about fixing the problem. So it's like, wait a [02:31:06.620 --> 02:31:15.980] minute. Public schools not teaching anything about private. You got to pay somebody big bucks to [02:31:15.980 --> 02:31:21.980] learn this stuff. So that's why the wealthy people are the only ones who are really getting it. [02:31:21.980 --> 02:31:27.180] Public schools don't teach you that. They teach you the public side so they can make money off [02:31:27.180 --> 02:31:36.380] of you, tax you, trade your image on the global market and use you because you don't understand [02:31:36.380 --> 02:31:44.700] that in the public aspect. You allow them to do that and that's how they gain their power on [02:31:44.700 --> 02:31:50.140] trading and both globally on the market. But if you were in private, if you learn how to put [02:31:50.140 --> 02:31:56.780] everything in private, your name, your paperwork, your passport, if we learn that, now that [02:31:56.780 --> 02:32:04.860] remove that information saying that they have the ability, the right to use us, to exchange us [02:32:04.860 --> 02:32:10.220] from the global market and all these things that we don't understand is happening because [02:32:11.500 --> 02:32:16.060] of not understanding the often the jurisdiction of private and public. [02:32:16.940 --> 02:32:21.500] So I remember back in the day, you always call my jurisdiction. I'm like, man, one day I'll figure [02:32:21.500 --> 02:32:25.900] that out. It's going to be, but right now I'm just going to fight. But now I'm like, wait a minute, [02:32:25.900 --> 02:32:32.460] this jurisdiction is really holding weight because now I see that there's a public and private [02:32:33.020 --> 02:32:37.580] and that's the easiest way to protect yourself is with the paperwork because with that paperwork, [02:32:37.580 --> 02:32:42.780] they can't, they can't do anything with you today. When you sue them, it's going to be really deep [02:32:43.900 --> 02:32:49.180] because they have no paperwork saying that you was in commerce. Clearly says that this is a [02:32:49.180 --> 02:32:57.500] private automobile. Okay. I'm still not clear how getting, removing the title from your [02:32:58.460 --> 02:32:59.820] picture. [02:32:59.820 --> 02:33:01.820] Yeah. [02:33:04.140 --> 02:33:05.820] Go ahead. [02:33:18.060 --> 02:33:20.380] I'm having a problem. I'm losing your mortgage. [02:33:20.380 --> 02:33:20.880] Okay. [02:33:23.340 --> 02:33:24.700] No, I asked somebody else. [02:33:28.220 --> 02:33:31.740] Can you hear me? Yeah, I'm just getting bits and pieces. [02:33:34.620 --> 02:33:38.620] You asked me, how does it remove the title? Yes. [02:33:41.180 --> 02:33:48.300] It doesn't remove the title. What it does is once the, once it, once you transfer it over into the [02:33:48.300 --> 02:33:56.780] trust, it becomes the, it becomes lawfully something else. The trust owns it. [02:34:00.060 --> 02:34:05.100] The public, the, the public doesn't have any control over the trust, [02:34:06.140 --> 02:34:13.580] but the jurisdiction that they, that the state have in the public does not transfer over into [02:34:13.580 --> 02:34:18.700] the trust. The trust is underneath the federal jurisdiction. [02:34:22.300 --> 02:34:27.260] Okay. Do you have any, any documentation you could send me so I could study that? [02:34:27.260 --> 02:34:34.860] Because I'd like to address this in more detail on the air. I've just recently set up a trust out of [02:34:34.940 --> 02:34:35.500] Wyoming. [02:34:38.220 --> 02:34:41.340] It's called V of Shell companies. [02:34:49.500 --> 02:34:51.660] Wait, I cannot understand you. [02:34:59.260 --> 02:35:03.660] Yeah, I'm hearing that and I don't know where that's coming from. [02:35:05.340 --> 02:35:08.220] Can you call us back next week? We were working on [02:35:08.940 --> 02:35:13.980] some new technology here and we don't have it up to snuff, but I'd very much like to talk about this. [02:35:23.900 --> 02:35:30.940] That's a way to, to fight without losing our time without, and you're making, you're creating [02:35:30.940 --> 02:35:38.140] wealth for your family. You're bringing new information that, you know, I'm smart, so I like [02:35:38.140 --> 02:35:44.060] learning and I know it took me this long to learn that it's going to take other families a lot longer. [02:35:45.100 --> 02:35:51.340] Will you come back, come on next week and be a guest and let's do a show on [02:35:52.700 --> 02:35:54.940] how to protect your assets with trusts? [02:35:56.220 --> 02:35:56.720] Okay. [02:35:56.720 --> 02:36:02.400] Good, and by then we should have this technology worked out a lot better. [02:36:03.680 --> 02:36:04.180] All right. [02:36:05.360 --> 02:36:09.760] Thank you, Monteshe. Okay, now we're going to go to [02:36:10.720 --> 02:36:17.280] Joseph in Texas. Chris, I see you there. We will get to you. Okay, Joseph, what do you have for us today? [02:36:23.200 --> 02:36:24.400] Hello, Joseph. [02:36:26.880 --> 02:36:30.880] Did you fall asleep on us? Okay, I'm going to go. [02:36:32.240 --> 02:36:40.320] Oh, okay. I'm going to go to Chris in Colorado, but I'm going to leave Joseph's line unmuted in [02:36:40.320 --> 02:36:48.960] case he wakes up. Chris, what do you have for us today? Well, I'm going to take us out. [02:36:49.920 --> 02:36:56.480] Thank you for calling the show. Oh, your time's up. We gave you your shot, but you blew it. [02:36:57.120 --> 02:37:00.640] Randy called, Brett found, we'll be right back. [02:37:05.200 --> 02:37:10.320] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds [02:37:10.320 --> 02:37:16.000] of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be [02:37:16.000 --> 02:37:22.640] on? Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the [02:37:22.640 --> 02:37:30.400] claims cost? 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If you have a lawyer, [02:38:22.240 --> 02:38:27.120] know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for [02:38:27.120 --> 02:38:34.400] yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was [02:38:34.400 --> 02:38:40.880] created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a [02:38:40.880 --> 02:38:46.320] lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices [02:38:46.320 --> 02:38:53.200] that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [02:38:53.200 --> 02:39:00.400] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [02:39:00.400 --> 02:39:05.920] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [02:39:30.400 --> 02:39:42.080] Okay, we're back, Randy Kelton. Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, [02:39:44.080 --> 02:39:53.280] ninth day of May 2025, and we're talking to, yes, Colorado. Okay, Chris, let's see if I can hear you. [02:39:53.280 --> 02:40:01.920] Yeah, it's pretty muted, Randy. Can you hear me okay? [02:40:02.960 --> 02:40:10.160] We're using Zoom right now because Skype has been shut down and we're having trouble [02:40:10.800 --> 02:40:18.480] getting meetings to come up and work right. So, we're struggling with technology as [02:40:19.280 --> 02:40:24.320] it's normal, part of the course. Okay, what do you have for us today? [02:40:26.400 --> 02:40:32.640] Well, I'm not sure if this is going to be the best space to do this at this point, but I wanted to [02:40:32.640 --> 02:40:39.840] touch base on a topic. I really need to chat almost offline with somebody because [02:40:41.520 --> 02:40:46.160] what I'm stumbling on, it seems we're all learning of some pretty significant areas. I heard [02:40:46.160 --> 02:40:50.560] Marty Shea talk about everything and it sounds pretty interesting, but we learn the hard way, [02:40:50.560 --> 02:40:59.120] don't we? And so, I went through the appellate process, I went through the court process thinking [02:40:59.120 --> 02:41:08.880] that doing a really good job, like really trying hard to speak the way the courts want you to speak, [02:41:09.760 --> 02:41:14.480] speak in a way they can understand and reference cases and law and facts in a way they can [02:41:14.480 --> 02:41:21.040] understand was what was needed. And I've been on the phone with many people over the past week, [02:41:21.040 --> 02:41:28.240] including the Institute for Justice, and here's what we were concluding as some of the statistics [02:41:28.240 --> 02:41:36.320] that were pro-safe. And everybody knows being pro-safe is hard, but there really is a systemic [02:41:36.320 --> 02:41:44.320] issue out there. So, my appeals case I thought would get heard and they would really wrap their [02:41:45.280 --> 02:41:49.600] hands around it and try to do stuff with it and maybe I would lose some arguments and maybe they [02:41:49.600 --> 02:41:54.000] would give me some points to some arguments. Well, here's what they did, almost not too far [02:41:54.000 --> 02:42:02.240] away from what they did to you. They invited me into the court and I had some disability claims [02:42:02.240 --> 02:42:08.240] going on because when this all went on, I was not in good shape. And I'm still not in great shape, [02:42:08.240 --> 02:42:15.360] but I'm better than I was two years ago. And so, I had valid disability claims and [02:42:17.280 --> 02:42:21.520] they basically, not only did they ignore that, but they ignored the whole case. [02:42:22.800 --> 02:42:27.040] 80, 90% of my arguments and case fall and everything, they just completely ignored it, [02:42:27.040 --> 02:42:31.600] which means they didn't read it, which means they had the clerk of the court, [02:42:32.640 --> 02:42:36.880] their clerk read it and give some suggestions and they signed off on it. It's that messy. [02:42:37.600 --> 02:42:45.280] They even, the state court, I'm sorry, the federal court in Wyoming used the wrong law. So, [02:42:45.280 --> 02:42:51.520] the law was changed in 2024 and my issue was from 2021 and they used the law from 2024 and I brought [02:42:51.520 --> 02:42:59.520] that up in an amended, not amended, a supplemental brief. And they ended my ruling with we grant the [02:42:59.520 --> 02:43:03.680] supplemental brief and then they dismissed the case. They ignored the supplemental brief. [02:43:04.640 --> 02:43:12.480] And then they also quoted a, they quoted some text that doesn't even exist about a law from [02:43:12.480 --> 02:43:19.360] Wyoming. And I even gave them a, actually the defense attorney gave them a case from Wyoming [02:43:19.360 --> 02:43:25.440] that just came out in January that substantiated tolling. And they said no tolling exists for that [02:43:25.440 --> 02:43:30.080] statute. We didn't know the Supreme court says tolling does, can be allowed for that statute. [02:43:30.080 --> 02:43:38.160] So it, it wasn't just messy. It was like, it was, it was an eye-opener to how they view us. [02:43:39.760 --> 02:43:43.840] And that's why I'm, I'm reluctant to get deep into it because it's a little discouraging, but [02:43:44.800 --> 02:43:50.320] I started talking about this topic and I found some statistics and it's pretty alarming how they [02:43:50.320 --> 02:43:56.320] treat process. This isn't, this is a big issue. This is a problem. It's like, it doesn't matter [02:43:56.320 --> 02:44:01.840] how good you are. If you're not represented, they, they, they put their noses down at you and not [02:44:01.840 --> 02:44:06.400] every judge, but most, most of the, the judicial system. And I didn't, I didn't really expect that [02:44:06.400 --> 02:44:12.560] from this level of the courts, but it was a humbling, so to speak. So that's where I'm at. [02:44:14.400 --> 02:44:22.160] I'm kind of there too. The higher courts, the lower courts, they're all absolutely ignoring law. [02:44:22.240 --> 02:44:32.240] So trying to figure out how do I get past this? How do I take what they're doing and turn it back [02:44:32.240 --> 02:44:40.080] on them? Exactly. So what I'm doing is filing criminal charges against them with a grand jury. [02:44:40.080 --> 02:44:49.360] Right now, what I'm trying to do is get the grand jury opened up to private citizens. [02:44:49.840 --> 02:44:55.440] I sent a set of criminal complaints to the grand jury in Fort Worth against the Fifth Circuit [02:44:55.440 --> 02:45:02.640] judges. And what my complaint was is irrelevant. It's a complaint against the Fifth Circuit judges. [02:45:02.640 --> 02:45:13.840] So the county, I mean, the federal district clerk intercepted my filing and he sent me a notice that [02:45:14.240 --> 02:45:22.800] I didn't pay a filing fee for his civil action. And then I got a response from a federal judge [02:45:24.400 --> 02:45:33.840] that essentially said the same thing. They took my criminal complaint to the grand jury [02:45:34.640 --> 02:45:40.160] and they converted it into a civil suit. And the last I heard is, I don't know if you've heard [02:45:40.160 --> 02:45:48.240] a civil suit, the last I heard is if I don't pay the $400 filing fee that they're going to [02:45:48.240 --> 02:45:56.800] dismiss my case. But you don't have a case. That's right. Good point. They didn't seem to [02:45:56.800 --> 02:46:07.520] get that point. So my plan is to file criminal charges against that clerk and the judge with [02:46:08.080 --> 02:46:17.280] the local U.S. attorney and get him to secret my complaint from the grand jury. [02:46:19.760 --> 02:46:25.440] Then I'm going to file a criminal complaint against the local U.S. attorney [02:46:26.720 --> 02:46:31.040] with the U.S. attorney general in D.C. [02:46:31.040 --> 02:46:37.520] And when she does, I'm going to demand that she [02:46:39.440 --> 02:46:44.240] give the forward this to the foreman of the federal grand jury in D.C. [02:46:46.080 --> 02:46:54.560] And my filing itself has a cover page that explains to the judge that we have reason to believe that [02:46:55.440 --> 02:47:01.520] the court reporters only report what is favorable to the judge. [02:47:04.400 --> 02:47:16.000] So what we want is that our complaints be given directly to the grand jury. [02:47:17.520 --> 02:47:20.960] And in that set of complaints, I have a cover letter that [02:47:20.960 --> 02:47:28.960] explains to the U.S. and to the foreman of the grand jury that it asks him to initial this [02:47:28.960 --> 02:47:35.280] document and return it to us. It explains that the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with your [02:47:35.280 --> 02:47:41.360] name on it. And we want to make sure he doesn't rubber stamp and send it back to us. [02:47:41.840 --> 02:47:48.720] I have a stamp self-addressed envelope included and take this document, initial it, put it in the [02:47:48.720 --> 02:47:57.680] envelope, send it back to us. I'm never going to get that document. But what that does is gives me [02:47:58.400 --> 02:48:05.120] reasonable probable cause to believe that someone intercepted the U.S. mail [02:48:05.120 --> 02:48:13.760] as I did not get this cover page back. And I'm going to accuse the attorney general [02:48:14.400 --> 02:48:21.600] of secreting my criminal complaints from the grand jury. Then I'll sue her. I'll sue in the [02:48:21.600 --> 02:48:29.840] federal court, but I'll sue the president as respondeat superior. Now, I sued against the [02:48:29.920 --> 02:48:33.360] president as respondeat superior. He's not going to go very far, and I'm not worried about that. [02:48:35.120 --> 02:48:44.480] But what he was likely to do is get his attention. That's the idea. When I sued all the judges in [02:48:44.480 --> 02:48:54.960] Texas, court of criminal appeals, I did not expect to win that suit. I did not expect to get anything [02:48:54.960 --> 02:49:01.200] not expect to win that suit. I did not expect to get anything other than a dismissal, and that's [02:49:01.200 --> 02:49:11.760] what I got. However, it gave me a whole line of complaints so I can go to the next higher level [02:49:11.760 --> 02:49:21.360] and say, look, this is what they're doing. Take that to Pam Bondi and insist that she take my [02:49:21.360 --> 02:49:31.840] complaints and present them to a grand jury. No. Whether I get an indictment, that's not so important. [02:49:34.240 --> 02:49:40.960] The fact that this public official has to risk Cash Patel or the attorney general [02:49:41.520 --> 02:49:48.480] giving my complaints to a grand jury, that's going to terrify all of them. Am I making sense, [02:49:48.480 --> 02:49:52.720] Chris? Is it clear where I'm going? Yes, you're trying to get their attention. I'm glad you said [02:49:52.720 --> 02:49:58.240] that, but just a little side note, did you see the video about James O'Keefe calling out Pam Bondi [02:49:58.240 --> 02:50:08.480] today? No, I didn't. She mentioned accidentally at a lunch to some private citizen that she's got [02:50:08.480 --> 02:50:14.080] tens of thousands of Epstein videos, and then somebody got that video, was sitting next to them, [02:50:14.080 --> 02:50:19.760] sent it into James O'Keefe. James O'Keefe sent an email to Pam Bondi saying, hey, what's going on? [02:50:19.760 --> 02:50:23.520] She came out in a preference conference and said that exact quote because she knew she was going [02:50:23.520 --> 02:50:31.200] to get in trouble. But anyway, I say that because she's sensitive to politics, obviously. But [02:50:32.080 --> 02:50:36.080] what you just said was getting their attention. So I have a question several levels back, [02:50:36.080 --> 02:50:41.360] because you're taking this all the way to the max. What I just discovered this week, [02:50:42.080 --> 02:50:48.480] because when this all went down, and I read that they didn't read my case, they basically didn't [02:50:48.480 --> 02:50:54.080] read my case. They knew I had claims, and they knew they couldn't dismiss it as frivolous because [02:50:54.080 --> 02:50:58.480] there's some serious allegations in there, and there's some serious claims. But because I'm [02:50:58.480 --> 02:51:04.000] pro se, they're like, just get rid of it. Okay, that's basically what they did. So I got a hold [02:51:04.000 --> 02:51:09.600] of the complaint process, and I learned something about judges and who's on the council, and I want [02:51:09.600 --> 02:51:20.320] to talk to you about that. Okay, talk to me. Well, we got what, 10 seconds? Oh, that's plenty of [02:51:20.320 --> 02:51:28.160] time. No, 30 seconds. 30 seconds. Okay. There's a number of the judges who are on the judicial [02:51:28.160 --> 02:51:35.280] council that reads the complaints, and there's a process, right? So I'm trying to make sure this [02:51:35.280 --> 02:51:40.560] gets before somebody's eyes, and that's what I want to talk about, is how many eyes do we get [02:51:40.560 --> 02:51:47.920] to? Because apparently there's 12 circuit judges in the 10th circuit, and like nine of them are on [02:51:47.920 --> 02:51:56.080] the judicial council. That sound about right? Colorado? That's in Colorado. Would you like to [02:51:56.080 --> 02:52:02.720] make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible [02:52:02.720 --> 02:52:07.760] and a set of free Christian books that can really help. The New Testament recovery version [02:52:07.760 --> 02:52:12.880] is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation, [02:52:12.880 --> 02:52:17.760] and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of [02:52:17.760 --> 02:52:23.600] life. The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [02:52:23.600 --> 02:52:29.440] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [02:52:29.440 --> 02:52:35.920] growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. To order your free New Testament recovery version [02:52:35.920 --> 02:52:45.600] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [02:52:45.600 --> 02:52:54.240] That's 888-551-0102, or visit us online at bfa.org. [02:52:54.960 --> 02:53:03.440] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [02:53:07.200 --> 02:53:11.520] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee [02:53:11.520 --> 02:53:16.400] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [02:53:16.400 --> 02:53:20.400] Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [02:53:20.400 --> 02:53:26.000] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, [02:53:26.000 --> 02:53:31.120] you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will [02:53:31.120 --> 02:53:36.960] start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to [02:53:36.960 --> 02:53:41.520] yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. Wait a minute, I have a problem here. [02:53:41.520 --> 02:53:52.320] Chris, can you hear me? I can, but all the commercials just went away. Okay, then. [02:53:54.880 --> 02:53:57.760] Something's not right here. I'm showing two more minutes. [02:54:01.360 --> 02:54:04.960] Let me take us back out and let me get this. This clock is not working right. [02:54:06.080 --> 02:54:10.800] I brought myself in, but it's like I'm not supposed to. I'm not sure what's going on here. [02:54:12.080 --> 02:54:16.400] Okay, take us out, and then I'll bring us back in in about two minutes. [02:54:17.120 --> 02:54:21.600] Mr. Man Lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third [02:54:21.600 --> 02:54:25.040] Amendment. Okay, can you hear me now, Chris? I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [02:54:25.040 --> 02:54:27.920] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. I can hear you, but I can hear commercials too. [02:54:29.040 --> 02:54:31.120] You can still hear me. You shouldn't be able to hear me. [02:54:35.760 --> 02:54:40.320] Commercials are gone. The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [02:54:40.480 --> 02:54:45.120] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on [02:54:45.120 --> 02:54:49.680] it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one [02:54:49.680 --> 02:54:55.680] of your constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, [02:54:55.680 --> 02:55:00.720] you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will [02:55:00.720 --> 02:55:06.640] start to vanish too. So protect your rights. You know to surveillance and keep your information to [02:55:06.640 --> 02:55:12.160] yourself. Privacy, it's worth it. This public service announcement is brought to you by [02:55:12.160 --> 02:55:19.520] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [02:55:21.200 --> 02:55:25.680] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [02:55:25.680 --> 02:55:30.320] x-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans [02:55:30.320 --> 02:55:35.200] freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, [02:55:35.200 --> 02:55:39.360] get it? Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of [02:55:39.360 --> 02:55:45.360] security, case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. When government [02:55:45.360 --> 02:55:50.000] employees demand to pay for your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the [02:55:50.000 --> 02:55:55.120] constitutional alarm bells. Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [02:55:55.120 --> 02:56:00.240] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More [02:56:00.240 --> 02:56:02.880] news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:56:30.240 --> 02:56:58.480] Okay, so now I'm going to learn trying to open up the back doors to where these guys live. [02:56:58.480 --> 02:57:05.840] I think that's essentially what they're telling us is that you're not welcome here. And that was [02:57:05.840 --> 02:57:13.200] real clear from my ruling. Didn't have anything to do with the mayor. They didn't tax my case to, [02:57:13.200 --> 02:57:17.840] you know, the entire appeal to me. They didn't say anything about I have to pay for the entire [02:57:17.840 --> 02:57:24.880] appeal. They just said, we're not dealing with it. And they dismissed it unpublished. [02:57:25.440 --> 02:57:31.040] So that's how they do it. So here's the statistics that I think I mentioned earlier. [02:57:31.680 --> 02:57:36.000] Two thirds of the cases apparently that come in, it may even be higher, maybe like 80 percent of [02:57:36.000 --> 02:57:39.920] the case, 87 percent, something like that. But two thirds of the cases that come in are filed by [02:57:39.920 --> 02:57:44.720] pro se. And here's the side of the people who are doing the research for pro se. Two thirds of the [02:57:44.720 --> 02:57:53.040] cases that are unpublished are dismissed because of pro se. So somebody's watching, but they don't [02:57:53.040 --> 02:58:03.280] care. So I talked to the executive department that takes judicial conduct complaints. [02:58:04.560 --> 02:58:10.480] And I told her, I said, I'm not fully interested in filing complaints against these judges because [02:58:11.840 --> 02:58:18.720] it's not in that realm yet, although it should be. I said, what they did was I still haven't even [02:58:18.720 --> 02:58:23.360] figured out how to classify it. But now that I had a week on it, what they did was actually [02:58:23.360 --> 02:58:30.800] discriminatory on many levels because I filed the case as a disabled person from the accident. [02:58:31.600 --> 02:58:37.760] So I got informed apoparous as a disabled person. Then throughout the filings, I got extensions [02:58:37.760 --> 02:58:42.560] because it takes me a long time to read now. I haven't read a book in almost four years. [02:58:43.120 --> 02:58:48.640] And the screens are large and I have to amplify the text so I can even see it. But then I don't [02:58:48.640 --> 02:58:54.800] process it as fast. It takes me about three to five times a normal person to read and process. [02:58:55.360 --> 02:58:59.840] It's just a part of the brain that got damaged. I can talk and hear well. If you tell me it, [02:58:59.840 --> 02:59:04.000] I process it well. But reading the vision to the brain doesn't work well. So [02:59:04.720 --> 02:59:09.520] they acknowledged that and they gave me extensions. They didn't deny a single extension. [02:59:10.320 --> 02:59:15.360] So they acknowledged the disability throughout the process. And then when it got to the [02:59:15.360 --> 02:59:22.080] process of actually looking at my complaint, they 100% ignored the disability. The lower [02:59:22.080 --> 02:59:27.680] court didn't even mention that word. And the upper court mentioned it but said it doesn't matter. [02:59:29.360 --> 02:59:36.720] And so they basically denied access to due process under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [02:59:36.720 --> 02:59:42.240] So that's my personal hook that I can use. But here's what I'm asking to bounce off of you. [02:59:42.240 --> 02:59:50.800] The process happens when you file a complaint, it goes before the chief judge. The chief judge [02:59:50.800 --> 02:59:59.040] decides whether or not to put it before the committee. And once it goes on the committee, [02:59:59.040 --> 03:00:03.920] there's nine judges who are from the circuit and there's some mixed here and there. So maybe some [03:00:03.920 --> 03:00:10.000] retired judges who used to be head judges. But there's nine separate people. And if any of them [03:00:10.000 --> 03:00:15.840] are involved in my case, they have to recuse themselves. So there's nine people who are going [03:00:15.840 --> 03:00:24.160] to look at my complaint, but the chief judge has to approve that process. So that's one option. [03:00:24.160 --> 03:00:30.880] The second option is for a rehearing or a rehearing en banc. And if you do both, [03:00:31.520 --> 03:00:36.800] maybe I think you probably know this, but you get the panel of your three judges from the 12 [03:00:37.200 --> 03:00:42.960] other circuit will look at it. And if they refuse to do anything, then all of the other judges from [03:00:42.960 --> 03:00:49.600] all the other 12 or the other nine will look at it and decide if they're going to vote whether to [03:00:50.240 --> 03:00:57.760] hear the case again. So that's option number two. I'm looking for other ways to get the [03:00:57.760 --> 03:01:04.320] attention of this court and bring a lot of eyes on them for what they just did. Because [03:01:05.200 --> 03:01:09.600] I mean, it's one thing to just dismiss proceeds because they're pricks and they don't want to [03:01:09.600 --> 03:01:15.360] talk to people. They don't want to deal with us. But it's another thing to actually deny a citizen. [03:01:15.360 --> 03:01:18.560] Well, that's what they're doing. It doesn't matter who you are or what your problem is. [03:01:18.560 --> 03:01:25.040] They're denying us access to due process. And they're hiding it behind unpublished rulings. [03:01:25.040 --> 03:01:31.600] They're hiding it behind procedural appearances, like they've done something for us. But you know [03:01:32.560 --> 03:01:37.680] darn well behind the scenes, they're like, you can't touch us. So how do we touch them? [03:01:38.400 --> 03:01:44.400] How do we get the eyes? Perfect question. That's exactly what I'm working on. [03:01:45.760 --> 03:01:54.720] Is I had the Fifth Circuit take my 150 page lawsuit and on appeal and say, [03:01:54.880 --> 03:01:59.040] this case is frivolous. It's not denied with prejudice. [03:02:01.040 --> 03:02:10.800] I paid them $700 to give me a proper appeal. 150 page lawsuit and they dismiss it. This case [03:02:10.800 --> 03:02:17.600] is frivolous. Dismissed with prejudice. It is my position that they failed to provide [03:02:18.240 --> 03:02:27.680] good faith and fair services. And that they denied me in the procedural due process of the law. [03:02:29.200 --> 03:02:35.200] That's criminal. So I filed criminal charges against them with and mailed it to the [03:02:35.760 --> 03:02:45.760] Foreman of the Grand Jury, Fort Worth courthouse. I get a response back from the clerk saying, [03:02:45.760 --> 03:02:48.880] whoa, this civil suit you filed, you didn't pay the filing fee. [03:02:50.400 --> 03:02:52.640] And my question is, what the heck are you doing with this? [03:02:54.640 --> 03:02:56.800] It was addressed to the Foreman of the Grand Jury. [03:02:58.560 --> 03:03:02.480] What are you doing responding to that? The Foreman of the Grand Jury didn't. [03:03:03.440 --> 03:03:08.400] So my presumption is, you secreted that from the Grand Jury. [03:03:08.400 --> 03:03:18.240] And then the trial judge, the district judge, he followed suit, gave me notice that [03:03:19.120 --> 03:03:24.800] if I didn't pay the filing fee for a civil lawsuit, that he was going to dismiss my case. [03:03:25.920 --> 03:03:32.560] I said, is that a fact, Jack? Criminal affidavits against three judges [03:03:33.440 --> 03:03:39.280] with specificity and particularity. And these guys are doing this little song and dance, [03:03:39.280 --> 03:03:44.560] like I'm too stupid to know what a lawsuit is. So I filed criminal charges against them. [03:03:48.400 --> 03:03:56.560] My next step is to file criminally against the judge and the prosecutor with Pam Bondi in D.C. [03:03:56.560 --> 03:04:05.120] And put in the argument that if we are to take control of our government, [03:04:06.320 --> 03:04:12.240] we need free and open access as citizens to federal grand jury. [03:04:14.000 --> 03:04:19.920] How about just the courts in general, for God's sake? [03:04:20.160 --> 03:04:26.720] Well, the courts in general, you can't really condemn the courts in general, [03:04:27.920 --> 03:04:33.120] because the courts are inanimate. We have to go after human beings. [03:04:36.000 --> 03:04:39.520] I agree, but we don't have access. That's what I'm seeing. It's a front. [03:04:40.320 --> 03:04:42.960] I mean, not every time. Here's what I was told. [03:04:42.960 --> 03:04:47.840] I know, but what I'm doing is setting them up to do it wrong so I can file against them criminally. [03:04:48.480 --> 03:04:51.680] And then the one that doesn't act on my criminal complaint, I sue him. [03:04:54.640 --> 03:04:59.760] You sue secondary characters who don't feel like they have a dog in your hunt. [03:05:01.920 --> 03:05:05.360] And they're going to jump up and down railing righteous indignation. [03:05:05.360 --> 03:05:11.360] But what I really want to do is get my argument before the attorney general and the president. [03:05:11.920 --> 03:05:19.040] And if you open up those grand juries to private citizens, [03:05:20.560 --> 03:05:25.120] all this is corruption you're looking for in government. [03:05:26.880 --> 03:05:29.840] If somebody's doing something corrupt, somebody knows. [03:05:31.840 --> 03:05:36.880] And if they can go anonymously to a grand jury, [03:05:36.960 --> 03:05:43.840] go tell them what they saw, and then allow the grand jury to go do its own investigation, [03:05:43.840 --> 03:05:51.600] and it can do that, then every public official is going to have to think [03:05:52.560 --> 03:06:01.040] about what I'm fixing to do. Is it likely that one of my nurses is going to get PO'd? [03:06:01.040 --> 03:06:04.800] I'm sorry, nurses. [03:06:09.680 --> 03:06:15.280] Hang on a second, I lost my place. A guy in government, he does something wrong. [03:06:16.960 --> 03:06:23.040] Somebody knows. He's got subordinates, he's got contemporaries, other people. They know what's [03:06:23.040 --> 03:06:33.760] going on. And if they can go anonymously to a grand jury and give notice, then the vast majority [03:06:33.760 --> 03:06:42.400] of the trash that's going on simply stop. I mean, you know, most of them think that, oh, [03:06:42.400 --> 03:06:49.360] there's no way a grand jury would indict me. However, there is this movie out there about [03:06:49.440 --> 03:06:54.480] 12 angry men, and another one about a runaway grand jury. [03:06:56.160 --> 03:07:01.520] I walked into my district attorney's office. He is sitting with his head in his hand, [03:07:03.040 --> 03:07:08.480] and I said, what's the matter, Greg? And he looked up at me with this full-on look on his face, [03:07:08.480 --> 03:07:16.080] and he said, those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [03:07:16.240 --> 03:07:22.240] I looked up at the ceiling, held up both hands over my head, and said, there is a God. [03:07:24.480 --> 03:07:33.600] I don't care if the grand jury indicts or not. That is not the point. The point is, you get, [03:07:33.600 --> 03:07:43.600] you're behind, stuck in front of 12 or 24, in the case of federal. What's the likelihood they're [03:07:43.600 --> 03:07:50.960] going to indict you? Oh, they probably won't indict me. Okay, what's the likelihood? One in 24? [03:07:52.960 --> 03:08:03.360] Two in 22? You know, one of the odds. Who wants to play Russian roulette, their liberty and their [03:08:03.360 --> 03:08:10.240] career? We don't need grand juries to indict people. [03:08:12.640 --> 03:08:15.200] We need grand juries to act as a deterrent. [03:08:17.440 --> 03:08:23.680] So that's my purpose, is to get Pam Bondi to tell all U.S. attorneys, [03:08:24.480 --> 03:08:31.200] when a citizen sends a criminal complaint to the grand jury, give it to the grand jury. [03:08:33.520 --> 03:08:36.720] Don't make any determinations about it, just give it to them. [03:08:38.640 --> 03:08:44.560] If they want your input, they'll let you know. If they want the filer's input, [03:08:45.920 --> 03:08:50.240] they can summon the filer to come and present it to them. I once presented a [03:08:51.120 --> 03:08:58.240] district attorney to the grand jury, and the problem I went after in Johnson County, Texas, [03:08:59.120 --> 03:09:07.840] it is fixed. You file a complaint against a public official in Johnson County, Texas, [03:09:10.320 --> 03:09:13.920] there is no screwing with that. That's going right to the grand jury. [03:09:15.440 --> 03:09:21.440] As the prosecutor said, I'm not having that Kelton jackass come and present me to a grand jury again. [03:09:21.440 --> 03:09:28.880] The grand jury didn't indict him, but the foreman said he was PO'd. He liked the prosecutor, [03:09:28.880 --> 03:09:32.480] I guess. He asked me what my problem with the prosecutor was. I said, I don't have a problem [03:09:32.480 --> 03:09:38.240] with him. He never prosecuted me, never prosecuted anybody I know. He said, then why are you here? [03:09:38.240 --> 03:09:46.320] Violated laws. But I don't want him indicted. If you don't want him indicted, why are you here? [03:09:47.280 --> 03:09:54.800] Because I'm here, and he's sitting out there, wondering if I'm going to end his career tomorrow. [03:09:55.440 --> 03:10:00.400] That's all I need. That's all we need. He's probably going to take care of themselves. [03:10:00.400 --> 03:10:03.280] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. We'll be right back. [03:10:16.800 --> 03:10:22.000] against debt collectors and now you can win too. You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain [03:10:22.000 --> 03:10:27.520] English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by [03:10:27.520 --> 03:10:32.880] phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out [03:10:32.880 --> 03:10:38.800] of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [03:10:38.800 --> 03:10:43.680] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [03:10:43.760 --> 03:10:49.520] Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [03:10:49.520 --> 03:10:56.880] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com [03:10:56.880 --> 03:11:04.720] 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. [03:11:05.440 --> 03:11:10.320] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so [03:11:10.320 --> 03:11:14.960] addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fixed. I'd be lost without [03:11:14.960 --> 03:11:20.240] logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer [03:11:20.240 --> 03:11:24.560] but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it all [03:11:24.560 --> 03:11:30.320] on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from [03:11:30.320 --> 03:11:35.520] Amazon, you can help logos. You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do [03:11:35.520 --> 03:11:43.280] is clear your cookies. Now go to logosradio.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now [03:11:43.280 --> 03:11:49.600] when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? [03:11:49.600 --> 03:11:55.600] No. Do you have to do anything different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean [03:11:55.600 --> 03:12:02.160] yes. Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [03:12:02.160 --> 03:12:12.080] We are welcome. Happy holidays, logos. This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [03:12:20.240 --> 03:12:26.960] Okay. We are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and we're talking to Chris in Colorado. Chris, [03:12:27.920 --> 03:12:31.520] does that make sense? It does. I have two questions. [03:12:33.920 --> 03:12:40.560] Okay. What is the criminal act that was done that allows you to go to the grand jury? And two, [03:12:41.360 --> 03:12:49.280] what can the grand jury do about it? There is one catch-all that will work for everybody in every [03:12:49.360 --> 03:12:59.360] state. Official misconduct. In Texas, it's called official oppression. In the Fed, it's 18 U.S. Code [03:12:59.360 --> 03:13:11.920] 242. Unless there is more than two people, two or more people involved and then it's 18 U.S. Code [03:13:11.920 --> 03:13:21.600] 241, in that case it's a felony. But if a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority [03:13:21.600 --> 03:13:31.600] they do not have or fails to perform a duty they are required to perform, and that's my big one, [03:13:33.280 --> 03:13:37.600] and in the process denies a citizen full and free access to or enjoyment of a right. [03:13:38.160 --> 03:13:44.640] Ooh. It's a crime in every state. It's a crime in the Fed. It is the catch-all. [03:13:46.720 --> 03:13:54.080] I remember that. I like that. So it doesn't matter if you get an indictment or not. Who cares? [03:13:56.240 --> 03:14:03.840] It's this now all of a sudden, if we can get Pam Bondi to tell all of her U.S. attorneys, [03:14:04.720 --> 03:14:11.120] if you get a criminal complaint against a public official, you give it to the grand jury. [03:14:13.040 --> 03:14:21.680] I'm going to argue that absent an indictment by a federal grand jury [03:14:22.800 --> 03:14:28.720] on any criminal accusation, the U.S. attorney has zero jurisdiction. [03:14:29.120 --> 03:14:39.760] The judiciary has zero jurisdiction, because there's Article 4, Section 4 that says no person [03:14:39.760 --> 03:14:49.360] shall be called to answer to a capital or otherwise infamous allegation except by a [03:14:49.520 --> 03:14:58.080] capital or otherwise infamous allegation except by a indictment by a grand jury. [03:14:59.760 --> 03:15:01.840] How hard is that to understand? [03:15:04.800 --> 03:15:12.560] Neither the executive nor the judiciary have jurisdiction on a criminal felony criminal claim [03:15:14.480 --> 03:15:16.640] unless a grand jury indicts. [03:15:17.520 --> 03:15:22.480] So what they're doing is pressuring everybody into waiving an indictment. [03:15:24.960 --> 03:15:27.600] And I'm saying, where in the heck did they come up with that? [03:15:29.520 --> 03:15:34.960] That's not in the Constitution. The Constitution commands that there be an indictment. [03:15:37.440 --> 03:15:42.720] And now all these prosecutors are bypassing that by getting people to make a deal [03:15:42.720 --> 03:15:47.040] getting people to make a deal and waive their right to an indictment. [03:15:47.040 --> 03:15:50.720] And most of the times, it's indictments they could never get in the first place. [03:15:54.480 --> 03:16:00.480] If they could get an indictment, they would. And then they'd have a much stronger position. [03:16:01.680 --> 03:16:06.720] They don't have enough to get an indictment, so they just drag somebody in, scare the crap [03:16:06.720 --> 03:16:13.920] out of them, pressure them into writing this waiver of indictment, and then make a deal. [03:16:15.200 --> 03:16:20.960] I'm saying, wait a minute, wait a minute. You don't have any jurisdiction absent an indictment. [03:16:22.400 --> 03:16:25.520] So if you waive an indictment, you waive your own jurisdiction. [03:16:28.080 --> 03:16:31.920] So let's beat them up. It doesn't matter what they rule. [03:16:32.880 --> 03:16:40.880] In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, I've sent a letter to the [03:16:41.680 --> 03:16:45.600] foreman of the grand jury by way of the U.S. Attorney's Office. I get a call from the [03:16:46.480 --> 03:16:53.760] U.S. Attorney and says, if you attempt to approach the grand jury again, I'll charge you with, [03:16:53.760 --> 03:16:59.680] I think he said, jury tampering. I told him, knock yourself out. [03:17:00.400 --> 03:17:03.760] You charge me a jury tampering, I'll charge you with obstruction. [03:17:03.760 --> 03:17:06.800] We'll see how this works out for you. Click, he hangs up. [03:17:08.160 --> 03:17:12.000] They fired the IRS agent we were after the next day. [03:17:15.120 --> 03:17:21.840] We knew this. We go in there and file a complaint with the U.S. Attorney's Office [03:17:22.800 --> 03:17:27.040] and address it to the foreman of the grand jury when we don't get that cover letter back. [03:17:27.680 --> 03:17:35.200] Then we file against the head U.S. Attorney, criminally, in D.C. with Pam Bondi [03:17:37.120 --> 03:17:41.760] with a cover letter for the foreman. When we don't get that cover letter back, [03:17:42.800 --> 03:17:48.800] that opens the door to sue the president. He's responding at Superior. [03:17:49.360 --> 03:17:52.960] I've got two more questions. [03:17:54.000 --> 03:17:54.240] Yes. [03:17:55.680 --> 03:18:01.680] Okay. You mentioned denial of a right and access to, or what did you say, denial? [03:18:02.240 --> 03:18:05.760] You say it a lot. I should have it remembered by now, but I remember that phrase. [03:18:09.040 --> 03:18:17.280] Anyway, that denial process, could it be extended to judges not looking at a case, taking a case? [03:18:17.280 --> 03:18:21.840] That's exactly what I file criminal charges against the Fifth Circuit judges for. [03:18:22.960 --> 03:18:30.240] Okay. What can a grand jury do, and can I just do that and threaten or [03:18:30.240 --> 03:18:34.400] hint that I'm going to the grand jury for the violation of those rights? [03:18:34.400 --> 03:18:39.920] I'm going to suggest never hint, never threaten. Never give fair warning. [03:18:41.520 --> 03:18:46.480] If you give fair warning, they're going to construe you to be agitated. [03:18:47.920 --> 03:18:58.000] And they're going to claim that you're agitated, and they're going to accuse you of threatening [03:18:58.000 --> 03:19:06.400] them. I never give them an opportunity to do that. I never tell them, I'm going to go to the grand [03:19:06.400 --> 03:19:11.920] jury. I just go to the grand jury. Well, I don't think crying about it. [03:19:12.800 --> 03:19:21.280] Yeah. Never give fair warning. I want them to think that I played them like a cheap fiddle. [03:19:22.240 --> 03:19:23.600] Exactly. That's what I mean. [03:19:24.640 --> 03:19:28.640] Yeah. We start doing that. If we can get a bunch of people doing that, [03:19:30.880 --> 03:19:35.680] we get people start suing the president as responding at Superior for Pam Bondi. [03:19:35.680 --> 03:19:40.720] Okay. We may actually get Pam Bondi to tell these U.S. attorneys, [03:19:41.680 --> 03:19:47.280] stand aside, because you want to argue, look, if somebody's doing something rotten, [03:19:47.280 --> 03:19:55.360] somebody knows about it. You make the grand jury open to the public so a private citizen [03:19:56.320 --> 03:20:01.040] can come to the grand jury anonymously and give them notice of crime. [03:20:01.600 --> 03:20:08.960] It doesn't matter if the grand jury indicts anybody or not. Everybody out there who's in [03:20:08.960 --> 03:20:16.640] government and is considering doing something nefarious, they got to wonder, what if somebody [03:20:17.520 --> 03:20:24.160] caused a complaint with the grand jury? Right. That's what I want them to read [03:20:24.160 --> 03:20:30.240] between the lines. So the whole point is remaining, the key that I've been learning so far is to remain [03:20:30.240 --> 03:20:37.520] civil, to never lose your cool, to never lash back at them so they have an issue where they're [03:20:37.520 --> 03:20:42.800] going to say, yes, you're agitated, blah, blah, blah. They have no way to say I've been agitated. [03:20:42.800 --> 03:20:51.200] These are what my rules are for. The primary rule on that one is never give fair warning. [03:20:51.760 --> 03:20:59.040] I got this right, I got that right, blah, blah, blah. I'm not going to do that. [03:21:01.120 --> 03:21:06.480] You go down there, ask them to do something, and when they huff and puff and throw you out, [03:21:07.360 --> 03:21:12.320] you don't say anything to them. Go to the next guy, or I like to call 911. [03:21:12.320 --> 03:21:18.960] And everything I would have said to that guy, I say to the 911 guy. [03:21:20.880 --> 03:21:24.000] I just scooted him right square up on a dime. [03:21:25.440 --> 03:21:29.200] And then when I file criminal charges, I file it against the 911 guy. [03:21:31.520 --> 03:21:37.760] So the 911 guy is getting in trouble for protecting his buddy over here. [03:21:37.920 --> 03:21:44.000] He's going to be going to his buddy and say, hey, I did this for you. You got to get these guys off [03:21:44.000 --> 03:21:55.920] my case. Start creating dissension and distrust. The only way they can get around it is to do it [03:21:55.920 --> 03:22:04.880] right. And it just works so good. Go and ask a clerk for some records, and she tells me if I'm [03:22:05.200 --> 03:22:13.360] not the attorney or the accused, I can't see these records. Now, I know I can see those records. [03:22:14.560 --> 03:22:18.880] I know the law absolutely authorizes me to see those records. So what do you do? [03:22:19.680 --> 03:22:25.120] You say, oh, I got this right, I got that right, blah, blah, blah. She's not impressed. [03:22:26.240 --> 03:22:34.320] So I call the bailiff over, arrest that woman. That had a whole different outcome. [03:22:35.360 --> 03:22:40.960] So, yeah, this is really straightforward. It's nothing complicated. [03:22:44.400 --> 03:22:51.680] You know when you ask them, when they're not going to do something you ask them to do. [03:22:53.440 --> 03:22:57.840] My absolute favorite one is I sent the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme [03:22:58.480 --> 03:23:04.800] a 250 page criminal complaint against the governor. 35 felonies a misdemeanor. [03:23:06.640 --> 03:23:12.480] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, [03:23:12.480 --> 03:23:16.720] the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [03:23:16.720 --> 03:23:20.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [03:23:21.040 --> 03:23:26.640] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [03:23:26.640 --> 03:23:31.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [03:23:31.680 --> 03:23:37.920] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [03:23:37.920 --> 03:23:42.560] it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [03:23:42.560 --> 03:23:48.560] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [03:23:50.560 --> 03:23:55.040] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into [03:23:55.040 --> 03:24:00.240] your home, too, with a smart grid. So they're installing a national network of smart meters [03:24:00.240 --> 03:24:06.240] to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. But cybersecurity expert [03:24:06.240 --> 03:24:11.600] David Chalk says not so fast. If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [03:24:11.600 --> 03:24:17.680] hackers will have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and blackout the entire nation, [03:24:17.680 --> 03:24:22.960] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and [03:24:22.960 --> 03:24:28.400] health reasons. The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [03:24:28.960 --> 03:24:33.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:24:36.480 --> 03:24:42.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [03:24:42.000 --> 03:24:47.440] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [03:24:47.440 --> 03:24:51.760] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [03:24:51.920 --> 03:24:56.640] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural [03:24:56.640 --> 03:25:00.720] engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his [03:25:00.720 --> 03:25:06.320] son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [03:25:08.080 --> 03:25:12.080] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, [03:25:12.080 --> 03:25:15.920] we live in an us-against-them society. And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [03:25:15.920 --> 03:25:19.760] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the [03:25:19.760 --> 03:25:23.280] right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [03:25:23.280 --> 03:25:27.360] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least [03:25:27.360 --> 03:25:31.600] expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [03:25:31.600 --> 03:25:35.680] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most [03:25:35.680 --> 03:25:39.760] comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how [03:25:39.760 --> 03:25:44.000] to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to [03:25:44.000 --> 03:25:48.560] ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [03:25:48.560 --> 03:25:52.560] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original [03:25:52.560 --> 03:25:57.040] 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how [03:25:57.040 --> 03:26:01.360] to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy [03:26:01.360 --> 03:26:09.040] today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the [03:26:09.040 --> 03:26:13.520] Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [03:26:39.040 --> 03:26:59.920] Okay, we are back Randy Kelton with Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 9th day of May 2025 [03:26:59.920 --> 03:27:05.680] and we're talking to Chris Colorado. Chris, I need to move along. I got Steve in Texas and he's [03:27:06.160 --> 03:27:12.000] been on a couple of times and I never got to him so I need to give him some time but [03:27:12.000 --> 03:27:17.840] this is pretty straightforward. Go in there and ask them to do something you know they're not [03:27:17.840 --> 03:27:25.760] going to want to do and when they do their little huffy puffy stuff just call 911. If you're not [03:27:25.760 --> 03:27:32.320] comfortable with calling 911 then just take out the criminal complaints you already have in your [03:27:32.320 --> 03:27:38.320] hand because you know what they're going to do and you ask them where the nearest magistrate is. [03:27:38.960 --> 03:27:43.760] You go to the magistrate and file criminal complaints against them. It's great to have it [03:27:43.760 --> 03:27:52.240] in your hand. Oh you should have seen the justice of the peace when I had him a lawsuit against [03:27:52.240 --> 03:27:58.960] another justice of the peace and he takes it out of the package and across the top I've got this [03:27:58.960 --> 03:28:07.760] header that says www.prosefromhell.com slash templates slash magistrate suit. [03:28:09.760 --> 03:28:17.440] He looked at that and just froze. He looked out at me and then after he kind of come to himself [03:28:17.440 --> 03:28:24.640] and said are you this pro se from hell on on on that's just a website I downloaded all this stuff [03:28:24.640 --> 03:28:32.960] from. Okay I lied to him but now he's sitting there thinking this guy pulled this down off [03:28:32.960 --> 03:28:41.200] the internet and just filled in the blanks. Yeah how's that work for you Bubba? Does that make sense [03:28:41.760 --> 03:28:48.160] where I'm going Chris? Yes my my last quick question is can I file with the grand jury [03:28:48.160 --> 03:28:55.840] against the judges in the 10th circuit? You can file with the grand jury for anybody for anything [03:28:55.840 --> 03:29:06.240] you want. I filed against the fifth circuit judges and the judge and the federal judge and federal [03:29:06.240 --> 03:29:11.520] clerk intercepted and interfered with that communication. I'm going to go back and take [03:29:11.520 --> 03:29:16.160] it directly to the grand jury's office. Criminal complaints against these two. [03:29:18.960 --> 03:29:25.760] This keeps stirring the pot. Who wants to play Russian roulette with their career? [03:29:27.200 --> 03:29:31.520] I'm going to look into that. That's good politics. That's getting that's getting real spicy too. [03:29:33.360 --> 03:29:40.640] And it's fun. Okay thank you Chris. Now I'm going to go to Steve. Hello Steve. [03:29:42.000 --> 03:29:43.760] What do you have for us today? [03:29:47.040 --> 03:29:51.920] Yes sir it's just going to follow up and ask going back that [03:29:53.920 --> 03:30:01.120] potential suit on a mortgage and mortgage fraud or such and I didn't know if I'd get a chance from [03:30:01.120 --> 03:30:05.920] you at any point to not just take a look at it even if you had a template of what you were [03:30:05.920 --> 03:30:10.880] doing back in the day. Yes I do but [03:30:13.120 --> 03:30:18.080] do this for me. Yes sir. Go down to the county recorder's office [03:30:19.680 --> 03:30:28.160] and get all the documents that have been filed in the public record from the time you received [03:30:28.160 --> 03:30:35.440] a warranty deed to the property. I want to see all the assignments. I want to see all the appointments [03:30:36.080 --> 03:30:43.360] uh I want to see anything that has to do with this title from the time you got it and then I [03:30:43.360 --> 03:30:53.280] will show you how to go through it and then uh I'll take the note is the does the note have a [03:30:53.280 --> 03:31:01.680] variable interest? I don't believe it was variable it was fixed. I believe it was fixed sir um without [03:31:01.680 --> 03:31:06.720] having it okay if it's fixed first thing I'm going to do is calculate your payment. [03:31:08.160 --> 03:31:13.840] I got a spreadsheet that I can plug the numbers in it'll do the do these calculations it is a [03:31:14.400 --> 03:31:23.440] extensive sort of spreadsheet. It took me six months to build it. We put in the principal [03:31:23.520 --> 03:31:33.200] interest term all the data and the first thing the first one runs a amortization on the loan. [03:31:34.320 --> 03:31:39.200] This is what you should be charged each month in principal and interest. [03:31:41.200 --> 03:31:49.600] It has them both so we want to look at the notices to pay that have been sent to you. [03:31:50.400 --> 03:31:57.520] Then we'll take out the note itself and what does the note say? The note says you'll pay [03:31:58.640 --> 03:32:07.520] this much every month and this will amount to this much principal and this much interest. [03:32:08.800 --> 03:32:13.360] They all have to say that and then we will run an amortization on the note [03:32:14.000 --> 03:32:21.680] on the note and see if the amortization says you should pay the amount they're telling you to pay. [03:32:23.200 --> 03:32:29.600] Now most of the time they have you paying more but sometimes they have you paying less [03:32:31.440 --> 03:32:38.960] and one is bad as the other. If you're if they're telling you to pay less than what the numbers say [03:32:38.960 --> 03:32:46.080] you should what's going to happen is the first time you're slow to pay two or three times [03:32:47.840 --> 03:32:55.120] they're going to say oh my goodness we examined your your account and find that you [03:32:55.120 --> 03:33:00.320] shorted us ten thousand dollars because we weren't billing you enough. [03:33:01.280 --> 03:33:08.880] Yeah. Pay it or we foreclose. So they watch your payment when your payments get late [03:33:08.880 --> 03:33:15.120] two or three times then they send these guys out and they scare the bejesus out of you. [03:33:16.000 --> 03:33:21.920] They threaten all this stuff they're going to do to you if you don't refinance the mortgage. [03:33:21.920 --> 03:33:29.600] It's a scam. Everything about mortgage or anything with finance people are always trying to create [03:33:29.600 --> 03:33:35.040] their best advantage. Well we kind of know what they do. They are bound by the real estate [03:33:35.040 --> 03:33:46.480] settlement procedures act. So first we do the note principal and interest term. We amortize [03:33:46.800 --> 03:33:52.800] term we amortize that we run that through an amortization schedule and see what you should [03:33:52.800 --> 03:33:58.480] be paying. Then we want some of your payment stubs to see what they're asking you to pay. [03:33:59.840 --> 03:34:07.120] Ninety percent of the time those don't match and then we run an amortization. If you pay [03:34:07.120 --> 03:34:17.040] what they're demanding then when will your loan pay out? Most of them will do it in about [03:34:19.200 --> 03:34:20.080] 25 years. [03:34:23.280 --> 03:34:29.280] But you got a 30-year mortgage so the last five years is free to these guys. [03:34:30.320 --> 03:34:35.680] So you know I'm thinking right now I'm thinking in terms of a train. You had this train here [03:34:36.240 --> 03:34:42.560] and no that's not where I want. Okay mortgage. [03:34:44.880 --> 03:34:55.040] The what is it? Fair Debt Collection. No no the TILA. [03:34:57.520 --> 03:35:00.560] It's been a while since I did this and I was late and I'm tired. [03:35:01.040 --> 03:35:07.760] There's a document they're supposed to send you. [03:35:11.280 --> 03:35:16.640] 400 letters. I feel like I'm playing charades here. [03:35:20.320 --> 03:35:29.200] Anyway they give you a truth in lending act statement. [03:35:30.560 --> 03:35:37.120] The numbers on that never ever come out. One percent of the time they match what's on the [03:35:37.120 --> 03:35:43.120] note. Most of the time you have a different principle, different interest. I have never [03:35:43.120 --> 03:35:48.400] had anybody explain to me where they come up with those numbers and in one percent of the cases [03:35:49.840 --> 03:35:56.800] it pays out, it zeros out exactly where it was supposed to. I had Pastor Mass's brother was a [03:35:56.800 --> 03:36:08.240] real estate agent and he said they deduct the insurance from the principle and then they adjust [03:36:08.240 --> 03:36:15.360] the interest so that it pays that amount back over the term of the note. That didn't make sense to me [03:36:15.360 --> 03:36:22.240] but that's that's the only thing. Nobody else had a clue as to what that was and in about one percent [03:36:22.240 --> 03:36:28.720] of the time it matches your mortgage, your note. The rest of the time it has you paying about [03:36:28.720 --> 03:36:34.720] 90 percent of the time they have you paying more, about 10 percent less and paying less is worse [03:36:34.720 --> 03:36:47.200] than paying more. Sponsors, I'll explain why I'm saying that. If you're late two or three times [03:36:47.920 --> 03:36:53.360] and they have been billing you less than they should have, you're gonna wait till they see [03:36:53.360 --> 03:37:00.080] three no-pays or late pays and they're gonna say oh my goodness we made a mistake. We weren't [03:37:00.080 --> 03:37:07.680] charging you enough, you owe us $20,000. Do you have a business with five employees or more? How [03:37:07.680 --> 03:37:12.560] would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical [03:37:12.560 --> 03:37:20.160] plan that nobody can afford to be on? Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a [03:37:20.160 --> 03:37:27.680] current major medical plan by lowering the claims cost? 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[03:38:18.720 --> 03:38:24.720] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [03:38:24.720 --> 03:38:30.800] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now [03:38:31.360 --> 03:38:36.400] you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning [03:38:36.400 --> 03:38:42.400] experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [03:38:42.400 --> 03:38:47.840] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio [03:38:47.840 --> 03:38:56.080] classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. Please [03:38:56.080 --> 03:39:04.080] visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EASY. [03:39:15.120 --> 03:39:20.000] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Steve in Texas and I'm [03:39:20.000 --> 03:39:24.640] going to go kind of quick here. I'm going to talk to Steve in Texas and I'm going to go kind of quick [03:39:25.360 --> 03:39:32.560] here. I could do eight hours on this subject. So what I'm telling you now is the main things [03:39:32.560 --> 03:39:39.760] you need to look for. These are bankers and their money is their deal. They're going to steal as [03:39:39.760 --> 03:39:50.960] much as they possibly can and generally your mortgage is the biggest business, the biggest [03:39:50.960 --> 03:39:58.240] contract you'll ever enter into. And for the most part, you don't know squat about high finance [03:39:59.040 --> 03:40:04.080] and you're dealing with a bunch of sharks. They're going to screw you at every chance [03:40:04.080 --> 03:40:10.880] they get and 99% of the time they'll get away with it. So first thing, truth and lending statement, [03:40:10.880 --> 03:40:17.280] you run the numbers. And then I've got this spreadsheet that does five or six different [03:40:17.360 --> 03:40:22.720] amortizations. The first one is truth and lending statement. The second one, we take the note. [03:40:23.920 --> 03:40:29.760] This is the principle. This is the interest. If it's variable interest, it gets more complicated, [03:40:29.760 --> 03:40:36.880] but I have tools for that. And we run the numbers and then we compare the numbers, [03:40:38.480 --> 03:40:46.000] principle and interest primarily to the bill they send you. Oh, you always, you need to send us [03:40:46.560 --> 03:40:52.000] this much. And this much goes to principle, this much goes to interest. [03:40:54.320 --> 03:41:00.400] Okay, we do that one. And then we do another one. Well, you do that one and compare it, [03:41:01.760 --> 03:41:08.640] get the bill they send you and compare it to your amortization. [03:41:09.360 --> 03:41:16.240] Is the principle and interest the same on them? And 99.9% of the times, they are not. [03:41:17.440 --> 03:41:23.280] And you would think that's just an error, but it's funny that the error is always in the favor of [03:41:23.280 --> 03:41:32.080] the bank. Yeah, funny how that happens. Okay, then you go to the next one. Same amortization [03:41:32.080 --> 03:41:39.440] same amortization as the one before, except the HUD-1 settlement statement. [03:41:41.200 --> 03:41:45.680] When you sit down at the closing table, they drag out a HUD-1 settlement statement [03:41:46.480 --> 03:41:53.840] and it lists all the financial numbers. On the back side, it lists all of the charges made to [03:41:53.840 --> 03:42:09.040] you, made against you, like a warehousing fee, document preparation fee. They got all these [03:42:09.040 --> 03:42:16.320] lists of stuff they put on the HUD-1 settlement statement. Question, when you sat down at the [03:42:16.320 --> 03:42:26.400] closing table and you looked at this legal-sized document with about 100 lines on it listing all [03:42:26.400 --> 03:42:36.000] of this stuff they charged you, did they provide for you the documentation to show that these [03:42:36.080 --> 03:42:47.840] services that were charged for were actually necessary, that the amounts charged were reasonable, [03:42:49.840 --> 03:42:57.440] and that the services were necessary, and that the lender did not take an undisclosed markup [03:42:57.440 --> 03:43:04.800] on the amounts charged. They never do any of that. They just put all these charges on there. [03:43:06.560 --> 03:43:16.560] So, we say that they're all bogus. We know two or three of them always are. So, we challenge them [03:43:16.560 --> 03:43:23.040] all. They're all fraudulent. Don't know who this is. Never got any money from them. They're just [03:43:23.040 --> 03:43:30.480] making this stuff up. So, they have to come in and do their own analysis and show how they had [03:43:31.200 --> 03:43:37.520] grounds or standing to demand this much money. But for our purposes, we don't care. [03:43:38.720 --> 03:43:47.120] We say, okay, you charged $12,000 in closing costs and you gave me this BS spreadsheet with all this [03:43:47.120 --> 03:43:53.680] stuff you were supposed to do with it. I don't believe you. I think you ripped me off. So, [03:43:53.760 --> 03:44:02.080] you take that number on line 1400 of the HUD-1 settlement statement. That's the accumulation [03:44:02.080 --> 03:44:08.880] of all the charges. And you say, this is all bogus. Since they didn't send me documentation [03:44:08.880 --> 03:44:15.760] to show how they got these numbers, these numbers are all bogus. And you run the amortization, [03:44:15.760 --> 03:44:25.280] except on the first payment, you subtract the full amount of the HUD-1 settlement statement. [03:44:26.640 --> 03:44:32.320] Some of them are actually valid. You don't care at this point. You just list them all. [03:44:34.240 --> 03:44:42.800] And you take that full amount, you subtract it from the principle as an overpayment on the [03:44:42.800 --> 03:44:51.040] first payment of the mortgage and then amortize out the mortgage. Most of the time, the mortgage [03:44:51.040 --> 03:45:04.560] will zero out between payment 20 and payment 25 of a 30-year mortgage. Did I say payment 25? [03:45:04.640 --> 03:45:15.600] Not payment 25, year 24-25. In a 30-year mortgage, you'll generally pay off the mortgage in about [03:45:15.600 --> 03:45:26.960] 25 years. It is interest on the extra fees they charge you. So, we claim that every fee [03:45:27.760 --> 03:45:32.320] that was attached to the mortgage was fraudulent. [03:45:35.200 --> 03:45:39.840] And in fraud, you do not sue for the amount you were defrauded of. [03:45:41.840 --> 03:45:47.760] You sue for the amount you would have been defrauded of had their plan ran to fruition. [03:45:47.760 --> 03:45:58.320] So, the amortization tool shows how much you would overpay at a 30-year mortgage. [03:46:00.240 --> 03:46:02.480] And the number is a whopper. [03:46:04.960 --> 03:46:10.880] Then you sue them based on all of these, but primarily based on the last one, [03:46:11.600 --> 03:46:17.440] that I married you and then you went and did all this stupid stuff and here's a video to [03:46:17.440 --> 03:46:23.440] show for it. And you put all these BS fees on the HUD 1 settlement statement so you could [03:46:24.960 --> 03:46:27.280] foreclose on my home and cost me everything. [03:46:30.400 --> 03:46:38.080] Then you sue them and say, okay, guys, let's dance. They want to say, oh, no, that's true, [03:46:38.080 --> 03:46:44.320] blah, blah, blah. Who cares? We're going to kick your behinds every week from Sunday. [03:46:44.320 --> 03:46:50.080] Okay. And they come and they write you a check to go home. Does that make sense? [03:46:51.840 --> 03:46:55.600] Yes, sir. You sue me triplicate? [03:46:56.560 --> 03:47:02.000] Yeah. So, I need, first thing you need to get is all of the documents filed with the [03:47:02.000 --> 03:47:10.000] county recorder's office from the time in which you received a warranty deed. [03:47:10.000 --> 03:47:13.360] Right. And then let me look at them. [03:47:16.000 --> 03:47:16.800] I got some troubles. [03:47:16.800 --> 03:47:23.200] I guess the only complication would be we're on my parents' property with this house, [03:47:24.320 --> 03:47:27.760] but that was warranty deeds from a long time ago. [03:47:30.400 --> 03:47:33.200] Wait, wait, speak up a little bit. I'm having a little trouble understanding. [03:47:34.240 --> 03:47:39.520] I stood on this one where this is on my parents' property. I have property in town that is mine, [03:47:39.520 --> 03:47:43.040] but we're not on that with this house. We're on my parents' property outside of town. [03:47:48.000 --> 03:47:51.440] Okay, wait, wait. I'm not sure where you're going. I didn't hear all that. [03:47:52.240 --> 03:47:56.480] Well, that's fine. The note's only for a house. It's not for a land animal. That's all. [03:47:56.480 --> 03:48:01.920] Oh, okay. Well, generally, okay, that's okay. You still have to have a warranty deed on the house. [03:48:02.800 --> 03:48:04.640] So, I take it this is a mobile home? [03:48:06.000 --> 03:48:08.720] Yes, it's a main factory home, yes, sir. [03:48:08.720 --> 03:48:10.880] Okay. Main factory home, yes, sir. [03:48:11.600 --> 03:48:22.320] Okay, so the home is not bound to the property it's on. That's okay. Look at the house. Look [03:48:22.320 --> 03:48:27.600] at anything that's wrong with it. But before you do any of that, we don't care about all that. [03:48:27.600 --> 03:48:32.640] First, we want to see the paperwork from mortgage. Do they have a claim? [03:48:32.640 --> 03:48:51.680] Okay. If they didn't, any claim against real property must be filed with the county recorder's [03:48:51.680 --> 03:48:53.920] office in 20 minutes. [03:48:54.480 --> 03:49:04.640] 20 minutes? Did I say 20 minutes? I think I'm getting too tired. [03:49:05.600 --> 03:49:08.880] That's okay. You're almost done for the night. I apologize. You can go now. [03:49:08.960 --> 03:49:17.920] Yeah, I am. I wake up really early. Yesterday, I just crashed. I woke up at two in the morning [03:49:17.920 --> 03:49:23.040] and worked on my stuff from two in the morning and then I started the show at eight o'clock. [03:49:23.920 --> 03:49:31.360] I lost it. Next thing I knew, I remember thinking I need to lay down for a while. [03:49:31.920 --> 03:49:38.640] I woke up on the couch in my office at four o'clock in the morning. I have no memory at all [03:49:38.640 --> 03:49:44.560] of the show yesterday. Frankly, I'm getting too old to do this. [03:49:46.400 --> 03:49:50.640] I understand, sir. Listen, I'll leave you alone for a night. It's almost time for you to end [03:49:50.640 --> 03:49:55.120] the show anyway. I really appreciate you, Tom. No, no. Don't leave me alone yet. We've [03:49:55.120 --> 03:50:01.120] got two more minutes. Oh, okay. All right. Anyway, the point is I got this big spreadsheet [03:50:01.120 --> 03:50:08.160] that I spent six months building. If you'll give me a note, truth and lending statement, [03:50:09.440 --> 03:50:19.360] the deed of trust, and then go to the clerk, the county recorder, and get all of the documents [03:50:19.360 --> 03:50:26.080] that have been filed into the record since the time you received a warranty deed, and get me some [03:50:26.800 --> 03:50:33.200] payment stubs, something that shows what they're telling you you should be paying. [03:50:35.440 --> 03:50:42.560] I'll have a look at them and maybe we can do a show. On the show, I will analyze this stuff [03:50:43.840 --> 03:50:48.960] on the show so you can see what I do and so everybody else can see how I break this stuff [03:50:48.960 --> 03:51:02.880] apart. Does that sound like a winner? Yes, sir. These guys do everything wrong. [03:51:04.640 --> 03:51:09.840] When I started working on these mortgages, I'm looking at this and I'm saying this is insane. [03:51:09.840 --> 03:51:20.880] They are so incredibly sloppy, but they got so many foreclosures. You don't have time to keep up [03:51:20.880 --> 03:51:27.120] with all of them, so they're not ready for somebody who comes by and sticks their boot up their behind. [03:51:31.040 --> 03:51:35.040] I'll show you how to do that. Okay, we are done for tonight. [03:51:35.920 --> 03:51:41.760] You have a good night, sir. Thank you. Okay, thank you, Stephen. This is Randy Kelton. [03:51:41.760 --> 03:51:44.320] Brett Fowlin's not here tonight. He's got a new job that [03:51:46.080 --> 03:51:50.560] cost him a lot of hours, but he's going to make enough money he can give me alone, [03:51:50.560 --> 03:51:55.200] so that's okay. We'll be back next week. Thank you for listening.