We went live across multiple platforms for a wide‑ranging Friday night conversation that centered on the Tina Peters case and concrete citizen actions people can take right now. Kurt Riggin and others walked through legal tactics—FOIA requests, writs, amicus briefs, jurisdictional challenges, and how to leverage the OMB, GAO, and Inspectors General—to apply pressure and surface records. We also discussed practical steps for contacting federal and state offices, and why precision in court language (e.g., bills of particulars, delegation of authority) can matter. In the second half, we pivoted to health fundamentals—oxygenation, detox approaches including clays, glutathione support strategies, and becoming the CEO of your own health. We emphasized education over dependency, and invited listeners to continue the discussion next week when we’ll organize the action items for Tina Peters and expand our health Q&A.
- 'Tina Peters (background) — Wikipedia': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tina_Peters_(politician)
- 'Colorado Attorney General — Official site': https://coag.gov/
- 'Colorado Secretary of State — Official site (Jena Griswold)': https://www.sos.state.co.us/
- 'Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) — Official portal': https://www.foia.gov/
- 'Office of Management and Budget (OMB) — Official site': https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
- 'U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) — Official site': https://www.gao.gov/
- 'Vice President JD Vance — Official White House page': https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/jd-vance/
- 'U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper — Official site': https://www.hickenlooper.senate.gov/
- 'The Art of War — Background (Wikipedia)': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_War
- 'LifeWave — Company site (phototherapy patches)': https://lifewave.com/
- 'Rumble — Video platform': https://rumble.com/
- 'Twitch — Live streaming platform': https://www.twitch.tv/
- 'DLive — Live streaming platform': https://dlive.tv/
- 'Global Voice Radio Network (show feed host page)': https://fountain.fm/show/2888006
This is Health and Wellness Radio, spiritually, physically, and emotionally. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymitobust.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function without adequate mitochondrial function is kinda like running an engine without oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by snapfat.com. That is snap,phat,.com. It's also brought to you by the Preif International terahertz frequency wand through iterraplanet.com.
Thank you so much for joining us, and welcome to the program. Welcome to ABC Health dot Infos Health Talk on Europe on Global Voice Radio Network and, rumble.globalvoiceradio.net. Tonight, we've had Edward with us. Edward, how you doing tonight?
[00:01:54] Unknown:
I hope you're okay? Awesome.
[00:01:57] Unknown:
Yes. Can you hear me well? Yes. I can hear you well. I could hear you way better than average, of course. So and then I guess that's a good thing. This is the first night we're doing something different. We're actually gonna be live streaming the program that is normally recorded and then post processed and all that happy stuff, and then it's uploaded and then it's just a tremendous pain in the butt. So you are live on rumble.globalvoiceradio.net. You're on radio.globalvoiceradio.net. You're on Twitch. You're on d live, and you are on Soapbox TV on the GVRN channel platform.
So, you have six audiences at your beck and call. So go ahead, Edward.
[00:02:48] Unknown:
Alrighty. It's happy Friday again. What do we got? 11/14/2025. I wasn't sure what I was going to, speak on since there is so much going on that can be spoken on. And then I realized I got I must talk on this subject because, one zero seven put out an emergency recording. And it's and I put it in the newsletter. Let me read this. Dina Beavers, 70, is a cancer survivor whose Navy Seal son was killed in a parachute accident in 2017. She is the former Mesa County Clerk in Colorado. She was corruptly sentenced to nine years in prison by that state's government for trying to secure the twenty twenty election.
Paul, you know about this. She's been imprisoned for over a year, and she hasn't been, she has been denied bail while pursuing her appeal. Many people believe she will win her appeal. Illegal commit aliens who have committed child rape have been released on bail in mass, but not Tina Peters who has never had a traffic ticket. This is unacceptable. Her health has deteriorated severely. The corrupt establishment in Colorado would prefer that she die in prison. We cannot let that happen. To everyone reading this, please contact the White House and call, write, and email Colorado governor Jared Polis to tell them to release Tina Peters immediately.
I don't think so.
[00:04:54] Unknown:
Website. Excuse me? I don't I don't I don't think they're gonna do it because Colorado is horribly corrupt. I mean, they've got an entire city underneath You're right. They they've got an entire city underneath the Denver Airport. And she is not a she is not a dangerous criminal. She is a political prisoner, which makes her infinitely more dangerous than rapists and murderers and illegal immigrants. I mean, come on. Let's get serious. She is going against the narrative. She's going against the powers that be. That makes her infinitely more dangerous than a rapist or a murderer.
What is wrong with that picture? What is wrong with it?
[00:05:44] Unknown:
So, the White House website gave me the option, so I chose to write to, vice president JB Vance since he's probably less busy than president Trump. Feel free to use my letter as a template if you wish, but please do customize it. I put this in my newsletter. It's the first story. Everyone needs to hear this. I am writing to you about Tina Peavey. He's a gold star mother, a patriot, and an American heroine who has been wrongfully and politically imprisoned by the state of Colorado for her role as the county clerk of Mesa County in trying to secure the twenty twenty election. Tina is currently being held in Larimer County Jail, and her health is reportedly fading fast.
She is a lung cancer survivor and had has already lost one third of her lungs. She should be out on bail while preparing her appeal, which many believe she will win. Instead, she is being politically assassinated before our eyes. Illegal aliens who have killed people and who have raped children have been let out on bail in this country, but not Tina Peters. This is unacceptable.
[00:07:11] Unknown:
Well, okay. She's in Colorado. Right? Okay. Well, Colorado, infinitely as corrupt, if not more so than Arizona. And both Colorado and Arizona, they have this nasty tendency of charging people or arresting people without charging them and holding them pending pending trial.
[00:07:35] Unknown:
They can hold them for up to two or three years. I I mean, there's no such thing as a speedy trial in Colorado or a result. Let me read a little bit more, and let's get Kurt on here. He's in Colorado. He knows who owns Colorado, which counties. He knows all the corruption, and he is on the call. President Trump called for her release months ago. Whoever is holding up this up in the White House needs to be fired immediately. I implore you, and this is to to, JD, the the vice president. I implore you to do everything in your power to have Tina Peters removed from Laramieres County Jail and to rush, to the nearest and best oncology hospital. Excuse me. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Alex below is the transcript of one zero seven's appeal for Tina p Peters. In addition, he says that in the matter of in a matter of days, we can expect the president to announce a national emergency regarding the voting system in The US and to issue an executive order to protect The US voting system from foreign interference. And it goes into the transcript, of everything he said. And, yes, it is a bunch to it isn't that much, but okay. He makes a final plea at the end. I well
[00:09:11] Unknown:
You can send me a copy of that. I didn't see it in,
[00:09:15] Unknown:
I didn't see it in the chat.
[00:09:16] Unknown:
I would appreciate it. Juan says, I would appreciate it if everybody look. If her son was alive, he would be fighting as hard as he could. Here we are the day after Veterans Day. Everybody went out, thanked those that made sacrifices for us as a people, a nation to get us to this moment in time. Tina is as much a warrior within our society to get to truth and justice, to get people elected that we actually voted for and stop the fraud. And, excuse me, and the elected stop the fraud and the placement of people over us fraudulently.
Okay? And to get to the truth within the vote. President Trump is going to do a national address very shortly concerning how he's going to change the elections and sign an executive order changing the way that we're going to conduct this next election. It I don't care what you have to do on says, I don't care what other things are pressing on the desk right now. President Trump, call those people and find out who's holding up this up and get them fired. Get them out. Get them out of the way. By the way, president Trump does know one zero seven if some of you people don't know. Whatever you have to do, same thing with, the governor of Colorado.
You will not be free of the blood of Tina Peters if you don't act right now. Don't wait until she's on a respirator. Moments away from death to decide to go ahead and do something. Get the, f blank c k in there right now and get it done. Whatever you got to do, do it now. Nina says, alright, Juan. Let's let's I'll put it up right now. Let me say a quick prayer. Father god in heaven, one of ours is in the mouth. We pray that you will raise up the right people to do what needs to be done, to release her from this hell hole, from this injustice being perpetrated against us.
That we, as a people, would not have the guilt of her blood on our hands because we could not rise up fast enough, hard enough to bring to an end swiftly the injustice is occurring here. We ask for divine assistance, and we invoke not only the blood of Christ, but her son who is no doubt watching since our actions this moment, the day after Veterans Day. Please, God, make it happen and get her free. I ask in Jesus' name, amen. Nino, amen. Let's make let's let me get this up. Alright, folks. You know what to do. Did the people do an okay.
Anyway, he wants I would freaking get a call to the White House switchboard. I get a call to the governor's switchboard in Colorado. What are you thinking? Get her out of there right now.
[00:12:51] Unknown:
Ed, can I make a suggestion? This is Mike. Yeah. I'm both.
[00:12:56] Unknown:
Go ahead. Go ahead. You could I was just gonna make the last sentence. Okay. Because
[00:13:00] Unknown:
because she's in extent she said, you know, extremist circumstances that if we can we get 25 people on this call to convene as a grand jury?
[00:13:14] Unknown:
Because we can round them up. I got enough people. I I'm not on this call, but we can round them up. Yeah.
[00:13:20] Unknown:
Okay. What you do is you do an emergency writ of prohibition, under a writ of mandamus to remove her from from their from their custody. They they obviously, probably don't have subject matter jurisdiction. They, probably, probably don't have far agent registration, which gives you grounds to strike their, their action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. And because she's in extreme circumstances that, you can order that to be done in three days. They have three days order to show cause why the writ of prohibition, should not release them, release her, or, they face immediate rest for for, insurrection against the constitution.
[00:14:07] Unknown:
I got a better idea. Sure. Go ahead. Is that Kurt? Kurt Riggin? This is me, bro. I finally figured out how to unmute.
[00:14:17] Unknown:
I
[00:14:18] Unknown:
did. For you. Isn't it great to figure things out?
[00:14:23] Unknown:
John, love it. Yeah. I was thinking I could probably do an amicus brief on her case, amicus curiae brief. Anybody know what that is?
[00:14:38] Unknown:
Mhmm. Go ahead and tell us. You you are familiar with that. Is
[00:14:42] Unknown:
a friend of the court in Latin. And, see, my research when when Trump was in Pueblo, Colorado, he said Jefferson County, Colorado is the most corrupt county in The United States. Now we're talking Cook County, Illinois, New York. You know, there's a lot of counties in this country that are known to be corrupt. There's a lot of corrupt counties. And I was like, Jefferson County. You gotta be kidding me. Well, I I heard they they they also mentioned that Jefferson County is the richest county in in the state of Colorado. And there's 63 or 64 counties in the state of Colorado, and only five of them don't have a bond schedule.
Now I don't know if you know what a bond schedule is, but, basically, a bond schedule says every state's required to have one, every county's required to have one. And it says if you're charged with second or third degree assault, the maximum fine or the maximum bond you can have is, you know, this amount of money. You know? So in in most states, like, third degree assault, the maximum bond you can get is, like, $3. And, usually, it's less than that, 2,500. And there's only five counties out of 63 that don't have a bond schedule.
[00:16:19] Unknown:
So what? 63 or 64.
[00:16:21] Unknown:
You want to tell us? Why? I started looking into it. I went to the I went to the court the county auditor for Jefferson County with my friend, Carrie Kalenda, whose son was in jail on a quarter million cash only bail for a second and third degree assault charge, first offense. Kid was 27. Young man. And, they threw him in jail on a sec on a first offense for a quarter million cash only bail. Now I started looking at her him me and his mom went to the county auditors, and I said, I wanna know who who owns this courthouse. And he says, it's obviously the county. I'm I'm not wasting my time.
I said, so you're not gonna show me? He said, no. I'm not wasting my time. It's obviously the county. And I said, well, if you don't wanna show me, I said, go get a copy of your job description, and we'll go over it together, and you could show me where you can withhold public record from me. How about that? He goes, oh, that's how we're gonna play it? I go, that's exactly how we're gonna play it. He goes, fine. And he types up, gets on the computer, and he starts typing. He turned white as a sheet, man. I mean, he got pale instantly.
And I said, you okay? He said, oh my god. I've worked here fifteen years. I had no idea. I said, no idea what? He said, I I had no idea this this this courthouse was owned by the Jefferson County Finance Corporation. I go, how about the jail, the sheriff's office, and the prosecutor's office? Uh-huh. He types them up, and he goes, yeah. They're all owned by the Jefferson County Finance Corporation
[00:18:16] Unknown:
He
[00:18:18] Unknown:
And the public defender's office and all the land they sit on. I said, well, you know this land was eminent domain, and the courthouse was built with public funds. And over $10,000,000 in federal funds are in that courthouse because every every window in that courthouse is bulletproof, and every desk and every every, counter has a bulletproof panel behind it paid for by federal funds over $10,000,000 worth. How does that work for a privately owned building? Because I'm not gonna answer your questions. Then he turned around and left. You know? And he wouldn't give it to you know, he I said, I need that. And then I need oh, you have to you know, I'll come back in three days.
Well, we never did get it. And then they sent four guys with two bulletproof vests on the machine pistols and to intimidate us to leave. So we left. And I said, hey. Don't be afraid, guys. This cane is only, you know, I only use it for walking. I don't I don't use it to beat up cops with. I I promise. They're like, oh, yeah. We're really afraid of you. It's a hey. I'm a 147 of fury. They're like, yeah. Two of them got embarrassed and left. It's kinda looks bad when you and and the way yeah. My friend's you know, it was, you know, my friend's mom that was with me, you know, she was in her late sixties, you know, and so neither one of us were too menacing looking.
But, evidently, you know, when you start asking questions like who owns the courthouse and the jail and the prosecutor's office, they they don't like that kind of stuff. You know? A couple I think I'm not sure it was a couple days later or couple weeks later. I think it was a couple weeks later. They sold it to the county. They sold it all back to the county. Guess how much for? Nothing. Zero. Can you sell a $100,000,000 worth of property for nothing? I think that would be considered a gift. Right? Well, then I when when I started doing research, I found that there was five other counties in the state that don't have a bond schedule.
One of them is Mesa, the county that Woah. Woah. So Mesa, Gilpin, Boulder, Jefferson, and Douglas, Those are the only five counties in the state that don't have a bond schedule. And when I got pulled over, I I was going down Colfax in a car with no plates, no insurance. I had my tribal license, and I saw a cop unmarked cop coming up on my high end. So I slowed way down before I right when I got to Colfax in Sheridan. As soon as it turned yellow, I punched it. And that's a legally light. That yellow light's a three second yellow light, so it's completely legal. Because after 10:00, they changed to one second yellow lights, which makes it which makes it federally illegal.
But I went to that yellow light. The cop had to stop, which really you know, they don't like that. He had to stop. And by the time he caught up to me, I was all the way up to this place called Casa Bonita. And I saw him coming up on me on a an unmarked car at about ninety. And so I jammed it into the parking lot without signaling. And he pulled up he turned on his lights, and he says, I'm I'm impounding this car, and I'm taking your ass to jail. I said, hell no. You ain't, Skippy. I said, what did you say to me? I said, you heard me. I said, you ain't taking nothing. I said, well, how do you figure?
I said, because all four of my tires were on private property before you turned on your emergency signals. I said, you and I could drive all over this parking lot all night with no license, no insurance, no registration, and you can't do a damn thing because it's private property. It's not a public right of way. You only have a right to enforce your traffic code on a public right of way. You wanna write me a ticket? Go for it. So you want me to write you a ticket? I said, I insist. He goes, well, how do you figure I'm not gonna impound your car and take you to jail? I said, guy told you all four my tires were on private property. I said, oh, by the way, are you attempting to enforce traffic code in an unmarked police vehicle in violation of state and federal law officer? Because I need backup here now.
He goes, I'm not answering that question. I said, it doesn't look like a marked vehicle to me. You know, all of a sudden four cars pull up. And I said, oh, here's here's the mark, guys. I would stop for them. I said, I wouldn't stop for you because I don't stop for unmarked vehicles. I do an OJ Simpson. I said, if you're an unmarked vehicle, I have no reason to stop for you because there's no statute that says I have to stop for an unmarked vehicle. I said, under title 49, the Interstate Transportation Safety Act, which every state has adopted, you must be in a clearly marked police vehicle to enforce traffic code.
I said, all you gotta do is do a word search for clearly marked police vehicle in your state or federal law, and you'll find it. And he's like I said, and I said, who do you get your paycheck from? He goes, well, that's none of your business. I said, I bet you'd get it from the Jefferson County Finance Corporation, don't you? He goes, well, yeah. I said, so you know you work for a private corporation known as the Jefferson County Finance Corporation? He goes, yeah. So I could. Do you know that's a felony under federal law? Yes.
No. I said, I forget how it goes. Ignorance of laws, I forget.
[00:24:23] Unknown:
I can't remember the rest. No. By design. I heard it was no excuse.
[00:24:28] Unknown:
That's what I told you. Pages.
[00:24:30] Unknown:
6,000 pages per bill. Ignorance of the law is by design.
[00:24:38] Unknown:
That's what I told him. Big guy's law, he finished my statement. No excuse. I go, exactly. No excuse. And and, you know, but he told he he admitted. He worked for the Jefferson County Finance Corporation. The other ones had cut him a check. He doesn't work for the city of Lakewood. His check comes from this the Jefferson County Finance Corporation, which owns the city of Lakewood, Wheat Ridge, Arvada, Golden, Mountain View, and Lakeside. Every town in go in Jefferson County is owned by the Jefferson County Finance Corporation.
[00:25:14] Unknown:
Now Do you know what's do you know what's even more tasty than that? You know what's even more tasty than that? You go ahead and you throw in the status of American National on top of that shit. You throw that status in the mix. It is a legal status that The US Federal Government recognizes as national of The United States that owes permanent allegiance to a small s state, not a capital s state of entity, but Colorado state, which is unceded. So how are they going to enforce a law from an unceded government against somebody that is only under that law, the natural
[00:26:06] Unknown:
land law. You know what's even you know what you know what's even better than that? Do you know about the constitutions of this state and all the other Western states? Before you go there,
[00:26:16] Unknown:
sir. Wait. Hold on, Paul. Tell him what happened when that cop pulled up in that unmarked car and you and you're telling him he can't take the car. What did you tell him about him having his
[00:26:32] Unknown:
license whatever? Oh, I said, before we get started, officer, I need to see your delegation of authority. Yeah. He goes, well, that's my badge right there. I go, sorry. That badge is a symbol. I can get one at a pawnshop. I said, until you show me your delegation of authority, you're not illegally a police officer, and I can actually place you under citizen's arrest or impersonal officer under a color of law and official misconduct. I said, do you have your delegation of authority on you? He goes, oh, what is it? I said, you know, oddly enough, I I I looked at my job description and nor did I see where it was my job to educate you in the law.
Because what what what is it? I said, well, you know, you seem like a nice guy. I'm gonna tell you. It's your police ID. Do you have it on you? And he looks down. He goes, well, no. I said, you better get your supervisor down here, bro, because we have a problem. Yeah. Also, you know, more cops showed up.
[00:27:49] Unknown:
He's not gonna show you his police ID because that would that would let the cat out of the bag as to what his name was. That's the only reason that they have the last name and the badge number as their only means of identification with the general public, which under the War and War Powers Act, as it was rewritten in 1933, that made you an enemy of the state
[00:28:15] Unknown:
and an enemy combatant. Federal law says you have a right to demand a delegation of authority before you even talk to them or show them anything. And that isn't a badge. That isn't a uniform. You can get that at a costume shop. Your badge, you can I've seen them at pawn shops, but in a police ID. You can't get that at pawn shop or or, you know, anywhere else. You can get it from the police department. You know? And,
[00:28:42] Unknown:
It is called So delegations. Anybody should know this. Delegation of authority of the words. I couldn't remember what words you used.
[00:28:51] Unknown:
Show you Delegation of authority. And that and and most of them, you know, most of them don't know what it is. You know? And you say, listen. Federal law says if you don't have it, I can actually place you under a citizen's arrest, and I can book you down to federal courthouse for violations of title eighteen two forty one and two forty two. And if you place me under arrest, I can get you for violations of title eighteen two forty five, which is kidnapping. So, you know, it's and and another one is, you know, I when he goes he goes step out of the car, I go, why would I need to do that? He goes, so I'm gonna search the car. I go, what further evidence of no license plate do you hope to find by searching my car?
You think you might find one in my trunk or in my glove box? You know, they don't fit in a glove box. Right? He's like, well, I guess I don't have to search cars. Yeah. No. There is no plate. I said, I'm test driving this this vehicle. And I said, and when I do decide to, you know, get it, which I might now, I said, I'm gonna probably put a tribal plate on it. And I'm gonna, you know, and here by the way, here's my tribal right to travel brief, which I carry around and give you. That's your copy. I said, you've been served, so now you can't claim ignorance of the law when we are in court later.
[00:30:16] Unknown:
You know what I mean?
[00:30:17] Unknown:
I
[00:30:19] Unknown:
What's that? I have an affidavit. I have an affidavit and a fee schedule on my left rear window of my car. I've got this cute little 2013 Chevy Cruze that that refuses to fail inspection because I think I've got an o two sensor out or something like that. And the state of New York is, like, royally pissed that I don't have this inspection sticker. However, when the cop walks up to my left rear window, he sees affidavit of citizenship evidence that I am not a citizen of The United States under the fourteenth amendment and I am not a legal resident of Washington DC. Therefore, they have no jurisdiction over the car or me.
They get really pissed off.
[00:31:02] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. They get they get see, I'm a tribal member with a treaty. And, we're you know, we have a treaty. Right? And our treaty rights says we have a right to travel by vehicular means. On any road, we have a right to hunt and fish on any pub open public lands, and there's nothing they can do about it. It's our treaty right. And it and our treaty supersedes everything but the United States constitution. And so we're not subject to statutes. Indians are not subject to statutes except federal. You know? They wanna charge us that to actually bring us into federal court. And most people don't realize before '84, there were only three levels of felonies, three levels of gross misdemeanors, and three levels of misdemeanors.
Now they have six levels of felonies and three levels of misdemeanors. That's to fill up the prisons. It's a business matter. Exactly. And to keep people in the system for the rest of their lives. But what happened to the gross misdemeanors? And, see, there's cases out of Washington like State versus Klump, k l u m p, that says you cannot be prosecuted for a misdemeanor more than a year after its commission, and you cannot be prosecuted for a gross misdemeanor more than two years after its commission. And so in Washington, they didn't like me so much that they actually changed the law, turned the gross misdemeanor into a felony that they had against me for unlawful practice of law because I called and left a message on the Grant County prosecutor's office phone.
And I said, you know, I'm calling on behalf of a tribal member that you issued a thousand dollar cash only bail warrant for on a ten year old ticket for driving in the left hand lane. And I said, not being that this guy is a hoarder. He still has the receipts he paid you for every dime he paid. And I said, and according to the statutes and the court rules, he paid the maximum penalty you could have charged him for that fine ten years ago. Now you issue a warrant for failure to comply for a thousand dollar cash only bail? I said, what are you guys getting? Yeah. You guys get low on budget, so you gotta dig in and try to find cases that don't exist? I said, you know, cash only bail is a violation of article one section 20 of the call of the Washington State Constitution.
So I said, yeah. I'd love to hear from you. Please get back because I I'd love to hear your answer. And I said, well, you never did. I called back. So couple days couple weeks later, I drove to Grant County with my client, and, Randy. And we get to the courthouse, and there's there's two cops, a prosecutor, and a court clerk standing on the front steps of the courthouse. And I noticed we drove past two cops to get to the courthouse. And so I get out, and he goes, you're not welcome here, mister Reagan. And, mister Roe's case has been dismissed, so you have no reason to be here. I said, well, you know, it's not like I don't trust you or nothing, but I don't. So we're not leaving until we get that in writing.
Deal. And so he sends the clerk in to the court. She comes back out, gives me gives me dismissed with prejudice in writing, and we leave. Fourteen months later, they issued a warrant for my arrest for unlawful practice of law.
[00:34:56] Unknown:
You were acting as a friend of the thousand dollars. We're acting as a friend of the court. You weren't practicing law. You were a friend of the court. You were correcting their Exactly.
[00:35:10] Unknown:
They still have a warrant for my arrest. It's been out that warrant that the original, charge was issued in 2002. And I brought it to the to their to their attention under State versus Klumpf. You you can't prosecute me for more than a year after it's commissioned. This is a misdemeanor. And not only that, what's what county can regulate the practice of law in any state? Which county is that? None. No county can regulate the practice of law in any state. Only the Supreme Court or the attorney general's office. Right? Am I wrong?
Right. Hell no. I am right on that one. So I have two warrants that my brother, who was working for the Wall Wall State Penitentiary, Supermax Prison, he was a supervisor there. He told me twenty some years ago, he goes I go, these warrants expire in 2004, bro. And this is, like, in no. Actually, this is in 2005. I said, these warrants expired in 2004 under State versus Club. And he told me, listen, bro. These warrants will never expire. The word is they're gonna shoot you 18 times in the back if you're on a pair of crutches trying to escape. He goes, the last time they threw you in jail, you walked a 178 guys out of jail in two days. You think they're gonna let you do that ever again?
He said, that's not gonna happen. He goes, these are death warrants, and they will never go away. And so now I got one in Granite County and one in Kittitas County. In Granite County, I never ever stepped up in the courthouse. About
[00:37:10] Unknown:
some health issues, and then I want So Tina
[00:37:13] Unknown:
the the Tina Peters case, I think if people, if if if we got a Amicus Curiae brief, which is a friend of the court brief, and we pointed out that, you know, what we need to also find out is what was her bond. Does, you know, does anybody know on that? And did they do cash only, or was it bondable? Did she go through a bondsman, or did she do cash? That,
[00:37:43] Unknown:
and we can get into it. What that's what if if you had done it just about Tina Peters right now, we could have gotten this forwarded to some place. You gotta stay on point if you want to us to forward that and make sure she gets it. Hold
[00:38:00] Unknown:
on. That's why we got you here.
[00:38:02] Unknown:
This is a Edward?
[00:38:05] Unknown:
Hello? Yes. Hi. This is Linda. So, another piece about Tina Peters. Hello. I've been hearing for months now the DOJ could release her as a material witness. And everybody that I listened to complains that, you know, Von is dragging her feet and they're not doing it. So that would get her out of prison and Yeah.
[00:38:32] Unknown:
I do know those things already. And Yeah. Yes. What we're talking about is the excuse me. What Kurt is talking about and what, Michael Lerman and Yeah. I understand. Are talking about is totally different than what the mainstream and all these other people that don't know what to do are talking about.
[00:38:57] Unknown:
Absolutely. But, you know, the most immediate thing is put pressure on the DOJ to take some immediate action. The rest of it, I I I'm it's seriously I hear I hear you. I have a bet I have a better way. Okay?
[00:39:11] Unknown:
Okay. Because, Sun Tzu, you know, was I'm I'm a big fan of Sun Tzu, Art of War. And one of his teachings is never directly attack your opponent. So my theory is we should probably write to the OMB, the Office of Management and Budget, and I mean everybody, the GAO, the General Accounting Office, and the state's inspector general. And we need to we need to ask them, how can they give any federal funding to the county of Mesa to violate her constitutional rights and to violate state and federal law.
[00:40:01] Unknown:
That's brilliant.
[00:40:04] Unknown:
And if they lose their federal funding, I bet you she might get her ass released in a hurry.
[00:40:11] Unknown:
I bet you.
[00:40:13] Unknown:
Sure. They did that with the state of Washington.
[00:40:17] Unknown:
They, they did that. I did that in the state of Washington in '84.
[00:40:22] Unknown:
Yeah. They were added on the state of Washington. They had to shut down their Hold on. And rewrite all their laws before they could reopen Wait a second.
[00:40:31] Unknown:
Wait. Paul, we're gonna continue this exact conversation after we talk about something. Let people know that this is also about the health. We've what we do is we help people to understand what they need to do to eliminate the toxins in the tame pristine health that they're not experiencing now by rehydration, reoxygenation, detoxification and elimination, renutritionalization, and remineralization. You can take people that are so sick looking like they're gonna die and change their life. You know who responds the quickest to different applications that actually work, not the stuff that is put out there on mainstream, that pharmaceutical stuff, but things that actually work. The sickest people respond from the slightest bit of what they really need. They will respond dramatic improvements.
I have watched it for many years. What we need to do is educate people on how to return to pristine health. Go to abchealth.info. Abchealth.info. Learn about the magnesium with ozone bonded to it. Everybody talks about the need to take magnesium. We'll find out why the magnesium with ozone bonded to it in in particular, the Mag ozone is the number one oxygenating formula to oxygenate trillions of tissue cells and raise the oxygen levels in the body to completely address all types of dysfunctional health. When your body's low on oxygen, your body is not gonna function well. And when you raise it up, it is going to improve like you cannot believe. Of course, you need other things, the right nutrition, the right minerals for conductivity.
You can also learn about the bentonite clay, the calcium bentonite clay, the purest finest calcium bentonite clay ever discovered coming out of a 43,000,000 year old volcano, a subterranean mine under a volcano, I should say, protected by a two foot wall of zeolite for forty three million years. And what it does inside and outside the body is unique. Go to dazinisaway.com. Learn. Watch the videos. Daziseaseaway.com and go on to resources, learn and educate yourself. This is absolutely mandatory. You need to know how to heal yourself and your family, your friends, and your community.
Because if you don't take charge of your own health care and become the CEO of your own health care, and you're relying on, oh, yeah, doctors that can only diagnose and misdiagnose, they're not in charge of anybody's health care. You must become the CEO of your own health care. Utilize that knowledge. Yes. You can reach me if you need to in this emergency situations. I was just put on the phone to Dubai today, for emergency situations, and these people are high up in the, in the world of health and run health care, company group big. These are big people. Well, they have a personal situation that needed addressing with serious cancer challenges that needs to be addressed immediately. When something serious, it needs to be addressed right away before we lose people and they slip through the fingers, utilizing applications that have been, horrific on on on everybody since my mother back when I was 14.
They just seem to never change their their applications and Right. They don't work. Ninety seven percent of the people, their chemo and radiation isn't exactly what I would do to anybody. Now a lot of people do it, and we gotta help them through it by regrowth the mitochondria when they do it. Okay? If they're gonna do chemo and yes?
[00:45:22] Unknown:
Edward, we got a lot of time to talk about that. We're on a roll on the legal thing on the first part of the program. Let's There's plenty of time. Got it. There's plenty of time to to regroup and talk about Magozone and the bentonite clay in the second half of the program. We don't need to, like, put the brakes on the legal part of the program. Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. Can I make a suggestion?
[00:45:48] Unknown:
This is Mike, the ombudsman. I'd like to read something to you.
[00:45:54] Unknown:
Go ahead.
[00:45:55] Unknown:
Has anybody checked to see if this judge has a foreign agent registration?
[00:46:04] Unknown:
I'm sure not.
[00:46:06] Unknown:
They probably don't. Nobody let me this is this is work for somebody dealing with foreclosure, and I'm sure it'll work in this case. Demand to strike, magistrate, judge, order to show cause from the court record. Judge such and such is not a registered as a foreign agent in violation of federal law. Judge also got violated 28 US c, six three six. This thing worked like a champ for the person who used it originally. I am before the court by special parents without waiving any rights, defense, statutory, or procedural, states in, Howlett versus Rose, April.
Federal law and supreme court case applied to state court cases. Okay. Demands the court strike the magistrate's, judge order from the record of grant the damages. Judge violated foreign agent registration act of 1938. Federal law therefore all the judge decisions should be under judicial review. Okay? Judge also finally 28 USC.
[00:47:09] Unknown:
This probably wasn't a magistrate judge because they don't generally hear felony cases. And if we and you don't have you have a right. You know, people don't realize in law, if it's a magistrate or a pro tem or a court commissioner
[00:47:28] Unknown:
Commissioner. Yeah.
[00:47:30] Unknown:
You have to give them permission to hear your case. Gotcha. And you know how you do that?
[00:47:38] Unknown:
Yeah. By showing up. I understand.
[00:47:42] Unknown:
When you say you're walking in the door,
[00:47:45] Unknown:
you give it to him by walking in the door. Part, but do you ever have a judge say, do you understand that this could be ninety days in jail and a thousand dollar fine, or do you understand this, or you do understand it?
[00:47:56] Unknown:
That. To say that? To understand things. Sure.
[00:47:59] Unknown:
You stand out of jail. But when you say you don't understand
[00:48:02] Unknown:
it, they Every time somebody says I understand, they just enter into a contract with them. Because if you look it up in Black's Law, understand there's a contract. Exactly. Well, the first the first thing they did just entered into a contract, giving him jurisdiction. So, yeah, you never say I understand. You say I comprehend everything you say. I understand nothing that you do.
[00:48:24] Unknown:
The the first thing that they do is they is they're summoned to appear and they do appear. So they already performed
[00:48:35] Unknown:
Well, you always wanna hear that. Especially and not generally. And you say, I'm here to challenge the jurisdiction. But but see, you don't ever say I mean, I've seen seen I've seen guys go in there and say, this court has nurse no jurisdiction. Well, does that ever work?
[00:48:50] Unknown:
Nope. Well, the court has jurisdiction
[00:48:52] Unknown:
to determine whether Your honor Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. No. No. Listen. This is how you say it. You say your honor This is the last five plaintiff. The listen. You go in there and you say, your honor your honor you don't call the prosecutor. You say the plaintiff has woefully failed to invoke the jurisdiction of this honorable court.
[00:49:14] Unknown:
Uh-huh.
[00:49:15] Unknown:
Now did I tell the judge he didn't have jurisdiction? No. Nope. No. And did I say, you know, you're a worthless court? No. I called them an honorable court. And if you start out that way, say, your honor, this plaintiff has willfully failed to invoke the jurisdiction of this honorable court, and you go into your argument, explain why. A lot of times, they don't they don't know how to deal with that. You know? Because you're not saying this court has no jurisdiction because they'll bring in the boys, throw your ass in cuffs, and prove how they act. The judge. You're exactly the guys prosecuting the claim. You split you put a wedge between the prosecutor and the judge, and you say, this scumbag can't even tie his own shoes, much less write a complaint.
Where is the affidavit of probable cause to issue this warrant? Mhmm. And I've had them, you know, in one in one case in Gray County. To the distinction, they even come into this court and be inside this court here. You know, it's about I've had him say, well, the other judges found it sufficient because I went through seven judges before I got through one. And and the and then I go and he goes, well, great. Let's see it. And they all looked at each other as, like, five prosecutor, and they looked at you go, well, it's an awful big file, your honor. And I said, I haven't seen it yet. I've been demanding it every hearing in front of every judge, and we've been through this. You're the eighth judge here.
And he goes, well, I'd like to see it. And he goes, well, yeah. It's a big file, your honor. He goes, well, there's five of you. I'm gonna give you twenty minutes to find it. And so they took twenty minutes and actually pretended to look for it. But you knew you could tell by looking at it, they weren't really looking for it. They were pretending to look for it. And then after twenty minutes, he goes, did you find it? He goes, well. It appears we haven't found it. He goes, well, where is it? Well, it appears we've never had it.
And I said, well, if they've never had it, that means the warranty's legal, and you might as well dismiss this case before I charge you all with felony charges. He goes, well, we'll just proceed as if we did have it. Oh. That was judge yeah. And I was like, well, I'm gonna have to object to that because that would make you, a, you know, a a defendant district court for violations of title eighteen two forty one, two forty two, and two forty five. So you can't threaten me. I said, I'm just informing you. This is I'm not threatening you. I'm just trying to educate you. I said, because ignorance can be quite expensive on your end. Ignorance in the law is no excuse for any judge. Mhmm. Question. But I'd love to hear it as an as an argument in court.
[00:52:14] Unknown:
I hope Jesus.
[00:52:17] Unknown:
But that and then they ended up issuing a 20,020 thousand $200 warrant for my arrest for unlawful practice of law for defending myself. So, you know, but my brother told me these these are you know, they want you dead, and these are death warrant.
[00:52:38] Unknown:
You know? And he said these And what was the money of a county was trying to charge you?
[00:52:45] Unknown:
Well, they they were charging me with unlawful practice of law. And I and I and they still have warrants for unlawful practice of law, but the problem is only the Supreme Court or the attorney general can regulate the practice of law. No state can or no county can or or city for that matter can regulate the practice of law the last I checked. Right. And I'm pretty thorough. Is that
[00:53:09] Unknown:
but they they are trying to charge your straw man with that.
[00:53:13] Unknown:
Oh, they are. Well, they're making shitloads of money off my CUSIP account and and, and through the CRIS system. I mean, the $20,200 warrant that's been out since so 2002. Mhmm. Dude, that's twenty three almost twenty four years. Well, is that what you're saying?
[00:53:39] Unknown:
What if I'm positive? The nature of the action.
[00:53:43] Unknown:
Tell them to pony up the nature of the action that and that you are there to say Well, I'd have to show up to do that, and I'd I wouldn't make it to court.
[00:53:51] Unknown:
Right.
[00:53:52] Unknown:
Mhmm. It's it's a very So what I have to do is I have to remove it to federal district court in DC and file a criminal complaint against them under rule 26.5 and subpoena them into court in DC where I don't have to worry about getting murdered by them or their boys and, let them explain how it all works. Yeah. No. Because I know they would need And
[00:54:21] Unknown:
You cannot get justice from a state court unless you take it to federal court. You can't get justice from federal court unless you take it to a state.
[00:54:31] Unknown:
DC is federal court, bro. Yeah. Well, exactly. When you go You cannot
[00:54:37] Unknown:
DC. You cannot get justice from a state court.
[00:54:42] Unknown:
You cannot move take them to federal. Any any case to a federal court if you're a tribal member, bro. Anybody can do that. That is my treat. Right? Any Well, especially if you're tribal member because it's a treaty right. Yeah. And and no state can hear violations of treaty rights, can they? No. Because they're the ones that are violating street lists.
[00:55:04] Unknown:
Especially since they're a municipal corporation.
[00:55:08] Unknown:
Especially since they're corporate, and especially since The United States has filed bankruptcy.
[00:55:13] Unknown:
You You know what? You
[00:55:14] Unknown:
know what? All municipal corporations.
[00:55:17] Unknown:
How long have you been doing, this for the tribes? How many tribes? You that you've been handling all their law their,
[00:55:27] Unknown:
legal Long time. Yeah. Since the eighties. Early early eighties.
[00:55:33] Unknown:
And you do all federal,
[00:55:37] Unknown:
Removals. What do you Yeah. I removed their crap to federal court, and I let them explain it to a federal magistrate how in any way what they're doing is legal. And when they can't it's fun it's fun to watch them try, though. They will. They have to. And they put sometimes they put up some pretty good arguments, but they can't. They I've you know, they've yet to win. Let's put it that way. And most of the time, they just capitulate. They don't they don't want me setting case precedents with their name on it because then they have to seal it seal it.
All my case precedents, you can you can look up a lot of them, and they'll tell you, sorry. That file is sealed.
[00:56:24] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:56:25] Unknown:
Because they don't like getting, you know, my stuff in people's hands. It could be dangerous.
[00:56:30] Unknown:
Right. They don't wanna let you put them in the bag.
[00:56:34] Unknown:
No. They don't. They don't. You know, but somebody's got it.
[00:56:40] Unknown:
I have a similar situation. I have a similar situation. Well, you're most of the people in The United States.
[00:56:47] Unknown:
We we can write up a letter, and everybody make it a little bit different, but I'll put the same legal stuff in there. And, right, you know, and see, we we can't do about the federal funding for Mesa County.
[00:57:05] Unknown:
Oh, the way they might do. And the to the audience, how you stop the funding, and shut down the courthouse. Could you explain that to, simply to people your experience of that? You just narc on the state to the federal government,
[00:57:20] Unknown:
out of the state is violating the constitution of The United States because no state can receive federal funding if they do not follow federal law.
[00:57:32] Unknown:
And you can actually get whistleblower funds of in you know, I haven't done it yet, but I I my friends have told me, dude, you should get whistleblower money because you deserve it. Yeah. I should.
[00:57:48] Unknown:
You certainly do.
[00:57:51] Unknown:
Excuse
[00:57:56] Unknown:
me. But, You gotta watch out for those chemicals, dude.
[00:58:02] Unknown:
Yeah. That being said c o COPD, emphysema, and pneumoconiosis.
[00:58:08] Unknown:
No. Well Over that. Yeah. I'm gonna I'm gonna throw something in. Hold on a second. When my friend Ronald wouldn't stop coughing, I let him into the house when he was very sick, and it was 20 degrees. He was sleeping in his make his van, his motor. Anyway, he comes in. I put him in the couch in my bedroom, and I go try to go to sleep, and he wouldn't stop coughing. Luckily, it was a very big house in my it was my daughter's house. She was the other end. I said, that's it. Get up. And I made him up a glass of clay water or I already had it, and I made him gargle with four ounces, go in the bathroom, stand up by the sink, take sips of it, gargle with it fifteen minutes.
And if it runs down your throat, take another sip and another sip till fifteen minutes go goes away. And it did just what I knew it would do. It stopped the coughing for five hours. The next day when he came back, on the doctors, the doctors said I have pneumonia and gave me a prescription of antibiotics. I said, you're not gonna take those, are you? And he said, well, that's what he said. And I said, never mind. Come here. And I poured a glass of water with a quarter teaspoon of hydrogen peroxide, 35% food grade in it, and another glass of water to wash it down. He drank both glasses, and all the pneumonia was gone the next day. He coughed up everything just like always. I use the magnesium ozone.
Okay. Back to the legal stuff now. I I just want people to know. You can take charge of your own health care if you know what to do.
[01:00:00] Unknown:
Yep. And if it wasn't for, Clay, I would not be alive because I got my insides, you know, rearranged and including my part of my stomach shoved into my chest cavity of my lungs. And I had the worst case of bleeding gut syndrome my doctor said he'd ever even heard of. And I drank bentonite clay with activated charcoal powder, and it helped, keep me alive. It's it sealed up that bleeding the leaky gut syndrome I had and helped my my intestines heal. But, I mean, the guy was, like, they were pretty amazed because I have, you know, seven fistulas in my chest and thirty percent of my stomach and part of my lower intestine up into my chest cavity of my lungs and, bifurcated liver.
And, you know, because the police wanted to kill people know what that means, a bifurcated
[01:00:56] Unknown:
liver. They don't know the extreme of the of what you actually mean.
[01:01:03] Unknown:
They fractured my liver in two pieces by kicking me in the liver repeatedly over a period of hours. Those people
[01:01:11] Unknown:
who meet those same people that didn't want you releasing people from jail and putting judges in jail that you've put in there.
[01:01:19] Unknown:
Yep. Snohomish County Sheriff's. But, you know, yeah, I was, working for the tribe up there in tribe, and the sheriffs were using this the tribal docks to haul in loads of chemicals for making meth in a little town called Granite Falls. And, they, I I brought it to their attention, and it, it cost me dearly. But, but a lot of them went to prison. I didn't get nothing out of it, but, I did save some people's lives. You know, I've had a couple people contact me. About
[01:02:08] Unknown:
and and the clay, that's what I do. I people come to me with people that are dying. I I said, let's not let anybody die. No one needs to die of disease. Let's get it straight. Get your your head straight and start learning how to stop it even when it's, like, a couple of days before.
[01:02:27] Unknown:
Long as it's not also takes off the parasites. Don't forget that. Parasites do not like clay. They cannot survive in it.
[01:02:36] Unknown:
They cannot. It's wonderful for parasites. It's just what they need. Too bad. And away go troubles down the drain. Yeah. So
[01:02:53] Unknown:
so, yeah, it's pretty amazing. And you can do, like, a play bath, and then the parasites will come right out.
[01:03:00] Unknown:
Right out of the pores, right out of your body. Yeah. K. We oh, let me let you know, you guys. We got something special. We we got something special coming.
[01:03:15] Unknown:
One second. Request. There are the best attack is using using the Freedom of Information Act. And one of the people I work with is a guy named Arthur West. And, if you look up Arthur West versus Washington State, anything, Washington West versus Olympia, Arthur West versus Fife, and all these other towns around. He's, Washington State Department of Licensing Martial Fishing Game. He does FOIA requests for stories he'll see on TV. And under the Freedom of Information Act, it's a $100 a day per page for every page they don't give you after ten days. Unless they ask for more time, and then you gotta give them, like, twenty days.
But it after that, it's a $100 a day per page for every page they refuse to give you. And that gets expensive for them. They don't expect people to request things like in an office communications, texts, emails, phone records, sticky notes, you know, everything. And it's worked for them, and they don't like giving up stuff that is incriminating to them. And so they would rather pay you public funds than give up documentation that could put them in jail. Arthur is now a millionaire. When I met him, he was not. He's got a car collection of 24 cars.
He's got property in Hawaii and on the water in Olympia and, all from Foyas. And he's made a lot of changes in Washington state. And, you know, last time I was there visiting him, he he said, do you wanna use one of my cars? I'm like, sure. He's got, like, 22 convertibles. Like, dude, you live in the rainiest part of the country. Do you have convertibles? Well, sometimes it's sunny. Like, okay. So I'm driving on these convertibles. The tabs were expired by four years. Four years. And I'm on I five, and all of a sudden, the brakes go out. Well, he's got 22 cars and, you know, evidently, he doesn't keep track on which the fluids are how the fluids are doing on him, all of them. Oh, man. And so I bumped into the guy ahead of me, and there happened to be a cop right next to me.
And his eye gets all his eyes get all bright. I'm like, you know, I get out and, you know, I didn't I was we're doing, you know, stuck in traffic. You know? There's no marks on either car. So we shake hands, and and this cop gets in behind me as we're slowly moving, runs the plate. He recognizes me because about ten years prior to that, I got him up on the stand and grilled him for four hours like a cheeseburger to where the judge had to go let him take a break to change his uniform because he was soaked in sweat. And the case got dismissed.
He remembered me for some reason and Yeah. Got behind me.
[01:06:36] Unknown:
For some reason, Yeah.
[01:06:39] Unknown:
He runs the plate. And I know it happened because Arthur had sued them and won. You know? I don't know. He didn't want he won so much money that they they had to have a special session with the senate to cut him a warrant for payment. You ever heard of that? Anybody ever heard of a warrant for payment? No. It's he he asked me, what do I do with this, man? Can I take it down and deposit it at the bank? I'm like, no, dude. He said, well, what do I do with it? I said, you gotta take it to the treasurer. And if I were you, I'd demand it in lawful money. I said, I got $87,000 one, and I figured out I had to take it to the either the county or the state treasurer and demand it. And and if she would demand it in lawful money, they have to pay in face value silver coin or gold face value coin.
And they've got it. And so, he said, I'm not gonna do that, dude. I said, come on, dude. This is the only time you can. That would get Because I don't know why happen to me. It would happen to
[01:07:56] Unknown:
you. I said, very Yeah. You know? A face value silver coin, that would get really, really expensive, especially now that silver's over $50.50 an
[01:08:06] Unknown:
ounce.
[01:08:07] Unknown:
They had to pay me $87,000 face value silver coin because the warrant was for 87,000. And I said I had demanded a lost money.
[01:08:18] Unknown:
And this is this is from a what? Check. Check. From a FOIA or what?
[01:08:24] Unknown:
Well, it yeah. This is from a FOIA. But see, the the the the senate had to issue a warrant for payment because it was a lot of money, evidently. He he won't even tell me. So it's undisclosed. I can't tell you. Dude, you could tell me. Nah. I can't. But, yeah, he went and bought property in Hawaii. He's got a car collection of about 24 cars, all convertibles. So, you know, I'm thinking it's probably a few bucks. And, so and I know there's a case out of Washington called Arman Yousefian versus King County. And Arman Eusefian did a FOIA for the financial records of The Kingdome.
Remember anybody remember The Kingdome? Seahawks used to play there. It was a big concrete dome built in the seventies.
[01:09:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay.
[01:09:20] Unknown:
'77, something like that. They blew it up. You know the problem with that? Public funds. They owed $78,000,000 in that building when they blew it up. Oh, no. Yeah. Yeah. Yep. City of Seattle owed $78,000,000 on this on The Kingdom when they blew that building.
[01:09:45] Unknown:
And it was built with public funds, so it wasn't theirs to destroy.
[01:09:51] Unknown:
Exactly. How does that work? They did it. And Arman Yusufian did a did a FOIA about that, and they paid him, like, I think he got, like, 4,800,000.0 or something like that. And he told me a while back, but I think, you know, there was undisclosed, I believe, just so they didn't have to give him the financial records from the kingdom. Because what would happen to those people if they did? They would have gone to prison. So for them, it was cheaper to pay, you know, 4 or $5,000,000.
[01:10:30] Unknown:
Right. Because they passed that they passed that expense off to the taxpayer. They didn't even have to pay it.
[01:10:38] Unknown:
And by the time it gets investigated, well, shit. They're probably in a nursing home.
[01:10:42] Unknown:
Yeah. That's true.
[01:10:45] Unknown:
You know? So they got nothing to lose to lose. And or did they? But but, yeah, there's there's FOIA's can be quite lucrative. Here, nobody's done very well with them. But I don't think anybody's really sued under the under the federal law. They always try to enforce CORA, which really doesn't have any teeth to it. But five USC five five five five two a says it's a $100 a day per page.
[01:11:12] Unknown:
What what is that again? You you got fuzzy when you said that statute. Excuse me. Five
[01:11:19] Unknown:
USC. Five on top five of The United States code, five five two and five five two a. It's called the Freedom of Information Act for you for you. And in Colorado, they have CORA.
[01:11:35] Unknown:
CORA. Okay. So The Colorado has a cracker. So high Oh. So hypothetically speaking, Kathy Hochul, the governor of New York, issued a $4,000,000,000 bond to my local township, for, infrastructure upgrades and such and such. So I could send a FOIA for a accounting of where that money was spent.
[01:12:08] Unknown:
Yes. You can, bro.
[01:12:11] Unknown:
And I would send that to Kathy Hochul, or I would send that to No. No. The town that I'm Send that to the treasurer or the state treasurer
[01:12:19] Unknown:
or the state treasurer. Secretary of treasury is who you send it to. And what I would be looking for under her office.
[01:12:29] Unknown:
What I would be looking for would I would be an accounting of how that money was spent.
[01:12:38] Unknown:
Well, what you would want is you would want all financial records. Okay. It's not how it's spent, you go. I want all financial records and all interoffice communications involving this project.
[01:12:53] Unknown:
Very good.
[01:12:55] Unknown:
Emails, texts, you know. Right.
[01:13:00] Unknown:
The whole the whole nine yards.
[01:13:03] Unknown:
The whole nine yards. All all all records. And so on records.
[01:13:10] Unknown:
They have ten days to respond unless they ask for additional time, and then they have an additional twenty days. But thirty days
[01:13:17] Unknown:
Well, no. Just a ten day. So yeah. So so they get twenty days total if they don't respond. And then after that, the the clock starts ticking at a $100 a day per page.
[01:13:31] Unknown:
And Okay. So but the onus would be on me for proving how many pages we're missing.
[01:13:40] Unknown:
Well, here's how it works, dude. If they wanna say, well, we can't give them these pay certain amount of pages because it's, you know, it would be harmful. They would have to show up in court and show those to a judge without your privet you know, without you being privy to it privy to it and prove what would be harmful to give to you to you, to them, or to the court. And that might be kinda tough.
[01:14:10] Unknown:
Right? Since they don't have anything. Yeah.
[01:14:15] Unknown:
So, you know, so, yeah, most people don't take it to court. And if they do, well, they'd settle out.
[01:14:22] Unknown:
Right. You know? And so that that's what and, you know, that's why ours has got down in their mind and they're fearful of anything to do with courts and judges and stuff.
[01:14:33] Unknown:
Well, we And you can look up the case law in the Washington case law involving Arthur West, there's a lot of cases. I think he's got probably nine in the state Supreme Court or more and about three or four in the US supreme court. And he's never lost, but he's he's one of my best students. He he tell he tells me, I got I got a a book you gotta write, Reagan. I go, well, I'm working on a book because no. No. You gotta write this book. I go, what's that? He goes, it's called Kurt Rigg and American Badass. I'm like, dude, I'm not gonna write that book. I said, I don't wanna get somebody to take.
[01:15:16] Unknown:
I was just about to ask you if there's a FOIA for dummies that that I could put maybe on Amazon or something like that.
[01:15:26] Unknown:
Well, I have a FOIA form I can put out to, you know, where we wherever we wherever you guys want me to send her. But, I have one for Colorado that might be coming handy, and it's very, very thorough. I mean, I think I've got a half a page on the definition of document.
[01:15:47] Unknown:
Okay. I have a question. I've I've got a question. Hypothetically speaking, let me let me see if I can give you the details in in a with a broad brush so it doesn't, like, let too many cats out of the bag. A friend of mine whose son was, wrongfully charged with murder. And it was during the whole COVID thing and stuff like that, so everything was, like, terribly weird. The son, sat in jail, for over two years waiting for their trial. And finally, it looked like they were going to go to trial, and they scared the scared the hell out of the kid and said, well, you could get twenty years for this or you may get the needle.
So what happened was after being, held without formal charges for two years, they accepted a plea deal and time served. So then they got out. Could somebody, send a FOIA request to the state of Arizona and the county that was holding him for a, for a for all Anybody. All documents Anybody. All accounting as is associated with that case from day one Anybody. To the banging of the gavel, finally.
[01:17:19] Unknown:
Yeah. Anybody could do that. It's all public record.
[01:17:23] Unknown:
And if they refuse to give up that information, then that would be, $100 per page.
[01:17:32] Unknown:
Yep. And And so yeah. You know?
[01:17:37] Unknown:
That money would go a long way in restoring that young man's life because he lost almost three years of it.
[01:17:47] Unknown:
Well, I'm working on a case for a a a gentleman in Texas who's a doctor who was teaching people how to, you know, get away from traditional medicine. And, he taught applied kinesiology and herbs. And, he was set up and charged with molesting his own kid. And Mhmm. He wanted under you know? And it was and get this. He was he was arrested in January 2014. He was indicted in January 2024.
[01:18:26] Unknown:
Wow. Is she a problem with that? No. That's that's what they do as political prisoners.
[01:18:33] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, here's the problem with that. I found a Supreme Court case where it took eight years to indict an a guy, and that and the Supreme Court said that was an egregious violation of his speedy trial rights. So what's ten years? I think that couldn't be less than egregious. So, yeah, so I think I'm gonna, you know, I'm working on getting him out. I'm I'm working I I did an amicus brief, and they basically told me I have to do it in the form of a findings of fact and conclusions of law. So that's what I'm doing now. Even though I've never done one. Well, it was the first time for everything.
So, I think I got I think I get a good chance of getting them out hopefully by Christmas.
[01:19:28] Unknown:
K. After the first one, the rest is cake. You know?
[01:19:35] Unknown:
Yeah. That's what I hear. But see, did any of these cases file a motion for bill of particulars for their cases?
[01:19:46] Unknown:
See Wow. The I
[01:19:48] Unknown:
one of the pleadings I do is anytime somebody's charged with a felony, they have a right to a motion for a bill of particulars. And in one case that I just helped out, a gentleman, Ryan Foley in GEFCO. He was part he was charged in both Clear Creek and GEFCO with the same exact charges, which include breaking and entering, burglary, robbery, assault, and kidnapping. Well, the problem with that is one of those properties was his house. So it's, you know, it's kinda hard to burglar or break it into your own house when you have the key in the lease. Right? So, he he hired two attorneys.
One of them he gave us Harley in about 6 or $7,000 cash, and that that cheese ball filed a a notice of, you know, notice of appearance, a motion for continuance, and a motion to withdraw. And the judge granted it. And she goes, now you gotta get an attorney. She goes, lady, I gave that guy over $12,000, $6,000 Harley in in in cash in $6 in cash. And you tell me I gotta get an attorney, you just let him go. Because, well, you can get a public defender. So, you know, that's what they do in GEFCO. It's pretty bad. I've you know, it's the cases I'm dealing with. But, see, what I found interesting is I helped a young man do a brief in while he was in custody in GEFCO, the guy that was on a quarter million cash only bail.
Now I found a study that GEFCO paid $2,400,000 to a law firm in 2009 to do a feasibility study on the use of cash only bail. And in 2009, they came back with 137 pages for $2,400,000 Now remember that number. When you're doing a 137 pages, what should you get paid? This law firm got $2,400,000 and they came back with a 137 pages saying, well, it's illegal, unconstitutional, and you can't do it except for capital offenses. Ten years later, they threw this kid in jail on a quarter million cash only bail on a first offense of second and third degree assault. And they had exculpatory evidence in their file to prove that he did not commit the second degree assault, which they ignored and and hid, essentially.
And I had to dig it out myself. And then at the same time, a young man from Mesa County, young Hispanic gentleman, was charged who had money and property was held on a quarter million cash only bail in Mesa County. And I told him, look up the counties around you and see what the bond schedule says for what they're charging you with. And he looked up the bond schedule for the three counties that's around Mesa, and he said, the maximum bond is $5,000 per charge. So the maximum they could ask is 25,000 bondable. But instead, both Mesa and Jefferson County had quarter million cash only bales on two guys at the same time.
Now both these guys filed petitions. Jeff Kalinda filed one from Jefferson County, and I don't remember the other guys in Mesa County, but they're both filed around the same time with the state supreme court. Neither one of them got one word response from Phil Weiser, the attorney general, or their or their county prosecutor. No response whatsoever. And you know what the Supreme Court said? Denied. One word. Denied. What does that prove? Corruption. That proves that proves that to me, that proves that Mesa County and Jefferson County, two of the privately owned counties in this state, can charge whatever they damn well please. They don't have to abide by and we We filed a his brief and proved that all you have to do is know the difference between singular and plural, and most people still know that. I mean, last yeah. I learned that in grade school. Okay? I'm pretty sure first grade.
Because the constitution of the state of Colorado under article two, sections nineteen and twenty, say that the state shall not or the state of Colorado shall provide sufficient surreise, but may accept cash in lieu of bond except for capital offenses. Now what that means is sureties, is that singular or plural? Plural. Last time I checked, it ends in e s, plural. Now cash only bail, is that singular or plural? Singular. Singular. Only gives you the clue, doesn't it? Mhmm.
[01:25:41] Unknown:
But what they're dealing with is administrative courts administrative courts that get their base of authority through military tribunals.
[01:25:51] Unknown:
They're not Oh, I know. But they swear an oath to this constitution of theirs, bro. This is their constitution, bro. We didn't make this up. This is their article two, sections nineteen and twenty, and it's also the United States court United States constitutional eighth amendment. You dig? And so they have to say, no. The state and federal constitutions don't matter here. And that's exactly what they said in both cases. And so I think if Pan Bondi got and looked at these cases that were filed, the Jeff Kalinda, the second case, filed, he was his and here's the here's why they went after mister Kalinda, because his dad is the CEO of Uranium One.
[01:26:42] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Do you know what Uranium One is? Oh, yeah. Yeah. That was Hillary Clinton's deal selling uranium to Russia.
[01:26:51] Unknown:
Hillary and Biden, bro. Because, see, they still have to sell uranium to the Burisma company in the Ukraine, and guess who's on the board of directors of the Burisma company in the Ukraine? Hunter Biden. No.
[01:27:07] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:27:09] Unknown:
So, you know, every all of our all of our uranium companies are required to sell their their uranium to the Burisma company in Ukraine, and all our government contractors that use uranium, which is all of them, have to buy the uranium from the Burisma company in Ukraine.
[01:27:25] Unknown:
Alright. Well That's uranium. Where do you Let let me explain something to you. Under the War and Emergency Powers Act that was rewritten in 1933, the citizens of The United States were considered they were declared enemies of the state. Because as fourteenth amendment citizens to the federal United States, they are considered in rebellion to their home state and an enemy combatant.
[01:27:54] Unknown:
So Don't forget the Buck. Have
[01:27:57] Unknown:
right. I and I'm not forgetting the Buck Act. They they don't have access to the protections, the privileges, or immunities of the state constitutions when they are considered in rebellion to their states. That's the whole linchpin is the fourteenth amendment citizenship. Anybody that is a fourteenth amendment citizen can absolutely be railroaded by their local state, and they can do so with impunity. They don't have to follow the law. But treaty tribal members cannot,
[01:28:35] Unknown:
and they know treaty tribal members, they cannot piss on our constitutional rights or our treaty rights without it costing them. And all it takes is the right counsel to bring it to you know, there's a lot of ways of skinning them too. And one is through the OMB, the GAO, and the inspector general general. And the other one is through something that most attorneys know nothing about, and that's by using the court rules. And, see, because if you file a lawsuit, they will they will 12 b six your lawsuit so fast, it'll make your head swim, which is failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted. Even if you stated a pretty good claim, you still failed for them, and they will 12 b six b six. But I have found a way around that.
That's been very effective. And years ago, I used it against the IRS, And they gave guy they gave they doubled the guy's money they took out of his bank account and then fixed all his, the cooling and his gate they ran down. He went up to his gate and he goes, dude, it's tubular steel gate, man. It's way better than the one I had. He goes, you can't run this one down. This is one of those steel pressed flat gates. You know? Mhmm. And so, yeah. And then they fixed this place up real nice that, you know, they damaged and put nicer stuff in there. And so
[01:30:13] Unknown:
Right. Well,
[01:30:14] Unknown:
for tribal members drop the case, drop it.
[01:30:17] Unknown:
For tribal members, you for tribal members, people have protections. But as fourteenth amendment citizens under the constitution, they have no protections whatsoever.
[01:30:29] Unknown:
So Well, here's the beauty of it. If you look at my 24 page brief I have a 17 page one. I have a right to travel brief that's one in 34 states so far. Okay. And I have yet to have anybody respond to it. Nobody's actually filed a response to the brief. You know? Because they'd have to have something. You know? And, I mean, I have had people respond to it in court, but then I I brought it to the attention, the the court, that all the four cases he quoted were I that I had actually read. And the only place I could find those quotes that he used were in the dicta section. Mhmm. You know what dicta is?
[01:31:24] Unknown:
No.
[01:31:25] Unknown:
Or you ever heard of dissenting opinion?
[01:31:29] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. It's a just the dissenting opinion. Yeah.
[01:31:33] Unknown:
Yeah. That's called dicta. And this prosecutor quoted dicta, dissenting opinion, as ruling case law in his response. Well, this is what it says. Blah blah blah blah. Wait a minute. I've read those cases. They don't say that anywhere.
[01:31:54] Unknown:
Yeah. That's not the opinion. That's Then I looked something opinion. It has no personal law.
[01:32:01] Unknown:
I said, woah. This guy this prosecutor quoted dicta as ruling case law. You know what that is? What is that? Fraud. Fraud on the court, bro. Yeah. That's worse than fraud. Oh, fraud is nothing compared to fraud on the court. You you they you know, you add those three words three words to fraud, and it's way more serious to them. Uh-huh. And so yeah. No. That's fraud on the court. You tried to you tried to mislead the court by quoting Dicta as ruling case law. He goes, well, I just looked in the wrong section of the book. Uh-huh.
[01:32:50] Unknown:
The ignorance is a law. It's no excuse.
[01:32:53] Unknown:
Uh-huh. I pulled out a personal copy of a Dicta book. It clearly says right on it. Dicta. Good. So you looked in the wrong section of the library in the wrong section of the wrong book. Is that what you're telling me? Because it ain't even in the same section of the library. You do realize that. Mhmm. They don't have the dicta section next to the ruling case law section.
[01:33:21] Unknown:
Right. So it's Or even on the shell. Shell. Do you have a 34 page right to travel brief?
[01:33:31] Unknown:
Yeah. I think that's about the size of it. No. I think it's yeah. 30 no. Maybe it might be 24. But I have a seventeen one. I have, like, three different size size right to travel briefs. One that's short and sweet, one that's a little bit more lengthy, and another one that's pretty well briefed out to where actually had, the University of Washington in, Seattle offered me a honorary, JD degree if I submitted it as a thesis.
[01:34:10] Unknown:
Oh, exactly. Because once you submit it as a thesis, they can figure out a way to work around it.
[01:34:17] Unknown:
No. It becomes their property, bro. I can't use it without their permission. That's what that works. Work around it. Well, I just I don't need you know? Thanks. But, you know, I'd like to have a piece of a piece of paper with my name on it and fancy and all that, but I could probably print one out myself.
[01:34:40] Unknown:
So you can go for it. Dude, you can get one from Columbia. You and and I'm not talking about the university. I'm talking about the country. You can get one from Columbia.
[01:34:52] Unknown:
Exactly. Well, I was just I said, you know, I don't wanna trade my work, you know, several days, hours, and weeks of of research and work to put this brief together for, you know, your little degree. You know? But thanks anyways. I appreciate that. Yeah. You know? And thanks for the dinner. You know? They took me to Yeah. Got a nice school.
[01:35:14] Unknown:
So so let me sum this up. One second. So, this guy didn't know his, dicta from his proverbial derriere?
[01:35:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly.
[01:35:28] Unknown:
He didn't know his dicta from his derriere. Okay. How does one get a copy of that brief?
[01:35:38] Unknown:
Yeah. I might have a version of it on courtroom kung fu. I think I but they keep messing with my website. They take a lot of shit off of there, and my friends go, what the hell, man? They don't it's gone. I'm like, you know, so I keep losing people that are helping me with my website. But I have, Indian rights to travel brief, and then I have the right to travel for people who are not in commerce on the road. You know? People who are not transporting passengers, commodities, or livestock for hire are not are not required to have a license insurance or registration under federal and all state laws that adopted the federal law. Title 49, Interstate Transportation Safety Act.
And, yeah, I did that one. The, you know, it it says that no license, no insurance, and no registration are not and have never been a, arrestable offense.
[01:36:46] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:36:48] Unknown:
And neither is driving license suspended. And there's a lot of Washington case law I used to use. One's, Aberdeen versus Cole. And that one they tried that one on me too, but they sent me I got, you know, I never actually filed. I got it applied for a license, and Washington sent me a license in the mail one day with my mugshot from an arrest on the license. And I'm like, what the hell is this? This is my mug shot on my license. I didn't even apply for this. So I I sent in a FOIA request saying, hey. Please provide me a copy of my signed application for this privilege privilege.
Because as a tribal member, I I'm pretty sure I didn't ask for it, and I don't think you can give me one without me requesting it. Well, they couldn't find one, oddly enough. But what they were gonna do is they're gonna send me this license, and then, of course, they'd already suspended it. Oh, so they sent me a license? Yeah. They sent me a license in the mail just so they could suspend it.
[01:38:12] Unknown:
Of course.
[01:38:13] Unknown:
Right. Oh, they've they've done that to people that had no license to begin with. They gave them a license just so they could suspend it.
[01:38:21] Unknown:
Well, they That's what that was me, dude. I never had a license, and they damned it. They sent me one just so they
[01:38:28] Unknown:
licenses. They issue licenses for everything in this country just so they can take them away. Go ahead.
[01:38:36] Unknown:
Well, you know what the definition of a license is.
[01:38:40] Unknown:
Aberdeen versus Cole says you can't suspend a privilege a guy has never had and never applied for.
[01:38:47] Unknown:
You can't convert a right to a privilege and then charge a fee for it.
[01:38:53] Unknown:
And then suspend it.
[01:38:55] Unknown:
But you're right. But you know what a license is? You know, what a license is is permission to do that, which is otherwise illegal. Not unlawful.
[01:39:06] Unknown:
What's Illegal. So, you know, I I got a pretty good I used to have a girlfriend that was a, you know, exotic dancer. And they had a just before election just before the election, about a couple months before the election, they would send these cops out, and they give them, like, 3 to $900 to spend at strip clubs. And then they would, they would set these girls up, and they'd set up a bust, and they'd come in and arrest a dozen of them or so for violations of the standard of code. You know? $900 per violation, and they always got charged with at least three. And so they'd have to pay three charges of $900 plus They had a setup with the strip club that if you got charged, they would take $350 a week out of your pay to give to Gil Levy, the scumbag attorney who actually never showed up for court ever.
And they all plead guilty and pay the $900 and get the three. Well, I started looking into it, and I I read the citation, and then I read the law that they, you know, they're licensed. And here, they were citing them for what they were licensing them to do and arresting them. I'm like, wait a minute. Their license says they can do what you guys are arresting them for doing. It's like saying, here's your driver's license, but, we're gonna throw you in jail if we catch you using it. Excuse
[01:40:48] Unknown:
me, Kurt. Isn't that what they did to Tina Peters? And they arrested her and put her in jail for nine years right now. That criminal
[01:40:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Because she told the truth.
[01:40:59] Unknown:
No. Because she did her job, and they don't like it.
[01:41:04] Unknown:
Well, she told the truth. She said, I sent out a little over 12,000 ballots. I got over 18,000 back. Right. Now my math is not that great, but it really isn't that bad either, and, that just don't add up. And that's why she's in prison. She claimed it was a fraudulent election. It was. As a matter of fact, they had windows in the envelopes of the ballots here in Colorado, bro. Now have you have you ever seen that in any ballot in this country? Oh, a little window like you'd get on your bill? No. No. Hell no. Hell no. And when you bent it in half, you could see if it was a Republican or Democrat that was voting.
Isn't that convenient?
[01:41:59] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. That was Jenna Griswold.
[01:42:02] Unknown:
That was Jenna Griswold that did that, and she needs to be sued for that shit and charged criminally.
[01:42:09] Unknown:
Absolutely.
[01:42:10] Unknown:
Better than that, she took Trump off the ballot because she said he was an insurrectionist and a treasonist. I mean because then a treason, insurrection. Even though he was never convicted or charged Right. They didn't not for lack of trying or wanting. And then the state supreme court said, oh, yeah. She can do that. Uh-huh. So who do they work for? Oh, the five corporations, you know, or the corporations that own the five privately owned counties in the state. And now there's six privately owned counties because I found out Clear Creek was bought was was purchased by Jefferson County after the Christian Glass case where they lost millions because they're sure their deputies stood on this guy's hood and shot this poor kid eight times in the chest in his own vehicle because he was having a mental health crisis.
Mhmm. And nobody was in danger. It was all bullshit. You know? And they got sued for millions. And now Jefferson owns Clear Creek Clear Creek. So I wonder what Pam Bondi would say if she knew that, yeah, there's at least five privately owned counties in the state, now six. And they when I went and found out at the Jefferson County auditors, couple days later I don't know. Maybe it's a week or so. So I was pretty sick at the time, but they sold it all back to the county for nothing. Now what's interesting is the city of Arvada several years ago sold nine acres of Arvada for $30 to a developer.
Nine acres. $9,000,000 worth of land for $30. That's reasonable. Right? Well, they got taken to court, and the court said no. Not $30 is not a reasonable conveyance for $9,000,000 worth of property. And so they they undid that old transaction. So how is it they sold the courthouse, the jail, prosecutor's office, sheriff's office, public defender's office for nothing back to the county. And, you know, the Jefferson County Finance Corporation, man, people don't realize, which is owned by the Jefferson County Economic Development Corporation. Their CEO is the CEO of Xcel Energy, Xcel Minnesota Southern Energy. He's the CEO of 36 energy corporations into this country.
Benjamin g Folks the third. And, he's the CEO of the Jefferson County Finance Corporation and Jefferson County Economic Development Corporation. They happen to own a majority of the resorts, condo complexes, and shopping malls in the Gulf Coast Of Mexico, Florida, all the way up into, you know, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, even up into Minnesota. So they have a considerable amount of holdings. And every one of the courts, like Jefferson County Court, is part of the Federal Reserve's CRIS system, which people don't realize.
Like, for example, the Kalinda case where you had a quarter million cash only bail. You know how much the Jefferson County Court made off of his quarter million a day? $2,500,000 a day. Mhmm. And sometimes as many as 10 times a day. So you do the math on that one, especially when it's cash. We were getting 2,500,000.0 10 times a day, but as many as. But, generally, sometimes only three or four times. So you would they would monetize it every day to the Federal Reserve's CRIS system. You can look it up. Port registry investment system on the Federal Reserve website. And then they use your CUSIP number and your Social Security number through the use a through US they use GSA form two seventy three when they issue a warrant or a summons.
When you show up, they issue a GSA form two seventy four either when they show up or they arrest you. Yes. Yes. Yes. They issue a GSA issue form two seventy four, which is saying we are in the first one, we're we're commit we are creating a performance bond with almost CUSIP number and his and his Social Security number. And then when you either are arrested or you show up in court, they issue a GSA 74, which says we have performed. And then when you're either acquitted or found guilty guilty, they issue with GSA four two seventy five, which says we want payment. And they get paid every Wednesday.
So every courthouse is a bank, and most people don't have a clue. That's not including the money they take out of your pocket. Bleed you for. But they're they're making serious money. And if people knew how to do it, they could actually get a third of that money because it's because it's in their name. But it's a very complicated process. I have it written down somewhere. Not exactly organized as well as I used to be. But but, yeah, there's a lot of ways to people don't realize in the IRS have been beaten up for decades, and it's it's almost too easy because it goes it goes back to the original IRS code book. I had original copy of the 1939 IRS code book. Now, Lewis Ewing has my copy. It's got my name in it unless he's he's probably blacked it out by now.
But, that '39 IRS code book says right in the front of it, on this day in 1939, the IRS code title 26 was ratified by Congress. Then it says in parentheses, without quorum. Does anybody know what that means?
[01:48:36] Unknown:
Means it wasn't lawfully ratified.
[01:48:40] Unknown:
Means there was 27 legislators that voted in the IRS code. 17. Excuse me. Not quite enough even though there was only 38 states back then. Oh, it was Two weeks later
[01:48:59] Unknown:
So you were saying it was ratified. No. Ratified without quorum. Just write it Right. But okay. But they said it was ratified. That's for the stupid people that say, oh, okay. Well, yeah, it was ratified.
[01:49:13] Unknown:
But then they added without 27 legislators got together and voted it in. But see then, two weeks later, when when congress got back together, they said, what the hell is this? And they repealed it repealed it. Two weeks after that, they published it. Uh-huh. And then in '54, they amended it. In '86, they amended it again. Well, what happens when you amend a repeal code? Do you somehow give it force or effect?
[01:49:41] Unknown:
No.
[01:49:43] Unknown:
No. You don't. Well, if you amend it,
[01:49:48] Unknown:
if you amend something that was lawfully ratified to begin with, yes.
[01:49:54] Unknown:
And then repealed.
[01:49:56] Unknown:
But if you repeal it, they know it goes away.
[01:50:00] Unknown:
See, it wasn't ratified lawfully. That's why they repealed it. Because Right. Even in four even with 48 states, you had more than 27 legislators that had to vote in a law, didn't you? Mhmm. And all of them were bankers.
[01:50:18] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:50:20] Unknown:
Every one of them. Bankers are lawyers for bankers. Yeah. Sorry. I not all. Either bankers or, you know, bankers' lawyers. But yeah. And so so, basically, I've been kicking our ass saying, hey. Show me how this repealed code that's been ratified multiple times is somehow got an illegal force or effect, and how are you gonna win in court against me? They hated my '39 IRS code book because it it was dog eared and tagged and looked like somebody's family bible.
[01:50:56] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[01:50:58] Unknown:
And and, boy, they see that, and they just start oh, yeah. They I'd pull that out, and they just start packing their shit up. They're like, we're done here. This is one time.
[01:51:11] Unknown:
The IRS is easy to beat, particularly for nationals for American nationals. Because even in the IRS code, it says that an income tax is owed by all citizens and residents, and, with the exception of eight seventy one b and eight seventy seven b, all nonresident alien individuals. So the nonresident aliens are only obligated to pay eight seventy one or eight seventy seven b taxes. Eight seventy one is, I believe, any income that was derived from an agency or an entity that got its life from the federal United States or, like, a federal, income wage and the expatriation tax, which is levied directly by the federal government when somebody gives up their citizenship and, gives up their nationality for another country.
They'll hit him for taxes before they let him go to the airport. But, no. IRS is easy to beat if you know how to do it. It's easy.
[01:52:26] Unknown:
But then If you're dealing with tribal members, you just do a ten forty one schedule d and the form eighty eight thirty three, and it lays out that I'm a tribal member and therefore not taxable under federal law. Thanks, man. Thanks for asking. Let's hold up a second.
[01:52:39] Unknown:
We've been running this thing a long time. We're on a lot of different platforms. I think we need to resume this next week and and, get into certain aspects and a little bit, more about health. I'll have it planned exactly.
[01:52:56] Unknown:
Okay. Now I'm I'm good for that. I can take the streams I can take the streams down anytime. We are on multiple platforms right now. So
[01:53:07] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. It
[01:53:09] Unknown:
But, yeah, I think if we if we can get a a a group together that can start using our foyas, and using some Arthur West case law, which is they they do not like cars. I was driving this car five years expired tabs, broke down, and finally, you know, wheeled it off in the reservation, the Tulalip Reservation, and that was Puyallup. And they they know me there, so they they really took good care of me, fixed it up for me. But the cop he when he found out he couldn't pull over Arthur West's car because he'd won a lawsuit against him, he took his mic and slammed it against the dash, threw it basically threw it up against the dash, and it went to the floor. And then he he sped around me in the in the, shoulder. So he went down the shoulder of the road to get around me. But, yeah, he wasn't too happy.
[01:54:12] Unknown:
Yeah. They lose temper pretty quickly, don't they?
[01:54:17] Unknown:
Especially when you, you know, when you beat him up with, you know, common sense. It's like one of my tribal members. He was in the Walmart here in Denver on on 58, and he has these expired temporary tags that have been expired by a couple years before we got his tribal plates on there. And, he pulls into Walmart, and they get plate readers at every Walmart. I don't think people realize that. Every Walmart has a plate reader connected to the police department. And so he's in the Walmart toilet paper well with his little dog in his cart. And two cops are about the cops come up to him. They said, is that your van out there in the parking lot? He goes, which one of the five vans are you talking about?
And they're like, well, the the white vans that expired temporary tags. He goes, let me ask you officers a question. Just what's that? He goes, do you think this Walmart toilet paper aisle is a public right of way? And they looked at each other, got all embarrassed and left. Should they write you a ticket? Can they write you a ticket in a Walmart toilet paper aisle? I don't think so. Yeah. Pull that card over, kid. Yeah. So he looks out there. There's five cop cars out there. So he he gets in the electric cart, and he cruises around for two hours, eats lunch, feeds his dog, does his grocery shopping. Dicks around for a couple hours till the car starts dying, then he pulls it back to where they charge it, and he realizes, yeah. There's only one cop car out there now.
So he goes out to his van. Cop pulls up behind him and blocks him in the parking spot. Well, they can't do that. Then she goes, I wanna see your driver's license, prove his terms, registration right now. He goes, listen, lady. I ain't showing you shit until you show me your delegation of authority. And she goes, well, that's my badge right here. He goes, that badge is strictly a symbol. He goes, tell you, show me your delegation of authority. You're not legally a police officer, and I could punch you under arrest. She goes, I need backup now.
Screams in. And so five cop cars pull in, and out of all of the cops that were there, it was, like, six or seven cops. Only one of them had a delegation authority, her police ID ID, which she finally told her after. She said, what is that? What is it? You can find well, you know what? Since you guys are ignorant of the law, I'm gonna, you know, I'm gonna charge you for this later, but I'm gonna educate it. It's your police ID. And the sergeant goes, well, I'm a cop. Damn it. He goes, you better get away from me because you don't if you don't have one, I can actually place you under arrest. He says, you better get home and make yourself leave. I'm gonna let you go this time, all of you guys. I'm gonna let you all go.
But he said, I want all your cards. He said, man, they were heading they headed out to they couldn't get out of there quick enough. And he goes, what would you do? I said, well, you want him to butt mess with you again? He goes, no. I said, then file a formal administrative complaint, demand a formal administrative hearing, demand to be put on their permanent record, demand to be, demand to copy that record, and demand to be at their hearing. He goes, oh, okay. Okay. That's right. Files the administrative complaint, does all that. He goes, now what? I go, do you wanna live here? He goes, oh, yeah. I said, now withdraw it.
Wait a couple days then withdraw. Tell him, you know what? I had to change your mind. Just keep it off record and have his boss talk to him about this. Let's just keep it off the record. How about that? So why would I do that? It should be Because you wanna live Now they know Exactly. You know how to live your career. And they're not so inclined because you you don't feel like doing it. You know? So, yeah, you just let them know. Hey. I know how to do this shit. But now they know
[01:58:25] Unknown:
that they don't admit they won't mess with you anymore.
[01:58:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, some of my students have on there When, you know, my friend Bob Burr in Oklahoma, he got pulled over, and he the cop says, mister Burr, could you step out of the car for a minute? He goes, what do you wanna search my car? He goes, no. I I'm pleased, mister Burr. I just wanna ask you if you could step down and step out of the car and sit in the driver's seat of my car. Because you want me to sit in the driver's seat of your police car. Because if you would, please, mister Burr, why would you want that? He goes, because I need you to look at the computer, and you can only really see it from the driver's seat. He goes, okay.
So he gets out, gets in the driver's seat, and Bob's a big boy. You know? So he had to squeeze behind the wheel. And here it said on the computer, paralegal, do not cite cite. He says, how come I can't write you a ticket, mister Burr? He goes, well, I used to work with a guy named Reagan, and they just find it not economically feasible to pull me over and bring me into court because I will find stuff that they're doing wrong. And I will use the rigging method that, if you want me, you better have you better not have any Klingons because I'm gonna be looking up that bunghole and making sure that you are squeaky clean. And none of them are.
None of them. None of them. And so, yeah, and you and when you start going after their funding and
[02:00:01] Unknown:
that's exactly right.
[02:00:04] Unknown:
But I use statutes. I use court rules. I use federal law. I don't use, you know, common law courts or any of that shit. I use their own federal courts, and I don't play in their sandbox, you know, especially when I know they're crooked. And, this this statement, it's one of the worst. I mean, I've I've dealt with some pretty bad ones before. But I've never dealt with ones that had privately owned courts and jails and, you know, sheriff's office. And we're talking the prosecutor's office. What's funny, one time I tried to serve process on the prosecutor's office, and she hated me so much. She goes, you have to serve this on the court before you could serve it here. And I said, lady, I don't have to prove to you I served the court.
I do have to prove to the court that I served you. So I'm serving it here on you so you can stamp my copy, thereby proving that I served you, obviated the necessity for proof of service. It's just I'm not taking your proof of I'm not taking any of your pleadings. I'm like, how many attorneys are in this building? Because I'm not telling you. I go over a 100. I know. She goes, well, yeah. Obviously. I go, how many you think are gonna be able to keep their bar cards when I file an affidavit that says their their office refuses refuses service of process? You know it's literally in yours and their job description.
Right? Mhmm. And she called the cops, tried to get me arrested. They go, what do you want us arrested for? Well, he's trying to serve those documents on me. I go, and she's she's the lady at the front desk. I said, and she doesn't wanna take them and, you know, you better send somebody down to receive them. Because I said, either that or I'll drop them at his feet, her feet, whoever, and file a proof of service. It don't matter to me. Service to officers is service to, you know, service to agent is service to is service to the court. I'm like, know. It's the prosecutor. Right. It's their office. I said, anybody in this office that's working here is I can serve. And she goes, well, fine. Well, I'll I'll get somebody down to sign it. So they brought a couple prosecutors down there, and they're like, what's all the big deal? They had, like, eight cops.
You know? And I'm I walk with a cane. You know? And they're like, well, he he wants to serve this. So, you know, I served it, but they get all worked up over that stuff. And then I made them stamp it, you know, sign it received. And, yeah. You know? But I I do pleadings that most of attorneys won't because they get in trouble if they do. You know? Like, if you file a motion for bill of particular, most attorneys that take the unless you pay them a 50 or a $100,000 retainer, you probably ain't gonna get an attorney to file with us.
[02:03:05] Unknown:
Absolutely not. You're not you're gonna be hard pressed. They You're gonna be hard pressed you're gonna be hard pressed to find an attorney that actually knows what a bill of particulars is.
[02:03:20] Unknown:
That's right. What's funny is in Narmer County, I filed one for one of a friend of mine that was a tribal member, and the prosecutors filed this answer to a bill of particulars. So it was the discovery that we got the same thing that we got when we filed the motion or demand for discovery. And so I said, your honor, this is not a bill of particulars. He goes, well, yeah. You're right. He goes, well, he has to tell me what he wants. I go, your honor, last I checked, I can't find it anywhere in my job description where it's my job to educate the plaintiff in the law. Can you show me where that's my job? And he goes, he's right. He's not it's not his job. You've gotta look it up.
He goes, well, you know, he has to tell me what he wants. So they said, again, your honor, I don't see that in my job description. And he goes, no. He doesn't have to tell you. You better look it up. He goes, I'm giving you one week. If you don't have it, I'm gonna dismiss his case. Well, week later, he filed the same week. Sorry. Yes. You know? Answers to bill particulars that was basically the discovery. I go, your honor, this isn't a bill of particulars. He goes, well, he has to tell me what he wants. I go, here we are again, your honor. The merry-go-round.
He goes, nope. Case dismissed. You didn't provide the bill particulars. And in this last case with mister Foley, he did a motion for bill particulars. The judge denied it denied it. And what's funny is in the prosecutor's response to the motion for bill of particulars, they quoted three cases that I didn't know about. They're they're Colorado cases, and you know what they said? They said denial of a motion for bill of particulars is a reversible error.
[02:05:10] Unknown:
Would that be Say that again.
[02:05:12] Unknown:
It's a denial of a motion for bill of particulars is a reversible error.
[02:05:19] Unknown:
So Yes. Like, no matter what presumption.
[02:05:23] Unknown:
Yeah. No matter what you're found guilty of, that denial of a motion for bill of particulars is a reversible error. So that means your case is over. Wow. And they probably didn't do one in Tina Peters' case, did they? No. No. Because they don't even know what it is.
[02:05:44] Unknown:
My guess is she probably hasn't even been charged.
[02:05:50] Unknown:
Oh, she has. She's been charged and convicted and sentenced. Oh, yeah. But but in a privately owned court system, in a privately owned county that doesn't have a bond schedule. Now we gotta find out what her bond was, and was it cash only? Because if we can if we can prove that her bond was excessive and unauthorized by, like, my friends, if they demanded a quarter million cash only bail, which I don't doubt they did, that will that will vacate her case right there. Because that's a violation of that one. But clean it out. For sure. You know? And we can we can do an emergency brief to the US Supreme Court or, actually, to the, what, tenth circuit here And say, show us how this works because we know it doesn't. And I guarantee you that sorry ass piece of crap Phil Weiser, which I was nice to him and he kinda liked me When he was trying to I had him so pissed off that he could he could barely talk.
I had him so you know, because I I'm pretty good at pissing people off when I when I want to. And he was he could barely talk or even I just beat his ass in court, you know, and made him look like a fool. And, he was you know, and it was, like, Friday, end of the day, and, yeah, I could just see him just red in the face, you know. And I said, hey. I said, Shabbat Shalom. And he looked like I mean, he took two steps back like I smacked him. And he looked at me. He kinda curved his head to the side and looked at me. He came up and shook my hand with both hands, and he said, thank you so much. He goes, I was gonna take my anger at you home, and this is Shabbat.
He goes, and you you I really appreciate it. You know? So he re he had more respect to me, but he he still didn't like me. Yeah. Mhmm. Because people don't like me to look like a fool and, you know, and, you know, and sometimes I can't help it. You know, I try not to, but sometimes they they hang themselves by doing stupid shit that when you bring it to the light of day, you go, how does this work exactly? Because, you know, I'm just a simple country lawyer, a simple tribal lawyer, and, in my world, this doesn't work. And in the federal law world, it really doesn't work.
You know, and what's funny is when Jenna Griswold started talking about insurrection and treason and how Trump was guilty of insurrection and treason
[02:08:59] Unknown:
That's her.
[02:09:00] Unknown:
You know one of the definitions of insurrection and treason is? When a mayor flies to a foreign country like Canada and signs the International Compact contract created in the state of Colorado under international code, So all code violations now say international code on them. You look at it any you look at a code violation ticket anywhere in the state, it says international code. That's because of who? Hakan Looper. When he was mayor, he signed the international compact contract in Canada, creating Denver and the state of Colorado as a province of Canada. If you look up the definition of state and Colorado law, you'll find any state, which which means any state or providence of Canada.
Now why would that be in the definition of state? Because of Hickenlooper. That was when he was mayor. It gets better. When he was governor, He flew to Paris along with every other governor and signed the Paris Accord. Anybody know what that is?
[02:10:29] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:10:30] Unknown:
It's a treaty with a foreign country. Not just one, but a lot of them. So what governor can sign a treaty with a foreign country bringing our state or any part of our country into a treaty with a foreign country and not commit insurrection or treason. And you know what the you know what the penalties for those offenses are. Right? You get the choice. You actually get your choice. There is a Well, you don't have to be honest. A rope. You get exactly. You get to choose the bullet or the rope. That is your choice. And when, you know, they start talking about insurrection or treason, they say, you show me how Hickenlooper didn't commit insurrection or treason, not once, but twice. Once when he was a mayor, once when he was governor.
And there's no immunity from that. There's no statute of limitations on that. No. And then what he did was he after he signed the Paris Accord, he came back here and he shut down two coal power plants, one just a few miles away from the the coal mine. So what the hell is that? That's him committing insurrection and treason.
[02:11:51] Unknown:
Well, what was it? It was not was it was it Obama that put us in the Paris Climate Accord as a country? Oh, yeah. And Yep. Then Trump took us out of it, and then Biden put us back in. Yep. What was up with that?
[02:12:10] Unknown:
Well, because they're treasonous pieces of shit, bro. And they're you know? And did you ever see that Tucker Carlson special about, chemtrails?
[02:12:22] Unknown:
Oh, I'm sure I probably did, but refresh my memory.
[02:12:28] Unknown:
You know what they put in those chemtrails, don't you?
[02:12:31] Unknown:
It's on my website
[02:12:33] Unknown:
called stop strontium
[02:12:34] Unknown:
nano aluminum.
[02:12:36] Unknown:
Go to stopsprayingme.com. Strontium. Strontium. Strontium.
[02:12:41] Unknown:
Yeah. All kinds of really bad shit plus graphene. Nano graphene.
[02:12:49] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:12:50] Unknown:
You're breathing it now. That's why I have Wisconsin. Air filters at my house. But yeah. And but there's one thing. My my doctor has found a cure for that. And one one of the things that works really good clay is one of the things that helps. No. But But the few things that really pulls it out good Kurt. Is banana peel extract will actually take the graphene oxide out of your blood. I I I have a way. Birch charcoal also. But he's actually done tests, taken blood samples, and done a lot of testing. He goes, and that's one of the few combinations of the banana peel extract and the and the birch charcoal. Now there are there's all kinds of South American recipes you can get for fried banana peel, and they're actually pretty tasty. Almost taste like jerky if you do it right.
And guess what? They're really high in this extract, and within nine to twelve weeks, he couldn't find any graphene in anybody in any of his patient's blood.
[02:14:10] Unknown:
I have another way as well because of the, glutathione, patch from the Lifewave. We put a three fingers under the bell belly button on the C V 6 Meridian, and it raises the glutathione levels not by 2% like the pills or 10% like the shots, But by 300%, the clinical studies that were done by doctor Halkwanger are very conclusive. It's very obvious that it actually works better than anything I've ever seen in raising the glutathione in the body. So I'd have to see your studies, which is one's very good, and you'd have to see these because they're amazing.
But I'm not sure in relation to the graphene oxide. So, I haven't, seen after utilizing the, larger introduction of raising the glutathione, I haven't seen any tests on, whether they have the graphene oxide lowered.
[02:15:27] Unknown:
Glutathione does break down graphene oxide. It's one of the few things that does. Yeah. And it's important to raise it. I've been teaching people to raise it
[02:15:36] Unknown:
simply and easily for a very long time.
[02:15:40] Unknown:
Guys, it's Yeah. That's one of the things they were trying to say. Oh, we're gonna make it a scheduled Remember that? They're gonna make it a scheduled drug or something. So you had to get a prescription. Was that was that one that one of the things they're Glad. I'm sure. That was quick. Well Yeah.
[02:15:55] Unknown:
The acupuncture meridian with the, I what I do is laminate the patch, the the the device, and then they can be used, constantly or, over long periods of time. It works beautiful, and, it saves a lot of money.
[02:16:19] Unknown:
Yeah. I'll tell you. The the the but, yeah, he he found that my my friend, Arthur, when I first met him, he, you know, I've been constantly talking with him over the phone and everything for a long time. But when I first met him, his feet were purple, bro. He couldn't wear regular shoes. He could only wear slippers or flip flops, you know, because his feet were so swelled up. And his skin was peeling off, which is like it was like like sunburn. You know? His feet were basically dying. And, I got him to start, he started using, mustard oil, mustard seed oil.
And we gotta start, you know, eating healthy and doing, you know, clay and other stuff like that. But the mustard seed oil is a vasodilator. And, he said, man, my feet started tingling. The first day I started rubbing it on in my hands, I could start they start tingling too because he was losing the feet feeling of his hands. And, yeah, the mustard seed oil is a vasodilator that also restores the nerves that you use topically. And it's a good it's Chinese medicine going back a couple thousand years.
[02:17:47] Unknown:
Well, I've been restoring everybody's with that, doctor Bevins XDS technology and the more vital products. My father no longer has bone on bone in his knees. His cartilage had a grown back from fifteen years ago in New York, and he's able to, go out dancing two, three times a week and not even sit down anymore after the first dance like he used to. He's enjoying life in his 90 year like he was still a teenager. He's having the time of his, life always. He's in perfect health. That helps. And that's because he does everything correctly. I know what he does. I make sure that he does the right things because I actually know what to do when they get in emergencies like he did last year.
He just followed my instructions, and, nobody survives after getting rectal surgery in an emergency from fistulas. They just don't. Not at 96 years old. Once they're in bed for thirty days, their muscles atrophied by, 50. And, I told him from the beginning, you're not used to eating anything but raw food. When I got him on the phone after two weeks and I I had finally got located him and found out what happened, He I I said, don't eat that don't eat that cooked food. You're not used to it. Have him give you organic foods or or or and get your bullet over there, raw foods like you're used to, and, or order in. And I said, don't you can't be taking the OxyContin and the morphine.
I can't do acupuncture on anybody on receptor blockers, Tylenol, aspirin, Motrin, all of that garbage blocks the receptors. You can't do acupuncture for twenty four hours. He says, overnight me the right stuff. Organic. Slept like a baby. He told me recently. He slept like a baby. I called him, last a month and a half ago about, and and he says to me, I can't talk right now. I I I'm with, other people. I said, oh, you're with the, patients in the in the rehab? He's he said, no. I haven't been in there for a month. He says, I belong to four organizations, and I was out dancing last night. I oh my god. You know, the first thing I told him when he told me he had rectal surgery and he had pain in his rectum, that's why he was taking the morphine and OxyContin that that he can't heal on. I said, put your finger in the in the more mito, in the gel with the oil, and stick it up your rectum for the pain, and he did. Of course, he already knew it works.
He he he grew back his cartilage and his knees with this stuff by putting it on five times a day after fourteen, sixteen months. Yeah. Fourteen months, he was out dancing two to three times a week. After sixteen months, he tells me, my cognitive function is the best it's been in years. I said, you're kidding me. Now it's been three years. Over three years, he's been, in just it's amazing. Everything we're doing, regrowing mitochondria, reoxygenating the body, pulling out all the toxins, and learning about 14,000 different herbs that were meant for us to be able to heal us instead of pharmaceuticals is the only thing you've been told about?
Pharmacia is the root word coming from the Greek meaning sorcery. Even in revelations in that New Testament everybody talks about, it says it right there. Pharmakia means sorcery. Why would you defile the temple with sorcery if the body's and all of these different religions and belief systems? Why are they, injecting, sorcery into their bodies and their babies? Why do they do this? Why don't people realize what they're doing? Are they ignorant to their language? Oh, yeah. They are. That's the problem. They don't even know what words mean. They've been doing that. You I understand, your honor. They've been doing that for over four hundred years. You you just contracted with the judge when you tell them, I understand.
It's the same thing. People basically are beyond even ignorant. They actually believe they know something. That's even worse. To be better if they knew they didn't know, and they just knew they were ignorant like me. I always knew I was ignorant. And when I leave this world, I'll I'll know how little I know. Did you know? There's so much to know, but you gotta know the most important things. And you know what the most important thing to me is? That feeling inside of me, that peace, that joy, that love, that feeling that makes life worth living.
Only in the moment called now, I can feel it in every breath if I pay attention. That feeling is more important than all of this. Well, they call it an illusion, a Leela. It depends on the language. All of this physical plane is one thing, but the feeling has nothing to do with logic or this physical plane. That's me, the feeling. And when you don't feel you, you don't wanna be in this world. So the number one most important thing in my world is that feeling, and then play the game. Play the game. You realizing that feeling, your intuition, your peace, clarity, and learn. Educate yourself. The one and only that breathes me puts me in touch with all the right knowledge and answers all my questions and all the right people come together because that's how it works.
But being your peace first, first, it tells you in that book they read, they translated as 4,000 different versions of the New Testament alone. I don't know which one you read, but there is literally 4,000 different versions, and they're all different. But the point is it it tells you in
[02:24:47] Unknown:
there that you
[02:24:50] Unknown:
ask and you shall receive. What does that mean? You should ask over and over? If you don't believe it, it ain't true. When I ask for something, I already know it's mine. If the answer comes to me in the middle of the night, like Thomas Edison said, he kept a notepad by the side of his bed so he he would write it down at 03:00 in the morning because he said you could forget it if you go back to sleep in the morning. And I've had that happen when I didn't write something down during the day. I didn't even have to go back to sleep and I forgot it. And it was important.
It was just something that needed to written down.
[02:25:31] Unknown:
And we got it And you shall Right. Ask and you shall receive. Okay. Check out the great Bible great check out the great Bible hoax of 1883 or 1863, something like that. So that all the shenanigans that that went on behind the King James version. But, anyway, we've been going for over two hours Oh, yeah. For two hours now. You ever read have you guys ever read Miracle on Main Street? Yeah.
[02:26:03] Unknown:
It it's a pretty good one. Tupper size? One section 10.
[02:26:08] Unknown:
Yep. We got a lot to talk about next Friday, everybody. And tomorrow, every Saturday, twelve noon, East Coast time is the more vital calls. They are the best health calls anybody ever learned to help about. That is amazing. They're free, and everybody tells me every call they learn things from, they have never heard calls like this ever. No Nobody has ever had calls like this. I would advise everybody invite their friends to these calls. At six Turn your skin into baby skin. Mhmm. 0003. Excuse me. (608) 906-0003. That is every Saturday at 12PM.
The and get back to us or call me if you need help. Just give me a call. You can contact us through the website, abchealth.info, diseaseaway.com, either one, and contact us. Even my phone number is there. Thank you very much, everybody, for coming and making it inspiring for us all to, participate and, get some of this out onto avenues where other people can hear it, and it will go out.
[02:27:42] Unknown:
Let's, let's get Tina
[02:27:45] Unknown:
let's get Tina out of prison for Christmas, man. I mean, it'd be nice if we get it out for Thanksgiving. I'll do that with you starting Monday. I wanna work on that starting on Monday. Act actually, we can prepare on Sunday. Okay? It's the first day of the week in my world, the way I look at it.
[02:28:01] Unknown:
Okay, guys. Let me let me take us out. This has been ABC health dot info, health talk, on radio.globalvoiceradio.net and rumble.globalvoiceradio.net. Thanks for joining us. We'll catch you back here next Friday, 09:30 ish, maybe 09:45. It just depends on when we get started,
[02:28:25] Unknown:
but it'll be shortly after 09:30. Don't forget. Don't rumble. Jesus rumble.
Opening, simulcast rollout, and guest introductions
Going live: formats, platforms, and show housekeeping
Emergency appeal: Tina Peters case and call to action
Debating corruption in Colorado and detention without bail
Letters to federal leaders and a claimed national election order
Prayer and urgent plea for Tina Peters release
Legal tactics proposed: writs, grand juries, and amicus briefs
Kurt Riggin joins: county corruption claims and bond schedules
Ownership of courts and jails allegations; finance corporations
Traffic stop anecdotes: jurisdiction, IDs, and right to travel
Tribal status, treaties, and jurisdiction arguments
Amicus curiae strategy and questions on bonds in the Peters case
Alternatives to pressure: OMB, GAO, and Inspector General routes
Brief health interlude: oxygenation, clay, and self-care message
Back to legal talk: foreign agent registration and magistrates
Challenging jurisdiction: language, contracts, and courtroom framing
Federal removals, treaty rights, and sealed cases
Health sidebar: clay, detox, and recovery stories
FOIA tactics: penalties, case wins, and requests that bite
Applying FOIA to criminal cases and delayed indictments
Bills of particulars, excessive bail, and reversible error
Election disputes, private counties, and ballot controversies
Right to travel briefs, licenses, and administrative courts
County finance, CRIS system claims, and monetization of bail
IRS code arguments, ratification, and enforcement debates
Wrapping legal segment and planning next steps
Retail plate readers, delegation of authority, and complaints
Bills of particulars revisited and case dismissals
Insurrection, treaties, and state-federal authority claims
Chemtrails, detox ideas, and glutathione discussion
Elder care stories, recovery, and alternative therapies
Closing reflections on faith, peace, and learning
Announcements for upcoming calls and next Fridays show
Sign-off and scheduling note