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February 15, 2025 32 mins
Handel on the Law, Marginal Legal Advice. 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eight hundred five two zero one five three four. That's
the number. Eight hundred five two zero one five three four.
Top of the hour, always always the best time to call,
especially our number one. And then we start moving and
then what ends up happening. The line is busy for
an hour and a half two hours, you can't get in,
and sometimes there are no calls coming in. This is

(00:20):
one of the problems of a show like this. It's
caller driven, which is why I don't talk to anybody
during the course of the morning show. It is caller driven.
That means you you have a question and you know
one of those what statement, no question is too stupid? Well,
in my case, I want stupid idiotic questions. Eight hundred

(00:45):
five two zero one five three four. This is handle
on the law, marginal legal advice, where I tell you
have absolutely no case out of New York. And there
are two states that are going to be are and
will continue to be in a war with President Trump

(01:06):
for the next four years. One of them is California,
where I live, and we'll be talking a lot about that.
The other one is New York. Both states are sanctuary
states illegal migrants coming into the states and camping, working,
having driver's license. I mean it's I think available for

(01:30):
California education grants. Okay, So what happens. The Justice Department
sues New York of favoring illegal aliens over US citizens.
Now I don't understand that. I do understand the concept
of New York bringing illegal migrants on the same level,
same playing field, but the state of New York favoring

(01:56):
illegal aliens. So how does that work. New York has
something called the green Light Law allows people in the
state to get a driver's license, regardless of citizenship or
legal status. In California, we've had that for a long time.
So allowing people to get a driver's license, according to
the Justice Department, should be illegal. And that was Frankly Bondi,

(02:20):
Pam Bondi, the Attorney General of the United States, her
first her first press conference, flanked by federal agents in
ray jackets, very strong vowed to put an end to
those practices. She said, it stops, It stops today now.
The lawsuit said that New York state law was the

(02:42):
most egregious and that it requires state authorities to promptly
tip off any illegal alien when federal immigration agency has
requested his or her information. So this goes a step further.
If the FEDS contact the state, any state agency about
an illegal alien, the state cannot buy law give any

(03:06):
information to defense unless it's a very serious crime. The
accusation convicted fell in YadA, YadA, YadA, and Kathy Hochel's office,
the governor said, it's supported deporting violent criminals who write
the law. However, law abiding citizens, law abiding people should

(03:29):
not be targets. So the State Department is saying, Okay,
we're suing you because if you do that, you are
giving preference to illegal aliens. See that part. I don't understand.
How is that preference? I mean, the argument, the legal
argument is you have no right to do that because
immigration is a federal issue and you can't touch federal issues.

(03:49):
And we have a law that says you must turn
over information as a federal law or at this point
it's federal law. So where's it going to go. Well,
this is a very conservative Supreme court. Oh, it'll go
to the Supreme Court, no question about it. All right,
let's do it. Phone calls uh Roger, Hello Roger, Yes.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
Sir, hi, Yes, I'm calling in regards to aviation easement.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
Yeah, I'd like to know what an aviation Eastman is
to begin with.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Well, Amazon, FedEx and Ups has just moved into a
March Air Force base and I live in that that area,
and Aaron flight, very loud planes going over my house
early morning, late nights, the whole night are Okay, that's

(04:48):
a beef.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
That's a legitimate beef. So you want to know what
to do. You want to know what to do about it? Well,
there's those things an aviation easeman. You don't have an easement, however,
you own your property right up in until the stratosphere.
That's the law up it goes right there. Can you
stop someone from overflying your airspace that you own? No?

(05:12):
I mean, yeah, theoretically you could, but the answers no.
And so what you do is you have local laws.
You have laws that, for example, make the place an uninhabitable,
too loud they after night, after ten o'clock. You got
a bunch of local laws. Now, is anything gonna happen
about it? Of course not. Now who's gonna who's gonna prosecute? Yeah,

(05:34):
what the local DA is gonna arrest someone in Amazon
for overflying your land? By the way, that's not you
don't have an issue. Believe me. There have been lawsuit
after lawsuit of people houses in the flight path. I
had a house that was not in the flypath of

(05:54):
that was in the San Ferano Valley that was near
Hollywood Burdbank Airport, and they didn't know fly my property
and then they started to overfly my property and people
went nuts. So when happening, thank goodness, planes got quieter,
and after ten o'clock they couldn't do it. Before seven,
they couldn't do it. But you know, there isn't much

(06:16):
you can do about it. There isn't much. Yeah, I mean,
I'll tell you what I know. This may be illegal, okay,
but there are people arms dealers out there that you
can actually buy an anti aircraft weapon, you know that
really Yeah, Stinger missile for example, you buy them, they

(06:36):
actually sell them. Not easy to get them in the country.
But you know, you shoot down one of these, let
me tell you they're going to pay attention big time. Yeah,
and you can buy them, by the way, crazy as
that is not in the United States so much. All right, Mike, Hello, Mike, welcome.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Hi Bill. Mom is ninety years old. For kids to
a respond two are not responsible in her will, as
you divide the estate between the four equally. However, the
book the estate is in iras and investment accounts, and
in that case, the two responsible kids are named as
the beneficiary. So what takes precedence. Is there a situation

(07:17):
where the non responsible could challenge the will.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Well, they're going to challenge the will. I mean that's
a given. Does mom have a ton of money.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
It's a couple of million dollars.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Oh yeah, they'll challenge the will. Now, when you have
an account that there is a beneficiary, boom, the money
is taken out immediately. So what's left in the will
is not those documents. For what I understand that the
beneficiary is the beneficiary unless she changes the beneficiary. The

(07:52):
beneficiaries of that money on those accounts, they get the money.
So the two non responsive kids I am assuming, get
no money.

Speaker 3 (07:59):
Correct, They get you know, personal effects and things like that,
but no more.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
Yeah, but they get no money. So it's the two
I'm assuming you're one of the ones that is responsible
and takes care of your mom. Okay, here's what you do.
My understanding of this is that the two of you
get all the money. They don't. But I suggest you
take them out to dinner and rub it in their
faces and say, you guys are schmucks. We have all
the money. That's that's something I would do. And of

(08:29):
course it's not only is it prevailing legally, but it's
also rubbing in someone's face, kicking them when they're down.
See that just sort of adds to the joy of
doing that. Now, if you live in chronic pain, or
you happen to know someone who does trauma which often

(08:49):
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Game podcasts. Guests have lived with, dealt with, or have
treated those living in pain, and the host, Lindsay Soprano,
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(09:10):
understand the show and it's truly giving pain purpose. I
know that's counterintuitive, that's what it does. And listen to
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you're in pain or chronic pain, or you know someone,
this is well worth listening to. It's The Pain Game podcast.
The Pain Game Podcast. Hi Susan Hi Bill, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (09:34):
Former m California and like you, Yes, I'm calling with
a very it's a sad call. It's about my sister
has developed Parkinson's and there's definite cognitive decline. She lived
in a let's see, it was a twenty eight unit
condo Unit Rose. She owned it, Yeah, she owned it,

(09:57):
and she wouldn't let it. He went in for a
long long time and finally Push came to show and
she let us in and it was a shock to
see the condition of the condo. I mean, I have
seen hoarding shows and hoarding pictures, but this was over
the top. So after and she's been there for thirty

(10:19):
five years, and so what happened eventually is we got
in there. My daughter's been helping me, and we actually
had to hire a crew that three people to help
us clean that place out, with a furniture and all
the stuff just all over the place. Everything was broken inside.

(10:39):
She didn't get it repaired. It was too embarrassed to
have anyone inside. So and then the hoa got word
of from an adjoining neighbor on one side that he
had bedbug infestation coming into his unit. He has a

(11:01):
family with small children. He thought to maybe the boys
brought it in. Now they found out it was coming
from my sister's unit. Now, when we were in there working,
we didn't see any signs of bed bugs around, but
I mean there was all kinds of other stuff. They
could have very well been there and just hidden. So
now the h O Way is going after my sister

(11:24):
and she has just sold the condo.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
But okay, going after your sister for what.

Speaker 4 (11:30):
For the infestation that they said spread through the complex
because of the people that were cleaning it were going
down the common walkway.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
Okay, let me let me ask you. So how many
units are they arguing that she infested with bedbugs?

Speaker 4 (11:46):
I think it turned out to be about eighty two
adjoining And.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
Then h O A that is going after her, not
the not the individual owners of the property. The ho
A is going after her. Do I have that right?

Speaker 5 (12:03):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (12:03):
Well, the the owner next door that had the bed
bugs already had them sprayed. He's on the board and
he alerted the board.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
All right, I got it. So what's uh? And when
you say going after her, uh, tell me what they're
doing financially? Obviously? What are they? What are they? What
are they doing? Filed the lawsuit stop the sale.

Speaker 4 (12:27):
Well they are, they're withholding something from the sale. They're
charging her like over two Wait.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
A minute, what do you mean withholding?

Speaker 6 (12:35):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (12:35):
People that buy, they don't buy from the HOA whoever
bought the property. The money goes directly to uh, your relative,
your mom if I have it right, or your sister. No,
it's my sister, okay, goes directly to your sister, uh,
and doesn't go to the h o A. How does
the HOA said we get the money?

Speaker 4 (12:54):
Well, they they are claiming that their I understand.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
How are they claiming? How are they claiming? Have they
filed a lawsuit? Have they put in a claim in escrow?

Speaker 4 (13:08):
They may have done it with escrow. I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
It doesn't matter. You can claim all day long that
you owe money out of escrow. I mean I could
have gone in and said I owe money and written
to escrow and put a claim in there. They're not
going to give it to me, and they're not going
to give it to a neighbor without a lawsuit. And
then even then there is you answer or she answers
her estate answer? She's still alive?

Speaker 6 (13:30):
Oh yes she is?

Speaker 1 (13:31):
Okay, got it so she answers or if someone answers
on her behalf, because the HOA doesn't have any power here.
It's the individuals, the individual homeowners.

Speaker 4 (13:41):
That's what I'm that's what we're wondering.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
Yeah, you know what, Fine, you just tell the Estra
company isn't going to hand them any money just because
they make a claim. Now they can throw something all
a list pendance to stop the sale, but that's all
they can do. And man, based on this, yeah, they're
in a world of hurt. So at this point, don't

(14:03):
worry about it. You tell the Escro company saying, hey,
give me the money, okay, because it's the wrong people.
The HA does not have right to do that because
an individual owner gets bedbugs.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
Yes, and also what they did is they chose the
guy to come in and exterminate everything, and he was
very expensive.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
You know what is not their call. It is not
their call unless they argue that it is somehow dangerous
for the neighbors. And I would like to see that.
You need a lot more information to tell me on that.
But you know, you just can't make a claim. I
want money, and if you can, man, I'm jumping in it.
Oh yes, I am hey, I want some money too.

(14:46):
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(15:10):
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(15:33):
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(15:57):
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Speaker 7 (16:05):
Thank you for kicking my call. My question today, Bill
is I have a nineteen year old stepdaughter that lives
with us. She has stolen from my husband and I.
Last weekend, she and my husband got in a physical confrontation,
which she started. She put her hands on him first.

(16:26):
How do I go about evicting her? I am fine
with giving her ample time, I said, I told my
husband maybe one year, like a year for today.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Oh, you don't want to give a year. You want
to a vict her. I mean you can tell her
to leave and you give her what You can give
her a year's notice, which means she doesn't have to
move out for a year. Why don't you give her
a sixty day notice, which you can do under law
and the paying. Yeah it's California. I think it's sixty days,
but other states, she just it's like one week month. Yeah.

(17:00):
Just he's just a victory. Oh yeah, yeah, you have
to give her a notice. Oh yes, yes, yes, you
have to give her a notice. You. Yeah, well you
can go on the go on the internet and just
go notice to evict and there are you have to
meet certain criteria in California. But it's really easy, peasy.
All you do is follow the template. Yeah, and the

(17:22):
fact that they got into an altercation doesn't mean anything
unless she calls the police, or unless he calls the police,
which I wouldn't suggest, because it's a man against the woman.
This poor woman has been beat up. So if she's
not going there, you leave it alone. I'm sorry.

Speaker 7 (17:40):
Does it make a difference that he and I are
just renters and we don't own the property?

Speaker 6 (17:44):
No?

Speaker 1 (17:44):
It really well, Uh, she's just living with you, correct
with us? All right, she's okay, So she's not all right,
here's the problem with that. And she you have a
lease with the landlord.

Speaker 7 (17:58):
Yeah, I actually rent for my parents.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
Okay, but you're paying rent. Have your parents a victory,
give her a sixty day because that's their call. They
own the property. Okay.

Speaker 7 (18:09):
That's why I actually can't. As being the renter, we
can't actually.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
No, no, because she's not a tenant from you. She's
the tendency is with her in the landlord, even though
she's having a mom and dad do it. No, that's easy,
you know, I'm assuming mom and dad will do it.
Go figure Chris or Cyrus. Hi, Cyrus, welcome Bill.

Speaker 5 (18:31):
I'm thinking of publishing some love letters I received decades ago.
They are sort of poignant because they're mixed with the
life threatening health problems of the sender. Am I entitled
to do that? Is there an invasion of privacy?

Speaker 3 (18:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Well, I mean there's something. Yeah, there's an invasion. But
let's talk about whether you are entitled. Probably not. But
now what you know, it's like, who cares? Is a
sender dead? Oh yeah, that's very helpful publishing dead senders letters.
Who is going to argue the estate of the center.

(19:12):
There's probably no estate left.

Speaker 7 (19:15):
When did.

Speaker 5 (19:17):
In the nineteen sixties early sixties?

Speaker 1 (19:19):
Oh yeah, you got there's no problem. There's no problem.
You're fine. So how old are you, Cyrus? Is it
are these letters to you?

Speaker 5 (19:26):
These letters are to me as a college student. Her
mother died, she has a brother and a sister.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Yeah, don't worry about it now, you're fine. You're fine.
I wouldn't sweat it. Now. Just go ahead and do it.
You know, whatever invasion I mean, he's going to argue
from the sixties. Let's get practical for a minute. The
estates and your likeness making money. It's all crap. I mean,
if you're a big star, it's not if you own
the estate of Elvis Presley and you use his likeness

(19:53):
or his letters without permission from the estate. Yeah, that's
a difference. But you know, dead mother who I well,
of course dead people do die in the sixties. Who
the hell knows?

Speaker 3 (20:04):
You know?

Speaker 1 (20:05):
Oh god, I got a lot of this. Uh okay, Greg, Hello, Greg, Welcome.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Good morning Bill. It's a pleasure to talk to you.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
Yes it is.

Speaker 8 (20:19):
Yes, there's a property in Las Vegas. It's owned by
a married man as his soul and separate property. He
has dimension Now his wife is completely fine and understands everything.
The title company is saying that she needs to go
into court and get a guardianship for him. The property,
again is in Nevada, but they live in California.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
Yeah, you and you go into you go into Nevada
and get the guardianship there. It's actually easier in Nevada
than it is in California. So yeah, it's simple easy, pas,
go in. She has dementia. That's a relative who is
asking for it. There has to be a motion, there
has to be a legal request for conservatorship, and the

(21:05):
judge either you bring a doctor's diagnosis on an affiday,
but yes, she has dementia, or even enough people saying yeah,
she unfortunately does not understand what's going on, or she
thinks she's on the planet Mars, which, by the way,
there are a lot of religions I think that where
people understand perfectly well and they believe that, so go
figure on that one. Aliens have come down in the backyard,

(21:30):
or just clearly not understanding and zoning out. My mother,
for example, died at ninety eight, and by the time
she was ninety three, she had no idea who anybody is.
I could have gone into I could have gone to
court gotten a conservatorship in two seconds. But the good
news is I was already a signature on all of

(21:51):
her accounts, her bank accounts, so I just cleaned out
the money before she left or before she left Earth,
so I didn't have to worry about a conservative ship
because she was broke almost instantly after I cleaned out
the account. There is there's the answer, Huh what are
we doing for time? Oh we're good, Hey, Claire, welcome.

(22:14):
What can I do for you? Claire.

Speaker 6 (22:16):
Hi, Bill, I'm in a lawsuit that I don't want
to be in and I called for one reason the
attorney I called, but she's suing for another. So I
finally told her I want it settled or dropped.

Speaker 1 (22:33):
Okay, I don't understand. Hold on, hold on, you're doing
the suing or you are the defendant.

Speaker 9 (22:40):
No, I'm doing the suing.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
Oh that's easy and so okay, So what's your question.

Speaker 9 (22:46):
Well, she told me, not very nicely, that there would
be repercussions if I dropped the suit.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Oh yeah, I mean what does she tell you? What repercussions?

Speaker 9 (23:00):
It was such a nasty woman.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Yeah, there are no repercussions. If you want to continue
on with the suit, you just get another warrior and
then the new lawyer takes care of it. If you
want to drop the suit, you tell the attorney I
want to drop the suit. The attorney has to do it.
This attorney can't go forward if you say no. And
the repercussions are she's going to charge you hourly for
the work she has done. And what kind of case

(23:23):
is this?

Speaker 9 (23:25):
I was in an automobile actor.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Okay, yeah, all right, so it's time and how badly
Were you banged up?

Speaker 9 (23:33):
Well, it caused the accident unfortunately.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Oh, then it's your insurance, your insurance company that's defending you,
if you have insurance.

Speaker 9 (23:41):
No, no, no, that's true. Now I sun into somebody,
but then a woman ran into me.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
All right, if you're okay, you don't want to sue
the woman and you simply want to defend as against
the first woman who is that you are suing, you
can drop that case and the insurance company has to
defend you on the second case. That's it. Is it
repercussions all you want, Just turn it over to your

(24:11):
insurance company. That's it. They'll they'll handle it.

Speaker 6 (24:13):
Well, well they won't because I'm the one that filed
a suit against the woman that hit me.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
No, but you're talking about the second woman you're talking
about you want to drop against the woman that hit you,
And now you have a case with the that you
hit And now you have a case of a woman
that hit you. Who are you suing? There are two
people here who how many people are you suing?

Speaker 9 (24:37):
Just a woman that hit me?

Speaker 1 (24:39):
You're suing her? And a lawyer took that. How badly
were you banged? How badly? Were you banged up? Claire?

Speaker 9 (24:47):
Well, I still have shoulder problems.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
But okay, have you been treating? Are you going to
a chiropractor? Are you going to a doctor? Are you
treating for that? Yes? Why do you want to drop
the case? Why do you want to drop the case? Claire?

Speaker 9 (25:00):
Well, I just don't want to do it. I'm eighty
nine years old.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
All right, then just tell your attorney to drop it.
And is she going to turn around this to an
eighty nine year old woman. Probably not.

Speaker 9 (25:13):
They said if I dropped it after it's been filed,
that there will be a rap percussion.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
You can drop it any time you want, right in
an email to this woman, you want the case drop
to your lawyer, the case gets dropped, okay, or the
lawyer says, I don't want to drop it because it's
a good case and I don't want anybody to go
after me, So I'm going to do a substitution of attorney.

(25:42):
You become the lawyer and figure out what you want
to do. And that's and you're now representing yourself. You're
not the lawyer. You're representing yourself, which you can and
then you can drop the case on your own or
hire another lawyer to go forward with the case. But
there are lawyers out there who just handle it all
for you. That's what I would do. At this point,
I get a second opinion. You can go to you

(26:04):
can go to my website handle on the law dot com. Uh,
they have personal injury lawyers who are just excellent and
don't want to steal a case. We'll just give you
good advice, much better than I could give you. So
go to handle on a law dot com. But the
bottom line is you have every right to drop a
case whenever you want. And a lawyer saying, well, there
are repercussions, okay, other than hourly eighty nine years old. Yeah,

(26:28):
that's that's going to be a tough one. That really is.
And I don't know what the retainer says either, does
a retainer say if you drop the case, then I
am titled to hourly that I've done on the case,
and I'm willing to bet there wasn't much. Hello Luis,
good morning, mister Handle.

Speaker 10 (26:43):
Yes, sir, I bought a remind I bought a remanufactured
engine in October and since it's been giving me issues, Okay,
I tried. I tried calling the company and they stopped
receiving my phone calls. They don't get text.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
All right, so let me Okay, Louise, I got it.
I got it. You can't get satisfaction. So here we go,
Louise on the law. Louis, I have a manufactured engine
that just isn't doing what it's supposed to do, and
I paid money. What advice would you give me?

Speaker 10 (27:18):
The advice that I would give you is that you
got to get yourself a lawyer.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
No, how much did you spend?

Speaker 2 (27:23):
Okay?

Speaker 10 (27:25):
Four six hundred?

Speaker 1 (27:26):
Okay? How about this? Do you have to know what
the small claims limits are in California?

Speaker 10 (27:32):
Unfortunately, the engine that I bought was in Florida.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
How do you buy an engine in Florida? Did you
truck it to California?

Speaker 10 (27:43):
And that's not the best part. The best part is
they made the engine in Texas.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Yeah, okay, you can sue in small claims court where
the contract took place or where you live. The problem
is serving them in Texas Florida, and that may be
a problem. Yeah, all right, So let me give you
the advice that may give you the best legal advice.
Don't buy an engine from out of state. Okay, so

(28:13):
you can try small claims court and see if you
have jurisdiction. Getting a lawyer for four thousand dollars is crazy.
You're gonna go through four thousand dollars in legal fees
in about thirty minutes, right, yeah, So see what you
can do with small claims court. Depends on the jurisdiction.
Whether you can file or not. Sometimes you can, and
then the trial takes place and it's done by Affidavid.

(28:34):
It's done. You know. Everybody makes our case with just
a statement of letter to the court. Ooh, really interesting stuff.
Hey Eddie or Edie?

Speaker 9 (28:43):
Hello Edie? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Yeah, what can I do for Edie?

Speaker 8 (28:49):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (28:49):
I was one.

Speaker 8 (28:49):
Have you ever heard of being arrested for telephonic harassment?

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Yeah? Of course not really. Yeah you can. You can
harass someone by telephone, of course you can.

Speaker 9 (29:01):
No, But I didn't harass I sent a pastor truth.

Speaker 10 (29:04):
I'm a writer.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Okay, that doesn't mean you asked. The question you asked
is can you be arrested for telephonic harassment? And the
answer is yes. So now the question becomes you sent
a pastor a what.

Speaker 9 (29:18):
I sent him?

Speaker 1 (29:19):
Truth? Because I don't care about the truth. What did you.
What did you send him?

Speaker 10 (29:25):
Well, like I said, I'm a writer, and he somebody
had put on a community page.

Speaker 9 (29:31):
Why don't churches help the homeless?

Speaker 4 (29:34):
More?

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Okay? What what did you eighty? What did you write him?
I texted some of the posts from the community page. Okay,
and that's it. How many times did you do that?

Speaker 2 (29:48):
No?

Speaker 10 (29:48):
I I send him the post.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
I tried calling him.

Speaker 7 (29:54):
It's a long story.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
I tried talking to you. You don't have time for
a long story. You don't have time for a long story.
I tried calling him. How many times did you try
calling him? That's so, he tried calling him once? And
when you said you sent him a letter or an email,
how many times did you do that?

Speaker 7 (30:13):
I text him?

Speaker 2 (30:14):
I shouted the post?

Speaker 1 (30:16):
How many times? How many times?

Speaker 5 (30:20):
What?

Speaker 1 (30:22):
And they arrested you? They arrested you with one text
and one phone call?

Speaker 7 (30:30):
I was texting the truth, he's how many times?

Speaker 1 (30:34):
How many times were you texting him? Thank you so
much for your phone call? I like these phone calls
a lot, because you know, I've got to call him down.
I got to go and take my limit dough because
I can't stand this kind of stupidity. I really can't.
Man just can't. Okay, how many times, well I said

(30:55):
the truth? Well, how many times? The truth? How many times?
Well I send him an email? How much many times?
Because that is the harassment issue, not whether it's the
truth or not. That doesn't matter. Now, bad breath absolutely
no fun. No matter what you eat, well, in my case,

(31:16):
garlic and onions, it can cause bad breath. And of
course I'm talking about Zelman's minty Mouthmens, and I have
been saying or telling you about it for months. And
for those of you that have bought Zelman's Minty Mouthmens,
you know exactly what I'm talking about. Boy do they work.
For those of you that have not, you have horrible breath.
You breathe on someone, they start reeling and almost keel over.

(31:37):
So what you can do is swallow or bite into
these little capsules that are coated with a mint pop
two or three in your mouth. You suck them in
part until that's done, and then you swallow or bite
into them and it goes to work in your gut
where it really starts. That's where bad breath can start
and stay there. And no other mint does that at all.

(32:01):
That's Zelman's Minty Mouthmans, So of course I've been using
them well as long as they've been around. So here
is the offer until the end of the month, and
that is, if you buy a three pack, you will
get an automatic fifteen percent discount, automatic fifteen percent, don't
even have to put a code or anything else. And
that's until the end of the February. So go to

(32:27):
Zelman's dot com slash kfi my station Worry broadcast from
zelman Z E L M I N S dot com
slash kfi zelmans dot com slash kfi. This is handle
on the law
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