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August 27, 2025 57 mins
In this episode, Bubba Startz recaps recent courtroom experiences, discussing questionable documents, a mistrial, and the emotional toll on those involved. The conversation delves into constitutional rights, Judge Killinger's background, and the legal history of the family ranch. Ongoing legal battles, harassment tactics, and the Calkins ranch legacy are explored. Aaron Prince discusses the erosion of constitutional rights, the sovereign citizen debate, and systemic property rights abuse. The episode also covers Winter City jail conditions, an upcoming lawsuit, and rallying support. Aaron calls for audience engagement, while Tyler shares personal challenges and gratitude.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
Welcome back to the Patriot BroadcastingProject.
I'm your host, Bubba Starts.
And today, we are continuing the saga of theCalkins family ranch.
With me again today, Aaron Prince, TylerCalkins Stoser.
Welcome back to the show, guys.
Jeez.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you, Bubba.
Yeah.
Well, you know, the last time we left off, Iwas like, you know what?

(00:23):
You need to get together once a week at leastand kinda recap it.
And and at this point, I don't know if once aweek is often enough with as much happens, in a
seven day stretch.
So, you know, we were talking a little bit lasttime, about some criminal charges that have
been levied against you and kinda going throughthat, but you still have these, you know, civil

(00:43):
cases and a lot of other things going on.
And you just left the courtroom, recently thisweek.
So I kinda let you pick it up, from the recent,you know, trip to the courtroom there and kinda
share what had happened, and and we're gonnatalk about the emotional toll that's being
levied on you and your whole family throughoutthis whole ordeal as well.

(01:04):
Yeah.
Just absolutely nuts.
You know?
I was preparing to go up to that, judge Bobbyrank, and, she had falsified my name to public
defender document.
I never signed it.
You know?
She that share I'm guessing well, one of thetwo sheriffs or few sheriffs there in Jones

(01:30):
County, somebody signed her name to that searchwarrant left at my cabin.
You you've seen that, Bubba.
And I go in there.
This thing's a mistrial from the get go justbecause of their misactions.
You know?
And I get there, there's a big police presence.

(01:51):
Like, I'm some bad person.
My grandmother, she got there before we did.
And, you know, that that's what our our eldersdo.
They're they're they're known to be thereearly.
And that that attorney that that got placed onme had had the gall to pull my grandmother.

(02:13):
My my my grandmother's in her eighties.
You know?
She just lost the love of her life.
She just lost her closest daughter.
And then she about loses her closest grandson,you know, the one that's there for her.
And, oh oh, by that error and that error, he'she's gonna get Tyler put in prison.

(02:40):
He's gonna get Tyler put in prison, emotionallydistraught in my grandmother.
We get there.
There's a big police presence.
It's like a big show.
Look.
It was like a damn clown show.
You know?
My grandmother's in tears, and it itemotionally distraught at a guy.
I wasn't prepared for that.

(03:02):
You know?
Then the state's attorney there that state'sattorney, she's conflict of interest.
It's like, what in the heck is going on here?
You know?
They wouldn't let us come in with videocameras.
It's like, what are you guys trying to hidefrom?
You know?
I'm I'm fearful for my own safety because Ihear about some of this shit that they've done

(03:26):
to other people.
And there's other people that they've doneheinous things to, but they're afraid to talk.
They're they're they're fearful for theirchildren's lives and their family's lives, and
they don't wanna come forward because they'reafraid of what might happen.
You know?
It's just it's just wrong.

(03:46):
Well, Aaron, he he's trying to tell them, youknow, hey.
It's constitutionally protected.
Right?
Yeah.
Well, it's First Amendment, and you have theright to videotape a public servant doing their
public duty.
And and it absolutely is is is the law, andeverything else has to be set aside based on

(04:06):
their policies.
So and they're protecting themselves.
That's the whole point.
I mean, it's always been an issue for years tobe able to it doesn't matter what court you're
in, but you absolutely have the right tovideotape them if you know
Everybody else has got video cameras in there,but why can't we?
Well, what they do is it now that you don'thave recording of it, they'll charge you for

(04:28):
the transcript or the videos, and it's anotheraspect of commercialization of your court case.
Meanwhile, it's supposed to be a public record.
It should be accessible by everybody, and it'snot.
As you know, it's a it's a private tribunalthat they're conducting.
So
You know?
And then so I I I I humor and hear what try tohear what this guy has to say, and I go in

(04:57):
there and I he he's trying to talk to me.
I I I say, what makes you think that I couldtrust you?
You know?
I didn't ask for you, but yet you here you are.
My name got signed to documents, and here youare trying to trying to stir the pot,

(05:18):
emotionally tormenting my grandmother, whichjust absolutely wrecks me.
You know?
I wasn't prepared for that at all.
I'm sitting there trying to comfort mygrandmother, and and, you know, He gives a poor
girl a heart attack.
You know?
That's too much damn stress on my grandmother.

(05:43):
And then he gives me paperwork.
He's like, oh, well, Bobby Bobby stepped downand this new judge is in, and I looked down at
the paperwork and I read Killinger.
I'm like, what in the hell is going on?
This is just absurd.
This is nuts.
This is just crazy.
This is just a really, what what kind ofkangaroo court freak show is this?

(06:07):
Right.
And and got federal lawsuit on you.
Take yeah.
Exactly.
Take a second to go into why it's so absurd andkinda refresh our listeners' memories a little
bit about who the judge who's now presidingover these hearings is and their affiliation.
Yeah.
That's judge Killinger.
Killinger killing Klinger.

(06:29):
Klinger.
Klinger.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She was provide presiding over a part a landpartition.
Well, first, you know, that land partitionshouldn't have been happening.
The state's supposed to uphold the intent ofthe test year.

(06:51):
Right?
It said undivided.
So they're supposed to uphold his intent.
Undivided is undivided.
It doesn't mean divide it right off the bat.
Right?
I give that you know, first, I have anattorney, Quentin Riggins, and I'm like,
there's something there's something reallywrong here.

(07:12):
And and then later, I find out that thatQuentin Riggins was the same attorney that my
mom originally got ahold of to to make themgive up the will that they're holding on.
And I I I'm highly suspect on if that was evenhis will or if it parts of it was or, you know,
pages one and two didn't even have an initialor signature on a multimillion dollar cattle

(07:37):
ranch.
Anybody could have typed up them first twopages.
Anybody.
You know, you you want us to believe this?
And then all this stuff that happens along theway.
And I keep this goes on for a while.
And I'm telling that Quentin Wiggins
Tyler, I I just wanna stop you.
I mean, the the partition now that's kinda Imean, obviously, we have the fallout.

(07:58):
Your grandfather dies.
Right?
So we have the fallout.
Obviously, there's there's, you know, there's awill.
There there there's a piece of paper that sayswill on the top of it, I guess.
There was no power of attorney to move forwardwith what they did.
They didn't have the authority.
And the reason why the reason why they made herget an attorney because soon as she got the
attorney to get the document to see what theywere talking about, basically, it's it's in

(08:25):
it's a jointer with a contract.
So that's how they
an old legal procedure that they used to totrap people into stuff, you know, from what
from what I understand.
Yeah.
They're they're creating
a joiner.
But now now that they had a joiner, even thoughthat was not a valid valid thing, they assume
and presume that is valid now because you'vecaught you've contracted an attorney, a third

(08:51):
party, to get get the document that had novalidity in the first place.
So they just created a contract out of thin airbecause as soon as Rob Robert passed away,
unless there was a a valid contract to continueon with the power of attorney, which I
guarantee you there is not.
No.
My grandfather in the hospital, you know, whenhe was talking with the doctor, the doctor

(09:14):
asked him, Rob, do you have power of attorney?
He said, no.
I don't have power of attorney.
Well, do you have medical power?
He said, no.
I don't have medical power of attorney.
And the doctor said to him, he's like, well,maybe you should probably at least think about
medical power of attorney.
Is there anybody that you you know and trustwell enough that might be able to make
decisions on your behalf in case you can't doit yourself?

(09:37):
And he looks right over at me and he said, yo,my grandson here.
So at that moment at Hospital down in SiouxFalls, my grandfather denounced anybody having
any type of power of attorney over him and onlygave me medical power of attorney over him
because he knew that his grandson, no matterwhat, would do what was best.

(09:58):
And after they were all said and done and donedoing all their tests, and they basically told
us, oh, well, don't be surprised if when youcome back in the morning that he's not on life
support, tubes down his throat and nose andshit.
I said, what in the hell?
No.
If you guys are done doing your test and thereain't nothing more you can do, he ain't gonna

(10:20):
sit there and die on hoses.
So I got him back to the ranch.
You know?
That was that was probably one of the greatesthonors I could do for my grandfather because my
great grandfather died in the hospital.
I wasn't gonna let him die in the hospital.
I got him back home, and that man got life backinto him again.
You know, they said twenty four to forty eighthours he was gonna have left to live, and and

(10:43):
he made another two weeks.
And one one thing he said too, he said, I'llI'll be damned if I die before that queen.
The queen died, and he passed he passes thenext day.
And so he he held out.
He he he stayed true to that.
You know?
But that so that Quentin Reagan's me and mom,and mom was still alive yet.

(11:07):
We we're we're like, no.
This ain't right.
This ain't right.
None of this is right.
My mom is an intelligent lady.
We're sitting there going through code laws andstuff trying to trying to see because,
obviously, they weren't doing the work.
Well, we find the the the South Dakota codelaws that backed up our argument.

(11:27):
That that was partnership assets because it'salways been used.
That's where the r bar c was born.
That's where the whole thing started.
If it wasn't for that place, there wouldn't bea place.
You know?
Well, my mom died in the middle of this.
Under suspicious circumstances, I think wealways need to add into this as well,

(11:49):
especially
about the program.
Pretty extreme circumstances.
Yeah.
You got another sheriff department not actingin their normal protocol.
But then I I get hit again.
Oh, you need to hurry up and make a decision.
You need to hurry up and figure out how youwanna split that land or the courts are gonna
do it for you.

(12:09):
Put distraught the me into even making adecision.
I told that Quentin Reagan.
I said, you couldn't pay me to draw a line onthis damn place.
You know?
I I just I don't it don't comprehend with me.
It does what are you it don't what are youtalking about?
Well, kept pushing that, kept pushing it, andmy mom dies.

(12:30):
And then they did back off just a little.
But I think it was, like, a month later, I geta call from them again.
I'm like, Jesus Christ.
My my mom just died, and you guys wanna you'retalking about breaking up land, or you you guys
are sick?
Like, give me some time.
Well and they're just I mean, Aaron, maybe youcan speak to this because this is such a larger

(12:53):
story.
Right?
The Tyler the Culkins Ranch isn't the firstranch that's been attacked like this.
It's not even the first ranch in this county tobe attacked in this way.
So
A lot of
families have come to me, talked to about theconcerns and what they've gone through.
It's really, really bad.
Brother, I have gotten people reaching out tome now as these things are coming out and

(13:13):
saying, hey.
We have more documents.
We would like our story to be told as well.
So, obviously and we're talking about a very,very minimally populated county in the middle
of South Dakota.
Right?
Like, I under 10,000 people total, I wouldassume, damn near in these counties, there
aren't that many people there.
So every single person that is you have toassume at this point because pretty much

(13:38):
everyone has a conflict of interest from theattorneys to the judges to the sheriffs.
Everyone seems to have it down the generationallines, some kind of stake in this piece of
family property.
So I don't understand how anything could beadjudicated inside of this county without
everyone recusing themselves if we wereoperating above board with any of this.

(14:01):
You know, and it's really sad too because myfamily has deep, deep, deep roots there.
We're a founding family.
We helped create that that whole town, thatwhole community along with others.
And it wasn't me.
It was the people that come before me.
You know?

(14:21):
And to sit there and to treat a family likethat, that's not what their vision was.
That wasn't what they helped build.
They turn around and destroy.
You know, if if there's one thing I could say,don't don't wait and use a will.

(14:46):
Don't put your pride aside and do it before youdie.
You know?
That's the only way you can guarantee what youwant done gets done.
An irrevocable trust.
Like, the
especially the FLP, even though it was uselessin this case, at least you have a way of

(15:07):
recourse too as well.
So you you kinda wanna stay away from statutorycontracts because then you enter into their
domain, and that's when they start theirprivateering.
A common law trust, irrevocable trust, allthese type of mechanisms, they give you
shielding, and it's breach of trust to actuallyto penetrate that any of those things.

(15:32):
So it gives you a recourse if something likethis happens.
They they didn't even have the jurisdiction toeven attempt to mess with that that FLP, the
Cokins Legacy Land Limited Partnership.
They're not an article three court.
They're an administration court.
But back to where where where I was goingbefore I got sidetracked because there's a lot

(15:56):
to this dang thing.
So I had to fire that Quentin Riggins becauseit was clear he wasn't doing his job.
Me and mom found found the work, and I gave itto him.
And then he still says, oh, well, you you'reright, but it wasn't formally put into the

(16:19):
partnership.
And I said, well, that's I gave you thedocuments.
I'm doing the work that you should be doing.
Well, I went to go give that guy a check.
You know?
I wanted to meet this man that's trying to makeme split up a fucking multigenerational cattle
ranch.
And when I get to his office, that's when itdawned on me.

(16:42):
This is the same guy that I originally brought$500 to on behalf of mom just to get him to
call the Doug Abrams and make him give up thewill that they held on for five weeks.
I was like, oh, shit.

(17:02):
No wonder why he ain't doing nothing.
They're all they're all in this niche, thisthis club, you know, suits and ties and robes,
they're all buddies.
They all work for the same principle.
They all have each other's back, and they'llturn around and cover tracks and do whatever
they wanna do.

(17:23):
It it it's it's corrupt as hell.
Everything they're operating is foreigncontrol.
The I the IVA, it's all filtered down.
They're all subsidiaries.
You're basically being run by foreign law.
I mean, civil law is Roman civil law.
It comes from the papus, the papal, however youwanna say it.
It it goes back centuries.

(17:43):
I mean, this isn't something that people justcame out of the blue and wrote.
These are patterns why Rome fell apart.
So
now I'm by myself trying to find a differentattorney.
Conflicts of interest.
Conflicts of interest.
Everybody I call a complex of interest are toobusy on started calling outside.

(18:07):
You know?
I call only outside attorneys, differentstates.
You know?
They said, oh, that that may Adam's law firmand these people you're trying to go against,
they're lobbyists.
They're they're they're too big.
You know?
I'm not a big enough law firm.
It's like, oh, lobbyists.
You guys are scared of these people becausethey're too politically powerful.

(18:29):
And then so I'm I'm moving forward by myself.
So I drafted up before even Aaron showed uphere.
I typed up letters just demanding a fullinvestigation, which was my right, which was my
mom's right.
They ignored my mom.

(18:50):
She and she wanted an investigation done, youknow, into this whole deal.
And then I'm in demanding an investigation doneon this whole deal, and they completely
blindsided.
They pushed through forward like like some godbeing stubborn oxes.
They just keep on going, keep on trudgingthrough.

(19:11):
So as of right now, have they actually gonethrough with a partition of the of the ranch?
Yeah.
Well well, no.
Well, the first thing
Probostly, it's it's not.
I mean, but they've pretended to be becausewhat they've done, the documents chain of
titles, so there's conveyance fraud.
There's a bunch of things that make it but juston the surface level for the person who doesn't

(19:35):
know what's going on, they're pretending thatit's gone through.
Well and and and does that I mean, because ofthe fraudulent nature of the original document,
right, which is the will.
Everything kinda stems from grandpa dies.
There's this there's this
The will was never
Right.
Right.
Right.
Nothing is valid.
Right.
Nothing is valid.

(19:55):
Now does that does that incriminate them forall of the fraud that they have committed?
Why do you think they're coming so
hard on him?
They don't want him to come out because theythey wanna they wanna they fabricated so many
stories, and now you have the same person thatwe have a $550,000,000 claim in a in a civil

(20:16):
case, and that's not even us making the claim.
That's a state making its own amount claim onon the defendants.
So we have nothing to do with that except forwe're gonna make a claim on those securities.
But the thing is is it's it's it's crazy thatthe fact that she didn't even have the the the
nerve to send her.
It either showed the blatant criminality.

(20:36):
Or
Then then then then she starts trying to movepush on forward still, and I'm just sitting
there.
I'm like, I just got blindsided.
I'm twisted up.
I'm tormented.
I don't know what the heck is going on.
This is absolutely absurd.
My grandmother's in the straw.
I'm in the straw.

(20:58):
I'm like and then and then this judge steps in.
I'm like, what in the heck is going on?
How can you be up there right now?
You I'm I'm kinda lost for words.
It's just it's mind blowing.
It's absolute mind blowing.

(21:19):
Terminal crypto.
And and it's
just following not it, right, where it's justlike it just keeps getting wilder.
But it's like you said, Aaron, they're in sodeep now.
Right?
They have made so many fraudulent forgeddocumentations.
They're so deep that they can't stop.
Right?
And and and, I mean, killing someone is not outthere

(21:41):
around either.
Faults.
I mean, that's what they'll do.
They'll keep doubling down, doubling down.
Instead, we've given them many opportunities tocure.
We we gave them opportunity to do this, youknow, professionally, responsibly, honorably.
We've given them every single step along theway to to give them an opportunity to come
clean and just fix it.

(22:01):
They're compounding their own problems at thispoint, and that's what they're they're trying
to really hammer him, put him away for a fewyears because that way, once you get torn away
from your environment, you know how it destroysyou.
It destroys everybody.
It's it's hard to regain things back and putthings back in position, and it'll be a
strategic win for them even though everything'sfabricated.

(22:24):
We'll do podcasts from a prison cell, Tyler.
I don't give a fuck.
Well, I I just we would just refuse to besilent because it's all we have.
Right?
It it is all we have to stand in public eye tokeep your story out there, to continue to tell
it in real time, essentially.
Right?
You are getting not something that happenedmost ago.

(22:45):
This is in real time.
Like
Speaking of in real time, I was on my computer,and I'm using tools like ChatGPT to help me
out, you know, because I'm not a lawyer.
Well, the lawyers are using it too.
That's how we ended up with a lot of this stuffinside of the system anyway.

(23:07):
So continue.
So I I'm I'm in the middle of using it, and allof a sudden, my documents go away.
All of them.
I'm like, what?
So I start refreshing it, start refreshing it,you know.
Not there.
Not there.
Not there.
I'm like, this is months upon months uponmonths of work, you know, and long time work of

(23:34):
mom too.
All of a sudden, it's not there.
I'm like, what in the heck is going on?
And I was quick to go run over to my othercomputer, and it was still there.
I I I saved it.
You know?
I I sent it to to back it all up.
And then I go to click into one of my deals.
All of sudden, it's not there on that computertoo.

(23:55):
I'm like, what in the heck is going on?
And so then they all disappear on that computertoo.
And I go call my Mid Continent provider just tosee.
You know?
We're pretty intelligent, DJing.
You know, we we get electronic somewhat.

(24:17):
I call Mid Continent.
And from the day that they arrested me, evenduring the day while we were at court, not even
here, they've been trying to get in or gettinginto my computers.
You know, that I can understand it to a point,but they must be scared or worried about the

(24:45):
work that I'm doing to go ahead and get rid ofit.
And, you know, they stole my cell phone.
They went outside of the scope of theirwarrant.
They stole my cell phone, and that's how theygot into my chat.
You know, they had my and I could even seewhere my phone my other phone was active.
And Mid Continent has this documented.

(25:07):
We got we got a it's recorded and and backedup, and they're sending me documents on that
too.
Well and it's it's funny to me that, you know,these powers that be, right, all of these
people that are operating kind of what theyassume is under the cloak of darkness.

(25:29):
Right?
We have ways of finding out who these peopleare as well.
I mean, there are IP addresses attached tothese things that are going in.
We may not have the money and the funds, right,to go and to to expose all of that, but,
there's ways to find all of these things outand who's in there specifically.

(25:49):
The fact that Midcontinent can go in and easilytell you, hey.
These are you're being accessed remotely, and,I mean, there's really only a few vested
interests, that are against you right now.
I would say the court of public opinion isbehind you a 100%.
The high traffic was when we were going tocourt that morning.
So That was really high that day.

(26:10):
And with all our all my computers and devicesare off because we were leaving, and they're
still trying to get in.
Still trying to get
a fact that you are not on your phone orcomputer because you are locked in a courtroom,
and they have access.
So, I mean, it almost stems to someone who'scan.
If people don't understand, can see, like, thecomputer we're on now, my desktop.

(26:34):
It can see the TVs.
It sees the phone.
It knows my addresses.
It knows the devices by name.
You know?
And the one that they're really hammering onthe most was my computer desktop where and
that's a new computer.
I got it just for this work stuff.
You know?
I I didn't I didn't have it before, but I waslike, shit.

(26:55):
I I need to get one of these.
I gotta do a bunch of work and research and,you know, I've I need a computer for that.
You know?
And then even on the I was on it, you know, andI started seeing magnifying glasses everywhere,
on all my all my folders and everything, andthen it turned into little boxes.

(27:15):
And then it turned back into magnifyingglasses.
I'm like, somebody's in my computer.
I could see this.
You know?
They weren't taking control of the mouse, butthey were taking control of the data.
And there's nothing wrong on my computer.
They're probably just like Well, they wannaknow what you know.
No.

(27:35):
They wanna know what you're working on.
Evidence.
Yeah.
There's a lot of evidence.
You know what?
That was their discovery.
Yeah.
Files is
not what it is.
Files is How how to defend themselves againstthe criminality, basically?
I mean, there's no other way to put it.
Yeah.
It's just yeah.
There there's so many criminal actions thathave been taken at this point by by them.

(27:56):
I mean, we just say them because, I mean, yeah,there's names attached to this.
But who's doing what?
I mean, the Dragnet at this point is so wide.
So many people have implicated themselves intothis case.
It's unbelievable.
So I get in front of the judge Klinger, and I'mlike she's like, do you understand what what's
going on, what I'm trying to tell you?

(28:17):
I'm like, I'm sitting there looking, trying tograsp what's going on.
You know?
I'm like, I need more time.
I don't even know how to even talk to you rightnow because I just got bombarded and blasted
and emotionally distraught and distressed.
And, you know, you guys just I don't even knowhow.

(28:39):
Which are their tactics?
Even understand how you're sitting in front ofme right
now, judge.
Right.
Well, which are their tactics?
I mean, they they have stopped at nothing totorment you, to harass you, to, I mean,
criminal activity.
Criminal activity against you in every fashion.
It's no surprise that they would try tobamboozle you when you walk in the courtroom

(29:01):
and to bring a large police presence to stressyou out, to talk to your grandmother ahead of
time, to stress you out so that you arecompromised walking in front of that bench so
that you make decisions, right, that aren't ofyour right mind.
If you're emotionally compromised, you cannotmake sound decisions.
And this is exactly what they're trying to

(29:21):
do to you.
Good way to play.
The same play that they've done against soundlike I said, Aaron, and and we all know now
because so many other families are starting tocome out of the woodwork with this, that these
are their tactics.
There is a playbook that they are running.
You have just forced them to get way deeperinto that playbook than they usually have to

(29:42):
because of the resilience.
I didn't want any of this stuff.
Who knows?
Who would?
Who would wanna be like, you know what?
I wanna dedicate years of my life to defendingthe legacy of my family because a bunch of
crooks are trying to steal it.
It's crazy.
Pirates.
Pirates.
It's it's it's crazy.

(30:05):
Yeah.
You can't you can't make this crap up, and Ijust hope it doesn't happen to anybody else
because not everybody can handle stuff likethis.
I I I I wonder how I handle this stuff everyday.
You know?
Just keep pushing forward if it wasn't for mymom and my grands and my grandmother.

(30:27):
You know, they they raised me really well.
Well, and they raised you to continue thelegacy, and that's why it it was so important
for you to have all of these years on theranch.
Tyler, the entire time, I've I mean, your DJname is DJ Cowboy.
Right?
Like, that's how most people would know youbecause that is who you are.

(30:50):
You are a rancher.
You are of the land and of the those animals,and that that legacy was instilled in you.
You.
And and it is not a name or a piece ofproperty.
It's something that lives inside of you that ispushing you.
And that's what I see.
And that's why I'm willing to put my name andmy network out there in support of you because

(31:11):
that's what we are here for.
Right?
And I didn't know that until really we startedtalking.
Yes.
I had done some, a little interview with ChadSullivan and talking about the Maude family on
here, but to save other families from the sametragedy that is befalling you, that is our
mission.
Right?
And it starts here, but it'd but in no way isit ending with this saga on either side.

(31:37):
Right?
But, like, they're not gonna stop doing whatthey're doing even if they get caught with
their hand in the cookie jar in your case.
It doesn't end here.
There are families currently that are goingthrough this.
We just don't know who they are yet becausethey have been beaten down in much the same
ways that you are to being silent and a feelinglike there's no one out there that's going to

(31:57):
help them.
You know, that that that land and that thatranch, that is my family.
You know?
I lost them, but what they're doing is, like,losing them all over again.
Well, I wanna bring something to the table.
The arguments that we're doing basically wouldunwind any single judgment that these, judges

(32:21):
have done for how many ever years they've beenworking.
So the arguments, what we're bringing to thetable is basically, an argument that will
obliterate this year everything they've donefor years.
So we're talking criminal CPS.
It doesn't matter what category of law thatwe're dealing with.

(32:43):
It it brings out the the fraudulent nature of aforeign interest that had been abusing, the
people in this community.
So the arguments that we are bringing to thetable, please, I I I, you know, really hope
that everybody gets a chance to read and gothrough because that's those things are
absolutely fact.
There's no arguing about it.

(33:04):
There are things that I mean, void for forgetfor vagueness laws.
You know, when things conflict, you know,everything has to the the statutory law has to
be set aside when it comes to constitutionalrights, but they're not doing that.
And then when they implement, civil code, itactually is foreign to most Americans, and

(33:25):
people don't realize that because we've beenindoctrinated and taught and trained by foreign
interests, and and then they're not even peopledon't even rec I mean, you can ask a police
officer about the constitution, and most ofthem won't even get past one.
Yeah.
You know, if if people don't start waking up,it's gonna be a really, really ugly world for

(33:46):
our kids' kids and our you know?
Well, that's just it.
Just us when we get older.
Yeah.
Well, there I mean, we already don't haveanything, Tyler.
I have nothing.
There's no inheritance for me coming down fromgenerations.
They've already stolen it.
Right?
They've already they've already takeneverything that, you know, a small thing that

(34:06):
my family had and and you know?
So and that's just through economic means.
Right?
That's just by hyperinflation and devaluingwhat we have anyway.
Right?
That's by no nefarious means whatsoever.
Unconventional warfare, that's one of themechanism is financial.

(34:26):
One would be legal.
There's other different mechanisms that use anunconventional warfare.
So you everybody's thinking that we're notunder attack.
We're absolutely under attack throughsubversion, through deceptive means.
I mean, you go back to what the dollar wasworth eighty years ago.
I mean, we're talking about it's only a pennyfraction.
I mean, again, I'll I'll come back to the mostbasic.

(34:49):
Mice would be smarter because they wouldn't eatthe plastic cheese.
It's time to really, really, really think aboutwhat's actually going on because we'd all be
better off if we just cut bait.
Well and and we're gonna get you on, Aaron, andkind of run through some of the paperwork.
I think that would be I think that would begood for us at this point because we've covered
a lot and we're pretty current on what'shappening in this case specifically now, that

(35:15):
we can start to move forward to the greaterramifications of what you're what you're doing.
Right?
Well, what I could do is is is actually do,Speechify.
And if you want, I could actually record thevideos because it's a lot of reading.
Some of them are are quite extensive becauseit's it's there's a lot there's a lot to it.
I mean, you're talking about investments,mutual mutual bonds.

(35:37):
You're talking about major securities.
It's not a simple subject.
And now I was I I reason why I know this stuffbecause I I've been, like, management to
implementing credit card service for the wholeBank of Australia.
I mean, I've been around the investment.
I've been around the different segments.
I actually work for a court of clerk as asenior software engineer working on car

(35:58):
reports, which is, court appearance records,which I realized that they're bonding people
behind people's back just on appearancerecords.
And this is state to state to state.
So we've definitely done the due diligence andthe work to be able to bring this stuff
forward.
Aaron, is it safe to say that these small townlawyers and judges have no idea who the fuck

(36:19):
you are?
Yes.
Okay.
They have no idea.
And and and they're just they're just ignoringeverything because they're not competent or
capable to answer the questions.
And they're like, oh, he's gonna throw you injail.
He's gonna have you thrown in jail.
It's like, you know, at least he came to help.
Nobody else did.

(36:40):
Right.
Everybody else is just, hey.
Settle this.
Sell the land.
Just let it go.
You don't wanna deal with any of this stuff.
And
Of course.
That's what con artists do.
Right?
That's what that's what's that's what slimeballs do.
Yep.
Well and if it's not them, it's the governmenttrying to death tax you and and the, you know,
estate of taxes.
And
There's only two responsibilities, protect yourproperty and protect your rights, and they've

(37:04):
miserably failed all across the board.
They've failed everybody.
I mean, people have to understand.
They're your servant.
They're there to help you.
You're you're the sovereign.
American man or woman is the sovereign, andyou've hired these people to help you, to
assist you, not to rape you and fleece you anddeal from you, purloin from you your property.

(37:24):
And let's not get that confused with sovereigncitizen.
You know?
I I had to go and become a state national so Ican have my constitutional rights back in
Foley.
You know?
Don't let them try to twist things around.
What's wrong with the constitution?
Why do they not like the constitution?

(37:44):
Well, that's that's the supreme law of theland.
And, by god, I think, I don't see any oceansaround here.
Well and those are our those are our rights.
Right?
Yeah.
But they're actually your guarantees.
They're your guarantees.
You you've implemented them for them to followthose.
They've implemented a cast system more so.

(38:07):
If people don't start paying attention andstart caring a little bit, we're probably gonna
lose them.
Well and I think that, you know, we're veryfortunate right now in this age of information
and where society is, our last election cycle,I think there is a hunger for exactly what
we're doing, and it's a reason that ourepisodes have been getting a lot of traction

(38:27):
online as well.
Right?
People are watching this.
People are interested not just in your story,but in the ramifications it has for every
single citizen, whether they have amultimillion dollar cattle ranch or not.
We all need to be vested in our rights and inour Yeah.
No.
Let let said rights.

(38:47):
Well, they've been stealing from from Americansfor three, four, five generations.
Okay?
They've got securities behind everybody's back.
Okay?
So once everybody actually realized that, youknow what?
There's no need for struggling because they'vebeen stealing and they've purlined your
estates.
Right?
And they're holding it as collateral so theycould hype hypothecate new investments and and

(39:13):
and new opportunities for themselves.
Meanwhile, you're all just a bunch of chattel,for their for their benefit.
I mean, people really have to understand thatthis has come through IMF, u UN, through these
different international organizations thatthese arrangements were made prior to any of us
being born.

(39:34):
And that's where the disconnect happens becausethey do it over generations.
They don't all do it at once.
It's a slow And then
there's a lot there's a lot of lot to it.
You know?
I sit there and listen to this stuff, and Ilisten to this stuff, and it's like, holy heck.
But the average person ain't gonna sit thereand read it.
They're gonna be like, oh, look at that big oldthing.

(39:56):
And it's like, I do the same thing.
Like, shit.
That's a lot of damn that's a lot of damnreading.
Thankfully, there's things like Speechify thatthat'll read it for you, and you just listen.
Just kick the radio off.
None of that's coming from a DJ.
Kick the radio off.
Listen to something sometimes.
You you'll be surprised what you'll learn.
Listen listen to something that's gonna makeyou a little bit smarter and probably protect

(40:18):
you in the future because I think this iseventually, this machine comes for all of us.
And and right now, it just happens to be theCalkins family ranch, but it could be any any
one of our listeners that will go through this.
And It's gonna get to the point it's communism.
Well, we are teetering on that edge

(40:38):
quite literally.
Everybody knows, under title 50, communistsdon't have rights in America.
So it's pretty straightforward once we but,again, we have a bunch of con artists that are
foreign agents, legal liars, that are incontrol of the clubs and the sticks.
And these people the clubs and the sticks arejust following blindly.
So you wonder why it would happen in Germanyback in the day when no.

(41:02):
That would never happen.
Well, these people aren't paying attention.
They're they're they're just brainwashed.
It's almost like the zombie apocalypse becausethey're just blindly obeying without
questioning.
Yeah.
Plea please, people get help us get the wordout.
You know?
And not and not just for Tyler.
Right?
This is a much larger issue for yourself.

(41:22):
We are gonna use this channel to continueeducate you, to continue to share stories like
Tyler's, and to to not use, but to communicatewith people like Aaron who are extremely
knowledgeable, who can educate myself or, like,mostly, I'm very selfish about this.
I want to be educated, but there's no reasonthat we can't use this platform to educate more

(41:45):
and more people and to Reach
out if you got issues.
If you got some issues, reach out.
You know?
Yeah.
They already have.
Like I said,
it's We
already have a RICO case, but the more themerrier.
That way, you know, we with him alone, I thelist of RICO violations, but, really, any

(42:06):
anybody can get involved.
I mean, I'm working as a private attorneygeneral doctrine, which basically allows a a
private man or woman to, litigate situationslike that.
But they they're so afraid of the argumentsthat I'm bringing to the table.
They're not acknowledging it because that thatit just expresses that they're the criminality
that they're they're doing.
Because similar to the will when you hire whenyou hire an attorney to examine that will, them

(42:30):
acknowledging you is acknowledging that theclaims that you're bringing also have some
validity as well.
But I I have to assume there's timelines ofthese things, and eventually their hand is
going to be forced into answering thesearguments.
And I think they will stop at nothing to topressure Tyler into ending this all if they

(42:52):
don't try to end Tyler himself.
Right?
I mean, we already kind of know that well,that's why we have to be public.
Right?
That that is the function of the PatriotBroadcast ing Project at this point.
We're not really doing any other content otherthan covering this saga because I don't have
time to cover anything else.
Right?
Like, this is consuming.
I I appreciate it, Bubba.

(43:15):
You know?
I hope we can get get some stuff straightenedout and resolved and, you know, and get get you
more help.
You know?
You you we need to get you a bigger studio andand maybe some more help to get you going.
And, you know, that's another thing.

(43:37):
Where's the news networks?
I've reached out to them.
I've reached out to all of them.
Completely.
Where are guys at?
I mean, they're they're part of the system.
The you know, all all these people in suits,whether they're on TV or behind a bench or in
front of a bench, I mean, they're all they'reall part of a very small club, and we're not
part of it.

(43:57):
Right?
And and that's really what it comes down to.
It it is us against them, and we are a lot morenumerous and a lot louder than I think they had
bargained for.
I don't think when they started this againstyou, Tyler, that they really knew who you were
and the following that you had built because ofyour, you know, your other profession, right,

(44:17):
in the entertainment world and your connectionto people like me who have, you know, their
platforms of their own and people payingattention that that brings the pressure onto
them.
And, obviously, they're feeling it because theywouldn't be going to such lengths if they
weren't feeling said pressure.
So we're gonna keep it up.
I mean, we're gonna put the hammer down on themand to make sure that, that we this doesn't go

(44:41):
away.
Right?
We're not gonna stop talking about it.
We're not gonna we're not gonna stop namingthem by name and putting this out there.
And even if they come with injunctions, I'vebeen to prison before, Tyler.
I'm not afraid to go back.
Well, this is an important cause.
I mean, he tells me, oh, you're afraid of myI'm not afraid of my life.
I'm I'm afraid not to do something because it'sthat important.

(45:04):
You know?
And I don't it's not
Oh, you wanna talk about prisons or jails?
Hell, that winter the Winter City jail.
I got I had water around my bed.
There's mold on the on the goddamn studuprights.
The the sheet rock's all torn out on thebottom.
There's mold on the carpet.

(45:25):
And, you know, that goddamn jail, you got youguys got gnats flying around.
They got biscuits that they cook at, like,05:00, and then they feed them to you in the
morning for breakfast, but they stay in theoven all night.
And there's gnats flying all over the place.
And you what?
You get it's a a little cup of peanut butterand and a couple biscuits for your breakfast,

(45:47):
and every other day, you might get a thing ofham.
It's like, you guys get, like, $10,000 a day.
I understand it's jail, but there are alsopeople in there.
You can't be doing that.
They're still citizens.
Right?
They're
they're still Americans.
Well, they're profiting.
Half of them is charged by So, really, unlessthere's a corpus to elect, there really isn't a

(46:10):
crime.
So what they've created is is is a network ofof of code to penalize people around
inhabitants of the area.
So, really and and, again, anything that's notconstitutional is null and void, but these SOPs
that they're following are all implemented byforeign interests.

(46:31):
Like a like a basketball.
Alright?
How much does a basketball cost?
Right?
They got they got basketballs in there.
They're all lopsided and deformed.
They don't bounce right.
They're one the one good one, half theleather's torn off of it just because that's
about the only good thing that
they did there.
They not to mention they sent a couple ofhitmen in there to try and off you while you

(46:54):
were there, but let's just, you know, bury thelead.
Possibly.
It was it was very suspect at best.
You know?
They got I had some native American cousins inthere that kept an eye on me and watched out
for me and, you know
Well, about another thing.
They they even they even got on with them.
Well, what what was he putting money on yourbooks for?

(47:15):
It's like, well, shit.
I was waiting for some commissary money to comein, and they wanted a little phone time.
Well, heck, you you can't just call in and anduse your card to put some commissary money on
there for them, but you can get phone time puton instantly.
So it was just a little bartering going on.

(47:37):
They need a little phone time, and I wanted tohave a pop and a and a bag of chips.
So and then they're harassing them, and I thinkI think they even turned around and maxed that
kid out because he just showed a littlekindness to me.
And it's that same judge that clinger, killingher, whatever clinger She needs to be arrested.

(48:00):
These people should be ashamed of themselves.
To be arrested.
I mean, you don't
But you how how would they like it if the shoewas on the other foot?
Well But golden rule.
The simple golden rule that they you you don'ttreat people like that.
Just because you wear a robe doesn't make youbetter than other people, and you shouldn't be
treating people like that.
No.
But when people actually find out what the howthey've been operating, you know what?

(48:23):
The the the the tar and feathers won't be farbehind.
And that really comprehend.
That Winter City Jail, I got videos out, soit's not just just my word.
I got a list of inmates that were in there thatthey signed that.
We're gonna be starting a lawsuit on them toobecause that's just it's just inhumane.

(48:46):
You know?
It really well, the mold.
The mold is the biggest thing.
There's an old man laying on on a on a cot, youknow, and he's breathing in mold.
Like, they don't give a shit.
No.
Well, it's revenue generation.
Right?
It's revenue generation.
Saying some of the, you know, some of theemployees in there are good people.
You know?

(49:06):
Right.
And I'm not saying the employees are badpeople.
Heck, one of the CEOs said that you you need meto come in subpoena me.
And he's like, I'll testify that you neversigned that document.
You know?
There's good people in there.
Now until the the pressure is put on him as
well.
Yeah.

(49:26):
Boy, a subpoena is a subpoena.
Yes.
You know?
You can't change it.
Hey, man.
If they if they're willing to forge and lieeverywhere else, they're gonna step on a stand
and, hey, buddy.
We're not gonna charge you for we're not gonnacharge you for a felony for, you know, towing
the company line.
This saga continues.
It's just it's just wild.
I I get something from Tyler almost every daynow that just completely blows my mind.

(49:52):
But I always feel like it it it it shows thatwe're having an effect.
Right?
And not just in the courtroom, but I think thispublic pressure that we're putting on with our
social media presences and with these things.
And and, you know, I have some I have somelegislators and other people that I can look
into as well, right, that I've done some favorsfor that I can kind of get out there and to at

(50:15):
least ask some questions, right, and try to getsome answers about who the people higher up
because this goes all the way to the top.
I mean, I know you you spoke about, you know,conversations that your your mom had with our
with our ex governor as well.
Like, there's this goes all the way through.
It's every
He got he got got one that's coming up that,John Hanson.
You know, I reached out to him.

(50:37):
He's getting ready to run for governor.
Where where you at, John?
You know?
You're you're gonna you're gonna wanna be ourgovernor, and you got corruption smack dab in
your face, and you you where you at?
Your job is to help people, not ignore it.
Well, avoid and ignore.
That's that's their MO.
If it doesn't fit your perfect little picture,you avoid it, and, you know, you paint the

(51:00):
picture of the white picket Fetton's family andand then you turn around and you destroy it.
Well, when's the next court date?
Hopefully, isn't one unless it's in the SupremeCourt because the way this is, they can't judge

(51:22):
themselves.
No.
You know?
That's a maximum of law.
I mean, it's pretty pretty straightforward.
No.
There really shouldn't be one.
There really shouldn't.
There's too much wrongs.
Good.
Then we keep up the pressure.
But if if it has to, August 11 Mhmm.
Murdo, South Dakota.

(51:43):
People, please show up.
Last time they were using intimidation tacticsand and and just exert pressure, and I only had
I only had two people show up besides mygrandmother and her friend.
And I very appreciated of it.
You know?
I know it's a long way to go.

(52:04):
Hey.
I know Murdo well.
I know I know Murdo well.
I'm there several times
a year.
Next one, August 11.
Isn't that rally time?
Right around there.
Yeah.
Right after.
It's the Monday after rally.
So I'm gonna probably be seeing how many vetswanna come support Yeah.

(52:25):
Family.
Yeah.
You know?
Well, we're
gonna organize that.
I'll be out there for Raleigh talking about it,and we'll see if we can get fill that courtroom
up with support and really let them feel thatpressure because it's it's the only thing
that's gonna get something done.
I think until these public officials see that,we're not going away, which I think would be

(52:46):
perfectly evident at this point Unless it makeme go away.
Out there.
Mob
bugs again.
Well but they you can't silence it.
And, honestly, at this point, if they it's likeyou've said before.
At this point, if they try to unalive you, thenyou become a martyr.
Right?
And you get even more cost.
So they almost cause more problems forthemselves by trying something.

(53:10):
So Incorrect this stuff.
They can they can restore justice to you know?
They're insured, and plus they're not theprincipals.
You gotta think who are the principals.
No one knows where the money goes to and howthese mutual funds and where it all goes.
Again, they're not have to be protecting peoplethat are foreign that are enemies to United

(53:34):
States, and that's who they're protecting, andthey don't even know that they're doing it.
Well and
we're gonna put an
end we're gonna put an end to all of it, andwe're gonna start with a a court date, August
11, in Myrtle, South Dakota, where we'll beshowing up in force to support our brother
Tyler and to be there for you guys.
If they won't let you have cameras in there,then we will have plenty of eyeballs to

(53:57):
document and witness what is happening insideof these courtrooms.
Tyler, Aaron, I appreciate you guys coming onagain today, continuing to share this story,
and, for for being brothers, man.
I appreciate, Aaron, for you coming out.
I mean, out of the kindness of your heart,you're not being paid to be here to do any of
this for for

(54:17):
Too important.
I I wouldn't I mean, I'm giving up.
I make $20,000 a month a month doing softwareengineer.
I've been a software engineer for thirty fiveyears.
So I, you know, I basically taken time off toget this done because it's that important.
I mean, I the money doesn't mean anything atthis point because it's a joke anyways, but
it's, this is important.

(54:38):
This is important to everybody.
I mean, if we can make this, we can help thewhole entire country because this is you know,
we're we're we're standing on that positionright now on that mound.
And there's there's so much more.
Well There's so much more.
Right.
And if you listeners wanna get more, make sureyou're following the channel.
You can jump on and find Tyler on Facebook.

(54:58):
He shares a ton of documents there.
We've been doing our best to keep up and try torepost those things on the Patriot Broadcasting
Project Facebook page as well.
Well, you know, the reason why I was dumping somuch is because it's like, I I I had to get
this out before they put me away and beforethis appears or they steal it or
They're in your computer.
Disappear.
They're in your phone.

(55:19):
They're they're everywhere.
So, yeah, good good on you for for getting thisstuff out there, and we're gonna continue to
push it on our pages.
And we we recommend that you share shareeverything as well to get it out there just for
the simple fact of you don't know who thiscould help.
You don't know how many people in your life aredealing with some of these
same I'm not a Clinton friend.

(55:40):
I'm not a friend of the Clintons.
Well,
there's no statutes of limitation on fraud, andthere's no latches on equity.
So anybody that's been harmed over the lastten, twenty years, this is our chance to deal
with your grievances because, basically, it itimplodes their house of cards Oh.

(56:03):
That's laying on quicksand.
They were they were trying to right right atthe last minute, they weren't expecting me to
make make mail.
Right at the last second, they were wanting toput stipulations that I couldn't leave the
Sixth Circuit Court system.
Like, I had to stay in their jurisdiction.
And they had to stay away from me.
Yeah.
It's like

(56:24):
and they're like, oh, Aaron's known to haveguns.
I'm like, that was my fucking gun, you dipshit.
Doesn't have no weapons.
I gave you all my guns, you dumb people.
They're just.
Tyler, you're as real as it gets, man, and Iappreciate you continuing to share this story.
I know it's not easy.

(56:44):
I know it's not easy to go through what you'vegone through, but, it takes a lot of balls to
to put yourself out here and and to deal withthis publicly.
A lot of people would have laid down already,and you continue to stand.
And we stand with you, and I speak for all ofour listeners out there as well that we are
behind you.
I I cannot thank our listeners enough forsharing this and getting these videos out there

(57:10):
and continuing to follow along with this Imean, it's just a saga.
This is an epic tale that needs to be told, andit doesn't stop with a with a resolution to the
Gulkins Ranch.
This is going all the way to the supreme court,and the Patriot Broadcasting Project will be
following it all the way.
So thank you for tuning in, boys.

(57:30):
Thanks for being here.
We'll chat soon.
And, I mean, if I don't see you during rally,I'll be there in Murdo, August 11.
So you guys take care.
Stay alive till then, Tom.
Thank you, brother.
Thank you, brother.
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My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

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