Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listenings.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am six forty the Bill Handles show on demand
on the iheartradiop.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
And this hand is staff.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
I am six forty Bill Handle here on a Saturday morning.
I'm back from vacation and come Monday, boy, do I
have a ton of stuff to talk about. Oh yeah,
I was on a cruise that was international, and oh
you should hear what people have to say across the
(00:30):
world as to what's happening here in the States. But
I'll do that on Monday on the Morning Show starting
at six am. In the meantime, this is the Saturday Show,
which means I answer marginal legal questions with marginal legal advice,
and without you it's me just babbling, which I normally do,
(00:50):
but this is legal advice, and I'm a little sick
of giving myself legal advice.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Hey, Bill, I have a tree that No, No, I've
heard it before. Bill. I don't want to do that anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
The phone number here is eight hundred five two zero
one five three four eight hundred five two zero one
five three four, and it is the first part of
the first hour of the show, which is always the
easiest to get into. And so if you have a
question you would like answered. The number is eight hundred
(01:22):
five two zero one five three four. Also because of
this show and the way it works, and sometimes I
go through these phone calls like lightning, because as you know,
I have absolutely no patience. After I've told you how
to get out of your straight jacket so you can
make a phone call, and I've done that a couple
(01:42):
of times, lines are open, so this is a great
time to do it.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Eight hundred five two zero one five three four.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
This is handled on the law marginal legal advice, where
I tell you you have absolutely no case. Now, the
big political story and also criminal justice story that has
come down over the past couple of weeks in this
last few days is the former FBI director James Komy,
(02:15):
who has become an avowed enemy of the president, and
the President has been saying for now what a couple
of years that Comy is a bad guy. He is
the worst FBI director in the history of the FBI.
He is a liar, he is someone who's disreputable. I mean,
(02:40):
one of the things that this president does, he does
not mince his words, as you know, and I'll be
talking more about that. I mean, I don't care what
side of the political spectrum you're on, and whether you
agree with the president or not. You've got to admit, boy,
there hasn't been a president who has used that kind
of language in describing his enemies and who are his enemies?
(03:04):
People have said anything against him or people in government
prior to and during his administration have gone after him.
He calls that the weaponization of the Department of Justice
and the FBI, and so he says, now to bring
(03:24):
justice to the FBI and the Department of Justice. What
we're going to do is go after the bad guys,
and who are the bad guys? Anybody who disagrees with him? Komy, Boy,
does he disagree with him? So Komi has been indicted.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
For a federal charge.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
And the indictment reads that he obstructed a congressional investigation
into the disclosure of sensitive information. There was a leak
that came from the FBI. The deputy FBI director, when
investigated in front of Congress said it was Komby that
authorized it or even told him to leak it, and
(04:05):
Komy said absolutely not. Based on that, the Department of
Justice is saying that proves that Kobe is lying and
he lied in front of Congress. Now, usually you need
some corroboration. There is none from what we understand. Certainly
the administration has can come up with it. So what
the Department of Justice is doing is wants to go
(04:28):
to trial and say, here's our proof. Mccayb is telling
the truth, Comy is lying. Anything else, mccab is telling
the truth, Comy is lying. Based on that, we should
convict him. Okay, there's that, and then he's also being
(04:51):
charged with corrupt leadership and just a bunch of other stuff.
Do I think there's anything there. I don't know if
there is there not. I don't know if there is
or not. But based on that, from what the experts
are saying, there is absolutely no way that this can
move forward. The next step for the president, next step
(05:15):
for the Department of Justice is they're going to effectively
be the subject of emotion to dismiss in front of
a federal court. It's that simple, nothing more, nothing less, Okay, Sam.
What we have going here is we have a you know,
a real problem with our with our the phone calls
(05:38):
coming in and for me seeing them on the computer,
and we're trying to figure it out on this side
and okay, And what we're going to do is I'm
going to hear in my ear at what is going
on until we get this straightened out. I didn't even
have to tell you that, you know, because it's happening here,
this is inside baseball. I shouldn't have said a word. Okay, Eric,
(06:01):
welcome to handle on the.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Law going And Bill, I was I had a previous
call with you regarding my father that was in the
hospital and he was overdosed and it kind of sent
him back and he had to stay in the hospital
an extra ten days. He subsequently died, you know, like
six months later. He never recovered. And now the insurance
(06:23):
company copied us on a letter to that they sent
to the hospital saying that they will not pay for
his stay because they overdosed him. I'm worried about them
coming after us the hospital and what is the chances
that that's going to happen, because I have no idea
how much it's going to cost.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
It's going to cost a fortune.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
It's gonna it's gonna cost more money than you will
ever see in five lifetimes.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
Right, That's that's the problem hospital plan for that, you know,
I think.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
He needed medical malpractice attorney is what you need, like
right now.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
And that's so the thing is that the attorneys won't
pick it up because my father was so old.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
He was ninety yeah, and I understand that now they
may go after First of all, they're not going to
go after you.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
They're going to go after your dad.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
And it's pretty difficult for your dad to pay money
once he's dead.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Did he have a substantial estate?
Speaker 3 (07:18):
Probably about seven hundred thousand.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Okay, Well that's enough for them to try to get
the money. So at this point you're I would say,
talk to a pregnant a bankrupt pregnancy attorney. Boy, you
can tell her my head is that back to my
old law practice, a bankruptcy attorney or a creditor debtor attorney,
(07:41):
because number one, the attorney can get you out of it,
probably or get his estate out of it. Worst case
scenario is that money is going to walk out the door.
The other thing the attorney does is negotiate like crazy
with the hospital. The lawsuit may have to go against
(08:02):
the insurance company because they're figuring out a way not
to pay the malpractice. As your insurance has said, he
was so old and so decrepit as far as they're
concerned that he was on his way to death anyway.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
How healthy was he?
Speaker 3 (08:19):
He was ambulatory, but he did fall quite a bit
and that was the problem. He has a history of that.
But he never was able to walk after they overdosed
him because he was laid up in bed so long.
He's never recovered.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
By the way, is there proof of the overdose? Is
that part of the medical record? Yes, okay, so you
know it's going to be difficult. You're not going to
get a malpractice attorney on that because he's dead. So
that's kind of difficult based on the defense because he's old,
decrepit and has a history of falling, and the argument,
(08:53):
the defense argument is going to be, you know what, mean,
we may have over dosed, but it really didn't have
much to do with that. It was all his other complications. Yeah,
we overdosed it, but it's minor stuff. So you're dealing
with a medical malpractice attorney on one hand, because the
family has the ability to sue for wrongful death, et cetera.
And then the issue is protecting that seven hundred thousand
(09:16):
dollars whether because the medical people will the hospital will
probably go after that and so what do you get
to do. Well, I'll tell you what you get to do.
You get to defend yourself to hold the seven hundred
thousand dollars. By the way, who is the recipient or
the potential recipient of the seven hundred thousand dollars My brother, myself. Okay,
(09:38):
so you have a vested interest in this for sure. Okay,
go to the credit or debt or attorney that I'm
going to suggest.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
This is Handle on the Law, KFI.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
I am six forty bill handle here on Saturday morning,
phone number eight hundred and five two zero one five
three four.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
Rough.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
Pretty good start around for a couple of weeks on vacation.
So it's nice to be back again. And I'm sure
some of some of these phone calls have been building up,
much like a pimple with stuff in it that you
sort of squeeze.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Now, we won't do that.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Eight hundred and five two zero one five three four.
Welcome back, Handle on the Law, Marginal legal advice, Danny, Hey, Danny,
welcome to Handle on the law.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Hey, go ahead, Okay.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
So my wife, my son and I moved into a
nice house, bought a house quite neighborhood and then a
couple of years later, some neighbors moved in across the street.
We welcome in the neighborhood. And then a couple months
after that, they started harassing us, accusing us of throwing
rocks at the house, all kinds of stuff. I'm gone
from four am to seven, seven to seven thirty at nine,
I tell them when do I have time to do that?
Speaker 6 (10:56):
So they just.
Speaker 5 (10:57):
Kept harassing us. Eventually they put a bucket out front
that they wrote white trash on faced towards our house
for months at a time, and then wrote on the
back by Felicia towards my wife. They kept harassing a wife,
calling her nasty stuff to her and you'd get her
nasty ass back in the house. Like they kept saying
stuff like that, screaming across the street at her. So
(11:19):
we listened to the sheriff. We've got a restraining order.
And then it seems like they're kind of back at
it again. But what I'm trying to tell you is
they put cameras all around their house, and when they
came to court, they were trying to play the victims.
So they showed a picture of my house and in
their camera it was only my backyard. They put a
camera camera up on their chimney at the highest point
(11:43):
and they're across the streets, so it's facing over the street,
not even looking at the street into my backyard.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
What can you tell you about it?
Speaker 1 (11:50):
Okay, you have a restraining order already against them.
Speaker 6 (11:54):
Yes, we did get them.
Speaker 5 (11:55):
But I did mention these cameras to the judge.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Okay, and so they okay, so the judge order them
to remove those cameras, Is that correct?
Speaker 7 (12:03):
No?
Speaker 5 (12:03):
He what I was gonna tell you. I mentioned it
to the judge, showed them the picture that they were presenting,
and all the judge says it's illegal to have a
camera and someone else's backyard, But he never ordered them
to take it down. He never took it down.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
Yeah, I see, because at this point.
Speaker 5 (12:17):
Judge was already sticking over and he didn't want to
hear anymore.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, what you do? Yeah, all right, you
got a problem. Because this judge doesn't want to hear it,
is not going to do anything. And had the judge
issued an order restraining order, you can go various places
with that.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
You got two choices.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Number one, hopefully the police will get involved, and what
you do is document every single time something like that happens,
all literally across the board everything that was said, bring
your phone with you, record everything, if you can, put
your video up, and as soon as they start, start
(12:54):
videoing them and go on and on with that, and
then that goes to the police department. They're not going
to do anything the first time, the second time, the
third time, and then based all that on all of that,
you then go back to the judge that is it's
a mess. The law is really sloppy when it comes
to this sort of thing. For example, I had a
(13:15):
situation in a condo my kids were living at and
the upstairs neighbor was said music was too loud. What's
too loud? They said it wasn't too loud. He said
it was too loud. What's too loud? I got a
sound engineer to in fact bring in and measure the decibels,
and even then it was a mess. So I think
the easiest answer, Well, let me ask you this. Do
(13:36):
you have a rifle.
Speaker 5 (13:39):
Yeah, we have a lot of guys.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
Okay, well maybe you know, maybe those lights get shot out,
the cameras get shot out.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
I don't know, Uh, you I don't know.
Speaker 5 (13:49):
Who the hell is friends made that joke.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
It's not much of a joke. It's not much of
a joke.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
You just have you just have to make sure that
you can't be connected to it.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Hey, do you have a dog, a killer man eating dog?
Speaker 5 (14:04):
No?
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Yeah, that's another one to yet, that's another one.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Do they have any puppies?
Speaker 1 (14:12):
No? Oh, that's a shame.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
I mean, you can give them a puppy, so they
fall in love with a puppy, and then you can
have your dog eat the puppy. I mean, there's a
lot of ways of going doing this outside of the law,
because you got a mess on your hands.
Speaker 5 (14:25):
Yeah, they have camera in my yard. I can't do it.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Why don't you do the same thing, Hey, why don't
you do that?
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Why don't you do the same thing, put up a
camera in their yard, same thing, harass them?
Speaker 1 (14:38):
I mean, what else you gonna do.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
You're gonna go through the police, which is, by the way,
all of that that legally. This is why I call
the show marginal legal advice because of all that that
I gave. The point is you can make it as
miserable as you can for them within the law, which
is what I did, and or go through the system,
which you really have no choice, and all you can
do is make it.
Speaker 8 (15:00):
I know.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
But you keep on asking, you keep on filing, you
keep on filing, you keep on complaining, and then.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
You go into court and then here it is your honor. Yeah. Yeah,
it's horrible.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
It's horrible with neighbors like that, and you just have
to figure out a way of making them miserable instead
of sitting back and letting him kick your ass, which
is what's happening. Yeah, I know, no easy way of
doing it. Okay, this is Handle on the Law.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Caf I am six forty Bill Handle here on a
Saturday morning.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Plenty more of Handle on the Law.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
To go and welcome back Handle here and your marginal
sometimes stupid and actually always kind of questions. Fair enough,
Let's do it. Mary Anne, Hi, Mary Anne, welcome to
Handle on the Law. George, Yeah, George, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
It's right.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
I used to be Bill, but now my name is George.
What can I do for you?
Speaker 8 (16:09):
Okay, my son passed away this year February twenty Oh,
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
How old was he? And he passed away.
Speaker 8 (16:18):
He was sixty years old. Oh okay, he made his sixties.
I thank you so much, I will okay, okay. He
received the roundup case money for twenty three five and
he lived with a girlfriend and two more friends. In January,
(16:43):
my daughter had to help him cash the check to
put him temperary until he was okay on his own.
He could only take out two hundred dollars a month.
I went too, well.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
Minute, based on what okay, that determination.
Speaker 8 (17:02):
Made? That determination, I don't know that, okay.
Speaker 2 (17:06):
So somebody and incidentally the money went to him, so
I don't get how somebody gave him an allowance of
two a month.
Speaker 8 (17:16):
He made his girlfriend go in and take out the
money with his card, okay.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
So the money was all okay.
Speaker 2 (17:23):
So the money was always there in his account, yes, okay.
And he allowed her to take the money out and
give him two hundred dollars.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
How much was she taking out?
Speaker 7 (17:33):
Ye?
Speaker 8 (17:35):
Well, that's all I know is two hundred dollars because okay.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
And how much money is left I.
Speaker 8 (17:42):
Don't know, because wells Fargo. We went there, me and
my daughter, and they said we weren't on his account
as beneficiaries, so we could not get any nation. Okay, okay,
my question real fast is about how how I have
(18:03):
to go to an attorney.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
I am, well, yeah, you call them up, but I'm
concerned a little bit.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Who is the beneficiary on the account?
Speaker 8 (18:14):
I have no idea about that. They won't give us
no information because our names are nowhere near his account.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Yeah, you were an English teacher, I know. Okay, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Fair enough.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
I think you have to talk to a lawyer to
start the process here. And you said you have no money.
Speaker 8 (18:34):
There are organizations there.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
Are okay, hang on a minute, there are organizations that
do help elderly that you are new elder abuse, although
that's not the case here. This seems to be a
possibility that money was taken out of the account.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
Maybe not.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
You have no idea, and so okay, hold on a minute.
It's your son. Was your son married?
Speaker 8 (19:03):
No?
Speaker 1 (19:04):
Okay? Does he have any Does your son have any siblings?
Speaker 4 (19:08):
No?
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Okay, So you are the one connected to your son.
A father's not around, correct, No? Okay, so you're by yourself,
all right, So that makes it fairly easy for you.
All right, you have to go to one of these organizations.
Do you have a computer, no, do you know what
a computer is? Yes, excellent, excellent, it's I would go
(19:32):
to your local library and librarian to help you out,
or ask the library to help with the research to
find these low cost, no cost organizations that help people
exactly in your position, and that's the way to go,
all right, Marianne, that's actually a rough losing your kid,
(19:53):
and I don't care how old your kid is.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Parents should not be bearing their children. Jack. Hello, Hello Jacqueline,
Welcome to Handle on the Law.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
Hi, good morning, mister Handel, Thank you for taking my call. Sure,
my question is about an ADU build that I'm trying
to complete. It started in twenty twenty two when we
started drafting the plans. It was starting to be built
in twenty twenty three. So the project began and it
(20:24):
was pretty slow. In December of twenty twenty three, the
architect passed away, so he dies and we had made
some changes to the ADU that were different from the plans.
(20:45):
The contractor that we had was just horrible, so we
had to change contractors, and then in twenty twenty five
we ended up with a different contractor. This this second
contractor was able to pass all the inspections and to
(21:07):
have the ADU almost complete, ready to be rented. So
what happened was I had I had put it up
on Zilow and started to get it, you know, secured
some renters, and we still had not passed the final inspection.
(21:32):
What happened was that when we everything, all the inspections
were passed, but when it came to the final inspection,
it did not pass because it was not because it
was not drawn according to the plants. So the building.
What happened was Building and Safety had one the first
(21:54):
set of plans and there was a second set of
plans that was also submitted only to Building and Safety,
and Planning department had only the first set of plans,
and so when Planning came in to do the final inspection,
they made they had all these corrections, and now we're
(22:17):
stuck where I had to cancel the contract.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
Yeah, you don't have a certificated you don't have a
Yeah you don't have a certificate of depot of occupancy.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Yeah you've got nothing.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
You've got nothing to rent until that certificate is issued
by the city, which means you have a structure that
can be moved into and so you basically have to
find out exactly what they want to do across the board,
because you're going to need the okay from every agency
before you move in, and any one of them can
(22:48):
stop it cold.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
But I don't understand how can it have passed all
these inspections. The whole card was was.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
No idea, no no idea, no idea.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
He wants us to put a window.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
The only depends on what the zoning is. It depends
on what the code is. Does the code call for
a window there or is that just an arbitrary decision
by some inspector someone of safety and planning or yeah,
safety and building.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
I have no idea, but if they're.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Saying you got to put in a window, you look
at whether or not you have to put in a window.
And if you don't have to, and they say you
have to, you can appeal that and then you go up,
but you have to meet code.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Basically, at the.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
Time the certificate is issued, you there's nothing to do
except play their game, Jacqueline.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
You have to play their game. That's all you can do.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
And it doesn't matter what it costs, and it doesn't
matter if it doesn't seem reasonable.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Let me give you a story.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
A friend of mine built a group of homes I
think it was twenty something homes, and he got into
it with the inspector, and the inspector hated him, and
he hated the inspector because he was one of those
guys that punch cops in the chest and say, hey, buddy,
I'm paying your salary.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
That's never a good news, never good news. So you
know what the inspector did.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
He went outside the house and the outside sprinklers have
to be X number of inches over and above the
bottom of the property of foundation. He was half an
inch off. The inspector made him tear out the entire
system and make it half an inch lower. And there
(24:34):
was nothing he can do except do exactly what the
inspector says. If they are within their purview, there is
nothing you can do because if you start doing, if
you start going the legal route, oh you are screwed,
beyond screwed. So just play their game. Yes, sir, whatever
(24:55):
you need, I will do. If it costs too much,
you throw yourself on the sword and say I'm so sorry.
Can you give me a break? Can you allow this
to happen? Can you give me some kind of a waiver.
I would really appreciate it. My mom is dying of cancer,
my dog just got run over, my kid was born
with one leg and he has an arm coming out
of his forehead. I don't care what you say. That's
(25:19):
what I would do because there's no other way of
doing it. You have to play their game.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
This is handle on the law.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
Can't fine handle here on a Saturday morning, right up
until eleven o'clock.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
And it's nice to be back.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
I've been gone for a couple of weeks and I'm
ready to go back into the ready to jump on
the saddle. If you ever noticed, when you go on vacation,
you anticipated, oh my god, it's wonderful. It's wonderful, it's terrific,
and then the vacation hits and it goes. It takes
about ten minutes and the vacation is over, and then
you're back at work and it seems like within ten
(25:56):
minutes it never happened.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
That's the case here, So I'm back.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
In my case, it was five minutes before I kicked
up phone number here. Eight hundred five two zero one
five three four. Eight hundred five two zero one five
three four that's the number to call.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
And we went through some phone calls.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
So we have lines open and jump right in eight
hundred five two zero one five three four.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
That's the number welcome back.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
Handle on the law marginal legal advice where I tell
you you have absolutely no case Justine, Hello Justine, Hi,
Hi are you yes, ma'am?
Speaker 7 (26:43):
So basically, I had about between one thousand and thirteen
hundred dollars stolen from me from a banking app called Chime,
and I got a police support like they had asked
me to do that, and I sent it, you know,
sent them all the information I had and they refuse
to give me back the money that they have like
taken out of my account. It's really kind of completely
(27:07):
screwed my life up. I mean, what can I do?
Speaker 2 (27:11):
Yeah, that's a tough one. I don't know anything about
that app, by the way, is uh yeah, because I
don't use I mean, what I use to transfer money
is Chase, for example. I having a couple of accounts
on Chase, and uh, you know they're you know, it's
a big enough company. So also PayPal is another one
that's pretty legitimate, and Zelle is I've never heard of Chime.
(27:35):
Any particular reason you chose Time instead of the big players.
Speaker 7 (27:41):
I well, I have I have another bank. I mean,
I have maybe federal bank account with them. It's just
I can't for some reason, I couldn't get a PayPal account,
and now I have one. But I'm not really I
had my sorry, my paycheck going to my Chime account.
And there's a reason I chose Time because it seemed like, oh,
this is a legit like growing business. I mean, I'm sorry,
(28:01):
it would be awesome. I mean they have five stars
across everywhere.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
You know, it would be a good.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Yeah, Okay, that's that's not you know, you do your research,
you do your reviews five stars, although you know yelp
review five stars. Very few people do pay attention, should
not pay attention.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
To go the other way. A lot of people pay attention.
So yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
Obviously, the money came out of your bank, right where
was the money originally?
Speaker 7 (28:32):
What do you mean?
Speaker 1 (28:33):
And the money was somewhere.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
That you sent or did you or did you put
the money directly into Chime?
Speaker 1 (28:39):
Was Chime your bank? Okay? Got it? So there? Your bank?
Oh man? Yes, And I don't even know is it
a bank? I don't know. Insured then that's where you go.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
You go to the FDIC instantly, I mean if you
sue a small claims court, Yeah, I mean automatically you
go to the FDIC. What did you do sue a
small claims court? You don't even know where they're based.
That's you know, do they have offices in California at all?
What if they're overseas? The whole thing is overseas, right, Yeah,
there's no way of knowing. So you get to go
(29:14):
to you know, the FDS and see what happens, and
just keep on going. What are they telling you or
are they just a ghosted you?
Speaker 7 (29:22):
No, no, they they'll talk to me, but they'll investigate clue,
investigate my claims. And every time they come back with sorry,
we didn't find anything wrong. And I keep it funting.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
Just keep on going what you're doing, Yeah, what you
do on that? When you just keep on going, keep
on going, while you're filing, while you're filing a complaint
with every regulatory you can.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
All right, so much for that. God, that's a drag. Shelley, Hello, Shelly.
Speaker 6 (29:49):
Welcome, welcome back, and good morny. Thanks for taking my call. Sure,
my daughter is in the military and she was in
a car accident in August twenty two. She was diagnosed
with a concussion and she started having migraines in two
to three days a week, so she which enabled. She
was able to go to work, and the military prescribed
(30:12):
her Rizo trip TN and with no limits. She could
just use it as you kind of like tail and all.
She requested a neuro consult because it's because of the medication.
She wanted a neurologist overseeing her case, but they denied her.
So it fixed the problem and she went back to
(30:32):
work for about three or four months, but then the
migraines returned two to three days a week with the medication.
So finally, after ongoing requests and denials from the military
for a neuroconsult, she finally got one and she was
diagnosed with being overdosed with a resot trip town.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
Okay, so the migraines are you have medical medical information,
medical reports that it is directly related to the medication
they overdose.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
You're with there's no issue.
Speaker 6 (31:05):
About that, he the neurologist.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Doctor, all right, what's your question.
Speaker 6 (31:10):
And so well as sorry that the long term effect
is actually she the neurologists wanted to put her on
a specific medication, and the military denied it. Fast forward
they made they may go through all of these different
medications before the one that he wanted. So this month
she was prescribed the medication that originally wanted and she's
(31:31):
doing great. Okay, But last month the military.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
Said, we have to make this, we have to make
this quicker. Shelley, we're out of time. She lost her
job in the military, correct, yes, okay, so what do
they have her do?
Speaker 6 (31:46):
The clerk stuff? She's highly trained this technical position with
the right Shelley.
Speaker 2 (31:52):
Shelley, we're out of time on this one. Okay, we
spent too much time. So here's what we'll do. We'll
pick it up the next hour and make it as
short as you can, because that's what these questions are about.
They offered her something. It didn't work. She can't stop.
I mean those kinds of those kinds of stories. I
want to set this up. So we'll stay on, we'll
(32:13):
come back and we'll pick it up from the beginning again.
All right, Before we do go, I want to tell
you about Zelmans. Zelmans is well, it's all about fresh
good breath. I mean, for hours and hours every single day.
You wake up in the morning and do you have
morning breath?
Speaker 1 (32:30):
Though, well you don't.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
No, no, you don't it ever ever, never had, So
you don't need Zelmons.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Do you do anything that causes bad breath? Though no,
of course not. You don't need Zelmons. As a matter
of fact, you never have bad breath.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
You don't need Zelmens. Well, the reality is you do,
we all do. And what Zelmans is are these little
capsules that are covered with a good strong mint and
they're partially seed capsules and once you suck the mint
away then or bite into them and they go to
work in your stomach or guess what bad breath can
(33:05):
does start and stay there, and it's a double hit
with Zelmans. It works in your mouth, it works in
your stomach, and boy does it work. That's Zelman's. And
you can't find Zelman's a Trader Joe's or Costco or Walmart.
You can only go to Zelman's. And I always have
my pack available there. It is Zelman.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
See, you don't know if that's really bite them in
he or not?
Speaker 2 (33:25):
Don't you my Zelmans all the time? Go to Zelmans
dot com and use the code KFI for fifteen percent
off your first purchase Zelmans dot com. The code is KFI.
This is Handle on the Law.
Speaker 3 (33:43):
You're listening to Bill Handle on Demand from KFI AM
six forty