00:00:00 Speaker 1: You're listenings kf I AM six forty. 00:00:03 Speaker 2: The bill Handles show on demand on the iheartradiop KFI AM six forty. Don't handle here Saturday morning. We've got three fun hours of complete humiliation and basically calling. Now. I was going to stay calling each other more on No. Now it's a one way street. It really is. 00:00:25 Speaker 1: And that's what makes us so much fun. 00:00:27 Speaker 2: And the phone number here as always, because we're right up at the beginning of the hour, beginning of the first hour, and phone lines are always open. Eight hundred five two zero one five three four. Eight hundred five two zero one five three four This number to call, and we will start. I got a couple of phone calls already, So sometimes we start just with a bang, and sometimes we start with virtually nothing, and then sometimes we start with sort of in the middle. 00:01:00 Speaker 1: All right, let's do it. 00:01:02 Speaker 2: This is handle on the law, marginal legal advice, where I tell you you have absolutely no case. I have been saying ever since the court, the Supreme Court has gone radically to the right with the three justices that President Trump put into office, and the swing has gone from a very liberal court and a lot of liberals forget that that you had the Warrant Court, which is very left wing. It was very liberal, and it swung the other way. And now you have a lot of very liberal republic Democrats who are screaming about how the court is so republican and so biased. 00:01:43 Speaker 1: Well, yeah it is, but it swings back and forth. 00:01:46 Speaker 2: So the issue, this is an issue of religious freedom, and religious freedom in many ways has been bandied about and based on the Constitution that state sponsored religious freedom. You cannot compare the two. You can't integrate the two. It's separation of church and state. So religious religion has always been removed from state activity. 00:02:16 Speaker 1: For example, you can't put the. 00:02:19 Speaker 2: You can't put religious texts into public schools, you can't have the Ten Commandments in front of the courthouse. I mean just not allowed to do that. Well, the current court is moving more and more towards towards expanding the concept of religious freedom. One of the most controversial I think issues and decisions that was made. I'm not obviously, I'm not in favor of this. I go totally the other way. Is the issue a conversion therapy. Conversion therapy the concept is that if a young person or any person is gay or any part of LGBTQ society, that there is something wrong with that person. It is a medical issue. It's a psychological medical issue that has to be straightened out. And one of the ways to straightening it out is this conversion therapy. And it is oh man, it is really controversial. They throw up pornographic films and make you throw up and just to somehow convert you away from that. But the premise is there is something inherently wrong and evil and perverse about being gay homosexual, and conversion therapy is predicated on that. Well, it was deemed to be illegal. You know Colorado, for example, that banned conversion therapy. You can't do that. It's not therapy, it is not helpful, it is hurtful. And that went up to the Supreme Court because religious people are saying, oh no, no, it's religious freedom, we have the right to do this court said, that's right, that's right. The law that ban conversion therapy for gay and transgender miners. 00:04:08 Speaker 1: Violates free speech. 00:04:11 Speaker 2: That those who engage in conversion therapy are now able to do so, and you cannot have a law. This has to do with young people. For the most part, this has to do with young people who are gay in conservative families, and the families then take these teenagers, young people to these conversion therapists who use this type of quote therapy to convert them back into a straight life. Even though, as most of us know, people do not choose their sexual orientation. It's sort of hardwired into them. 00:04:44 Speaker 1: I love this. Oh, they chose to be homosexual? 00:04:46 Speaker 2: Really, why would you choose to be someone who is going to be ridiculed and someone who is going to be prosecuted, persecuted and prosecuted, well, not so much prosecuted anymore, but certainly persecuted. Okay, so much for that. Let's go ahead and take a phone call. Okay, let's do this. We'll start with you, Wayne. Good morning, Wayne, Welcome. What can I do for you? 00:05:11 Speaker 3: Good morning? 00:05:12 Speaker 1: Yes, my eighty year old my eighty year old friend. 00:05:16 Speaker 2: Okay, you speaker phone, you're a oh oh you're on a speakerphone, Wayne, So that doesn't work. 00:05:21 Speaker 4: Okay, there's my hearing aide. 00:05:23 Speaker 1: But I'll call back. No, that's okay, that's okay. I just wanted to make sure we're okay. 00:05:27 Speaker 5: Let me, I'll get ill I can get off of them. 00:05:30 Speaker 1: That was eager. Oh much better, Oh much much better. 00:05:34 Speaker 4: Okay, My eighty year old friend had a wife who died suddenly and unexpectedly. His new duties include opening and going through the mail. He's now discovered seven accounts that he was unaware of, all in her name, from store accounts and credit card accounts, and they're all sending him collection notices now because it's been several months that she hasn't made her payment. He's told that he's getting two answers. One is it's the community's problem and you got to pay it. Other people say you can mail them a copy of the death certificate and a letter saying, don't call me anymore, it's not my bill, and they'll leave him alone. Do you recommend? 00:06:22 Speaker 2: Well, both the right, depending on the circumstances. First, to start with, how much money are they asking for? What's the most money that one credit card is being charged? 00:06:33 Speaker 4: The largest is thirteen thousand? 00:06:35 Speaker 2: Oh okay, all right, well okay, that's enough, all right. That puts it right into some serious stuff. It was a couple thousand dollars. There's just going to leave it alone. You're not going to go for it. But now at thirteen thousand dollars. All right, So what they're going to do. He's going to say, I had no idea. The community is generally is generally responsible. Now there is a situation where upon her application, he has nothing to do with her application. And here's the argument where the community is responsible. This is their argument, and that is in the application she put down community income and therefore rely telling the creditor you rely on our income. If it's just her, then you can argue it's just her, you know, and it has nothing to do with me. I mean, they're still going to go after believe me, they're still going to go after him, which is unfortunate. 00:07:27 Speaker 1: But he is he does he have assets? I mean he's pretty well off or not? 00:07:32 Speaker 5: Yes, he is? 00:07:33 Speaker 2: Okay, wow, thirteen thousand dollars you didn't even tell him about it, and the other ones are in that same range. 00:07:41 Speaker 4: Yeah, from two to thirteen for a total of almost forty. 00:07:45 Speaker 1: Okay, forty thousand dollars. Yeah, that's enough. 00:07:48 Speaker 2: You may want to go to a debtor creditor attorney just to get some letters out and argue there's nothing there because they especially thirteen thousand dollars. 00:07:58 Speaker 1: One, it's going to go to a collection agent. See, Uh, they will try that. 00:08:02 Speaker 2: It's going to go to a collection attorney who works with a collection agency, and there'll be a lawsuit. 00:08:09 Speaker 3: Uh. 00:08:09 Speaker 2: And then there are the defenses that I mentioned, and some you know, some creditors go after it and some don't, and so sort of the boat both right, Wow, how did she get away with that? 00:08:22 Speaker 1: I guess she paid for it? 00:08:24 Speaker 4: Oh yeah, she always answered she opened the mail. At what point he's not he's not going to want to defend the lawsuit. At what point should he give up and just pay it? 00:08:35 Speaker 1: Well, you can't. 00:08:35 Speaker 3: Now. 00:08:36 Speaker 2: Also, you can cut a deal, don't for a That's the other thing he can negotiate. 00:08:40 Speaker 1: You can go to one of these creditor. 00:08:43 Speaker 2: Negotiating companies and cut a deal and have them cut a deal and do a little research as to which are goodwins and which aren't, and then start negotiating with a credit card company. Hey, you know the guy is he doesn't care about his credit anymore. He's going to defend. Why don't you take fifty cents on the dog will go away? There's always that available to So there are some choices. And how long were they married? 00:09:06 Speaker 1: How long were they married forty years? 00:09:10 Speaker 2: Forty okay, Well, if my wife had done that, you know after four years. 00:09:16 Speaker 1: Okay. 00:09:17 Speaker 2: I want to share with you a problem that I have had, and you may be right in the middle of it too. Where you're going to be, and that is putting your senior loved one into an assistant living facility. I did that with my mother, So I didn't know where to go. I mean, where do you put your mom? So I put her one near my house and that didn't work out at all. So I had put her in another place that was also near my house, and that one barely worked out. 00:09:41 Speaker 1: I mean it was pleasant. And so let me ask you, do you know where to go? 00:09:45 Speaker 2: If you're going to be putting your senior loved one into an assistant living facility? 00:09:49 Speaker 1: Do you know where? Probably not? 00:09:51 Speaker 6: So let me. 00:09:51 Speaker 1: Suggest looking at SLC Placement. 00:09:54 Speaker 2: This is a company that helps you find that excellent caring environment, reduces the amount of time it t takes to search and evaluate and decide which one would be the best. And this is serious stuff too, and it takes a long time to find that place. And by the way, you're looking at spending sixty nine thousand dollars a month. So if you happen to live close to a loved one, or maybe you have more money, it's on you that that happened to me. So I moved my mom from one place to another. That was a nightmare too, that second search. And so uh, let me suggest looking at SLC placement. They're gonna help you by referring you to the right home at for that love one, your loved one, at. 00:10:30 Speaker 1: No cost to you. The referral is no cost to you at all. 00:10:34 Speaker 2: And when the time comes, maybe it's now, you'll appreciate the help of SLC placement. 00:10:39 Speaker 1: Boy, I wish they were around when I did this. 00:10:41 Speaker 2: SLC Placement called eight eight eight two three three sixty nine forty eight eight eight two three three sixty nine forty slc placement dot com. This is handle on the lot. 00:10:54 Speaker 1: It's KFI AM. 00:10:55 Speaker 2: Six forty Saturday Morning phone number eight hundred five two zero one five eight hundred five two zero one five three four and welcome back. More Handle on the law, marginal legal ad vice or I tell you you have absolutely no case. 00:11:16 Speaker 1: Dave, Hey, welcome to the show. 00:11:19 Speaker 4: Dave. 00:11:19 Speaker 1: What can I do for you? 00:11:22 Speaker 6: Bill? I was driving down a two lane highway in my pickup truck one morning, doing about forty five fifty mile hours. Nothing behind me, nothing coming, and on the passenger side, on the right side was a steep gravel driveway and a mail carrier truck Postal Service truck was coming down and it kept going slower and slower and slower, and I just, you know, computed it was going to stop, and it did. And about time it stopped, it pulled out and it was only ten yards in front of me. I didn't want a t bone it, so I cut hard left fast as I could, and Mitt would have missed him, but he was making a left wiped out the whole side of my truck. And at first I went to a couple of lawyers and they wouldn't take it. They said, we don't take tort cases. 00:12:17 Speaker 2: Well, that's certainly you went the wrong lawyers. That's a personal injury. Were you injured at all? 00:12:23 Speaker 3: No? 00:12:24 Speaker 1: Oh, then you're just trying to get your car repaired. 00:12:27 Speaker 6: Yeah, And uh so I went to a lawyer. You know, they told me Postal Service doesn't have insurance. I got the government tort fund and all this anyway, at first, it sounded like he was really gun ho and a couple of times contacted me he said, it's look, it's gonna take a long time, and uh, but I'm gonna get some money for you. Well, time locked on, time locked on. I touched base with him a couple of times. He said, they offered us ten thousand, and you couldn't even it was a ninety eight, but it was in really good shape. You couldn't even buy in good shape ninety eight for even close to ten thousand. 00:13:09 Speaker 1: Well is that way? 00:13:09 Speaker 2: I got a car that was a car that was it was nineteen ninety eight model. Is that what you're saying? 00:13:15 Speaker 6: Yeah? Yeah, nineteen ninety eight pickup truck? 00:13:18 Speaker 1: Pickup truck? 00:13:18 Speaker 5: How is that? 00:13:19 Speaker 1: How much? How much are those worth? 00:13:22 Speaker 6: Well? Twelve to fifteen for a decent one when accident happened. Here's a kicker. He yeah, easily fifty. You could get fifteen up to eighteen for. 00:13:32 Speaker 2: One car for a car that's uh, for a pickup truck that's like twenty what eight years old? Something like that? 00:13:40 Speaker 6: That's correct. Wow, Okay, my buddy got online. We looked at a bunch of them. Anyway, all right, anyway, Okayny, I'm not getting any response for. 00:13:49 Speaker 1: Right, I got it. Okay, So your question, kicker. 00:13:52 Speaker 6: It's been My question is it's been three and a half years, Bill, oh. 00:13:56 Speaker 2: Three and a half years, and now you're calling, okay a couple of things. Uh, there's no lawyer in the world that's going to take your case. The lawyer that said he's going to do something is out of his mind. And I'll tell you why. All you're doing is getting as far as legal services are concerned, all you're doing is getting the value of your truck. 00:14:13 Speaker 1: That's what you're going to get from the government. 00:14:15 Speaker 2: And you've got to make a claim and you have to against the go against the federal government. Okay, that's for starters, and that is there are lawyers that won't touch the federal government even if they came and took your head off. And there was a great case. So where let me ask you, where does the lawyer make any money? You get you get the value of your car. And now how does the lawyer get paid? Well, I mean literally, how does the lawyer get paid. 00:14:41 Speaker 6: He gets paid out of what I get paid. 00:14:43 Speaker 2: All right, So well, it's but okay, you're going to go against the government. So let's say, you get fifteen thousand dollars and he takes the third. So he's going to go go against the government and basically work for minimum wage because when you go against the Feds, it's it's almost impotus. So, yeah, you've got nothing there. By the way, how about insurance. You ever heard of insurance under you? Underinsured uninsured motorists and you simply turned over your insurance company. 00:15:12 Speaker 6: Yeah, I didn't have uninsured motors. 00:15:15 Speaker 1: Oh okay, Well, but you have a car that's worth. 00:15:20 Speaker 2: Okay, that's why you want That's why people get uninsured motorists for sure. 00:15:26 Speaker 1: All right, Lisa, you're up. Welcome to handle on the law. Hi, Lisa, Hi, I. 00:15:31 Speaker 7: Have a quick question about taking a picture my boyfriend's daughter in law. I was taking pictures of her kids, which I posted before on Facebook and tag them, you know, tag the daughter in law on my boyfriend. Well, her great grandmother. My boyfriend's mom calls me up and said, I'm going to go to the police. I'm going to go to your employee. All right, a picture of my great great grandchildren to some one. So I was curious, am I allowed to see? 00:16:03 Speaker 6: Yeah? 00:16:04 Speaker 1: I mean where was the picture? Where was the picture taken? 00:16:07 Speaker 7: It should a public place, you. 00:16:08 Speaker 2: Know, fine, Yeah, yeah, tell you she can. Yeah, and I'm surprised she didn't say. And we're gonna put you in jail for twenty five years, maybe even the death penalty if I can get the district attorney to agree to put you to death for taking a picture of my grandchild. 00:16:23 Speaker 7: And then that the daughter in law even said she overreaccup. 00:16:27 Speaker 1: Yeah, you're fine, You're fine. You should have just started laughing. 00:16:31 Speaker 7: Thank you so much. 00:16:32 Speaker 2: Yeah, call her back, call her back and beg her to take you to court or to call the cops. You know what, you should call the cops at least, you know, if they're bored. 00:16:42 Speaker 1: They can. 00:16:43 Speaker 2: Yeah, it only be an interesting conversation when they get off of off their shift. All right, let me let me tell you for a second now about Zelman's and your bad breath. 00:16:54 Speaker 1: Uh, you have bad breath. You wake up in the. 00:16:56 Speaker 2: Morning, you have morning breath during coffee. I did this morning coffee breath. And so how do you deal with it? Well, I'm gonna suggest Zelmans. Oh, and don't forget the foods that you eat that cause bad breath. So what is Elemens all about well. It takes care of the mouth, the bad breath in your mouth. Like mints do little capsules that are coated with this very strong MINTI coating and then you suck on the mint part. When that's gone, you then swallow or bite into the capsule and its partially seed oil. It goes to work in your stomach because when you have when you eat spicy foods, you know, the food goes into your stomach, it doesn't just disappear. And Zelmans takes care of that too. That's Zelmans. And I've known these folks for over thirty years, so there's no problem standing behind this product. Go to Zelmans dot com z L M I N S. Zelmans not available in the stores, but fresh clean breath for hours, both from your stomach and your mouth. 00:17:50 Speaker 1: Zelmans dot com. This is Handle on the lot. You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM six forty. 00:18:01 Speaker 2: Kay bye DM six forty bill Handle here, good morning, it's a Saturday. 00:18:05 Speaker 1: Okay, we've reached that point. 00:18:07 Speaker 2: We don't do it too often, but we are there, and that is because the phone calls are not pouring in and occasionally that happens here's what you get to listen to before we do that. Sam, I just want to tell everybody here this is my favorite song. This is a song that generates phone calls. And I don't know if you ever saw the movie Mars Attacks, where heads are literally exploded. This is what happens to you when you listen to this for the next X number of minutes while we're waiting for phone calls. So the number here is eight hundred five two zero one five to three four. Eight hundred five two zero one five three four, And now sit back and enjoy sexy baby check it, baby check Now. We've done this for row fifteen minutes at a time, and so I'm gonna suggest that your head is either gonna explode, which is always fun, hugely entertaining, or the number here is eight hundred five two zero one five three four. It's eight hundred five two zero one five three four. You can also sing along too. Oh that's great, See Heather. 00:19:22 Speaker 1: We do it. I support your choices, Bill, and I know this is uh. This is the second go round. 00:19:30 Speaker 2: I've been doing this show now for decades and this is the second choice songs. The other one we did for Oh You know what I used to do. You remember the Jerry Lewis telethon here from many many years ago. Yeah, and he would raise tons of money for muscular dystrop feet and he always ended head. 00:19:51 Speaker 1: Oh yeah, yeah. We would do that for four minutes, so good. Yeah, as the phone numbers the storm. Yeah, and we would repeat that. 00:20:02 Speaker 2: Song, by the way, So we went from there to uh, baby shark, the lines are coming in a little bit. 00:20:11 Speaker 1: Let's give it another minute for baby. Yeah, why not? I mean I played this all the time when my daughter was little. So all right, we'll take some phone call Sam, thank you. Okay. 00:20:29 Speaker 2: Yeah. 00:20:29 Speaker 1: See some people couldn't see it worked. 00:20:31 Speaker 2: It worked, see it It does because people they just don't want their heads to explode, all right, Nicole, Hello, Nicole, welcome. 00:20:40 Speaker 8: Two quick questions. First quick question, what's the best place online for me to search for Lean's deed, hopefully free of charge? 00:20:51 Speaker 2: Okay, well, you start with going online and you start throwing in a couple of search words lean deed free of charge. 00:21:03 Speaker 8: I know that's the part I forgot to add. 00:21:06 Speaker 2: Okay, what do you want to do? Well, let me ask you, what do you want to do with your lean Uh? 00:21:11 Speaker 8: If there are any liens on the house. 00:21:13 Speaker 1: Oh, okay, that's easy. 00:21:15 Speaker 2: That is that's uh that there would be the county Recorder's office that has that, and you just you can put your name up there and say leans title and you'll see if there already or not. 00:21:29 Speaker 8: Okay, Well, a question approximately how much money am I looking at for an attorney for probate, no will, no trust? Approximately a million dollar estate? Got any ballpark? 00:21:39 Speaker 1: Yeah? 00:21:41 Speaker 2: You know, it usually is on the the It's usually based on the estate, how big the estate is and how complicated the estate is. 00:21:50 Speaker 1: What are you looking to probate? 00:21:51 Speaker 8: Very simple? One house and maybe you're saving a check account. 00:21:55 Speaker 2: No, it's easy. You probably do it yourself. Actually, I don't even know if you need an attorney for that. How many beneficiaries are there? 00:22:01 Speaker 3: Yeah? 00:22:02 Speaker 2: How many beneficiaries are and yeah, you know what, I would just yeah that you can do that on the internet. 00:22:08 Speaker 1: I don't think you need an attorney. 00:22:09 Speaker 2: I mean it's gonna it's gonna cost you a couple thousand dollars, but no one's going to argue it. 00:22:14 Speaker 1: I mean you're the beneficiaries. 00:22:15 Speaker 8: If I do it myself, it will cost a couple of hours. 00:22:18 Speaker 2: No, no, no, must want to charge yourself a couple of thousand dollars. You know the fees are minimum there, you know, in one hundred dollars, several hundred dollars range, two hundred dollars range. 00:22:28 Speaker 8: Okay, I didn't know I could do it. 00:22:29 Speaker 2: Yeah, but try it, try it on your own first, because that's a real simple I mean, you have to open up a probate. 00:22:34 Speaker 1: Yeah, you have to open a probate. But if who's who died, well he hasn't yet. Okay, when are you going to kill him? 00:22:45 Speaker 2: Oh? 00:22:45 Speaker 8: Well, I don't really want to say. 00:22:47 Speaker 1: It on the air, That's true. I wouldn't either, A good point. U Yeah, I wouldn't say it on the air, okay, Ben Hi Bend, welcome, good morning. Regarding I got a judgment on a civil case. I won the judgment. 00:23:05 Speaker 2: Then the lawyer I just wanted to know, is he responsible to renewing the judgment? 00:23:11 Speaker 1: To renew No, abstutely not. 00:23:12 Speaker 5: Well. 00:23:12 Speaker 2: First of all, you can't renew it for ten years. That's for starters, So the lawyer is probably gonna be dead. Judgment is good for ten years, and it is not up to the lawyer to renew it. 00:23:21 Speaker 1: It's on you. Oh I'm the one half to do it. 00:23:25 Speaker 4: I'm not. 00:23:25 Speaker 2: Yeah, or you hire someone to do it. It's just a form. It's just a form. It's easy peasy. So yeah, I didn't know. Yes, Yeah, that's good. And how old is the judgment? It's old behind ten years because now the guy has stuff sure his name that I could get. 00:23:43 Speaker 1: Okay, how many waste? How many? How many years is it? 00:23:47 Speaker 5: It's been about twelve years down at Yeah. 00:23:50 Speaker 2: Well, if you didn't if you didn't affirm, if you did not restate the judgment, reaffirm the judgment, it's over it. You can't sue, right, I mean you can't collect. Your judgment is finished. Yeah, so you're completely screwed. I got you called twelve years after the fact. No problem with that one at all. Oh, Mark, I'm Mark. 00:24:09 Speaker 1: Welcome. 00:24:10 Speaker 3: Hey, how you doing? Yeah? Ye, Sair? 00:24:12 Speaker 1: What can I do for you? 00:24:14 Speaker 3: My Jim, I was with my gym and a year ago they gave me a new plan to say they would lower my monthly payments, but they didn't cancel the other plans. So I've been paying for two payments for over a year. Just found out about it now. And they said they can only find me for the last ninety days, the last three weeks. 00:24:34 Speaker 1: No, no, I don't think so. 00:24:35 Speaker 2: Now they're going to argue that it's on you and you should have known. 00:24:39 Speaker 1: But they can't keep that money. 00:24:41 Speaker 2: No, no, they can't say ninety days back. 00:24:45 Speaker 1: And what's their basis for ninety days? 00:24:47 Speaker 2: Is that the contract that says you can only go back ninety days or that's our policy. 00:24:52 Speaker 1: Did they give you a reason for it? 00:24:55 Speaker 3: They said policy only. But I thinking, so I can get the rest of the money. 00:25:00 Speaker 2: Yeah, of course you can get the rest of the money. You can get the rest. Yeah, because from the time they started billing you twice. Uh, that's unjustin Richmond. I mean that's uh. 00:25:08 Speaker 1: No, they can't do that now, it's just not right. 00:25:12 Speaker 3: Yeah. 00:25:12 Speaker 1: So you're a title too. Uh you have to pay for the for the second plan. 00:25:16 Speaker 2: But the first plan they they didn't cancel, and they should have canceled because you're the ones or they're the ones that sold you plan number two. And you know based on the fact that, uh, they put you in a new plan, why would you pay for a first plan? 00:25:33 Speaker 1: What if they put you in another plan? Are you now going to pay for three plans. Right, yeah, so no, you're you're. 00:25:41 Speaker 2: You're fine, I just and assue them if they say no, you go, okay, I'll take you a small claims court. 00:25:46 Speaker 1: What judge is not going to say, uh no to that argument. Now. Uh. 00:25:51 Speaker 2: This phenomenon of receiving spam text messages which happens to all of us, deceptive emails all of us, Uh, clearly not good. 00:26:00 Speaker 1: We all hate that. 00:26:01 Speaker 2: And scammers only text an email when they have your information. So how do they get your informations information? Well, data brokers sell it to them. So you want to put those data brokers on notice to stop, and that is they they have to stop. And there's a company that does that for you, and that's Incogny and Cogni is an online service you sign up with that puts hundreds of data brokers on notice to stop the harassment once and for all. And I mean we're talking hundreds, and I use Incognity for just that purpose. 00:26:31 Speaker 1: So this morning, for I went on the air, I looked at my account. 00:26:35 Speaker 2: My account has just had removed three hundred and ninety five data brokers who are no longer collecting my data and selling it and Recogniti doesn't and in Cognitate doesn't slow down either. They continue to put more and more data brokers on notice. And so here's the end result. My data is not online like it used to be. Data brokers aren't selling my data because they don't have my permission they can get to it. So protect you and your family. Go to incognit dot com slash handles. Save sixty percent when you sign up and use my name handle in cogni I N C O G N I in cogny dot com slash handle. 00:27:10 Speaker 1: And if they can't find you, they can't scam you. 00:27:13 Speaker 2: That's in cogny dot com slash handle. This is handle on the law can fine am six forty bill handle Here it is a Saturday morning right up until eleven o'clock. Rich DeMuro, our tech guy comes aboard from eleven to two, and then it's Neil Sebakra the Fork Report All Things Food, where Neil shares with you how to get fat. And it's a love dealing with Neil. He and I hang out a lot at restaurants, all right, Oh, phone number eight hundred five two zero one five three four eight hundred five two zero one five three four welcome back. Handle on the law, marginal legal advice. 00:27:56 Speaker 1: Jimbo? Is that Jimbo? Is that your name? You know? 00:28:00 Speaker 5: This is Queban? My name is Cleebban Torpie? 00:28:04 Speaker 1: Oh god? This sure? Why not? All right? Guiban Torpie? I have that right? What can I do for you? Okay? What can I do for you? Okay? What can I do for you? 00:28:18 Speaker 5: My biggest problem is last night I went to McDonald's and I ordered the five dollars meal and they charged me six dollars and seventy four cents. 00:28:27 Speaker 1: And I said, what's the problem? 00:28:30 Speaker 5: And so when I got to the window I got the food. We had to scramble for all of our change in this ashtray and show the manager. He says, here's your five dollars mail. I said, why you call it five dollars meal? It's six dollars, the boy told me when I paid. He says, now they raised it to six dollars. Can I sue them for false advertisement and get free food for one year? Two years? 00:28:52 Speaker 8: Oh? 00:28:52 Speaker 1: No, you can do better than that. I'm telling you. 00:28:55 Speaker 2: There have been tastes against McDonald where they've been hit for false advertising, not just free food for a year. I mean, I think one of the cases it just came down, if I remember, it was two hundred and fifty thousand dollars that the plaintiff won, and it was over a happy meal for the kids. It was the happy meal I think was three ninety nine. And then I'm charging four to twenty five or something an extra quarter. Yeah, yeah, you've got a good case. Yeah you really do. Okay, thank you, my friend. Yes, Hi, Julie, welcome to handle on the law. 00:29:37 Speaker 9: Hi, Bill, can you hear me? 00:29:39 Speaker 8: Okay? 00:29:39 Speaker 1: I can, Okay. 00:29:41 Speaker 9: My question to you is it's more your opinion. But I was in an accident on the four or five. The woman rear ended me lightly and everything. Her insurance company is great. They contact me a few times about all the loose hands and I said I wasn't hurt at least three or four times, and then I thought I was with them, and then the final phone call came and they said they hurt. I was hurt. So at this point I just went along with it and said yeah I was, and described my injuries my back, my neck, and that. 00:30:13 Speaker 1: Didn't eat story. 00:30:15 Speaker 2: Julie, hold on, you described the injury in your neck and you're back that didn't exist. 00:30:21 Speaker 1: Do I have that right? 00:30:23 Speaker 3: Right? 00:30:23 Speaker 9: I just said I had a sore neck and back, and I. 00:30:25 Speaker 2: Get okay, so I understand, okay, So now what? 00:30:31 Speaker 9: So they said they called me back in a week with the settlement, and they they did it. So I called them back about a week later and I ended up they offered me a thousand dollars because I hadn't been to the doctor. I didn't lie and say any of that, but I said, I told I told him I've been getting massages, and they they offered me a thousand dollars and I said, I asked, can I have a little bit more? And they gave me fifteen hundred dollars. But I was wondering, in your opinion, because I've done better than that. 00:30:57 Speaker 2: I you know what, not really, I'm surprised they gave you that much because usually under these circumstances, where there's no proof you haven't been to the doctor, they don't offer a lot. 00:31:11 Speaker 1: I don't think so. But here's what I want you to do. 00:31:12 Speaker 2: Because the people that run handle on the law dot com that I'm going to talk about in just a moment, Mark, particularly the lawyer, does it. I had lunch with him the other day and he found stuff in insurance policies that I didn't even know existed. So well, I don't think there's anything there. But I'm not a personal injury lawyer. The fact that they're offering you fifteen hundred dollars may put it into a whole different league because they just don't just arbitrarily offer people money like that. So go to handle on the law dot com and at least talk to them, and I'll tell you I know you're doing great or not, and that's what I think is going to happen. They'll say yes, but I want you to check up on that if that's true or not. So talking about Handling the law doc on. By the way, I get questions all the time. And notice what I always say. I always ask people get in a car accident and they go, Bill, I got in a car accident. I got hurt, And I always ask how badly were you banged up? Or were you banged up? Well, no, I wasn't hurt at all. Well that's not much of a case. Or I was hurt, And now what do I do? What you do is go to a personal injury lawyer is what you do because when you are hurt. Now you need some help, that one you're not going to do on your own, and let me suggest Handle on the Law dot com. The lawyers that Handle of the Law dot com are vetted and if there is a problem, I make the phone call to find out if if there's anything wrong or if there's anything wrong, I say, Okay, what's going on? A lot of lawyers out there advertised? I mean tons of them out there? How do you know which ones to go to? And some are excellent and. 00:32:51 Speaker 1: Some not really? So who do you trust? Who do you go to? 00:32:56 Speaker 2: Well, that's why I created handle on the Law dot com. You could also call eight eight eight eight eight eight eight six six eight eight eight eight eight eight eight eight six six eight handle on the law dot com. This is Handle on the Law. 00:33:12 Speaker 1: You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show. 00:33:14 Speaker 2: Catch my show Monday through Friday six am to nine am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.