panic attacks. i can t deal with this. i want to know what happened. can you tell me anything? yeah. the only thing, you know, that i know is that a lot of stuff was stolen from the house. okay. ralph stuck to his story. a deadly home invasion. and then i found her. yeah. and that s, you know yeah. i tried to deal with that. shannon pressed ralph for details. the one guy that hit me that i saw from the front was taller than me. okay. and he had a dark complexion. you know, he had marks on his face. and then something that didn t sound quite right. and i don t know. and that s and it felt like a split second. a split second? remember, in his letter, ralph said his cap tors held him and abused him for nearly two days.
stolen from the house. okay. ralph stuck to his story. a deadly home invasion. and then i found her. yeah. and that s, you know yeah. i tried to deal with that. shannon pressed ralph for details. the one guy that hit me that i saw from the front was taller than me. okay. and he had a dark complexion. you know, he had marks on his face. and then something that didn t sound quite right. and i don t know. and that s and it felt like a split second. a split second? remember, in his letter, ralph said his cap tors held him and abused him for nearly two days. in my mind, if you re not going to tell me what happened, and you re going to dance around
brought, to a cage in the jungle. not this cage, we actually built this one, but to the exact specifications given to us by gerfa. five feet by five feet, some old broken boards for a floor. jungle sticks lashed together with bark. no roof, no protection from the elements, but a cage as secure as any cage in any prison. there were guard tents on either side of the cage, a sniper on the hill above watching them, and rebeside the cage a seemingly bottomless cliff planted with land mines said their cap tors. i know you had been walking for 36 hours or something. how did you feel? well, exhausted. physically, spiritually, mentally. and then they present you with this. and you see this piece of crap and this guy told us, get in. and you want to resist, you want
of captivity. last night u.s. intelligence assets let them know they were used. five cap tors were killed, we re told. the cap tifs were freed. he thanked pakistan and claimed victory. however, there are questions about the circumstances surrounding this and obviously welcome developments as well as complications involving the family s repatriation. so what more are you learning about how this family was rescued? we know that u.s. intelligence had been tracking them, seeing movements in this remote, mountainous area, this tribal region on the border of afghanistan and pakistan. so they notified the passenger sustains and before the u.s. could launch some kind of plan or rescue operation, three hours later, to their viez, they hear from pakistan that it was over and that this had the family safe. there are plenty of questions, especially at first around that. how did pakistan manage to end this so quickly.
we know that there was no prisoner exchange and we know at that the taliban had wanted that. we also know for a long time the u.s. has believed that pakistany intelligence has main taped some ties. it turned out this was a dangerous and violent operation, and here is what the family of the canadian josh boyle told them about his, you know, last moments after five years in captivity. as he was being moved with his wife and three kids in the trunk of a vehicle. listen. the five of them being in the back of a car, being transferred, and a car being stopped, surrounded by josh described 35 pakistani army officials, a fire fight breaking out, that all five cap tors had been killed by the pakistani army, and all five of our boyles