charge for domestic terrorism. i personally don t think that we need to make a group that are have extreme thought that they should be illegal like isis and al qaeda. that s the first amendment. it s the violence that the fbi looks for, it s the violence they need to get in front of and they re very good at doing so. undercover activities have been used for decades in dismantling the mafia and dismantling criminal organizations, drug organizations, computer and cyber crimes. it is a tool that once you get the authorities to do that, and there s a lot of check boxes, it is very effective way of dismantling an organization. and look, january 6th revealed who was willing to take it from free speech to action, right? that s what we saw in this case there. so tom, thank you so much for being with us this morning. tom o conner. thank you very much. have a great day. you, too. the olympics, they re a mess right now.
alarming increase in hate crimeses across the country, many targeting members of the asian-american, pacific islander and jewish communities. some cases these crimes are carried out by individuals we darkize as ethnically moat vited extremist to confront this threat we ve taken an approach focussing on our traditional investigative efforts through our civil rights program and domestic terrorism hate crimes fusion cell we created about a year and a half ago, but also enhancing our law enforcement training, public outreach, and support to our state and local partners. our efforts to stem extremist violence are on top of our continued and extensive work to disrupt violent gangs, drug organizations, and human traffickers whose criminal acts devastate families and communities. for many of you, violent crime remains the most significant and most pernicious threat you face
you so long to get there. i think if you look at this issue seriously, washington, d.c. is the last place that s willing to deal with a problem that everyone has been acknowledging for years. so i think grassroots america is ahead of us on this. and also i think that the solution comes from the bottom up with both sides pressuring both republicans and democrats to get the job done. you know the bill that has been introduced in the house to make comprehensive reform happens to be called the safe justice act, alison. here is what it does. it limits long mandatory minimum drug sentences to the leaders of large drug organizations. it gives judges more discretion when sentencing nonviolent offenders. and it strengthens alternative programs like drug courts which help addicts get back on the right path. how important is this legislation? oh, it s absolutely huge, reverend. we really have an opportunity to
issues, it s the health issue and drug cartels that exist. and there are international drug organizations. well these organizations let s take the escape you re referring to. this guy is part of a most powerful drug network in the world. they are the source for heroin all over america. most is coming in from mexico and south america, through mexico. this cartel controls most of it. these guys are the steve jobs steve jobs of drug trafficking. in other words, they ve got this down to a science. when we started decriminalizing marijuana in this country, mexico used to be the source for marijuana. the bottom fell out of that market. they saw an opportunity as americans became addicted to painkiller pills to be able to grow poppies and replace marijuana growth with poppy growth, more powerful more profitable and move into that market in a very sophisticated
determined it s a blind spot of the surveillance camera. he ducks out of sight and never emerges again. so seconds later that s when officials determine he was missing. he dug out of view and into this custom-made tunnel if you will that stretched from the prisonen itself to that partially built home about a mile out from the location. carol? and this druglord has many ties ft. united statesto the united states including his wife. tell us about that. reporter: she s described as a beauty queen, a u.s. citizen raised in mexico a family with ties to several drug organizations. we know that guzman and this young lady actually married in 2007. he was in his 50s. she was 18. they got married in mexico. then she went to the united states maybe to california to give birth to two daughters and we know that she in one way or another, directly or indirectly