dissent to the government approach on that and adams using those laws threw journalists into jail and congressman was arrested and indicted and jailed under extradition laws and jefferson aggressively resisted those. 1800 election was bitterly contested. there are lots that s can be said about the character of the various parties at the time. but at the end of the day, it was in the electoral college context, that produced a bitter that led to hamilton s death. we have seen similar politics and the country was in a dangerous place and required aggressive work to rectify. there are a lot of close parallels and it took hard work on the part of jefferson and came into the presidency to right the balance to restore
entity that has unlimited funds to do whatever they want, whenever they want. and basically right now he s in the hands of the united states marshal service and i promise you he will not be getting away. he will be coming back to the united states. he will be going to trial. and he will be going o to federal prison for the rest of his life. i guarantee you e he won t escape from our prison. thank you so much. he s charge d with drug trafficking, related crimes and multiple federal courts including arizona, new york, florida, the list goes on. joey jackson is sitting next to me. he s one of our wonderful legal minds. one of our legal analysts. so as we re talking about el chapo, talk to me about the extradition laws. we do have very good relations between mexico. there s a treaty in 19 80. as a result of that and the good relations, what you have to
people that they interacted with, i think it was natural, you saw this terrible bonding of these two psychopaths with one idea in mind, getting out. you know, is it worth getting out for three weeks, where one s dead and the other is critically wounded? only one of them can even answer that for us. i want to bring back bill stanton, former nypd. bill, we know that david sweat was shot a couple miles from the canadian border. he was we can guess that he was probably headed that way. what did he think would happen if he got to the border? i mean, we have extradition laws. i don t what is frustrating to me is that they didn t have a concise a, b and c plan. it s almost like these video games where you get to one level, you know, once they got out and apparently, they weren t picked up, they had no backup plan. but as an earlier guest said,
investigation. it sounds like a bad political thriller, the top line story. he s helping ecuadorian fugitives convicted of bank fraud and embezzlement back in their country. these brothers didn t give him money directly. but they family members kicked in $10,000 to him directly and $100,000 to the democratic party. martha: they say this family was the subject of political persecution in ecuador so they are seeking to protect them here because they believe they were wronged in their home country and the extradition laws that apply should not take precedence in this situation. but it raises a question that goes back before that, rich. is it routine for senators and congressman to call the
press. so it s all, you know, exceptionally weird and tortured right now. but all these extradition laws have loopholes. this is really much more of a political situation between the u.s. and these countries and it s going to take some kind of political resolution. we don t even know if he s on that plane, not on that plane. but we should know fairly soon. all right, guys. thanks very much. we re tracking a flight that may be carrying snowden to havana. it s due to land fairly soon. the world will be watching. we have a reporter at the havana airport. critics want to know why isn t president obama saying more publicly about snowden? there are pros and cons. we re taking a closer look at the possible reason why he s taking a back seat right now. [ male announcer ] with wells fargo advisors envision planning process,