was passed 15 year jail term for people who protest or call it a war. we re seeing now what the russians continue to do to alexi a. so, what could happen to her? she s reportedly in court today? i applaud her. she s a hero. that was a very brave thing for her to do. maybe spending 15 years in jail and by the way, i know that building, that television station. i used to appear there before i was banned as ambassador. you don t do that without the passive support of others to allow you to get on that stage where you said millions and millions of russians saw it. if she s brave enough to do that, that means millions of other russians have the same preferences, they just don t want to spend 15 years in jail. doesn t mean that s going to change the war. i don t see how protests will influence putin in the short term but i think it s a sign
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what s the value of this? we know the federal authorities knew something was targeted in garland. they were able to communicate quickly and effectively with law enforcement who are on the scene and able to prepare an appropriate response. so in that instance, the right information got to the right people at the right time and staved off a potentially more impactful and catastrophic event. there are thousands potentially of elton simpsons, also saying there are investigations or people they re following in 50 states. how difficult is it to monitor all of these? i think there s a key difference between the people who are providing more passive support or kind of retweeting links or images or links or other things and other individuals who might be more inclined to become active. that s still an exceptionally small slice even though there s quite a few followers and who
failed community or failed state. they know they can live off the passive support of the community, where the community is not going to call or engage the local police. we had this concept of what we would call a pilot team where you would hand pick select troopers, give them specific training and embed them in the community. it s about winning over the community. they become our eyes and ears and the flood gates have opened for criminal information that we can go after now. my phone is ringing constantly every day either text messages, they ll send me pictures of where they located guns. they ll send me e-mails of who is selling drugs. we drive off. we ve given them a template on how to control the town independently. brian: steve, i want you to finish. steve: here is a sound bite. brian: no, but it s good because we re not leaving that area. we re at war. everybody knew we were leaving, so it was a bit of a risk. these law enforcement officials who have a military background, t
you. how are you? i m good. did you have to do a james bond crazy thing to get into syria? you have to go in illegally. we went in through turkey and joined up with some rebels, but the turks are giving a little bit of passive support. if the turks had seen us, yes, they would have arrested us and that would have been about it and they would have sent us back inside, but i think the turks probably did see us because there were a lot of people crossing the border illegally and are just looking the other way, and they re allowing rebels and a few journalists to go in. and to give you an idea, this wasn t the first time i had been into syria, and i didn t know exactly what to expect, and now this conflict zone, so i brought almost nothing, a pair of socks. one extra shirt, i wanted to keep myself light. i thought i would be hiding under kitchen tables. i went in with the rebels at night, we cross to the other side, rebel flags, guys walking around in rebel uniforms, on
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