far. but we have two key interests here. americans it appears were involved in the assassination of a president. regardless of his politics, regardless if he was worthy of it, that is a strong criminal offense. the other is that the colombian recruitment by dea agents or dea agents recruiting colombians and the potential involvement of a florida-based security company violates u.s. laws. and so the dea is going to have to do a scrub in terms of who they had, what were they paying them, were they still on the payroll. there is some reporting from cnn that one of the informants actually called the dea during this couple-day period. so we need to figure out what involvement the u.s. had in terms of not knowledge, but in terms of just who this guy was. i mean, a lot of people work as informants, good and bad people, right? right, exactly. what s the significance of the fact that they were
remained. it was time to go in. a small assault team went in on the ground floor and were met with fierce fire that you can hear, from the handful of colombians that were still inside. the hour-long fire fight scattered window, concrete ceilings and walls, in the end the government says at least three colombians died in the fighting. the next day, with taiwan s permission, authorities went into the embassy. our source says authorities checked cctv cameras and found nearly a dozen kilocolombians i room who ended up giving up without more fighting. nearly a half dozen still haven t been found. now, jim and poppy, we have been talking over the last few days, of course, about one of the things people are asking here in haiti, well, how was this convoy able to leave the presidential residence so easily. the source we were talking to said the reason why that convoy was allowed to leave is because at the time security forces didn t know that the president