mexican culture. he s a little boy that sold oranges on the street and rises from absolute nothingness, can t read or write to being a billionaire. that s extremely captivating as a mythology for poor working people in a very impoverished country. he started in the drug trade in 1970s and was arrested in 1993. but el chapo was able to run his cartel from a high security mexican prison for eight years. and then in 2001 his legend grew when he escaped, hidden in a laundry cart. the way he escaped was like a movie. he s covered mexican drug wars and el chapo for years. i mean it s pure gold for a legend, right? el chapo was the master of bribery.
a difference. but the reality is that unless you stop demand these young kids that are getting addictsed that have no idea what they re taking, this is going to be a very long battle. it starts with the schools, the ed educators. even though he left the dea nearly four years ago drew still has security concerns. afraid? no, i wouldn t say afraid. just hyperaware. you know, ready for anything. and ready for his place in law enforcement history. a dea agent who was obsessed with the hunt for the most wanted drug lord in the world. i think that s where people had gotten caught up before is that it had just become almost infatuted with the man, with the legend, the myth. and for me that was never the case. it was about the challenge.
myth, the legend, tim o brien, the man we ve been waiting for, who has seen his taxes. his book trump nation drew a lawsuit from trump claiming he was not a millionaire that lawsuit was dismissed in court. good to see you. good to see you, yes. i want to talk about the terminology, how they lay this out which the secretary shall furnish the committee with any return or return information specified in such a request. and the key word here is shall, ie, must. this stems from the teapot dome scandal in the 1920s when the federal government decided it was time to keep an eye on the executive branch because of scandals around financial self-dealing in the warren harding administration. it dates back to that, and it is purely about congressional oversight of the executive branch. and it s well within not only the constitutional guidelines about the way that the congress should act with regard to the executive branch, it s been instituted in some of the law that came out of the teapot
verdict on the accused drug lord, el chapo guzman. brynn, they ve been negotiating for some time. what s the verdict? reporter: they ve been deliberating for over 30 hours. last week, yesterday into today, we know there are ten counts they are considering for the man who allegedly ran in the mexican drug cartel for two decades, el chapo, which has really garnered national/international attention. people as far as california have come here just to be in the courtroom as the man, the myth, the legend, as some people have really referred to him as, but of course he s facing serious counts here, including drug making, distribution, running a criminal enterprise, as well as murder, conspiracy, so there is a number of charges that the jurors have been considering for the last week into this week. and we re just waiting to hear what they have come up with.