before the 6th. pence pushing back every time. was it your impression that the vice president had directly conveyed his position on these issues to the president, not just to the world through a dear colleague letter, but directly to president trump? many times. and he had been consistent in conveying his position to the president? very consistent. and then the new memos show ing pence s legal and political advisers spending weeks whether pence could block or delay the electoral vote count. their conclusion doing that would break multiple laws. the author of that second memo, former counsel to the vice president, greg jacob, will testify today. so will federal judge jay michael ludig, who rejected a theory by trump adviser john sman that pence could unilaterally reject lectors. and if he tried any way, the new york times reports that emails from eastman predicted a heated fight in the supreme court. much more on that, and the connection to justice thomas wife
options would there be? an options would there be? in extradition would be way options would there be? fifi extradition would be way down the line. there is no extradition treaty between pakistan and the uk. given at this point that we are just at the stage of the police wanting to speak to these three individuals, the next stage of course would be, can they just the next stage of course would be, can theyjust bring them home to do that? in order to do that, if they don t come voluntarily, the stage most likely would be extradition. in order to be able to do that, the uk authorities have to build up enough evidence to prove to the courts in the uk and convince them and convince the court hearing pakistan but there is a case to answer, which would then be that both sides would have to agree that there would be an extradition. speaking to police here who are very familiar with the extradition procedure and have worked with uk police before, they have told me that it can take years someti
consent that. is the most serious charge and why this is being moved to a crown court. almost all criminal cases start here at magistrate court where is they ve seen by judges or adjudicated by judges of the peace rather than judges. but this one in the crown court means it s a more serious charge. it carries a penalty of far more than ten years. this charge i mentioned could be as much as life in prison for kevin spacey, if he s convicted. but what also is important is that he was granted unconditional bail that. means the court believes and has confidence he will show up in four weeks to that other crown court down the street from where i am now. the reason why they believe that is partly because he showed up today. that is what is so important today, kevin spacey didn t wait to be arrested in the united states to go through the whole extradition procedure.
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