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Dog Chapman extradition to Mexico

bczoom

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He was arrested by US Marshals last week (and is now out on bail) on charges related to his capture in Mexico of rapist Andrew Luster.

Should the US extradite him to Mexico to face the kidnapping charges in Mexico (for the abduction of Luster)?

It sounds like Mexico wants to extradite some captured drug pins to the US. Was there a trade for Dog?
 
bczoom said:
Should the US extradite him to Mexico to face the kidnapping charges in Mexico (for the abduction of Luster)?

NO.
The Mexicans will not let us extradite a Mexican from Mexico - we should play by the same rules.
 
Wannafish said:
NO.
The Mexicans will not let us extradite a Mexican from Mexico - we should play by the same rules.
But it sounds like Mexico is going to send us some drug kingpins. I wonder if Dog was a trade. :confused2:
 
:cry:...this is an extremely difficult time for me, my neighbourhood hero is being threatened.....

In Dog We Trust....!!!

NO, he shouldn't be extradited......pffft:rolleyes:
 
He violated Mexican law and that makes him a criminal. Like any criminal that flees to another country, he should be brought back to the country that the crime was committed to stand trial. They should give him a fair trial and then put him in jail, just like the people that he went after. The biggest problem that law enforcement has with bounty hunters is that they think that they are above the law and when they make a mistake, they, the bounty hunters, think that they shouldn't have to pay the consequences of that mistake. He was arrested in Mexico for bounty hunting, which is an illegal activity in Mexico. They posted bail but never returned for their court hearing in July 2003. He and the others, jumped bail in Mexico and they, of all people, should know the consequences of jumping bail. My only question is if they will also jump bail here in the United States and flee to another country that doesn't have a extradition treaty with the United States.
I wonder if Court TV will trump A & E with the trial?? Knowing Dog, he will try to sell the movie rights before the next time he sees the inside of a court room.
 
Junkman said:
The biggest problem that law enforcement has with bounty hunters is that they think that they are above the law and when they make a mistake, they, the bounty hunters, think that they shouldn't have to pay the consequences of that mistake

I think a bigger issue is the lack of laws pertaining to what bouty hunters can and cannot do, particularly if they come into YOUR house by mistake.

Personally, if they lock him up, the less you would have to see of him on T.V, which would be a good thing.
 
dzalphakilo said:
I think a bigger issue is the lack of laws pertaining to what bouty hunters can and cannot do, particularly if they come into YOUR house by mistake.

PUSHING THE BOUNTIES

SEPTEMBER 12, 1997
NEWSHOUR TRANSCRIPT

The push to regulate bounty hunters, Lee Hochberg of Oregon Public Broadcasting reports.

LEE HOCHBERG: The four are bounty hunters, or more formally bail recovery agents. They work for bail bondsmen, for companies that lay out bond or bail money for those accused of crimes. Their job is to capture and haul into jail criminal defendants who've skipped on their bail. In return, they get 10 percent of the value of the bond. The bail recovery business is being pummeled after an incident in Phoenix over Labor Day.

WOMAN: They kicked in the door, and I mean, they just opened fire on him. Chris didn't have a chance.

LEE HOCHBERG: Five men wearing black ski masks and body armor kicked down the front door of a house, held three children at gunpoint, and in a gun fight shot dead a young couple in bed. The invaders told police they were bounty hunters seeking a fugitive and mistakenly entered the wrong home. Arizona residents like Ron Barnhart were outraged.
In all but three states--Nevada, North Carolina, and Indiana--they operate with virtually no legal constraints, routinely entering homes without search warrants. They can do that under an 1872 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that permits those hired by bail bondsmen to seize a bail jumper, pursue him into another state, arrest him on the Sabbath, and break and enter his house.
 
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