Quote:
Originally Posted by Jason Marcel
Sorry, I misread that, it was a line about a visit he got from a consul from Canada. However, people are extradited back and forth all the time. It's part of our friendly ties. It's not an order, so much as a friendly arrangement. But they do happen.
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Actually it's an extradition treaty. The US can extradite people to Canada and Canada can extradite people to the USA, but the USA cannot extradite a person in Canada to Syria.
Basically what it comes down to is that he should have been taken to Canada just as his airline tickets said. He was one of their citizens. Canada denied him entry, so he was extradited to Syria where he was also a citizen.
I don't agree with the judgement, he should have got at least $100 million, not $10 million IMO.
What the Canadians did was reprehensible. They denied one of their own citizens entry into their country and he ended up in the place he fled from in the first place. But what the Syrians did was even more fucked up.
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