Yes, I read it on the way here. While Dog may have been technically in violation of Mexican law, this is a matter of judgment and priorities. There are a zillion and one laws being broken in the U.S. and Mexico every day. It's a matter of using your judgment, establishing priorities, and yes, justice. People like Dane may be technically correct, but in this case, that means nothing. To arrest a man like Dog for bringing back a rapist scum who is being sheltered in Mexico is just plain wrong. It is not justice, it is just some kind of sick pandering by somebody to somebody, and it has to be about money.
100% correct!
That also nails it on the head...
100% right IMO.
At least somebody sees the obvious.
Here's another story about the case, that people should read. Excerpt regarding the FBI manhunt -- the FBI received the same tip that Dog received, and was on the trail legally with Mexican Government approval:
We were surprised, but not embarrassed. Hes in custody and thats the bottom line, said supervising FBI agent Bob Mack, who, along with other officials, offered several excuses for not getting to Luster before Chapman: Theres lots of fugitives in Mexico. They were unsure of the legitimacy of the tip. They were hours away from catching him themselves. And, to top them all, Luster was a rapist, not a terrorist.
The story I reference is very sympathetic to Dog Chapman, but the facts embedded show that Dog was really just trying to make a name for himself and get some money, and while it suggests the mexicans were looking the other way with Luster, it offers no concrete evidence of that.