Also, AmCon is shit. They thought they had the cultural moment and just got their ass handed to them by the Heritage blowback. Their Chief of Staff buddy that probably wrote Robert's reply is already out, and the Board at Heritage is just beginning the whoopass.
They're carrying on right now about Venezuela, I guess they think the Monroe Doctrine is the original ZOG policy.
I think they're right in that article though. Lots of Israelis are involved in US organized crime, and Jewish criminals in the US tend to flee to Israel, like Eddie Antar, "known as Crazy Eddie, fled to Israel in February 1990 to avoid prosecution after being indicted on securities fraud and illegal insider trading charges."
Israel and the United States have an extradition treaty. The original treaty was signed in 1962, and it has been amended, notably by a protocol signed in 2005, which expanded the scope of extraditable offenses and addressed conditions for the extradition process. Under this treaty, both countries agree to extradite persons charged with or convicted of offenses that are punishable by imprisonment for at least one year in both jurisdictions. However, Israeli law generally prohibits the extradition of Israeli nationals. To address this conflict between domestic law and international treaty obligations, Israel’s extradition law was amended to allow extradition of its nationals only upon certain guarantees, such as the possibility for the individual to serve their sentence within Israel if convicted. The treaty and its amendments also contain provisions preventing extradition in cases like double jeopardy, expired statutes of limitation, or where extradition would violate public interest concerns. Although the treaty obliges extradition, practical and legal challenges arise in implementation due to Israel’s protective stance on its citizens, often resulting in Israel prosecuting suspects domestically rather than extraditing them. In summary, Israel and the U.S. do have a formal extradition treaty that allows for reciprocal extradition of criminals, but Israeli domestic law places restrictions on extraditing its nationals, requiring negotiations and legal guarantees for such cases.
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