User talk:Rdbrown1

I chose the article of Joaquin Guzman aka El Chapo because of the high controversy that surrounded him, and his prison break a few months back. Just recently it was reported on social media that El Chapo wanted to fight against ISIS terrorist, but that information was never officially released to be true. The most controversial edit to the page was his second escape from prison back in July, and how the plan was executed perfectly. Straight from the article, " he had escaped from a tunnel leading from the shower area to a house construction site 1.5 km (0.93 mi) away in a Santa Juanita neighborhood.[194][195] The tunnel lay 10 m (32.8 ft) deep underground, and Guzmán used a ladder to climb to the bottom. The tunnel was 1.7 m (5.7 ft) tall and 75 cm (29.5 in) in width. It was equipped with artificial light, air ducts, and high-quality construction materials.[191] In addition, a motorcycle was found in the tunnel, which authorities think was used to transport materials and possibly Guzmán himself." That information itself is shocking, yet clever to construct a plan, just to help one man escape. They way the public reacted to this news, is that they thought it was the most elaborate plan, and news sources said that it was highly expensive to construct. The events posted in this article correlated to real world events, and how most prisoners could never have an escape route built for them. The most shocking thing about this article was that the government was offering $60 Million on his bounty, and up to $3.8 Million for any information that lead up to Guzman's arrest. From the article I read that the accomplices that were indicted were, "police-officers employed within the division of intelligence, and another two, were employed by CISEN"