The Jordan Harbinger Show - 997: Christopher Ahn | A Marine in Kim Jong-un's Crosshairs Part Two
Episode Date: May 30, 2024Marine veteran Christopher Ahn explains why he got involved with helping North Koreans defect to the West, and how this has put him in danger. [Part 2/2 — make sure to catch 1/2 here!] What... We Discuss with Christopher Ahn: In 2019, activist group Free Joseon broke into the North Korean embassy in Madrid with the goal of helping staff defect to the West. But the mission didn't go according to plan and had to be aborted. Back in the US, Christopher Ahn was informed by the FBI that North Korea had discovered his identity as a participant in the botched embassy raid and planned to assassinate him. His identity was likely revealed when the FBI shared it with Spain. Christopher is now facing extradition to Spain on charges related to the embassy incident, based on statements from North Korean officials. However, the credibility of those statements is questionable given the likelihood they were coerced. If extradited to Spain, Christopher fears for his life from North Korean agents. His legal team is arguing there should be a humanitarian exception made to the extradition, given the unique circumstances, though this is an unprecedented legal argument. Despite the challenges he faces as a result of his actions, Christopher remains dedicated to helping others in need. While his particular path is not one most will be called to follow, we can all reflect on how to courageously leverage our own skills and circumstances to uplift and empower others in need. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/997 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
I thought we were cool, and then two weeks later, I get a phone call from the agent saying, like, hey, I just need to let you know that North Korea has discovered your identity.
And we have confirmed reports that they are going to try to assassinate you.
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Today, part two with Christopher On, who broke into an embassy to rescue North Koreans who wanted to defect.
A crazy story, if you have not heard part one yet, you're going to want to go back and do that.
This is part two.
Also, later on during the episode, his lawyer, Neon Rim, makes an appearance of when you hear the female voice.
That is her.
she's his attorney taking on this crazy case and trying to keep him out of prison and out of harm's way
and away from North Korean agents who want to kill him.
She's got a work cut out for her.
Here we go with Christopher On.
The story of the Madrid Embassy mission.
I would love to hear a little bit about how this went down because I think, first of all,
when this hit the news, everybody read that story and did a double take.
Like, wait, people broke into the embassy in Spain, the North Korean embassy.
Is this real?
I almost thought this didn't happen.
It almost sounded like one of those click-baity pieces that turns out to be fake news.
And I just assumed this would evaporate, turn into a big nothing burger and go away.
But that is not what happened.
Tell me what happened.
I went there because people were asking for help.
There really isn't so much more in terms of motivation other than that.
When we got there, we were supposed to be in and out very quickly.
And things happened.
and we needed to make sure that we were putting the people who we were trying to help safety as paramount,
and then after that, obviously, our safety.
The people who went there to help them, with me included, was doing this because these people were in a very desperate situation.
If you're a North Korean official and you were raised in a privileged position in North Korea,
and you're essentially told your entire life that North Korea is the best.
And you live your life surrounded with propaganda that basically says that like,
where you are is where you need to be because it's the best and you should feel lucky for where you are.
You're a Korean person and we're the best in the world.
And then they go to these countries in the West and they're surrounded by the reality of the fact that their entire life has been a lie.
these people are put in a position where you have to deal with the fact that what do you do with this information?
You grow up your entire life with a specific perspective and a way you want to live your life in a privileged position.
And then you go somewhere and you learn that everything is a lie.
And you know this better than I do.
The people in the embassy, they have to fend for themselves.
They go there and they have to earn money by doing the most,
menial things because they can't survive without it.
They get busted selling heroin and stupid crap like that.
Yeah.
Because they're bringing things in through like their diplomatic pouches and stuff.
And so none of the stuff that they can do is on scale or anything like that.
They're just kind of living hand to mouth.
They're living this life where there's a stark contrast of what they were told, how they were raised,
and now being surrounded in a world that is a complete contradiction to that.
These are North Korean officials.
We can go on and on about how terrible North Korea is.
These are also just people who have the same motivations that you and I do.
We want to make our lives better for those who we care about the most.
And when they're in that situation, what are they supposed to do?
It's not like they can go to an American embassy and just say like, hey, I don't want to do this anymore.
Like, you can't do that.
Like, their entire life was about that America and the West is the enemy.
and we all know that they leave behind human collateral.
So if they do something that's against the regime
or they do anything that is considered not proper,
then there is some heavy consequences that they're going to be facing.
And oftentimes it's not even going to be them.
It's going to be their family members.
Right.
So for people who maybe don't know what you're exactly referring to,
diplomats from North Korea have to go abroad
and leave a spouse, a child, their parents, whatever, back in North Korea.
and the unspoken or possibly very explicit deal is if they defect,
those people go to prison and die there.
That whole thing and how that revolves led down the path to when that choice was given to me,
when that phone call came and said, these people, they have nowhere to go.
Their fate, if they continue down the road that they're on, is sealed.
If they try to defect, then they're either going to be executed
or the people back in North Korea are going to be executed,
or they just resign to their fate and just go back to North Korea
and knowing the fact that their children and their grandchildren
and their great-grandchildren are going to be in that life living in North Korea
when there is this whole world of opportunity and a better life for them out there.
In a weird way, it's a very common immigrant story,
just with the stakes turned up all the way as high as you can get.
That makes sense.
You're essentially thinking,
I need to help these people, I need to rescue these people, they can't escape on their own,
is the best idea then to say, what if they didn't escape? What if they were kidnapped? Is that
kind of the idea behind this? I think you're starting at a position with that question that I came
up with the plan or that I was involved with creating that plan. Like, I showed up that morning.
Oh, okay. The way that this works is that, like, in the past and in every other kind of activity
that I, you know, helped out with, they would send me a message saying,
hey, we need your help. And I would say, okay, let me check my schedule, see what I can do.
And I would show up. I would perform in the way that I expected to perform there. And then we'd
call it a day. And then I go back to live in my life. When they originally asked me, I actually said,
no. I didn't have time that weekend. I was involved with a startup and we had some meetings with
some possible investors. I'm just a normal guy, right? Like I'm not running around trying to raise a
rebellion for North Korea and stuff. No time for an embassy raid. I'm just the guy, right? And so
the call came in. So I moved some things around and then I bought some plane tickets and I showed up.
And when I showed up that day, that's the day that they briefed me on what was happening,
what the requests were, what the plan was. And then off we went. So up to that moment,
you didn't know exactly what was going to happen. No. You arrived saying, I want to be of service.
Yes. And when I get there, they're going to tell me what
the plan is. Yes. They told you the plan and then you said, okay. Yes. Got it. And then what happened?
And again, I want to make sure that I'm very clear in the fact that, like, I am not trying to
distance myself from Fritjon whatsoever. I never considered myself some kind of card-carrying member
or that I'm on like the team to create, like, what the group's going to do and which missions we
decide to do and whatnot. Like, I'm as much of a member of Fritjolzun as I am a member of
Habitat for Humanity. If I go out and help build homes over the weekend,
Does that make me a member?
I mean, I guess, right?
But, like, I'm not going and deciding what and how and things of that nature.
Yeah, that makes sense.
So when the call for the Madrid operation came in, as I understand it, because I wasn't on the planning of this, is that one of the main things that they wanted to prevent was something like that happening again, that the family unit is able to be maintained and intact.
And that these parents aren't given this prisoner's dilemma kind of situation where they,
there is no right answer. And so those who were requesting the defection and the team that was
creating the plan had come up with the plan together because they felt that this would provide
enough coverage so that the entire embassy would be able to leave without anyone being put in a
position where they had to make this difficult type of choice. That's one of the reasons why
the type of activity was chosen,
but at the same time,
it's also because North Korea was noticing
that diplomats were starting to disappear.
Important people that they're sending
is starting to disappear,
and there's no reason why.
And so the more that you just continue to do this,
the more suspicious it's going to look for everybody.
So they don't know that these people are defecting
in the moment?
Correct.
They just like, oh, this person's,
we haven't been able to get a hold of them.
Correct.
Or this person died.
That's weird.
Oh, this other person just died.
What are the odds of that?
Correct. So you can only do that for so long.
Right. You get like two deaths before it's a really obvious fake coincidence.
Again, I'm not the one who created this plan, but it made sense to me.
When I flew in that morning and they said, okay, here's the situation and here's the plan.
Knowing what I had experienced in the past, knowing how much time and effort is taken and the cooperation that's taken place at the time of all these defections, it made sense to me.
And when I arrived, I understood why they were asking me multiple times to come because this was a bigger
operation than normal. You were asking a mass defection and that needed to be coordinated and there
were going to be multiple people who were scared, multiple people that were making this decision that
we had talked about. And they wanted to make sure that if anyone starts getting too scared or kind of
having an issue with, whether panicking or whatever it is, that like, I'm there to sit with them.
When you say a mass defection, you're suggesting that multiple people in the embassy had expressed that they wanted to defect.
Correct.
More than one.
Correct.
As I understand it, when I arrived there in Spain, I was told that the entire embassy wanted to defect.
All of them.
Yes.
Every single person in the building.
That's why that something like this wouldn't make sense.
Now, part of the interesting thing about this story is that it didn't go according to plan perfectly.
Correct.
My understanding, I would love for you to speak to this,
is that there was at least one person who didn't quite go along with the plan.
How does that fit with the fact that everybody in the building wanted to defect?
I can't tell you what that person was thinking, obviously.
For everybody who doesn't know, my understanding based on what's been in the media,
is that there was one woman in the building who,
depending on how you look at things, either panicked and changed her mind
or didn't want to go along with the plan from the beginning,
got to another room, I believe jumped off of a balcony,
ran to the street.
I think she might have eventually found an ambulance. She was treated for some injuries and then eventually
called the police or had somebody called the police for her. And that's more or less where the
mission started to go sideways. Correct. So you're saying that this woman originally wanted to
defect, but got a little spooked by the idea of going through it. Correct. That's what I was told,
yes. So that's pretty common in your experience for people who are, I mean, it's a big leap to make.
your understanding of this is that in the moment,
she said, I don't know if I can go through it with us.
To me, for someone to react that way
when you're asking them to defect.
Is it part for the course.
Yeah, it's totally understandable.
And the idea was to go in,
do our little act in front of the cameras
to make sure that we've got enough cover.
In, out, Bing, Bang, Boom.
The North Korean Embassy is a house.
And when I say a house, I mean like a driveway.
They got a little basketball court on the side.
Like, it's a house.
There's no guards.
There's no people who are trying to keep it safe or anything like that.
There are just people who live in there who do illegal activities to pay the bills and pay for their food.
And when we went in to do it, we didn't break down doors.
We didn't hurt anybody.
What does the North Korean embassy look like inside?
I'm not picturing an opulent circumstance.
Yeah, I got to tell you, I didn't know what to expect, but I didn't expect what I saw, which was.
was just like, it's just nothing.
IKEA furniture.
IKEA furniture.
Oh, really?
No, not that nice.
Oh, my gosh.
You know what I mean?
Like it was, like, college experience.
It was just like particle board garbage around.
Everything was just like really bad.
At one point, I went into the kitchen to grab some beverages or something so I can
give it to them so that they're comfortable and stuff.
And I opened up the refrigerator and it was nothing in there.
I remember that exact moment.
I opened up that refrigerator and I felt such sadness for these guys.
Take away all the terrible things, but like these guys are living hand to mouth and they're
supposed to be the elites and they can barely have food in the fridge.
And I remember feeling like, wow, this is so sad to immediately thinking, oh man, it's going to be
great because tonight I actually put down a shopping list because I was planning after the embassy
rate. I was going to go to the supermarket and buy a bunch of food and stuff and do like a
barbecue or something like that so I can feed all these people. And so I was getting excited
like they would go from the situation where there's no food in the refrigerator to giving
them like a taste of like what their life is going to be like. Try these ribs. Yeah. But yeah,
there was like almost no furniture. There was like no carpet or anything like that. So the walls are
basically bear except for the propaganda stuff.
They put up the posters.
Yeah, yeah, like the pictures of Kimmer-sung and Kim Jong-il, like, they're all there.
If you walked in there, you would be like, this is crazy.
Wow, look at this stuff.
And that's exactly how I felt.
But that's it.
There's no, like, arts or kids' drawings of what the kid did.
There was just nothing there.
And so it was very cavernous and echoy because it is like a nicer house.
So there's lots of rooms and stuff like that.
But it's just as most things, it's just the facade.
And inside there was just nothing.
So the cops come to the door and you're like, nope, nothing to see you.
Yeah, so the cops come to the door.
Did you answer the door?
Did he put a pin on and pretend he was North Korean or something?
Wow, he put a pin on and put it on.
And so like, after they went away, we were like, okay, great.
The people inside, they asked, like, who's at the door?
And we're not going to lie to them.
You know, it was like, oh, it was the police.
We say that and you just see the color in their face just completely drop out.
Right? Because they went from, well, like at first, it's like this range of emotions, right? Like, oh my God, we've been found out. Everything is a failure.
Terrifying. Terrified. And also, I would imagine a bit terrifying for you.
Well, yeah. I mean, what's going through your head at that moment? Well, I mean, at that point, like, you know, I was trying to convince them that like, no, no, this actually plays in our favor.
At a certain point, they basically came to the decision that they didn't want to do this anymore. And what are we going to do? We're not going to force them.
All of them. It was basically the word was passed down that, like, it's not going to happen.
Yeah, but also like two people can't be like, I'm defecting because the other people will be like, no, then they have to tell, I mean, they're going to have to tell what happened. Like, okay, so you got kidnapped, but they only took him and her out of the place. That doesn't make any sense. Yeah. So at a certain point, the main guy, he gives us the keys to the cars. He just says, hey, man, just go. We'll take care of it. So they decided on their own when they saw that things were going sideways that they did not want to go through with it. And it trickled through the group. Correct. We're no longer going to do.
do this. Correct. But it was the guy who originally reached out who said, I'm changing my mind.
Correct. Okay. And then like take one of our cars and just get out of here. Well, just take all the
cars, right? He didn't care. He just wanted us to leave because they needed to kind of figure out,
like, how they're going to explain this shit. So what happened was after the cops left, the phone
starts ringing, right? And there's multiple phones in the house, and there's no furniture, and it's very
cavernous. And it's not like we're going to pick up the phone. And so this phone just ringing and
ringing and it echoing throughout the entire house.
And like, it won't stop calling.
And so if there was any kind of chance that we had to make it feel like, don't worry,
we can do this, we got this.
All we need to do is walk out that door and then everything's going to be fine.
But then there's this ringing, constant echoing ringing that's like constantly there.
And they think it's for Kim Jong-un calling to be like, why are you leaving?
Exactly.
Yeah.
It's like a horror movie.
So I was working with talking with the group, just asking them that everything's going to be okay.
And then the other guys were working with the main guy to figure out the logistics of like, you know, how this new stuff's in situation.
And he's feeling unsure of whether he wants to do it and all this kinds of stuff.
But my primary role was just to simply sit down with the rest of the folks there and kind of stew in the fear with them.
That's kind of how I want, I approached it.
I just have to ask one thing, which is it came out after the fact that one, one.
subplot of the raid of the mission was that some assets were taken from the MEC.
Yes, yes.
I believe there was at least one hard drive, at least one computer and a cell phone.
So I actually never touched any of that stuff.
Was that part of the cover?
So they decide to, in order for this whole kind of ruse to be correct and believable,
we left all the gear there and some of the guys, I guess, took some hard drives or whatever,
and then we left.
That was part of the cover.
Correct.
Was there any aspect of that that Fritjosen maybe wanted to have those assets a hard drive to find out what's on it or to do anything with?
Not that I know of.
If they did, then I wasn't aware of that.
It was never told to me in the beginning of the plan that we were going to be taking out stuff like that.
It was always just about the people getting in, getting out.
Take us out of the embassy.
Yeah, yeah.
How did you get out of it?
Let's tell the rest of that story.
Yeah, I mean, so I can't get too much into it.
But at the end of the day, what happened was he basically said, like, look, this isn't going to happen.
This is the chief diplomat.
He said, it's not going to happen.
Take the cars and leave.
We'll figure it out on our own.
And we came to, it's not even a decision.
It's just like, that's what it is now.
We're not going to force these guys to leave.
So we get in the cars and we leave.
And we are concerned that with the phone calls, there are North Koreans in Spain.
There's a lot of North Koreans in Spain.
And why?
It's their hub for European, like, illicit activities.
There's a 60 Minutes Australia episode where the reporters, the investigative reporters,
acted like they were arms dealers to go buy arms from North Korea and they would go to Spain.
And Spain is where they go and do all the deals.
You know, if you watch the episode there, like, they actually get invited to go to North Korea.
There's that dude Alejandro Caledipanos or whatever who's like their little stooge.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, like, there's a lot of, like, you know, North Korea doesn't have like a gross domestic product.
or thing that they export, right?
They export guns and ammunition and weapons and drugs and slave labor and stuff.
And some primo propaganda postage.
Yeah, exactly.
And so, you know, a lot of that stuff happens in Spain.
And so we leave and we kind of understand that there may be North Koreans who have become suspicious, like that's who's calling probably, who are suspicious of what's going on and that there could be a possibility.
you know, that there are going to be North Koreans
who are going to descend on to the embassy
to find out what's going on
and then from there disseminate out
to go look for us, right? We don't know.
That's scary as hell, because these are not like
students studying abroad and stuff.
These are gangster or intelligence agents or whatever
operating on behalf of North Korea
and they're possibly driving there at breakneck speed
to find out why there's nobody answering the fire.
Exactly. One thing led to another where I found a cab
and I convinced the guy to take us to Portugal.
That's like a six, seven hour drive, yeah.
So you guys all scatter in the wind.
So we all scatter, and then the idea was to meet back up in the States,
and everyone was supposed to meet in New York
where they were going to basically, you know, debrief,
go over what went wrong and kind of lament over the fact that it didn't go well.
I, however, had that investor meeting that I had pushed back.
So I didn't go to New York.
I flew directly back to Los Angeles.
How do you do an investor meeting?
after that.
You're just like, well, let me just take my embassy raid head off.
Yeah.
Put my adventure capital head on.
The plane ride home alone would be so bizarre.
Yeah.
What's going through your home?
I mean, like, look, I mean, I'm not going to deny any of those, like, feelings,
feeling weird, of course.
Like, the answer to that is yes, across the board.
I came back to L.A. and went back to living my life.
I'm just being the normal dude that I am.
You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger show with our guest, Christopher on.
We'll be right back.
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Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. Now, back to Christopher on. So when does this sort of catch up with you?
And it's like, oh, you broke into an embassy, allegedly. Like, we might want to talk to you about that.
Yeah. So, you know, Adrian calls me after the debrief that he has with everybody in New York.
And he says, like, hey, we're going to go talk to the FBI about this to make sure that they know what's
going on. And by the way, one of the things that we did as soon as we left the embassy was we wanted
to make sure that the North Koreans there were going to be as safe as we can possibly be.
And so someone from the group sent the Spanish government at another, like their ministry
of, or their version of the State Department sent an email or a note to their State Department
that said, like, look, we were involved in something that happened at the North Korean Embassy.
we can't really get into it, but their lives are in danger.
And so if you see people coming in from North Korea,
specifically for these North Koreans at the embassy,
please be aware that their lives could be on the line
and it's a very dangerous situation.
So we tried to warn the Spanish government about what's going on.
When we came back, Adrian went and talked to the FBI,
and the FBI asked Adrian if they could talk to other people who were involved.
He asked me, like, would you be willing to talk to the FBI?
And I said, yeah, sure.
Like, I don't got nothing to hide.
Oh, no.
You didn't get a lawyer first, huh?
Yeah.
You know.
No.
But that's interesting because that means that what's going through your head is I haven't
done anything wrong.
I haven't done anything wrong.
I've tried to help.
Correct.
It didn't go the way we wanted.
And if I can help the FBI and give them some information, I'm happy to do that.
I totally understand that line of thought, except everything I learned in law school is don't
ever do that.
Right.
No, I get it.
It speaks to Christopher's state of mind at the time.
Yeah, it's true.
I think a lot of people might not fully appreciate just based on the bullet point.
points in the media. Sure. And so, you know, they set up a date to come over. And the day before I had made, I think it was snickerdoodles. I had made some snickerdoodles the day before. And so when the-cookies? Cookies, yeah. So when the FBI agents came in, I came in, I said, hey, I made some snickerdoodles. Would you like some snickerdoodles? And I gave them some cookies and some coffee and stuff and we just cashed it out.
Got it. So you'll make snickerdoodles for the FBI, but you arrive here, empty-handed. Continue.
And, you know, they asked me questions about stuff. And I try to make it very clear that's,
said, like, look, the reason why I'm talking to you is because I want to make sure that, number
one, that, like, you understand that, like, we're all on the same team here, right?
I'm not trying to do something nefarious or anything like that.
These guys wanted to escape.
They felt like they had no one else to turn to.
They asked me to help.
I wasn't asked to do anything illegal, right?
I didn't hurt anybody.
I didn't break into anything.
Everything was voluntary.
And I'm here to tell you that, like, what happened?
And so you can tell whoever you need to tell.
That's what's going on.
And before we left, I said, like, so is everything good?
And the FBI guys were like, yeah.
And I said, okay, cool.
And went back to living my life.
That must have been a relief to hear that.
Well, yeah, of course.
I mean, honestly, yes and kind of no, because, like, I didn't really feel like I had anything to be afraid of.
Oh, that's true.
Right.
So you're not even, you're just like, well, I guess I closed the loop on that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
That chapter is done.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's not as if, like, the FBI didn't know the things that Adrian was doing.
and have a long relationship with him.
And, you know, and, like, they are in the no.
So I'm just kind of like, they're double check to make sure that what they think they know is true.
Because there's a point at which Spain's like, this is terrorism or whatever, right?
And they obviously didn't see it the same way.
Well, so, I mean, the sequence of events from my perspective, because I know that that occurred,
but I don't really know when exactly that occurred.
B.I. came over. I gave them the cookies that I made. We, you know, we shared and we hashed it out. And then I thought we were cool. And then two weeks later, I get a phone call from the agent saying like, hey, I just need to let you know that North Korea has discovered your identity. And we have confirmed reports that they are going to try to assassinate you.
Oh, God. I thought you were going to say, like, have you arrested in Spain? Wow. So they were just like, find these guys and kill them.
Yeah. So the FBI called me and said, like, look, they know your identity.
We have positive confirmed reports that they're going to try to assassinate you.
So it's imperative that number one, you stay in the United States, and number two, that you stay visually.
We don't think that anything's going to happen here in the United States.
But at the same time, we do know that there's North Koreans here.
And who knows, right?
Steve, lock the door.
But, yeah, that's terrifying.
Yeah.
All jokes aside, like that's, at this point, what's going through your mind?
Well, first thing is like, my first reaction is like, what the fuck?
Yeah, of course.
And number two, how the hell do they know?
Because every single time I've ever done this operation or helping doing defections or whatever, nobody knows my name.
Like literally nobody knows my name.
They may know where I come from because I'm like, yeah, I'm from California because it's kind of hard to hide the fact that I'm from California with the way I speak and everything.
So they know that I'm from California and I may be a guy named Steve.
And so how do they know my identity?
And I told them, I said, the only people that know my identity is you.
So how does Spain and North Korea or anyone know my identity when the only people that know my identity is you?
The FBI.
Yeah, the FBI.
Do you have any speculation as to how they found out there?
Well, I mean, I think I've learned just from reading the same things that you have, right?
Like, I haven't been privy to some kind of other information.
Because from that point on, from this moment of the story on, the only access that I have is the same access that you have.
I can't guess how they figured out who you are.
Well, from what I understand is that they basically cooperated with Spain.
They gave my identity.
The FBI did.
Correct.
So they gave your identity to Spain who turns around and tells North Korea who you are.
Correct.
That is bananas.
That's so reckless of them knowing like, oh, yeah, the guy who killed his brother.
Yeah, you can leave all the names in the document that we're sending over.
Yeah.
And so, you know, I ask them like, what do I do?
They say, like, well, you know, just stay safe.
Thanks for the advice.
How do you stay safe from North Korea?
Yeah, exactly.
So now, like, if they know my identity, that means they know my mom's identity, my grandmother's identity, my brother's identity, everyone that I'm associated with identity.
I'm a private person in terms of, like, I'm not like on social media all the time and doing whatever.
You're not some billionaire who can hide bodyguards.
I'm just a normal guy, right?
And so, like, you want to look me up in the phone book or whatever, like, I'm going to be there, right?
And so I felt the best thing that I could do at that moment was I have two options.
I could either live my life in like perpetual fear and like lock up my entire family
or just accept that like I'm in the safest place in the world.
And the likelihoodness of them trying to hurt me or my family here on American soil is very, very low.
It is low.
And so I'm just going to kind of put up some ring cameras in my mom's house and just kind of make sure.
Like, tell my mom and my dad just or my brother to kind of be extra safe and be aware of, like, their surroundings.
But I'm not going to tell them like North Korean assassins might be after you.
Have a snickerdoodle.
Yeah.
How much does your family know about what you were up to?
Nothing.
Nothing.
Nothing.
So what did you tell them?
Well, I didn't have time, really, to kind of tell them.
Is this the first time you told them that you've been up to these extra curricules?
No, I didn't tell them that at all either.
At all.
Right?
So immediately after that, the phone call from the FBI, I call agent.
And I'm like, hey, man, what the hell is going on?
Like, what are we going to do?
And I think, like, the day after that, Adrian's name was in the paper saying that he was
involved in this.
Next thing you know, reporters and all these people are flooding into where he lives,
trying to, like, talk to him and get an interview from him or whatever and hassling their
family and stuff.
And so, like, he, you know, he basically says, like, hey, man, I got to get out of where I am
just for the safety of my family.
So he kind of packs up and leave.
right. But before he goes, he kind of left everything. And he gave me a spare key saying like, hey, if my wife needs to come and get something or whatever, can you hold a spare key for me? And I was like, yeah, sure. And then a couple weeks after the phone call, he calls me and he says, hey, my wife is going to be coming up to the house or the apartment. Can you just be there to make sure if someone's trying to hassle her, that you just kind of, you know, let her have some space and go with her inside the apartment, make sure everything.
everything's cool.
Check for North Korean
Assassin.
Yeah.
I mean, we've got to do
this ridiculous stuff
now, right?
So I'm like,
yeah, dude,
no problem.
So I go to the apartment
just to kind of make sure
everything's cool.
He had sent me a bunch of these
ring cameras because he was
going to get them for him and his family.
And he asked me if I wanted one.
And I was like, yeah,
sure, I'll take one.
But when it arrived,
I was expecting like these
doorbell camera kind of things.
And what showed up
was like these super buff,
you know, floodlights.
Yeah, you got the outdoor one.
Yeah.
This episode sponsored by Simplic
keeping you safe from North Korean Assassin since 2017.
And I'm not putting that up in my mom's house.
There's going to be a lot of questions that my mom's going to be asking of why are you, like, lighting up the entire front yard and all that kind of stuff.
I just wanted it to look like the DMZ.
Yeah.
And so I was like, no, I don't need this stuff.
I'm just going to get some, like, ring cameras and stuff.
So he's like, all right, just drop it off at the apartment when my wife gets there.
So I'm up there.
I have all these boxes and stuff, and I open the door.
And when I go in, the marshals are in there.
U.S. Marshal service.
The U.S. Marshals are in there.
And, like, I'm surprised because, like, I wasn't expecting them.
And I don't know who the hell these guys are.
And they're not expecting me.
And so I open the door.
I walk in.
We both kind of lock eyes.
And I go, like, who the fuck are you?
Right.
Yeah.
And they lift their guns and say, who the fuck are you?
And I say, like, I'm Christopher on.
What are you doing here?
And they come up to me and frisked me down.
They ask me if I have any weapons.
And I have a concealed permit weapon license.
Okay.
And I was told by the FBI, they're trying to kill me.
So I said, well, I think the pertinent thing to do is to make sure that I'm carrying my weapon.
Sure.
A real one this time.
A real one this time.
And so, like, when the marshals asked me if I have any weapons, I'm like, yeah, I do.
I have a belly band, holster kind of a thing.
And that freaks them out.
And so, like, one of the marshals puts, like, a gun to my head.
And it was just like, you fucking move and I'm going to blow your fucking brains out and all this kind of stuff.
And I'm like...
Very professional.
The irony that you were afraid of North Korea and then you go to your friend's apartment and now you're terrified of the U.S. government is very interesting.
Yeah. And so, like, you know, I'm telling them the same thing that you hear all the time that anyone who gets arrested is like, this is just a big misunderstanding.
You know, like, you got to talk to whoever you need to talk to. Like, I just, that's who I sounded like, right?
But at the end of the day, I was like, there's no way. Like, this is just a big misunderstanding.
Right. Like, I told them, like, look, I'm not going to fight you with this. I'll go wherever you want to go.
but like, go talk to whoever you're, you need to talk to.
Because they were waiting for Adrian.
Yeah.
Not you.
Yeah.
And I thought that by that evening that I would be home with my wife,
but it ended up me being in jail for three and a half months.
I was down the street here at the MDC here in Los Angeles.
And it's basically pretrial holding.
If they can't trust you to get bail or whatever, then they hold you there.
But they think this is a flight risk because he's an international man.
I mean, by definition, you know, at first I thought like this is just a big must
understanding.
And then I was originally told that my charges were aiding and abetting a fugitive.
And I'm like, oh, well, that's kind of obvious and easy to kind of disprove.
So that should be fine.
I don't have a criminal record.
If anything, I should be able to get bail.
And when the time came to actually stand in front of the judge, like the actual charges
that they had against me was like kidnapping and assault and all these crazy things.
And I was given the charging document and I was able to.
see like what people said, like North Korean said, I hit them in the face and all this kind of stuff.
And at the time, my hand was broken. And in all the pictures that you see in like this Madrid
stuff, like, you can see like peeking out of my hand that I have a soft cast on my hand. So like,
I physically couldn't even hurt these people if I wanted to. So like none of the evidence really
makes sense. So I just thought that like, oh yeah, you know, this is going to be like pretty easy in and
an hour. Still no lawyer. Well, I mean, I had the public defender at the time. Okay. And can I just
clarify something. I think a lot of people are going to be wondering, why are you being charged for
these things in America for a crime that supposedly happened in Spain? Can you explain that?
Yeah. So I'm not actually being charged with anything here in the States. If you pull up my,
like a background check on me, which I've had to do because I'm trying to find work and stuff like
that. I need to know if anyone, like, if they pull a report, what's going to show? And like,
nothing. Maybe a parking ticket from maybe a decade ago. But like, I'm a law-abiding citizen. Like,
I got a concealed weapons permit.
They don't just give those things out like candy out here in California.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So like,
you know,
there are multiple things that show that I'm like an upstanding citizen.
And it continues to be there, right?
Like,
I have no record.
What's actually happening is that Spain is trying to charge me with those charges
based upon what the North Koreans have told them.
And they are requesting the United States government to extradite me,
to send me to Spain to stand trial for those accusations.
And for the threshold of whether or not the United States sends someone from here to whatever country is they have to have probable cause.
And that's the threshold, which is an extremely low threshold.
It's a low bar, yeah.
And because of the fact that I've never denied being in the embassy in Spain, I've never denied being in Spain, I've never denied any of that stuff.
I've always just denied what happened inside compared to what the North Koreans have said.
They're not worried that you are a flight risk now?
No, they are, but this took a long time.
And a million percent of credit of that goes to this amazing woman that's sitting next to me here.
She was able to help the judge understand of the specific situation that I'm in and the fact that, like, there are so many things that, like, just don't match up.
And I don't really pose any flight risk.
And so me getting the bail was a very difficult uphill battle.
I think one time she told me that I had like less than a 1% chance that I would get bail.
But because the judge was able to listen and understand what this whole situation is about and go deeper than the headlines and kind of understand, she decided to give me bail.
And that's why I was able to get out after three and a half months.
And now you're waiting on, what, an extradition hearing?
Naum, your Chris is a lawyer working on this case.
How does Chris stand when it comes to extradition?
What's he facing?
Let me answer some of these questions.
So Chris is not charged in the United States with any crime.
That's correct.
He's being charged in Spain.
And to some degree, that's unavoidable, right?
Because in Spain, North Korea has diplomatic relations.
They have an embassy.
And those people have told the Spanish government that they were somehow held against their will.
right? So Spain has no choice but to bring criminal charges. What happens is that Spain then
makes a request to the United States and says, we're bringing these charges against someone who's in your
country, a citizen of your country, and we need you to extradite them to our country. Typically,
in federal court, they don't even bring charges unless they have that type of evidence. But here,
they really kind of have to honor what Spain is requesting. In our view, this is sort of where
the original sin happens because at that point, a judicious discreet.
discretionary decision could have been made internally in the executive branch, understanding the
situation. At this point, FBI is in contact with Adrian and even Chris and knows what's going on
and understanding the complicated dynamic where Spain thinks of North Korea as a legitimate
embassy present government. Right, as opposed to a mafia state that will do and say anything.
Correct. And the United States understands that these people, the people who are in there trying to
help the North Koreans escape are now in mortal danger. Some discretionary decision could have
and should have been made that prevented everyone from being in this terrible situation. But
for whatever reason, which we may never find out why, a decision was made to institute extradition
proceedings against Chris, against Adrian, perhaps others. They may be sealed extradition cases that
we don't know about. So the United States brings these extradition charges. And Chris is the only one
who is not in hiding. Everybody else disappeared.
Exactly. Everybody else disappears. So, you know, he's not tried to avoid charges in Spain. He's going through a legal process that he's allowed to defend himself against in this country. So he's here. He's always lived in the open. He's not tried to hide himself. He's not tried to escape. The problem is once you are in an extradition proceeding, there's very little chance of getting bail. It's very hard. It's not impossible. But the idea is that you're already in another country from the country that is charging you. Of course, we're not going to give you bail. And so that's sort of what Chris was talking.
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who support the show. Now, for the rest of my conversation with Christopher on.
Even the judge was like, hey, I have to, by law, allow this to go forward, but I hope somebody overrules me, which I didn't practice for a very long time.
But I don't imagine most judges say, I hope someone at a higher court overrules my decision.
Correct.
So we had the extradition hearing last year where we were able to present our case.
And we had Otto Warmbier's family come and testify on my behalf.
We had...
Otto Warmbier was the 20-year-old student who went on a tour.
allegedly took a poster, ended up in a coma, and passed away.
Correct.
In North Korea.
We had an amazing professor from Tufts University, who was the premier kind of intellectual
of what happens in North Korea.
He came out and testified on my behalf.
We had letters of supporters from Medal of Honor a recipient to those within the
previous administration, people I've worked with in charities and nonprofits, police officers,
firefighters, and I think we got like 30 letters or something like that, from government officials
to charities and friends and all these people who are all considered quote unquote, like
upstanding Americans. And the judge was able to see what this is. But unfortunately,
she's a magistrate judge that felt that she had to rule the way that she had to. But she was
very kind to make sure that she also put her opinion and perspective in there as well.
What's the fear right now is that you'll be extradited to Spain and that you'll either go to prison in Spain or that the North Koreans will try to kill you in Spain?
So the answer is both.
So the quandary that we're in right now is that extraditions are usually not like this. This is a strange case, right?
And that's why Chris got bail. You have to prove extraordinary circumstances to get bail.
In an extradition, usually we have an extradition treaty with a country, but we've agreed to
have an extradition treaty with North Korea for a reason, right? You vet the judicial
processes and systems of other countries, and you say, if you're not complying with due process,
if you're, you know, torture-friendly country, we're not going to extradite people to your country
and we're not going to expect you to extradite people to ours. So here we have a situation where
the United States, has an extradition treaty with Spain. Spain passes the smell test, but it's really a
criminal case driven by North Korea. Spain is a country that has its own justice system, but also has
a North Korean presence, and not just a North Korean presence, but one that is known and has been
confirmed in multiple investigatory reports as having connections to criminal dealings. You know, I guess you can
call it the underworld. So that's why the judge in this case found an extraordinary circumstance. She
determined that even though Spain has to take these North Korean witnesses at their word,
the United States does not have to. And she does not believe that those statements were made voluntarily.
She believes that they were probably under some threat of death, some fear of their lives.
For sure.
And, of course, I mean, how can any North Korean witness say, oh, yeah, we plotted a fake kidnapping
so we could defect, but then we changed our minds. Nobody's going to say that because they're going
to be killed and their families are going to be killed. That's the quandary we're in.
But the issue is now Chris has bail, so that's a positive.
But the negative is that the legal standard for extradition is so low.
It's just probable cause.
And we do believe, actually, there is room for the court to find there is not probable cause.
Right now, the extradition case itself is over.
And so the magistrate judge has found that there is probable cause.
We're currently on what's called habeas where we're asking a district judge who sits one tier higher to make a different decision on that ground.
But the main argument that we're making is actually that there's a humanitarian exception to extradition that has never, ever, ever been used.
You know, so there's two tracks to literally never.
Never.
Wow.
You're making history.
Well, that's what we're hoping for.
But every time this argument has come up, you know, it's usually come up in the context of, you know, Thailand's trying to extradite me for a drug crime.
And they give death penalty there for drug crimes.
And so the U.S. should have a humanitarian exception.
not send me there. And every time the U.S. has said, no, it's too bad. You broke a lot in that country.
You have to go there and face the consequences. Here, it's very different because Chris is not
afraid of Spain killing him. Right. He's afraid of North Korea killing him. And North Korea has no
treaty with the U.S. They don't have a history of abiding by international standards of decency.
So it's a completely different threat. And the other main difference is that part of the reason
Chris is in danger is because of decisions and actions the United States took.
And so the United States cannot put their own people in danger.
That's part of the argument that we're making.
And so that makes this kind of a unique case.
But it's an incredibly difficult standard.
It's one that we are pushing forward in front of the current case.
And we'll see how it goes.
But it's never been granted before.
An incredibly compelling legal argument the way you've laid it out.
But because of the unique aspects of this case,
It sounds complicated and it sounds like you guys are kind of in uncharted territory to some degree legally.
That's correct.
I mean, any kind of extradition case like this, I say there is no extradition case like this.
The court is not the only way that Chris can get out of the situation, right?
I mean, that's one process that we are following.
But ultimately, this is up to the United States government, the executive branch.
Spain can also make certain decisions that could end this sort of nightmare.
and the fact that I'm here is very unusual. I'm a defense attorney. I do not let my clients sit for
interviews. I certainly don't participate in them. That was us ambushing you, so that's fair. But this is a very
unusual situation where there may need to be more public support for any kind of courageous decision
to be made by whatever level of government. And so that's one of the reasons why we're in this
unusual situation. A judge involved in Chris's case, I believe it was Judge Rosenbluth, said among
many other things. Even assuming
A.on was acting at the direction of his country
and not simply to help those trapped in an evil empire, which was one
version of events, that's only
but another reason why that same country shouldn't
shove him into Kim Jong-un's grasping arms. And I believe the same
judge went on to say, yes, on should have to face a court
reckoning of some kind for possibly violating at least the
letter of the law, but he should not be cast off to face an uncertain
fate at the hands of a despot, perhaps
sacrificed to advance a foreign policy agenda. When you read opinions like that, does that give you
hope and heart for the outcome in Chris's case? What do you take away from that?
It's complicated, my reaction. Of course, we would have wanted his extradition to have been
denied for her to not have certified. But what I hear, when I hear that opinion and read her
words is the quandary of a judge who is dealing with a standard of laws that is not allowing her to
do what she believes is just.
just and that she believes is necessary to save someone's life. In terms of hope, it kind of is a double-edged
sword. I mean, she gave us the tools to convince a higher court that the outcome could be different.
But at the same time, this was also a judge who so very much wanted to do something to save Chris's
life and to keep him safe. And she felt like she couldn't. She looked at all the law. She felt like
she couldn't. Obviously, I disagree. I think she could have, and I think I hope that another court
will feel differently, but ultimately, at the end of the day, there's a real fear that the court
system is not going to be able to solve this problem. And so if that's the case, then we need to look
to politicians to step in. We need to look to the executive branch to step in and make sure that
this group of really volunteers who tried to help people don't end up losing their lives as a result,
or even losing their freedom because they're stuck in a country that has to take these witnesses at their word
because of the position that they have in that country.
Can I just say real quick also is that when the North Korean officials gave their statements,
they were given statements with another North Korean official in the room.
Of course.
If that kind of evidence and those statements were presented in an American court,
they'd be totally tossed out immediately because it was,
there's a guy that's looking at me while I'm giving these statements.
Right.
And it's like who's this guy, some dude from internal security services who's just going to sit in the room.
Oh, we know who that guy was.
It was the ambassador, the one who had initially reached out for the defection.
So he was the fan later for everybody.
So he's just like everyone's going to do what I say and I'm the one driving is correct.
That's crazy.
And if you look at the actual statements themselves, they said that I beat them.
I've got medical reports and x-rays that show my hands were broken before I got there.
And when I came back from Spain, I had more x-rays done just routinely and showed that they were healing.
My hand was healing.
So my hand didn't get any trauma.
At a certain point, they were saying that, like, we were eating people in there or something or other.
The woman reported they were eating the children or something like that.
Right.
There's a lot of things that in a normal circumstance, like it wouldn't really pass the smell test.
But because of the variety of kind of a uniqueness of this, here I am.
So we're meeting you at a pretty extraordinary moment in your life.
You're facing this extradition proceeding.
You're not sure what the future holds.
How do you feel right now?
What's your outlook?
What's your mood like?
What do you feel like when you wake up in the morning?
Well, I mean, I think it's just like just with anybody else normally, right?
It's a spectrum of things that you deal with, right?
There's a big part of me that feels incredibly blessed because I have people like Neune here.
I have people like my wife who have stood by me throughout this entire thing.
My wife's family, like my father-in-law, has never questioned me about the things that I've done because he understands.
And I've had supporters who've given small amounts of donations, large amounts of donations,
and those financial support has literally kept my delights on because it's incredibly hard to find reliable work.
I've got an MBA, I've owned businesses, I've been a part of some major deals, and I've also dug ditches and been like a manual labor guy.
I've done the whole spectrum.
You would think that I would be able to kind of pick myself up and get a job, but because of the circumstances of this, you Google me.
And in the beginning, it was all negative.
Now it's slightly positive.
But at the same time, as a former business owner, like, I get it.
Like, if I've got a guy who's applying for this job that has a history of
And then I walk, you know, like my version of someone walks in and he appears to be successful,
but he's got all this baggage. Why would I want to hire this guy? Like I wouldn't even hire me.
So on one side, like, I feel so incredibly blessed because I have such an amazing support system and
those who have taken the time to hear my story and look beyond kind of like the first headline
and the first paragraph of the clickbait article, they understand and they've, that's,
what's carried me through. But at the same time, there's the other side of this where it's
incredibly difficult to just kind of be here. I've spent my entire life working, helping people
and knowing that, like, I find fulfillment in helping those people who need help. And now I'm here
because of following, I guess, my heart in terms of doing what I felt was right. And now I
don't trust myself. Like, did I make a mistake? Did I, shouldn't I have not done this? I don't feel like
I made a mistake. Everything in my soul tells me I did the right thing, but I'm destitute. I can't pay my
bills. I can't support my family. I can't do the things that like normal people are able to do.
And I struggle with depression and feeling like I'm a person that deserves help because
I feel like I failed everyone around me, and it's hard.
I personally am very impressed by all this.
It's an understatement.
I mean, you did something that most people would like to think they would try to do
and would probably never actually have the guts to do.
It didn't work out the way that you wanted it to.
I don't think that negates the fact that you still did it.
So I want to directly address that.
And I appreciate that.
The first thing I say is like, thank you.
And I appreciate that immensely.
And I don't want to downplay the things that I was doing to help these people and the immensity of it.
But I think that the immensity of it is everyone looking at this from a very macro level,
where it's North Korea and it's like these defections and death and murder and all these in danger and all this.
Those macro things are very important.
It's why people want to tune in and listen to these kinds of things.
But we all live in kind of a micro world, right, where we're dealing with personal decisions and persons.
interactions. And I believe that if in a very specialized situation where a person was given this
choice, where they were in a very unique situation in the right place, in the right time,
and they had the right skills and the right experiences, and someone came to them and says,
yes, all this North Korea stuff, whatever, right? But this person needs help. And you are in a
very unique situation, not because you're someone like super special or they're,
you're better than someone, just because of the life that you led and the experiences that you had,
you have certain skills and skill sets that allow you to help this person.
Will you help them?
You can see that happening in the Chosun Institute when we went to these normal people and said,
you are given this chance to make a difference in what you do on a daily basis, and you can
change these people's lives.
Normal people have time and time again, and it's not just like this North Korean,
issue. It's just we as an American society have become successful, yes, because of all the things,
but because of the people here who care about our neighbors and care about each other. And that's what
makes us strong. That's what makes us unique. And I believe that, yes, what I did on a macro level
seems either on one side crazy or on the other side, amazing. But when you boil it down to the
micro level, all I was doing was just trying to help these people get from one place to another
and bring them from a bad place to a better place. Because I personally am the result of people
who've made that same decision. When my family left, my mom and my dad left Korea to start a
brand new life with no idea what they had in front of them. And I am the result of that and all
the amazing things that I've been able to experience. And that was because of their courageousness.
And when you're encountering that and seeing someone that's willing to be courageous for their family,
for not themselves but for others, I believe that any one of us here at this table or any one of us that's listening,
when they're presented that same exact situation that's custom tailored for specifically them,
that they would say yes, because that's who we are as people.
We want to help other people.
And so again, I don't want to try to downplay what it is that I did.
But that's not the world that I live in.
I don't live in this world of like these geopolitical events.
I'm just the guy that wants to live a normal life.
And when I see someone that's struggling and I can help them, I want to help them.
You've told us quite a tale today.
It was a very beautiful story, very heartfelt and very personal.
And I want to thank you for that.
And what I've heard is that you're a guy who has been compelled since you were
basically a kid by meaning and purpose and that that has led you into a very difficult and unusual
place. And I am very moved by what you've done, even though it didn't go the way you had hoped
and all the other things that you've done to help these people. I'm actually even more moved by
the fact that it doesn't seem to have this geopolitical dimension to it, that for you it's something
much closer to home and simpler. I just have to say that I hope this goes your way, because
this is an extraordinary thing that you're dealing with.
It's very scary, and you've done something that seems to me very pure,
and it's not ended up the way it should have.
I appreciate it, and thank you.
I just want to also recognize that, like, I'm here talking to you.
So obviously, I'm kind of the guy that you guys are focusing on.
But there are dozens of people around the world that just as much wanted to see progress
and just as much wanted to help, and just as much we're willing to put it on the line,
to be able to try to facilitate a better future.
I'm not the star of the show here.
There are so many people who put on, like, again,
I'm not a card-carrying member of this place.
Like, I support it, and if they ask me for help,
and if people want to associate with me with them,
that's fine.
But, like, those are the people that put in the time,
the effort to make these relations,
that really put in the time to make these plans.
And I'm just the guy they called up to help.
And at the end of the day, that's who I am.
So I appreciate the praise, but there are so much more people that deserve it far more than I do.
I hear you, and I believe that.
Thank you very much.
Yeah, thank you for having me.
You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger show with North Korean defector Yonemi Park.
In North Korea, birds and mice can hear your whisper.
It's the only place that modernity hasn't touched.
90-70% North Korean roads are not paved.
In the hospital, they use one needle to inject everybody.
It's very common to have a surgery without painkiller.
The worst torture is being starved.
And before you die from starvation, you hallucinate.
You lose your mind.
So some mothers eat their children because they thought their children were dogs.
Because they go crazy when you don't eat.
And then they wake up and then, like, what happened to my child?
If somebody challenging the party ideology,
they don't just go after killing you or your son and grandma.
They really go after age and a generation, like get rid of entire,
clan. That's how they prevent the revolution. And that's how they became like Almighty God.
Every front newspaper in North Korea is a Kim's photo. So sometimes you do not see the front page
and you rip it. That's how you get executed. How do they prepare you to escape?
Pray and fasting. You need a miracle to do it because you are going to go across the gobi
desert into Mongolia from China in the minus 40 degrees. That's why they make you pray.
They just give you a compass. Why don't you walk?
follow the north and the west, and then cross eight wire fences, and hopefully that's going
to be Mongolia.
Very unique in the North Koreans, whenever you ask them, in their dream, it's always North
Korea.
You never escape in your subconscious.
You're there forever.
Every night, every night I'm there, like nobody escapes in your dream.
To hear more about the bizarre mind games that generations of North Koreans have had to endure
under the current regime, check out episode 578 and 579 of the Jordan Harbourn.
Herbinger show. Told you this was a crazy story. By the way, more background on North Korea and this
particular story can be heard in episode 820 with our guest Bradley Hope, who wrote a whole book
just about this case. The government here is in a bit of a bind, right? Because if they don't extradite,
it might seem like the government is backing Christopher because he's secretly CIA or whatever.
And one of the ways to prove that this wasn't the CIA or sanctioned by the government is to
extradite him. I don't think that should really play much of a part here, but that's how the
agencies feel. That's going to be a big problem. I think they're looking at that as kind of a major
issue. It's a fascinating story, but man, in reality, the real life is very grim. This is life and death
for Chris. And where thankfully came to talk to us, I mean, he had a lot of trouble making this happen.
He's got an ankle monitor, which I've seen and looks incredibly uncomfortable that he has to
where he came with his lawyer who's amazing and he's got to go fund me if this story moved you
definitely consider donating to his go fund me we're going to link to that in the show notes he
really isn't doing much media for many reasons but he trusted our show he's been a fan of the show
which is amazing i had no idea about that obviously he's also suffering from major anxiety as a result
of his situation and he's got a curfew he's under restrictions he's not able to have children
with his wife because time goes on but you know he doesn't have a job right now he might be
going to prison for years in another country. Not a great time to have kids. This is a really sad
situation, in my opinion. And he's also responsible for his mother and his grandmother. So if you want to
help, the fundraiser, again, is linked in the show notes. Freechrison.com is the website. We'll link to
that in the show notes as well, as well as his Instagram at Free Chris On. He's open to work. He's
not expecting just charity. He's open to work. So we can connect you. If you have a job that he can do
remotely, because again, he is going to need to work from home, he is allowed to work. He's
just not allowed to go to the office. Strategy consultant is his background. He can, of course,
work remotely. He has a lot of experience. And he really needs to feed his family. So if you can help,
please do so. All things Christopher on will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com. Transcripts in the
show notes or ask our AI chatbot anything you want. Advertisers, deals, discounts, and ways to
support the show, all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. Please consider supporting those who support
this show. We've also got our newsletter every week, the team and I dig into an older episode of the show
and dissect lessons and takeaways from it.
So if you are a fan of the show,
and I hope you are,
and you want to recap of important highlights and takeaways
or you just want to know what to listen to next,
the newsletter is a great place to do just that.
Jordan Harbinger.com slash news is where you can find it.
And of course, we're doing all our giveaways
and stuff like that there as well.
Don't forget about six-minute networking
over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram.
You can also connect with me on LinkedIn.
Gabriel's Twitter and Instagram
will be linked in the show notes.
I almost forgot to mention that.
This show is created in association
with Podcast 1. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace, Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Millie, Ocampo, Ian Baird,
and Gabriel Mizrahi. Remember, we rise by lifting others. The feed for this show is you share
it with friends when you find something useful or interesting. The greatest compliment you can give us
is to share the show with those you care about. If you know somebody who's interested in North Korea
or just wants a hell of a tale, this is one you should share with them. In the meantime, I hope you
apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time.
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