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Home Front: WoT
Fast and Furious report: Gunwalking idea came from top Holder deputies in 2009
2012-08-01
This is a good summation of the report that was released yesterday. Issa has two more reports to release.
A new congressional report explores how gunwalking, as it occurred in Operation Fast and Furious, appears to have had its "genesis" in the offices of Attorney General Eric Holder's top deputies.
Ah, so it didn't come from the evil Bush...
The report also lays blame for Fast and Furious at the feet of five senior Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) officials.

Gunwalking describes a law enforcement operation in which law enforcement agents choose not to interdict or seize firearms they know were illegally bought by straw purchasers -- in the case of Fast and Furious, representatives of Mexican drug cartels -- with the goal of allowing them to penetrate further into a criminal conspiracy chain.

Once Fast and Furious-related weapons were "walked" across the U.S.-Mexico border, they could only be recovered at crime scenes in Mexico and the United States, or during raids other law enforcement officials conducted. Mexican drug cartel operatives commonly leave murder weapons at crime scenes so they aren't found with them at a later time.

Walking guns is tactically fraught with danger because those weapons are often used in crimes. In Fast and Furious, U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was killed in this way; so was Mario Gonzalez, the brother of now-former Mexican government prosecutor Patricia Gonzalez.

It also appears Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jaime Zapata was killed with a Fast and Furious-related weapon. Mexican government officials have estimated that hundreds of people in their country were killed with the guns the Obama administration walked to Mexico.

Holder has denied he or anyone in the Department of Justice's leadership knew of or approved gunwalking related to Fast and Furious.

But this new congressional report, released Tuesday by House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa and Sen. Chuck Grassley -- both Republicans -- concludes senior Obama administration officials appear to have set the stage for, and possibly encouraged, ATF officials to walk guns into Mexico.
Posted by:Sherry

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