ATF acting director may resign over Fast and Furious program

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waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
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cnn.com

Washington (CNN) -- Kenneth Melson, acting director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, is expected to resign under pressure, perhaps in the next day or two, in the wake of the controversy over Operation Fast and Furious, two senior federal law enforcement sources said Monday.

In the operation, straw buyers were allowed to purchase illegally large numbers of weapons, some of which ended up in the hands of cartels in Mexico.

Attorney General Eric Holder will meet Tuesday with Andrew Traver, head of the ATF field office in Chicago, about possibly becoming the agency's acting director, according to senior federal law enforcement sources, who are familiar with the details of the controversy.

The Justice Department refused comment. White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters he had no new information on the issue.

The operation has come under intense criticism since the December killing of a U.S. Border Patrol officer.

Operation Fast and Furious was "a colossal failure of leadership," Peter Forcelli, a supervisor at the bureau's Phoenix field office, said recently.

The program focused on following people who legally bought weapons that were then transferred to criminals and destined for Mexico. But instead of intercepting the weapons when they switched hands, Operation Fast and Furious called for ATF agents to let the guns "walk" and wait for them to surface in Mexico, according to a report by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

The idea was that once the weapons in Mexico were traced back to the straw purchasers, the entire arms smuggling network could be brought down. Instead, the report argues, letting the weapons slip into the wrong hands was a deadly miscalculation that resulted in preventable deaths, including that of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.
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good. whoever ok'd this needs to be bitch slapped then fired and maybe brought up on charges. i think pretty much anyone can tell them that allowing the guns to be sold was a dumb fucking idea.
 

Lemon law

Lifer
Nov 6, 2005
20,984
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The ATF, dating back to Waco, Ruby Ridge and before have always been serial idiot publicity hounds.

Let us just all just grow a brain and get rid of the entire agency as a total waste of Tax payer bucks and be done with it. A budget saving we can all agree with.
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
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The idea of letting some arms go through the pipeline to try and shut down the whole network could make sense, but not when you don't have the power/jurisdiction/control to investigate or shut down a big part of that pipeline because it's in Mexico. Dumb idea.
 

DominionSeraph

Diamond Member
Jul 22, 2009
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As though without this Mexico's murder problem would vanish?

There's a ton of guns down there. Letting a few more in for the purpose of shutting down the entire pipeline seems better than allowing multiple avenues of smuggling to remain.
Laying the responsibility for the result of action but not for the results of inaction seems a bit unbalanced. Their failures to curtail the traffic has a toll in lives as well. If these few deaths save thousands down the line, the argument against the operation loses pretty much all of its potency.
 
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