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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    ANOTHER FAST AND FURIOUS GUN TURNS UP AT A MEXICAN SHOOTOUT

    ANOTHER FAST AND FURIOUS GUN TURNS UP AT A MEXICAN SHOOTOUT



    By:
    John Hayward
    12/31/2013 04:46 PM


    CNN reports on the latest grisly fruit of the disastrous “Fast and Furious” gun-walking operation, in which Attorney General Eric Holder’s Justice Department released a small number of carefully-tracked firearms across the Mexican border in a bid to take down drug kingpins, but forgot the “small,” “carefully-tracked,” and “take down drug kingpins” parts of the operation:
    A dramatic shootout between authorities and suspected cartel gunmen at a Mexican seaside resort this month has ties to a botched U.S. gun operation.
    A U.S. official said Tuesday that investigators have traced at least one firearm recovered at a December 18 gunfight in Puerto Peñasco, just across from the Arizona border, to Operation Fast and Furious.
    How dramatic was this shootout, CNN?
    The shootout in Puerto Peñasco, also called Rocky Point by Arizona tourists, two weeks ago left at least five suspected cartel gunmen dead, including possibly a high level Sinaloa cartel chief, according to Mexican authorities.
    Witnesses reported hours of shooting and grenade explosions, with Mexican authorities using helicopters to attack fleeing suspected cartel gunmen on the ground.
    Wow, that’s pretty dramatic, all right! I sure hope the Administration takes responsibility for putting guns into the hands of all these cartel killers!
    The ATF said in a statement: “ATF has accepted responsibility for the mistakes made in the Fast and Furious investigation and at the attorney general’s direction we have taken appropriate and decisive action to ensure that these errors will not be repeated. And we acknowledge that, regrettably, firearms related to the Fast and Furious investigation will likely continue to be recovered at future crime scenes.”

    Oh, well, that makes everything okay, then. May the dead be comforted in knowing that a few right-wing extremist types up here in the U.S. actually cared about the program, and thought “accepting responsibility” should have meant more than issuing the odd post-shootout press release about how regrettable the whole affair has been.
    The tracking system for the Fast and Furious guns involves waiting for them to turn up at crime scenes and stepping gingerly around the chalk outlines to retrieve them. According to Katie Pavlich, author of a book on the Fast and Furious scandal, there are still 1,400 guns missing. That means we can look forward to a lot of chalk outlines in the coming year.



    http://www.humanevents.com/2013/12/3...ican-shootout/
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Gun from botched 'Fast and Furious' operation turns up after Mexican resort shootout

    Published January 02, 2014 FoxNews.com



    A gun from the failed "Fast and Furious" operation has turned up after a shootout at a Mexican resort this month, Fox News confirms.
    The gunfight took place between authorities and suspected cartel gunmen at a seaside Mexican resort on Dec. 18 in Puerto Peñasco.
    The gun was found and traced through the owner of the Lone Wolf gun store -- the man at the center of the "Furious" scandal for selling most of the weapons in cooperation with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
    The gun was purchased on Sept. 14, 2010.
    Fast and Furious was a 2006-2011 ATF operation in which the agency allowed hundreds of guns to be sold to Mexican drug traffickers in hopes the weapons would lead them to cartel leaders.
    However, some of the guns began turning up at murder scenes along the Arizona-Mexico border, including at the 2010 killing of U.S. Border Patrol agent Brian Terry. And hundreds of other weapons still remain missing.
    The resort shootout left at least five suspected cartel gunmen dead, including possibly a high level Sinaloa cartel chief, Mexican authorities told CNN.
    Witnesses told CNN that gunfire, as well as grenade explosions, took place for hours and Mexican authorities used helicopters to attack cartel gunmen on the ground.
    "ATF has accepted responsibility for the mistakes made in the Fast and Furious investigation and at the attorney general's direction we have taken appropriate and decisive action to ensure that these errors will not be repeated," ATF said in a statement. "And we acknowledge that, regrettably, firearms related to the Fast and Furious investigation will likely continue to be recovered at future crime scenes."

    Fox News' Laura Prabucki contributed to this report.

    http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/01...exican-resort/

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