ATF Gunwalking Dates From 2006

Mad Dawgs, Prosecutors and Smugglers

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2011-10-06 | 20:57h
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ATF Gunwalking Dates From 2006 – Mad Dawgs, Prosecutors and Smugglers

Former U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton represents the family of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, slain last year in a firefight near Arivaca. He is  preparing legal action concerning the incident.

Tim Stellar, of the Arizona Daily Star, interviewed Mr. Charlton concerning the discovery of a Bush era ‘gunwalking’ operation that allowed hundreds of firearms to be smuggled into Mexico.

Last June, the Terry family retained Mr. Charlton to represent their interests and determine any legal actions.

At the time:

Charlton said he will be reviewing all the facts surrounding the events of Terry’s death, including which weapons were used in the shootout and where they came from.

“How those weapons got there are obviously going to be very important to us,” said Charlton, who is now a lawyer with the Gallagher & Kennedy law firm in Phoenix.

Charlton also will be following investigations being conducted in the House and Senate about the ATF operation, he said.

After the Associated Press ran a story on “Operation Wide Receiver”, which details Bush era gun trafficking to Mexico, the Arizona Daily Star contacted Mr. Charlton regarding this new revelation.

…. the man who was U.S. attorney for Arizona when Operation Wide Receiver started in 2006 is pursuing a lawsuit over Operation Fast and Furious. Paul Charlton represents the parents of U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, slain near Rio Rico last year.

In an interview Wednesday, Charlton, who was U.S. attorney from 2001 to January 2007, said he couldn’t remember the Tucson operation.

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“We had hundreds of operations and hundreds of names,” said Charlton, now in private practice and planning to file a claim against the U.S. government for letting the guns loose that may have been used to kill Terry. “I don’t think I would ever have approved letting guns walk, and I don’t know if that’s what’s happened.”

He added, “If that happened on my watch, then I own it.”

Attorney Kurt Altman, who represented defendant Jonathan Horowitz in a Wide Receiver case, is a former federal prosecutor and could see that something “much bigger” was going on than his client’s relatively narrow case, he said.

In addition, Altman said, “There was no doubt that guns were going to Mexico.”

Horowitz, his client, admitted last year that he bought 100 AR-15 rifle components from Detty’s business for a man in Tijuana and that he had smuggled some firearms himself.

A Tucson defense attorney representing another defendant, Ismael Betancourt, who pleaded guilty July 13, said Wednesday that she was puzzled by how the case proceeded.

“I did find it surprising that the investigation began in 2006 and they did nothing about it until four years later,” Laura Udall said.

Fellow Tucson defense attorney John D. Kaufmann has argued that the case against his client, Ricardo Mendez Jr., should be dismissed because federal prosecutors waited years after the end of the investigation to pursue an indictment. He also has demanded any material that might show that ATF agents encouraged dealers to make illegal sales.

Udall and Altman noted that suddenly last year, the case was being handled by an attorney at the Justice Department in Washington, D.C., not a federal prosecutor in Arizona, as usual.

The May 2010 indictment says Detty’s home-based business, Mad Dawg Global Marketing, sold 126 firearms or gun components to people who exported weapons to Mexico for a man living in Tijuana. It doesn’t mention any firearm seizures by U.S. officers. Bear Arms Firearms in Scottsdale also sold 43 firearms to the defendants, the indictment said.

The October 2010 indictment said the defendants bought 269 firearms from Mad Dawg but refers to seizures by law enforcement of 47 of them, leaving 222 that may have crossed the border. The indictment does say firearms bought by defendant Carlos Armando Celaya “were transported to or near the state of Sonora, Mexico.”

In an interview with CBS News broadcast Wednesday, Detty said he signed on as a confidential informant for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in 2006. He said he sold about 450 firearms as part of Operation Wide Receiver but he wouldn’t have done th at if he’d realized the guns would end up going to criminals in Mexico.

“It really makes me sick,” he said.

A man who answered the phone at a number for Mad Dawg Global Marketing declined to comment for the Star on the case.

The House Government Oversight Committee has little information on Operation Wide Receiver, said Becca Watkins, spokeswoman for chairman Darrell Issa, the California congressman who has been pursuing an investigation of Fast and Furious.

“We don’t know much about it because the Justice Department has not given us the documents we’ve asked for,” Watkins said. “We’d love to know more about it…”

 

Its no secret that it takes lots of firearms for a drug war to become a real war. Allowing thousands of arms to be smuggled to Mexico seems to be either meant to destabilize Mexico, or prepare a theater for future battles. It sure makes marijuana seem more dangerous and exotic.

At the least, it subverts our relations with Mexico, while militarizing drug cartels and the border.  It should be shocking, but arming drug gangs and subverting governments seems to be in the playbook going back to the Reagan era, and the drug wars of the 80s. America is still Number One at selling arms and consuming drugs.

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