Posted on 09/27/2011 1:02:08 PM PDT by Kaslin
In other words, ATF Agent William Newell wasn't telling the truth.
The ATF agent who oversaw Operation Fast and Furious now says his testimony to Congress “lacked clarity and completeness,” Fox News reports:
After taking time to reflect and review my testimony from the hearing on July 26, 2011, I realize I could have given clearer, more complete and more direct responses to some questions, former Special Agent in Charge William Newell said in a 12-page document submitted to the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee and obtained by Fox News.
In other words, Newell previously lied:
In a supplemental statement, Newell insisted agents did not knowingly allow thousands of weapons to reach criminal hands. Any concerns raised over the program were never voiced to appropriate authorities, he said, and only once did higher-ups tell agents not to arrest a suspect — when the safety of the agents was in jeopardy.
This would appear to be another lie — he contradicts testimony by one of the original ATF whistleblowers, Special Agent John Dodson:
“Rather than conduct any enforcement actions, we took notes, we recorded observations, tracked movements of these individuals, wrote reports, nothing more. Knowing all the while that just days after these purchases, the guns we saw these individuals buy would begin turning up at crime scenes in the U.S. and Mexico. And yet we still did nothing,” says John Dodson, ATF Special Agent.
PJMedias Bob Owens has suggested this entire operation was about more gun control, and Newell’s filing suggests the same thing:
In the filing Wednesday, Newell said any mistakes were unintentional errors of omission rooted in, among other things, the laws we have at our disposal.
Meanwhile, one of the cooperating gun shop owners — Andre Howard, who ran the Lone Wolf Trading Company was apparently concerned about the operation and secretly recorded conversations with ATF Agent Hope MacAllister. Two of the weapons Howard sold turned up just days later at the scene of the murder of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, according to CBS News:
Among other things, Howard and MacAllister expressed concerns about ATF Special Agent John Dodson, who by that point had gone public about “Fast and Furious” in an exclusive interview with CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson.
The transcripts are damning, as MacAllister suggests the FBI is in real trouble:
Dealer: But you have got to put the word out there to all the departments tell the f****ing FBI shut the f*** up. (whispering)
Agent: FBI’s got their own problems, trust me.
Dealer: I know, I hear.
Agent: They’ve got their own problems.
Dealer: Hypothetically.
Agent: If anybody’s gonna get sued it’s gonna be the FBI, in my opinion.
Moreover, Hot Air is reporting Howard suggested to MacAllister that Terry’s death was just collateral damage“:
Its not an ATF agent who utters those magical words, its the Arizona gun dealer who was working with the ATF on Fast & Furious. He utters them to an ATF agent, though, to which she replies with a cryptic mm-hmm. Callousness — or strategy?
In the tapes, Howard seems arrogant. Howards lawyer claims this was a strategy to cover his own backside:
“He became very suspicious and in his own defense would tape key conversations with Ms. MacAllister and try to get her to make admissions about the truth of the matter,” said Dallas attorney Larry Gaydos. “Andre was trying to get her to admit that indeed they let guns go to Mexico.”
This exchange is particularly damning, because one would expect MacAllister to go ballistic upon hearing someone suggest the death of a fellow federal law enforcement agent — the result of an operation in which she was intimately involved — was “collateral damage.” That she did not speaks to a problem within ATF.
It would appear, however, that things are finally beginning to break loose with this case.
The tapes were apparently released to the U.S. Attorney’s office by Justice Department Inspector General Cynthia Schnedar, a move which sent the two main investigators in the case — Rep. Darrell Issa, (R-CA), chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and Chuck Grassley, (R-IA), ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee — around the metaphorical bend:
“Each of these disclosures undermines our ability to assess the candor of witnesses in our investigation and thus obstructs it,” they wrote in a letter dated Tuesday. “Moreover, your decision to immediately disclose the recordings to those you are investigating creates at least the appearance, if not more, that your inquiry is not sufficiently objective and independent.
“It appears that you did not consider the significant harm that providing these recordings to the very individuals under investigation could cause to either our inquiry or your own. You did not consult with us about the recordings even though the congressional inquiry and reactions to it are discussed at length.”
Moreover, Issa is now calling for an independent prosecutor, according to the Washington Examiner:
Issa complained in a conference call that there is ongoing cover-up of a pattern of wrongdoing that cant be explained by any ordinary people [who tried] to do the right thing but made a mistake.
The Obama administration has been slow to hand over documents to Issas committee, and when they have, theyve been heavily redacted.
Even though I have subpoena ability, I dont have the ability to lock people up for contempt until they fess up and give us what we want, Issa said.
A special prosecutor would have such powers, and would be independent of the government agencies that were responsible for creating and attempting to cover up details of the program.
Indeed, as more details of this case come to light, the deeper and darker it seems to get. An independent prosecutor at this point would seem to be the only way to find out just how deep of a hole DOJ and ATF have dug, and who is in it.
Don’t stop until Eric Holder and Obama are impeached. Anything else is less than justice.
Ping
Repealing the Second Amendment: the Omelette
Agent Terry: an egg
bflr
Have thought all along this story would be the one to show this administration set up most clearly against the Constitution, explaining all the chatter from the get-go to marginalize the Constitution and putting out front all the pointy head Marxist academics, including Obama, to innocuoulsy imply how it is just sooooo obsolete. You know, yawn material. All the while, lives were the price paid to further their gun grab agenda. The other scandals are corruption. This was always something different. Violence against the Constitution using enemies of the state in the scheme against us, the cartels. My head just exploded.
Tucson Tea Party Townhall....they did a GREAT job bringing a congressman on the Oversight Committee, Pinal Sheriff Paul Babeu, and ATF Agent Vince Cefalu to address a crowd of over 500 who enthusiastically support justice for BP Agent Brian Terry as well as many innocent Mexican citizens.
...and now, given the fact that another document has come out, showing BATFE agents using taxpayer money to buy firearms that they directly gave to drug cartels, it is clear Newell was lying -— AGAIN.
But Holder promoted Newell into the investigative role, putting him out-of-reach to Congress.
Deliberately providing firearms to known criminals.....especially across national borders....is an act of war, an act of treason and punishable by death.
The fact that hundreds of Mexican and American citizens have been murdered with these weapons just increases the severity of this case beyond anything we have seen in the history of this nation.
Thank God someone finally mentioned Special Prosecutor
Not to mention the DEA, FBI, Customs & Immigration and for all I know Homeland Security. Someone had to be complicit in getting all that hardware across the border.
Regards,
GtG
Very well said
The more Ive thought about this, the more Ive concluded that Obama, Holder, and the ATF and DOJ people involved are actually guilty of premeditated mass murder and should be prosecuted for it. The only logical purpose for F&F and Gunwalker was to get traceable weapons into the hands of the cartels, have them use the weapons to commit murders, trace the weapons back to American dealers, and blame legitimate gun owners and Second Amendment advocates for the carnage. Absent the carnage, there would be no political blame and no points to be scored. Thus, the guns had to be used to commit multiple murders for the whole evil scheme to work, and those who hatched the scheme had to intend that they be so used. That makes this whole thing a mass murder scheme and the individuals who developed and implemented it mass murderers.
I’m amazed and pleased it’s sloooowly coming along, but just remember this:
These are entities that burned a church full of 100 people to the ground, then promoted the perps. They drove over graves with tanks —they shot moms holding babies.
Sounds fictional, yes, I agree.
A less-well known part of the Weaver chapter was that they were going to burn his house down —if not for some intruding media photographers (whom they roughed up & arrested) it would have happened.
Glad it’s coming along, but THESE are the people they’re dealing with —hard core criminals with badges.
Thanks for posting....I wish the Gun Rights groups would be more involved.
Impeached, CONVICTED, and INCARCERATED would be more like it.
Subpoena, indict, extradite, impeach.
I love the smell of napalm in the morning
You're correct. This *was* always something different. This was, and continues to be, an outright act of war against the Constitution, or in the words of said documant, "waging war on the United States".
Those words define a specific unlawful act, with a specific name. That name is *TREASON*. It is Treason as defined by the Constitution, and should be treated as such, by anyone who took in good faith, the oath sworn by any Federal emloyee.
Rest assured that at least one such does view the whole mess in this light, myself...
the infowarrior
Any appropriate sentence for mass murder, conspiracy to commit mass murder, and treason would involve hypodermic needles, for all concerned, and not mere incarceration...
the infowarrior
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