Posted on 03/20/2015 9:31:37 AM PDT by maggief
The director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is stepping down following controversy surrounding the agencys proposal to ban certain types of ammunition.
The ATF announced Friday that Director B. Todd Jones is resigning at the end of the month to pursue other opportunities in the private sector."
ATF employees are hard-working, dedicated individuals who serve the public to make our nation safer every day, Jones said in a statement. I have seen firsthand their extraordinary commitment to combating violent crime, ridding the streets of criminals, and leveraging all available resources to keep our communities safe.
I will truly miss leading and working side-by-side with these men and women in their pursuit of ATFs unique law enforcement and regulatory mission, he added.
Jones, who in July 2013 became the first ATF director to be confirmed by the Senate and led the agency after a scandal involving the agency's infamousl botched Operation Fast and Furious" gun tracking initiative, is departing shortly after the agency dropped a controversial attempt to ban certain armor-piercing bullets used in AR-15 rifles.
The episode was the latest in a series of flaps that has put the Obama administration's ATF at odds with many congressional Republicans. In recent weeks, GOP lawmakers have introduced legislation seeking to tamp down on the agency's authority and to abolish the ATF altogether.
Jones resignation comes amid a firestorm over the ATFs proposed bullet ban, which was shelved last week after the agency received tens of thousands of public comments opposing the move.
The ATF argued that banning 5.56mm armor-piercing bullets that can be used in handguns would protect police officers, but emphasized that it was not attempting to ban all types of bullets.
However, congressional Republicans and gun groups beat back the ATFs proposed bullet ban, calling it an infringement on their Second Amendment rights.
Second Amendment rights require not only access to firearms, but to bullets, a group of 53 Republican senators wrote earlier this month in a letter to Jones.
If law-abiding gun owners cannot obtain rifle ammunition, or face substantial difficulty in finding ammunition available and at reasonable prices because government entities are banning such ammunition, then the Second Amendment is at risk, they continued.
The ATF backed off the proposed bullet ban the next day.
The vast majority of the comments received to date are critical of the framework, and include issues that deserve further study, the agency said. Accordingly, ATF will not at this time seek to issue a final framework.
In a statement anouncing Jones' departure, Attorney General Eric Holder lauded him for his service and "groundbreaking" law enforcement initiatives, including an effort to strengthen ballistic imaging technology that recently played a critical role in the investigation of the shooting of two police officers.
"As the first ever Senate-confirmed Director of ATF, his indelible legacy will serve as an inspiring example for all those who follow him," Holder said in a statement.
ATF deputy director Thomas Brandon will take over as acting director until the agency finds a replacement for Jones.
Eric Holder is looking for a new job...
Until the ATF (and pretty much every other “way around the Constitution” agency) gets shut down, it doesn’t mean a thing.
shortly after the agency dropped a controversial attempt to ban certain armor-piercing bullets used in AR-15 rifles.
Wrong. The stuff isn't AP. M995 is AP, hardened tungsten carbide core, two bucks a round if you can find it anywhere and I stopped trying. Let's face it, the 5.56 isn't your first choice against an armored target.
This affair was obviously a deliberate stretch to see if they could redefine ammunition categories enough to restrict their contents. Had they succeeded, any rifle caliber that has ever been chambered in a pistol format could have been banned, which is a very wide range indeed. There was no mistake here, only a reach for power and it's high time the hand doing so got slapped, hard.
I don’t know if you create these visuals or find them somehow, but they’re awesome, Dude!
ATF employees who are worth keeping should transfer to the FBI. The others should find useful jobs. ATF should be disbanded, and all federal firearms laws should be repealed. "Shall not be infringed" means exactly what it says.
How many lies can a person cram into one "statement"?
“Hardly something youre going to carry around in your pocket or a holster. But it does look scary! /s”
Yeah, and I just imagine that it’s noisy with that short barrel. An ordinary AR isn’t what you’d call quiet.
Not hardly’enough. Atf needs to be done away with and never return.
That's not correct. Bushmaster and others such as Olympic Arms made many auto pistols on the AR platform. I used to own one. They were not SBRs and they did not require a tax stamp. As I recall, the barrel was about 9 inches and did not have a stock. It was cool, but really more of a novelty and kind of useless...just a bullet hose. However, I never heard of one being used in a crime. A few years back Bushmaster was still selling them for around $1000 to $1100.
Fired because he backed off the decree?
Much harder to take someone’s pension after he has retired...
http://gunwatch.blogspot.com/2015/03/why-did-batfe-back-off-ammo-ban.html
Very loud - yes. And if you put a stock on it, it becomes a SBR.
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
Constitution of the United States, Article II, Section 4
And those that operate on straight blowback, such as the ones in .22 and 9mm, dispense with the buffer tube all together. Not sure about the ones in the FN 5.7 caliber- which IS a pistol cartridge that WAS designed to defeat soft body armour.
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