Senator investigating allegations guns sold in purchases sanctioned by BATFE were later used to kill a Border Patrol agent

By Chad D. Baus

The Associated Press reported recenty that a U.S. senator is examining a claim that two guns sold in purchases sanctioned by federal firearms agents were later used in a December shootout that left a Border Patrol agent dead near the Arizona-Mexico border.

From the article:

Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa said in a letter provided Monday to The Associated Press he had received information that appears to partially corroborate the claim received by members of the Senate Judiciary Committee about the guns.

"Members of the Judiciary Committee have received numerous allegations that the ATF sanctioned the sale of hundreds of assault weapons to suspected straw buyers, who then allegedly transported these weapons throughout the Southwest border area and into Mexico," reads a letter sent Thursday from Grassley to Kenneth Melson, acting director of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The letter does not elaborate on the role possible of federal agents in the sale of the guns, and it could not be determined if the purchases were part of a sting operation.

ATF spokesman Tom Mangan declined to comment. Grassley spokeswoman Beth Pellett Levine declined to comment on the senator's letter to Melson.

The article goes on to describe the details of the shoot-out that led to a Border Patrol agent's death.

Border Patrol Agent Brian A. Terry was waiting with other agents on Dec. 14 in a canyon near the Arizona border city of Nogales when a shootout with bandits erupted.

Terry was part of an elite squad similar to a police SWAT team that was sent to the canyon 13 miles north of the border known for robberies, drug smuggling and violence.

No other agents were injured in the attack. The six suspects were being held on felony immigration charges and haven't been charged in Terry's death. All have made court appearances, but authorities declined to release their identities and hometowns.

FBI spokesman Manuel Johnson declined to comment on the investigation into Terry's death. The agency declined an earlier Freedom of Information Act request by The Associated Press to release reports and other records of the investigation.

Grassley said in a letter Thursday that a buyer purchased three assault rifles with cash more than a year ago in Glendale, Ariz., and two of those guns were used in the shootout in Arizona.

"These extremely serious allegations were accompanied by detailed documentation which appears to lend credibility to the claims and partially corroborates them," Grassley wrote.

In the follow-up letter to Melson, Grassley said an ATF manager in Phoenix questioned an agent who answered questions posed by Grassley staffers about the agency's initiative to reduce the flow of firearms to Mexico.

The manager accused the agent of misconduct for his contacts with the judiciary committee, Grassley said.

"This is exactly the wrong sort of reaction for the ATF," Grassley wrote. "Rather than focusing on retaliating against whistleblowers, the ATF's sole focus should be on finding and disclosing the truth as soon as possible."

In recent years, the BATFE have taken part in the Obama administration's efforts to blame law-abiding American gun owners for Mexico's drug and violence problems, claiming that Mexican cartels are paying full retail price and sales tax for civilian-version semi-automatic rifles in America, when they can more easily purchase or steal fully-automatic rifles and other military ordinance on the black market in their own country. The claim that 90% of guns recovered in Mexico originate in the U.S. has been thoroughly debunked, and there are new allegations that the BATFE fabricated the number.

If these new allegations prove true, the organization will have been proved far more dangerous and wreckless than they claim law-abiding American citizens are.

Chad D. Baus is the Buckeye Firearms Association Vice Chairman.

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