Archives For Obama

The White House released a picture of our King skeet shooting and politely firmly instructed his subjects not to photoshop the picture.

prez

Sorry but where I come from – the internet – that is like throwing down the gauntlet and issuing a direct challenge for teh lulz.

The following are not mine, though I wish they were. I have no photochopping talent at all.

http://img580.imageshack.us/img580/9785/obamaskeetshootingcampd.jpg

This last one might offend people with an under devloped sense of irony or humor.

This is according to the Washington Post:

Obama will begin this effort Wednesday in the presence of children who wrote him letters after last month’s mass shooting at a grade school in Newtown, Conn., and who have been invited to Washington to attend the rollout.

Ok, it doesn’t exactly say that, but I think the picture we can draw from this is pretty stark. Surrounding himself with children as he literally takes a Chipotle Barbacoa with extra hot sauce shit on the Constitution.

I hope you’re still calling your congressmen and women, sending emails and getting the message out.

Vote Robamney 2012

El Bombardero —  October 1, 2012 — Leave a comment

Think you are voting for the lesser of two evils? You’re fucking retarded.

In case you don’t have time for a 10 minute video, here are the main points summarized.

1. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both supported TARP.

2. Mitt Romney supported Barack Obama’s “economic stimulus” packages.

3. Mitt Romney says that Barack Obama’s bailout of the auto industry was actually his idea.

4. Neither candidate supports immediately balancing the federal budget.

5. They both believe in big government and they both have a track record of being big spenders while in office.

6. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both fully support the Federal Reserve.

7. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are both on record as saying that the president should not question the “independence” of the Federal Reserve.

8. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have both said that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke did a good job during the last financial crisis.

9. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both felt that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke deserved to be renominated to a second term.

10. Both candidates oppose a full audit of the Federal Reserve.

11. Both candidates are on record as saying that U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has done a good job.

12. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have both been big promoters of universal health care.

13. Mitt Romney was the one who developed the plan that Obamacare was later based upon.

14. Wall Street absolutely showers both candidates with campaign contributions.

15. Neither candidate wants to eliminate the income tax or the IRS.

16. Both candidates want to keep personal income tax rates at the exact same levels for the vast majority of Americans.

17. Both candidates are “open” to the idea of imposing a Value Added Tax on the American people.

18. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both believe that the TSA is doing a great job.

19. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both supported the NDAA.

20. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both supported the renewal of the Patriot Act.

21. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both believe that the federal government should be able to indefinitely detain American citizens that are considered to be terrorists.

22. Both candidates believe that American citizens suspected of being terrorists can be killed by the president without a trial.

23. Barack Obama has not closed Guantanamo Bay like he promised to do, and Mitt Romney actually wants to double the number of prisoners held there.

24. Both candidates support the practice of “extraordinary rendition”.

25. They both support the job-killing “free trade” agenda of the global elite.

26. They both accuse each other of shipping jobs out of the country and both of them are right.

27. Both candidates are extremely soft on illegal immigration.

28. Neither candidate has any military experience. This is the first time that this has happened in a U.S. election since 1944.

29. Both candidates earned a degree from Harvard University.

30. They both believe in the theory of man-made global warming.

31. Mitt Romney has said that he will support a “cap and trade” carbon tax scheme (like the one Barack Obama wants) as long as the entire globe goes along with it.

32. Both candidates have a very long record of supporting strict gun control measures.

33. Both candidates have been pro-abortion most of their careers. Mitt Romney’s “conversion” to the pro-life cause has been questioned by many. In fact, Mitt Romney has made millions on Bain Capital’s investment in a company called “Stericycle” that incinerates aborted babies collected from family planning clinics.

34. Barack Obama and Mitt Romney both believe that the Boy Scout ban on openly gay troop leaders is wrong.

35. They both believe that a “two state solution” will bring lasting peace between the Palestinians and Israel.

36. Both candidates have a history of nominating extremely liberal judges.

37. Like Barack Obama, Mitt Romney also plans to add “signing statements” to bills when he signs them into law.

38. They both have a horrible record when it comes to job creation.

39. Both candidates believe that the president has the power to take the country to war without getting the approval of the U.S. Congress.

40. Both candidates plan to continue running up more government debt even though the U.S. government is already 16 trillion dollars in debt.

The only way this system continues to function is if you give it legitimacy by participating in it.

“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum.”
-Noam Chomsky

Is the revolution near? I hope not, I still don’t have enough MRE’s or flashlight batteries.

Five Missouri state senators, all Democrats, found stickers resembling rifle crosshairs on the doors to their Capitol offices Tuesday as the legislature debated health care reform, several senators said.

“This is a very open act,” said Sen. Maria Chappell-Nadal, who said she was taking it as a serious threat.

Police presence in the hallways of the capitol in Jefferson City was stepped up after the discovery, Chappell-Nadal said.

Crazy motherfuckers.

What about you guys? How do you feel about this?

 

Pfft

The Obama administration won’t be bound by a gun control ban in the $1 trillion spending bill for 2012, the president said Friday.

The funding provision for the federal health agency says that “none of the funds made available in this title may be used, in whole or in part, to advocate or promote gun control.” The language aims to ban taxpayer dollars from supporting gun safety research.

“I have advised the Congress that I will not construe these provisions as preventing me from fulfilling my constitutional responsibility to recommend to the Congress’s consideration such measures as I shall judge necessary and expedient,” Obama said in a statement as he signed the bill into law.

Obama says he won’t be bound by gun control ban in omnibus – The Hill’s Healthwatch

So it continues…

By Associated Press, Updated: Friday, October 14, 12:28 PM

WASHINGTON — A second Bush administration gun-trafficking investigation has surfaced using the same controversial tactic for which congressional Republicans have been criticizing the Obama administration.

The tactic, called “gun walking,” was used in the Obama administration’s Operation Fast and Furious. The Justice Department’s inspector general and Congress are now investigating.

Emails obtained by The Associated Press show how in a 2007 investigation in Phoenix, agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives — depending on Mexican authorities to follow up — let guns “walk” across the border in a failed effort to identify higher-ups in gun networks. Justice Department policy has long required that illicit arms shipments be intercepted whenever possible.

The Bush administration also engaged in another such operation, called “Wide Receiver.”

The tactic of ‘letting guns walk’ surfaces in a second Bush-era gun-smuggling investigation – The Washington Post

After their failed attempt at blaming law abiding citizens of smuggling guns into Mexico. After the BATFE, along with the white house, was proven to be the smugglers and not law abiding citizens.

Ladies and gentlemen, now they say we smuggle ammo into Mexico.

You fucking Joe Schmo. How dare you sell and buy ammo, because of you the cartels are forced to murder. You, and only you – Mr. Law Abiding Citizen are to blame for Mexico’s bull shit.

 

 

PHOENIX — Every year, thousands of guns are smuggled into Mexico from the United States, fueling the brutal drug-cartel wars and stirring outrage on both sides of the border.

But often overlooked in the controversy are the tons of bullets that also make their way south of the border.

In Mexico, ammunition is strictly regulated and possession of even a single illegal round can lead to prison. But there is nonetheless a steady supply of bullets. Almost all of it comes from the north.

Hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunition are purchased each year from online retailers, big-box stores and at gun shows in Arizona and other Southwest border states, then are smuggled across the border.

“It’s all coming from the U.S.,” said Jose Wall, senior trafficking agent for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Phoenix. “I can’t remember where I’ve seen ammunition from anywhere but the U.S.”

Bullets are smuggled through border checkpoints at the bottoms of grocery bags. They are hidden by the box in the backs of cars and stashed by the case in cargo haulers, according to federal court records and interviews with law-enforcement officers.

And like the methods used, there is no typical smuggler. Some work closely with drug cartels; others are ordinary U.S. citizens recruited by cartel operatives to smuggle bullets across for extra cash. Some smugglers are illegal immigrants; others are Mexican citizens with tourist visas who buy ammunition and carry it across the border.

“We have juveniles all the way up to individuals 85 years of age,” said Joe Agosttini, assistant port director in Nogales.

Over the past five years, seizures of ammunition at Arizona’s six ports of entry along the Mexican border have risen steeply, from 760 rounds in fiscal 2007 to 95,416 this fiscal year.

That reflects both a stepped-up effort by U.S. Customs and Border Protection to check southbound vehicles for guns and bullets and a rising demand for ammo by drug cartels. The levels of violence have accelerated in recent years with the Mexican government waging war against cartels and inter-cartel battles intensifying over trafficking turf.

Drug violence has claimed more than 35,000 lives across Mexico since 2006, according to government figures. Other estimates put the toll at more than 40,000.

For every gun and bullet confiscated, cartels must find a replacement, federal officials said.

“If they can’t arm their hit men, they are sitting ducks,” Wall said.

One factor that enables the smuggling is the relative ease with which bullets can be bought in the United States. There are few restrictions on the number of rounds someone can buy.

In one ongoing federal case, three Tucson residents are accused of purchasing as many as 250,000 rounds of ammunition online that officials say were smuggled into Mexico. In another case, federal officials searched a Tucson home and turned up 20,000 rounds plus receipts showing a man purchased “large quantities of ammunition on a weekly basis,” according to an indictment.

“Meet the nefarious gun trafficker’s ugly sister — the ammo trafficker,” then-U.S. Attorney for Arizona Dennis Burke said in a statement earlier this year after a grand jury indicted suspects in an ammunition-smuggling case.

“Driven by unfettered greed, liberal purchasing accessibility and border proximity, the ammo traffickers for drug cartels are flourishing in Arizona.”

Easy to buy in U.S.

According to law-enforcement agents, the cross-border trafficking is all about supply and demand. Mexican drug lords demand bullets, and the United States has vast supplies of ammunition.

“Fifty rounds might cost you 15 bucks here,” ATF Agent Wall said. “But sell them in Mexico, I’ll bet you can make $45.”

In Mexico, there is only one gun store, and it is controlled by the Mexican Army. The store, called Directorate of Arms and Munitions Sales, is in Mexico City.

Ammunition sales are only allowed at select stores and gun clubs.

The penalty for possessing even one illegal bullet in Mexico can be severe, including prison.

In contrast, though ammunition exports are regulated, few restrictions exist for buying ammunition in the U.S. Laws that once treated ammunition sales as rigorously as gun sales were repealed in 1986 and have not been re-enacted.

According to the San Francisco-based Legal Community Against Violence, a public-interest law center that seeks to prevent gun violence, the 1968 Federal Gun Control Act required sellers of ammunition to be licensed and to maintain a log of all ammunition sales. That ended with the 1986 Firearms Owners Protection Act.

Under current federal law, buyers must be U.S. citizens and have no felony convictions. Anyone over 18 can buy rifle ammunition and anyone over 21 can buy handgun ammo. But the decision to sell 10, 100 or even 10,000 rounds of ammunition is left up to the individual retailer. Unlike with multiple handgun and rifle purchases, sellers don’t have to record the transaction or report the buyer to authorities under federal law.

Some counties and states go further and limit the types of ammunition that can be sold, have recording requirements or regulate mail-order deliveries.

A 2007 study by the Legal Community Against Violence found that only five states required licenses for ammunition sellers and only four required a license to purchase or possess ammunition. A few states restricted where ammunition can be carried, and 32 states regulated certain types of ammunition considered especially dangerous.

Arizona is not among the states with any of those laws. The state does prohibit someone from giving or selling ammunition to a person under 18 without written consent of the minor’s parent.

Gun dealers say there is no reason to implement such laws. They say most buyers have legitimate reasons for buying ammunition in bulk, including firearms instructors and sports enthusiasts taking advantage of discount prices.

“I don’t see anything wrong with it,” said Don Gallardo, manager of Shooter’s World in Phoenix. “Should we restrict someone from buying 10 cases of beer versus one case of beer?”

According to federal authorities, the lack of restrictions has turned Arizona into an ammunition warehouse for Mexican drug lords, who only have to find ways to get it across the border.

Suspicions aroused

The operations that deliver bullets into the turmoil of Mexico’s drug war are not complex.

Take, for example, a 2010 Tucson case that began when delivery-truck drivers got suspicious.

A delivery truck for a national shipper regularly dropped off packages at a nondescript apartment in central Tucson. It happened so often, and the packages were so heavy, that the driver complained. The tip was passed along to federal officials.

According to the indictment, ATF agents monitored an April delivery, which came from an online Ohio-based company called aimsurplus.com, to the apartment .

The packages contained 4,000 rounds of .223 ammunition typically used in military AR-15 assault rifles, and 10,000 rounds of 7.62×39 mm ammunition, which is used in the AK-47 type assault rifles favored by drug cartels. Agents said two of the suspects, Emmanuel Vasquez and Charice Gaede, took the bullets from the apartment to a house they owned.

Two months later, in June, agents watched as a Ford Aerostar van with a Sonora license plate backed into the garage of the house; the agents then followed as it headed for Nogales.

Less than a mile from the Mariposa border crossing, the van broke down. The driver pushed it into a parking area less than 100 feet from the crossing.

Later that day, federal law-enforcement agents searched the van and reported finding two hidden compartments with a cache of 9,500 rounds. Agents also searched the Tucson house and found 20,000 rounds and receipts for earlier purchases of hundreds of thousands of additional rounds.

Vasquez, Gaede and Elias Vasquez were charged with illegally exporting ammunition. Emmanuel Vasquez and Gaede also were charged with possession of an unregistered firearm discovered in the search of their home. All three suspects pleaded not guilty.

Aimsurplus.com did not return calls.

Close to the border

Customs and Border Protection agents in Nogales are especially vigilant because the city is located on a key smuggling route; it connects directly to Highway 15,4 a main highway that runs all the way to Mexico City.

Only a few hundred feet from the border fence, tucked into a teeming shopping district , is a store called Nogales Tactical.

With its camouflage exterior and pictures of armed men in the windows, the store stands out among the discount-clothes merchants and bargain electronic stores. It is one of the few stores to openly sell ammunition so close to the border.

Inside, racks of merchandise offer boots and belts, sunglasses and holsters. Knives are kept in display cases; bullets are kept in back.

The store manager, who refused to give his name, said the store sells a limited amount of handgun ammunition. But he was quick to point out that any attempt to walk it across the border would be foolhardy.

“Just one bullet will get you arrested,” he said brusquely, pointing toward uniformed border agents sitting outside the entry port. “It’s worse than buying a gun right now.”

•No major efforts are under way in Congress or Arizona to enact place more controls on the sales or possession of ammunition, say federal officials and interested groups say.

•In 2008, several Democratic members of the Arizona House introduced a bill that would have created a database to track manufacturers, retailers, purchasers and the ammunition itself. Only law-enforcement personnel would have had access. The bill, also introduced in other states, would have imposed a half-cent-per-dollar tax on each cartridge sold to pay for the system. The measure died in committee.

•In Congress, no recent bills have been introduced related to ammunition, according to OpenCongress, a nonpartisan, non-profit group that tracks legislation.

•After the mass shooting near Tucson on Jan. 8, in which Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., was wounded, a bill was introduced in Congress to ban large-capacity magazines holding more than 10 rounds. The bill remains in the House Judiciary Committee.

Smuggled U.S. ammo feeds drug wars – USATODAY.com

Yes, we’re beating this story to death, but fuck it. All government is good for anymore is to take freedoms.

 

One of Washington’s most time-honored rituals is the Friday Night Document Dump, in which the Administration quietly drops a garbage bag full of potentially controversial documents on the back stoop and hopes the big media organizations don’t notice. Last week’s dump involved a pile of emails between a White House staffer and one of the top ATF agents involved in “Operation Fast and Furious.” CBS News reports:

The documents show extensive communications between then-ATF Special Agent in Charge of the Phoenix office Bill Newell – who led Fast and Furious – and then-White House National Security Staffer Kevin O’Reilly. Emails indicate the two also spoke on the phone. Such detailed, direct communications between a local ATF manager in Phoenix and a White House national security staffer has raised interest among Congressional investigators looking into Fast and Furious. Newell has said he and O’Reilly are long time friends.

Investigators previously got their hands on an email from Newell to O’Reilly, in which the ATF agent said “You didn’t get these from me,” and proceeded to discuss “gunwalking” operations in a roundabout way. These operations, of which “Fast and Furious” is the most infamous example, allowed Mexican drug cartels to buy weapons from American gun stores under the watchful eye of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.

The idea was to track the guns to their ultimate end users and bust them for firearms violations… something that almost never actually happened, as thousands of “walked” guns are still missing. Congressional investigators have learned there were never any reliable procedures in place to track the guns, ATF agents were told to stand down when they tried to track the cartels’ gun buyers, and in at least two incidents, the cartel gun buyer was actually an undercover ATF agent. Over two hundred Mexicans were killed with these “walked” guns, along with a United States Border Patron agent.

Here’s how things went back in July, when Representatives Raul Labrador (R-ID) and Darrell Issa​ (R-CA) of the House Oversight Committee grilled Special Agent in Charge Newell about his “you didn’t get these from me” email to White House National Security staffer O’Reilly:

LABRADOR: Special Agent Newell, do you know who Kevin O’Reilly is?

NEWELL: Yes, Sir.

LABRADOR: What’s the nature of your relationship with him?

NEWELL: I’ve known Kevin for ‑ I’d say probably 10‑12 years?

LABRADOR: How often do you communicate with him?

NEWELL: Oh, I haven’t communicated with him in a while but probably three or four times a year or something like that. Or maybe ‑ maybe more depending on him reaching out to me.

LABRADOR: Isn’t it a little bit unusual for a special agent in charge of an ATF field division to have direct email contact with the national security staff at the White House?

NEWELL: He’s ‑ he’s a friend of mine.

LABRADOR: How many times did you talk to him about this case?

NEWELL: The specifics of this case? I don’t think I ‑‑ I mean ‑‑ I don’t think I had one specific conversation with him about the specifics of this case.

LABRADOR: OK. Who …

ISSA (?): Would the gentleman allow me to help him a little? Not that you need it, but could you take the word specific out and ‑ and answer the general ‑‑ did you talk to him about this case?

NEWELL: I might have talked to him about this case. Yes, Sir.

ISSA(?): Do you know when that was?

NEWELL: It was probably ‑‑ I ‑‑ as I recall I think it was during the summer ‑‑ it might have been the summer or early fall of 2010.

(Emphasis mine.) It was just a little back-channel heads-up between longtime friends! You’d never guess from Newell’s testimony to House Oversight that he ended up discussing the flow of American guns into Mexico with O’Reilly for over a month, in a blizzard of emails that included a flowchart. It’s funny that Newell had such a hard time remembering the sizable volume of correspondence CBS News pulled out of this week’s document dump:

The email exchanges span a little over a month last summer. They discuss ATF’s gun trafficking efforts along the border including the controversial Fast and Furious case, though not by name. The emails to and from O’Reilly indicate more than just a passing interest in the Phoenix office’s gun trafficking cases. They do not mention specific tactics such as “letting guns walk.”

A lawyer for the White House wrote Congressional investigators: “none of the communications between ATF and the White House revealed the investigative law enforcement tactics at issue in your inquiry, let alone any decision to allow guns to ‘walk.’”

Among the documents produced: an email in which ATF’s Newell sent the White House’s O’Reilly an “arrow chart reflecting the ultimate destination of firearms we intercepted and/or where the guns ended up.” The chart shows arrows leading from Arizona to destinations all over Mexico.

In response, O’Reilly wrote on Sept. 3, 2010 “The arrow chart is really interesting – and – no surprise – implies at least that different (Drug Trafficking Organizations) in Mexico have very different and geographically distinct networks in the US for acquiring guns. Did last year’s TX effort develop a similar graphic?”

This is simply impossible to square with Newell’s earlier testimony before House Oversight. As the White House rushed to point out, there is no specific mention of the code name “Fast and Furious” in these emails, but Newell did send O’Reilly a photo of a menacing .50 caliber sniper rifle that was part of another, smaller gun walking called “Wide Receiver,” run out of the ATF’s Phoenix office.

There have been two competing theories about the Gun Walker program, which disintegrated in a rush of institutional panic after weapons from Operation Fast and Furious were found at the scene of U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry’s murder. One explanation holds that it was essentially well-intentioned, but the execution was horribly bungled, and the intense Obama Administration cover-up is meant to protect them from charges of deadly ineptitude.

The other, much more sinister theory is that “gun walking” was intended to pump Mexico full of American guns for propaganda purposes, enabling U.S. gun-control advocates to point at all those weapons flowing across the border when they push for more restrictive American laws. As determined investigators chisel through the Administration stone wall and uncover more details of the operation and cover-up, the relatively benign “incompetence” explanation becomes increasingly difficult to believe.

These emails between Newell and O’Reilly add further weight to the “propaganda” theory. O’Reilly sounds like a grad student expressing gratitude for information that supports the thesis of his term paper. Newell doesn’t seem interested in boasting of the ATF’s efforts to stop the activity portrayed in his flow chart.

It would be useful to conclusively determine whether Newell ever discussed the mechanics of gun walking with his old pal O’Reilly, the guy he maybe talks to three or four times a year… except when he’s pumping out a flood of emails about the operation nobody expected to blossom into a gigantic scandal. Unfortunately, the White House is still claiming executive privilege on an unspecified number of key documents.

Also, O’Reilly just happens to be on assignment in Iraq, and is therefore unavailable for comment. Too bad the Most Transparent Administration In History fought tooth and nail to delay releasing every single byte of Fast and Furious information, or the House Oversight Committee might have been able to chat with O’Reilly before he jetted off to Mesopotamia.

Fast and Furious: White House Connection Grows Deeper – HUMAN EVENTS

Umm, this is why you pay taxes.

Not only did U.S. officials approve, allow and assist in the sale of more than 2,000 guns to the Sinaloa cartel — the federal government used taxpayer money to buy semi-automatic weapons, sold them to criminals and then watched as the guns disappeared.

This disclosure, revealed in documents obtained by Fox News, could undermine the Department of Justice’s previous defense that Operation Fast and Furious was a “botched” operation where agents simply “lost track” of weapons as they were transferred from one illegal buyer to another. Instead, it heightens the culpability of the federal government as Mexico, according to sources, has opened two criminal investigations into the operation that flooded their country with illegal weapons.

Operation Fast and Furious began in October 2009. In it, federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives encouraged gun stores to sell weapons to an arms smuggling gang, then watched as the guns crossed the border and were used in crimes. Each month, the agency allowed hundreds of guns to go South, despite opposition from some agents.

All told, the gang spent more than $1.25 million for the illegal guns.

In June 2010, however, the ATF dramatically upped the ante, making the U.S. government the actual “seller” of guns.

According to documents obtained by Fox News, Agent John Dodson was ordered to buy six semi-automatic Draco pistols — two of those were purchased at the Lone Wolf gun store in Peoria, Ariz. An unusual sale, Dodson was sent to the store with a letter of approval from David Voth, an ATF group supervisor.

Dodson then sold the weapons to known illegal buyers, while fellow agents watched from their cars nearby.

This was not a “buy-bust” or a sting operation, where police sell to a buyer and then arrest them immediately afterward. In this case, agents were “ordered” to let the sale go through and follow the weapons to a stash house.

According to sources directly involved in the case, Dodson felt strongly that the weapons should not be abandoned and the stash house should remain under 24-hour surveillance. However, Voth disagreed and ordered the surveillance team to return to the office. Dodson refused, and for six days in the desert heat kept the house under watch, defying direct orders from Voth.

A week later, a second vehicle showed up to transfer the weapons. Dodson called for an interdiction team to move in, make the arrest and seize the weapons. Voth refused and the guns disappeared with no surveillance.

According to a story posted Sunday on a website dedicated to covering Fast and Furious, Voth gave Dodson the assignment to “dirty him up,” since Dodson had become the most vocal critic of the operation.

“I think Dodson demanded the letter from Voth to cover both himself and the FFL (Federal Firearm Licensee). He didn’t want to be hung out to dry by Voth,” a source told the website “Sipsey Street Irregulars.”

Subsequent to this undercover operation, sources told Sipsey, “Dodson just about came apart all over them (his supervisors). In a ‘screaming match’ that was heard throughout the Phoenix office by many employees, Dodson yelled at Voth and Assistant Special Agent in Charge George Gillett, ‘Why not just go direct and empty out the (ATF) arms room?” (to the cartels), or words to that effect.’

After the confrontation, ATF managers transferred Dodson to a more menial job. Months later, after the death of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry, Dodson blew the whistle and went public about the federal government’s gunrunning operation.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/09/26/us-government-bought-and-sold-weapons-during-fast-and-furious-documents-show/#ixzz1Z5c7wzEW

U.S. Government Used Taxpayer Funds To Buy, Sell Weapons During ‘Fast And Furious,’ Documents Show | Fox News

Uh Oh…….

WASHINGTON — Congressional investigators reviewing the failed gun-tracking program Operation Fast and Furious have formally asked the Obama administration to turn over copies of “all records” involving three key White House national security officials and the program, other ATF gun cases in Phoenix, and all communications between the White House and the ATF field office in Arizona.

The letter signed Friday by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, was sent to national security adviser Thomas E. Donilon, a top aide to President Barack Obama.

It marks a significant step in the committee’s investigation into the failed gun-tracking operation, as the committee begins to broaden its investigation from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and targets White House and Department of Justice officials.

This material, Issa and Grassley said, “will enable us to determine the extent of the involvement of White House staff in Operation Fast and Furious.”

White House officials, along with those at the Justice Department, said they have been cooperating in the widening probe, begun earlier this year when several ATF whistleblowers alerted congress that Fast and Furious weapons were found at the scene of the slaying of a U.S. Border Patrol agent.

Under the program, ATF agents allowed illegal gun purchases and hoped to track the weapons to Mexican cartel leaders. But most of the more than 2,000 firearms were lost. Hundreds have reportedly turned up in Mexican crime scenes, two at the shooting where Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was killed, and a semi-automatic at an altercation and assault with police in Maricopa, Ariz.

The congressional letter comes after a series of emails surfaced last week showing that William D. Newell, the ATF field supervisor in Phoenix during Fast and Furious, was in routine contact with Kevin O’Reilly, then the White House director of North American Affairs for the National Security Council. The emails discussed a broad range of gun-trafficking investigations on the Southwest Border, and White House officials have since acknowledged that the cases were part of Fast and Furious.

The White House has said that O’Reilly forwarded the emails to two other White House officials — Dan Restrepo, special assistant to the president and senior director for Western Hemisphere Affairs on the NSC, and Greg Gatjanis, director for Terrorist Finance and Counternarcotics, Counterterrorism Policy, also on the NSC.

In their letter, Issa and Grassley discussed a new email in which Newell told O’Reilly about a specific case that ATF agents had been aware of for three months involving a 22-year-old illegal gun purchaser whom the ATF allowed to buy nearly 700 firearms.

The purchaser was on food stamps and, Newell said in a follow-up email attachment to his boss, William G. McMahon, “when a 22-year-old kid on State financial assistance walks into a gun store and plops down $12,000 in cash to buy a tripod mounted .50 caliber rifle that’s a clue (even for us) that he’s involved in trafficking firearms for a Mexican DTO (cartel).”

According to Issa and Grassley, that exchange of information makes it “clear that the case Mr. Newell and Mr. O’Reilly were communicating about was Fast and Furious.”

The letter requests all emails, documents, briefing papers and handwritten notes involving O’Reilly, Restrepo and Gatjanis during the Fast and Furious period, which ran for 15 months between the fall of 2009 and January 2011. The committee also wants to personally interview O’Reilly by the end of this month.

How much you want to bet that the Obama White House is going to pull a George Bush on these fucking guys?