Published March 22, 2012
Documents
released Thursday show that federal agents appeared to have probable cause to
arrest the biggest buyer of assault weapons in the Fast and Furious operation
-- eight months before
Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry's death ended the scandal-ridden program.
Rep.
Darrell Issa,
R-Calif., and Sen. Charles Grassley,
R-Iowa, have demanded Attorney General Eric Holder
provide a briefing as to why ringleader Manuel Celis Acosta was not arrested
earlier given repeated evidence that he was running guns.
"I
think the Department of Justice is the Department of Injustice," Grassley
said on Capitol Hill. "They can't expect people to believe that they
couldn't arrest this guy."
On
April 2, 2010, Phoenix Police stopped Celis Acosta. In the car they found eight
weapons, none of which were registered to him. At least one, a Colt .38, had
been bought just a few days earlier by Uriel Patino, who had already bought 434
weapons in the previous six months.
It
is illegal to buy a gun for anyone other than yourself. The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has argued it did not have probable cause to
arrest Patino or Celis Acosta. These new documents suggest they did, raising
new doubts about the agency's desire to actually bust the trafficking ring.
Two
months later, on May 29, 2010, Celis Acosta was stopped again, this time
driving a 2002 BMW 754i trying to cross into Mexico. Inside, border agents
found 74 rounds of AK-47 ammunition and nine cell phones hidden in the trunk.
ATF Special Agent Hope MacAllister and her counterpart from Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, Layne France, released him after he promised to cooperate
in the future. MacAllister wrote her phone number on a $10 bill.
Celis
Acosta had been under ATF surveillance since October 2009. He had been a
suspect in a Drug Enforcement Administration investigation, but when he began
buying guns for the Sinaloa Cartel, the DEA alerted ATF. The two agencies
shared a wiretap until ATF got its own. The ATF also set up a camera mounted on
a telephone pole outside his home where they watched guns and money change
hands in his garage multiple times.
On
April 7, police in El Paso also seized another load of weapons assembled by
Celis Acosta. All the guns had been bought in Phoenix by straw buyers under
watch by Operation Fast and Furious. Some belonged to Patino, who again
appeared to be trafficking weapons.
ATF
managers have told Congress they could not arrest anyone because the U.S.
Attorney's Office in Arizona would not allow it since agents lacked probable
cause that a crime was committed. They also admit knowingly allowing some guns
to be illegally purchased in order to further their investigation.
Many
in Congress don't buy it.
"If
you find somebody carrying a massive number of guns across the border that you
didn't have reason to arrest them?" said Grassley. "That just doesn't
hold water as far as I am concerned. It doesn't pass the laugh test."
More
than 100 Republicans in the House have signed a resolution asking for Holder to
resign.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03/22/agents-appeared-to-have-probable-cause-to-arrest-fast-and-furious-suspect/?intcmp=trending#ixzz1px1b6Pzr
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03/22/agents-appeared-to-have-probable-cause-to-arrest-fast-and-furious-suspect/?intcmp=trending#ixzz1px1b6Pzr
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