Jul 202012
 

Flashback for “Fast & Furious”: 43 weapons in Phoenix traffic stop linked to ATF strategy

 

ABC 15 News

By: Lori Jane Gliha

Posted: 07/06/2011

 

PHOENIX –

The ABC15 Investigators have linked an additional 43 weapons recovered during a Phoenix traffic stop to the controversial Fast and Furious ATF case.

According to court paperwork, Phoenix Drug Enforcement Administration agents discovered the guns in mid-April. They pulled over a vehicle near 83rd Avenue and Interstate 10, near the Phoenix and Tolleson border.

Documents filed in federal court reveal five suspects named in the case are accused of conspiring to possess and distribute “500 grams or more of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of methamphetamine…”

Four of the suspects are listed as undocumented immigrants. The fifth suspect had been admitted to the United States under a non-immigrant visa, according to court documents.

 

THE WEAPONS RECOVERED

Agents recovered at least 59 weapons during the bust. The ABC15 Investigators found 43 are connected to the Fast and Furious case with certainty.

We reviewed official ATF Suspect Gun Summary documents – a sort of “watch list” for suspicious gun sales and gun buyers. We matched serial numbers within the ATF documents to gun serial numbers contained within the federal court documents.

Most of the recovered weapons connected to the Fast and Furious case included Romarm/Cugir GP-WASR 10/63 UF Rifles and Romarm Cugir Draco pistols. Agents also recovered at least one FN Herstal pistol.

We found evidence that multiple buyers purchased the weapons seized in the bust and some buyers purchased multiple weapons during one sale.

 

ACTING DIRECTOR TESTIFIES

According to representatives for the Committee on Oversight & Government Reform, ATF’s Acting Director, Kenneth Melson, testified about the Fast and Furious case in front of the House committee and the Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday July 4, 2011.

“Acting Director Melson’s cooperation was extremely helpful to our investigation,” Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Rep. Darrell Issa, R- CA, wrote in a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder.

“He was candid in admitting mistakes that his agency made and described various ways he says that he tried to remedy the problems. According to Mr. Melson, it was not until after the public controversy that he personally reviewed hundreds of documents relating to the case, including wiretap applications and Reports of Investigation (ROIs),” they wrote.

The letter also suggests the DEA, FBI and other agents may also be implicated in the Fast and Furious case. “…We have very real indications from several sources that some of the gun trafficking ‘higher-ups’ that the ATF sought to identify were already known to other agencies and may even have been paid as informants,” the letter stated.

 

DOJ RESPONDS

Assistant Attorney General, Ronald Weich, responded to the letter by saying the Department of Justice is aware of the allegations and “discussions about whether and how to provide any such sensitive law enforcement information have been ongoing.”

Weich continued, “this is not a matter of the Department attempting to keep any such material from the Committee for an improper purpose but a question of whether such material appropriately should be provided and, if so, how to best protect ongoing investigations.”

 

THE HISTORY

Phoenix ATF agents recently testified during a Congressional hearing that they knowingly allowed weapons to slip into the hands of straw buyers who would then distribute the weapons to known criminals.

The strategy was designed to lead ATF officials to key drug players in Mexico, but some agents admitted they never fully tracked the weapons after suspicious buyers purchased them.

“It made no sense to us either, it was just what we were ordered to do, and every time we questioned that order there was punitive action,” Phoenix Special Agent John Dodson testified.

According to the testimony of three Phoenix ATF agents, including Dodson, hundreds of weapons are now on the streets in the United States and Mexico, possibly in the hands of criminals.

Dodson estimated the number could be as many as 1,800 weapons.

“…Fast and Furious was one case from one group in one field division,” he testified. He estimated agents in the Phoenix field division “facilitated the sale of” approximately 2,500 weapons to straw purchasers. A few hundred have been recovered.

 

Jul 112012
 

2 arrested, 4 on loose in case of slain border agent Brian Terry

 

KPHO CBS 5 News

By Steve Stout

By Breann Bierman

Jul 09, 2012 
Brian Terry was killed in a 2010 shootout with suspected drug smugglers and illegal immigrants.

TUCSON, AZ (CBS5) -

Two people have been arrested and four people remain on the loose in the murder investigation of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Border Patrol Agent.

 

>>>> News Video Segment #1

 

>>>> News Video Segment #2

 

 

 

 

 

 

The FBI said at a news conference Monday that five suspects have been indicted on charges related to agent Brian Terry’s death.

According to the indictment which was unsealed Monday morning, Manuel Osorio-Arellanes, Jesus Rosario Favela-Astorga, Ivan Soto-Barraza, Heraclio Osorio-Arellanes and Lionel Portillo-Meza are charged with crimes including of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery, attempted interference with commerce by robbery, use and carrying a firearm during a crime of violence, assault on a federal officer and possession of a firearm by a prohibited person.

A sixth suspect, Rito Osorio-Arellanes was arrested and charged only with conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery.

FBI announced Monday they are offering a $1 million reward for information leading to the arrests of the four suspects they are still searching for, who they believe are in Mexico.

Agent Brian Terry was killed during a shootout with suspected illegal immigrants and drug smugglers in December 2010 in the desert near Naco.

Guns involved in the botched federal gun-walking case known as Fast and Furious were found at the scene.

The family of agent Brian Terry said Monday that they are pleased that progress has been made in the murder investigation.

The family’s attorney, Patrick McGroder said, “The Terry family once again asks that the Attorney General and the Department of Justice comply with the request for documents made by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee so that all Americans can know who approved of the operation in order that those individuals can be held accountable for their decisions. Agent Terry died as a hero protecting this country; he and his family rightly deserved a full and thorough explanation of how Operation Fast and Furious came to be.” Click here to read full statement from the family.

Stay with cbs5az.com and CBS 5 News for updates on this developing story.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.kpho.com/story/18979173/2-arrested-4-on-loose-in-case-of-slain-border-agent

Apr 022012
 

DHS Uses Wartime Mega-Camera to Watch Border

 

WIRED

By Spencer Ackerman

April 2, 2012

 

 

The Department of Homeland Security wants to mount a powerful camera on a Raven Aerostar blimp like this to spy on miles of border at once. Photo: Raven

 

 

One legacy of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars has arrived on the southern border of the United States. The Department of Homeland Security recently completed tests of a powerful camera, one that cut its teeth in the war zones, that captures video of entire miles of border in a single frame. DHS thinks mega-cameras on blimps and aerostats might be the future of border security — if its analysts can only keep up with the glut of data they’ll gather.

The system itself, a wide-area surveillance camera suite known as Kestrel, earned its stripes during the wars. That got DHS interested. “You had this imager flying that was able to archive and save imagery and reconstruct [bomb] emplacement so troops could go after [insurgents] later,” John Applebee, who manages the border camera program for DHS, tells Danger Room. “It also was used for other things every day, like troop protection or perimeter protection, just as we imagine its uses along the continental borders of the United States.”

So for a week of tests, the department mounted Logos Technologies’ Kestrel imager on a 75-foot long Raven Aerostar aerostat tethered 2000 feet above the Arizona desert. DHS reports in a statement that Kestrel helped spot “more than 100 illegal attempted entries and alleged illicit activities in progress.”

“We can see miles from this with a single image frame,” Applebee enthuses. “Within every pixel, you have high-resolution, good, detailed resolution, like high-d-caliber imagery. In every frame, across the frame.”

This is hardly the first time that wartime surveillance technology has made its way home from the battlefield. DHS flies unarmed drones above the northern and southern U.S. borders, snapping pictures. (They carry an “excellent camera system,” Applebee allows, but unlike Kestrel, “you need to know where to point it.”) Police departments nationwide have started using smaller spy drones as well. Earlier this year, DHS expressed interest in camera systems that can spy on four square miles at once, well within the range of the military’s new mega-cameras. Kestrel’s 360-degree camera suite is a step in that direction.

But the migration of those military tools comes the migration of some of the military’s problems. Specifically: the “persistent” video taken by the powerful cameras creates a fire hose of data that analysts struggle to interpret.

And if the glut of video overwhelms the military, DHS — whose annual budget is under $60 billion, an order of magnitude less than the Pentagon’s — is in deep trouble. Applebee is up front about it. “They have the people,” he says. “We do not.”

The answer, he hopes, will come from software. “We’re looking closely at the developments in the military and intelligence communities for ways the software and analysis can be automated, so can we use software tools as a tripwire to signal us and call agent to attention once [the camera observes] a movement has occurred in a given region,” Applebee says. Darpa, the Pentagon’s blue-sky researchers, for instance, are interested in something akin to a “thinking camera” that pre-sorts imagery according to an algorithm based on what an analyst hopes to find.

And perhaps after those pre-selecting imagery tools come online for the military, it won’t take long before civilian law enforcement puts them to use. Applebee certainly hopes so. He sees the wide-eyed Kestrel as a huge help for “securing large areas from illegal intrusion.” Imagine what the next generation of cameras will let him see.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/04/homeland-border-camera/#more-77264