Yuma Sun

Admin. to replace acting ATF director

- BY MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON – The Biden administra­tion is removing the acting director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives from his position and replacing him with the U.S. attorney in Arizona, three people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The shakeup comes a little more than a week after President Joe Biden announced he was nominating Steve Dettlebach, who served as a U.S. attorney in Ohio from 2009 to 2016, to run the agency.

In the interim, the administra­tion will put Gary Restaino, the U.S. attorney in Arizona, in charge while Dettlebach’s nomination wades its way through the Senate, the people said.

The current acting director, Marvin Richardson, is being demoted to deputy director and will remain at ATF for now to advise Restaino, the people said. The people could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Biden was making the move under a federal law known as the Vacancies Reform Act, which sets the terms for temporaril­y filling jobs requiring Senate confirmati­on.

“We of course, are strongly advocating for and pushing for his eminently qualified nominee to be confirmed,” Psaki said.

Biden had to withdraw the nomination of his first ATF nominee, gun-control advocate David Chipman, after it stalled for months because of opposition from Republican­s and some Democrats in the Senate. The nominee will need a simple majority to be confirmed.

Both Republican and Democratic administra­tions have failed to get nominees for the ATF position through the politicall­y fraught process since the director’s position was made confirmabl­e in 2006. Since then, only one nominee, former U.S. Attorney B. Todd Jones, has been confirmed. Jones made it through the Senate in 2013 but only after a six-month struggle. Jones was acting director when President Barack Obama nominated him in January 2013.

The move was first reported by The Reload, which reports on firearms policy and politics.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? speaks about his infrastruc­ture agenda at the New Hampshire Port Authority in Portsmouth, N.H., on Tuesday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP speaks about his infrastruc­ture agenda at the New Hampshire Port Authority in Portsmouth, N.H., on Tuesday.

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