Obama administration reveals new ATF gun probe rules
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Friday revealed new reforms undertaken to improve how it conducts undercover gun trafficking investigations in the wake of a botched operation in which scores of weapons disappeared.
The reforms require additional oversight of undercover operations, including those that involve more than 50 firearms, and, in most cases, ends the practice of paying gun dealers to serve as confidential informants.
Additionally, a new review committee has been established to monitor sensitive undercover cases or those that would have a “significant regional or national impact,” according to the Justice Department.
The details were revealed just before Attorney General Eric Holder testifies on Thursday before members of the House of Representatives’ Oversight and Government Reform Committee about the bungled operation known as “Fast and Furious.”
The operation, run out of the Phoenix offices of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and US Attorney’s office was meant to follow the guns from the initial buyers along the US border to violent drug cartel leaders in Mexcio.
However, ATF agents did not track the weapons after they were transferred from the initial buyer to others who smuggled them across the border. As many as 2,000 guns may have been sold under the operation.
Two AK-47 style weapons from that program were found in Arizona 18 miles from the border where a US Border Patrol agent, Brian Terry, was shot and killed during a December 2010 shootout with illegal immigrants. — Reuters