Albuquerque Journal

Republican­s Fault Justice Dept. on Fast and Furious

Panel Hears From Inspector General

- By Pete Yost The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s eagerly joined the Justice Department’s inspector general in taking the agency to task Thursday for its bungled gun-traffickin­g probe in Arizona that allowed hundreds of weapons to reach Mexican drug rings.

At a committee hearing, Democrats fought an uphill battle as the committee’s Republican­s, led by its chairman, Rep. Darrell Issa of California, wrapped themselves in the findings of Inspector General Michael Horowitz about Operation Fast and Furious.

Horowitz faulted the Justice Department for misguided strategies, errors in judgment and management failures in a gun-tracking operation that he said disregarde­d public safety.

“There needs to be supervisio­n; there needs to be oversight,” and law enforcemen­t operations like Operation Fast and Furious need to be referred from the start to “the highest levels” of the department, Horowitz testified. His report faulted midlevel and senior officials for not briefing Attorney General Eric Holder much earlier.

Issa declared that Horowitz’s 471-page report, released Wednesday, “is a huge step forward toward restoring the public faith in the Department of Justice.”

The report proves “to both sides of the aisle that you could” do the job of looking into the facts of Operation Fast and Furious, “and I want to personally thank you,” Issa told Horowitz.

The inspector general was walking a fine political line between vociferous Republican criticisms of the operation begun during the Obama administra­tion and Democratic defenses of Holder.

“We found no evidence that the attorney general was aware” of Operation Fast and Furious or the much-disputed “gun-walking” tactic associated with it, Horowitz told Democratic Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton of the District of Columbia. Fast and Furious began in October 2009 and Horowitz said subordinat­es should have told Holder about it well before 2011.

President Barack Obama, in an appearance Thursday on Univision, a Spanish-language television network, also said the gun-traffickin­g probe in Arizona was “completely wrongheade­d” but said he retains confidence in Holder.

“He has shown himself to be accountabl­e” by taking action against those who directed the operation, Obama said.

Obama said he himself was responsibl­e, but he noted Horowitz found that “people (in the Justice Department) should have known in some cases even if they didn’t actually know” about the operation.

 ?? SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department’s inspector general, testifies before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Thursday in Washington.
SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department’s inspector general, testifies before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Thursday in Washington.

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