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ATF gun sting fiasco spreads

Weapons found at 11 U.S. crime scenes, Justice says

Richard A. Serrano Tribune Washington bureau

WASHINGTON – Firearms from the ATF’s Fast and Furious weapons-trafficking investigation turned up at the scenes of at least 11 violent crimes in the U.S. as well as at a U.S. Border Patrol agent’s slaying in southern Arizona last year, the Justice Department has acknowledged to Congress.

The Justice Department did not provide any details about those crimes. But the Los Angeles Times has learned that they occurred in several Arizona cities, including Phoenix, where Operation Fast and Furious was managed, as well as in El Paso, Texas, where a total of 42 Fast and Furious weapons were seized at two crime scenes.

The new numbers, which vastly expand the scope of the danger the program posed to U.S. citizens over a 14-month period, are contained in a letter that Justice Department officials turned over to the Senate Judiciary Committee last month.

In the letter, obtained by the Times on Tuesday, Justice officials also reported that ATF officials advised them that the ATF’s acting director, Kenneth Melson, “likely became aware” of Fast and Furious as early as December 2009, a month after the program began. Melson has said he did not learn about how the program was run until January of this year, when it was canceled.

The July 22 letter, signed by Assistant Attorney Gen. Ronald Weich, was sent to Sens. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt., and Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, the top members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The program was intended to identify Mexican drug cartel leaders and smuggling routes across the border by allowing illegal purchases of firearms and then tracking the weapons. Instead, many of the guns simply vanished.

Weich said that although the “ATF does not have complete information” on all the lost guns, “it is our understanding that ATF is aware of 11 instances” beyond the Border Patrol agent’s killing where a Fast and Furious firearm “was recovered in connection with a crime of violence in the United States.”

Justice officials did not provide any more details about those crimes or how many guns were found.

But a source close to the unfolding controversy said that as early as January 2010, just after the operation began, Fast and Furious weapons had turned up at crime scenes in Phoenix, Nogales, Douglas and Glendale in Arizona, and in El Paso. The largest haul was 40 Fast and Furious weapons at one crime scene in El Paso.

In all, 57 Fast and Furious weapons were recovered at those six U.S. crime scenes, in addition to the two seized where Agent Brian Terry was killed.

Weich’s letter also said a total of 1,418 firearms were circulated under Fast and Furious. How many remain missing in the U.S. and Mexico is unclear.