A July 5, 2010 memo, to "The Attorney General," p.3, states that 1500 straw purchases were made to a firearms trafficking ring which "then supplied them to Mexican drug trafficking cartels. They also have direct ties to the Sinaloa cartel..." Subsequent 2010 memos to AG Holder restated this.
"Weekly reports from U.S. intelligence authorities to the Justice Department in the summer of 2010, at the height of Fast and Furious, warned about the proliferation of guns reaching the Sinaloa cartel."...
10/8/11, "Fast and Furious weapons were found in Mexico cartel enforcer's home," LA Times, Richard A. Serrano
"Guns illegally purchased under the ATF operation were found in April hidden in violence-plagued Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, court records show."
"High-powered assault weapons illegally purchased under the ATF's Fast and Furious program in Phoenix ended up in a home belonging to the purported top Sinaloa cartel enforcer in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, whose organization was terrorizing that city with the worst violence in the Mexican drug wars.
In all, 100 assault weapons acquired under Fast and Furious were transported 350 miles from Phoenix to El Paso, making that West Texas city a central hub for gun traffickers. Forty of the weapons made it across the border and into the arsenal of Jose Antonio Torres Marrufo, a feared cartel leader in Ciudad Juarez, according to federal court records and trace documents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The smugglers' tactics — quickly moving the weapons far from ATF agents in southern Arizona, where it had been assumed they would circulate — vividly demonstrate that what had been viewed as a local problem was much larger. Six other Fast and Furious guns
- destined for El Paso were recovered in Columbus, N.M.
- "But that's only how many we know came through Texas.
- Hundreds more had to get through."
The basement had been converted into a gym with a wall covered with built-in mirrors. Behind the mirrors they found a hidden room with the Fast and Furious weapons and dozens more, including an antiaircraft machine gun, a sniper rifle and a grenade launcher.
"We have seized the most important cache of weapons in the history of Ciudad Juarez," Chihuahua state Gov. Cesar Duarte said at the time, though he did not know
- that many of the weapons came from the U.S. and Fast and Furious.
In the U.S., intelligence officials consider the Sinaloa cartel the most powerful drug trafficking organization in the world. Weekly reports from U.S. intelligence authorities to the Justice Department in the summer of 2010, at the height of Fast and Furious,
- warned about the proliferation of guns reaching the Sinaloa cartel."...
- (The LA Times link above to 'Justice Department' was dead when I tried it. So I'm including here a link to the House Committee confirming the LA Times report that memos were sent to Holder in summer 2010 at the height of F and F. ed.)
Three months into the program, El Paso began to emerge as a hub, perhaps the central location, for Fast and Furious weapons. On Jan. 13, 2010, El Paso police stumbled upon 40 firearms after following a suspicious dark blue Volkswagen Jetta that backed into a garage at a local residence, according to federal court records.
Alberto Sandoval told authorities he acquired the weapons three days after they were purchased from someone he knew only as "Rudy." He said he was paid $1,000 to store the guns and "knew the firearms were going to Mexico."
Sandoval pleaded guilty in federal court in El Paso and was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison. A month later, on Dec. 17, 2010, he escaped from a minimum-security prison in Tucson; officials believe he fled to Mexico.
Two others, Ivan Chavira and Edgar Ivan Galvan, were subsequently charged in that gun recovery, along with the recovery of 20 Fast and Furious weapons on April 7, 2010, in El Paso. Those guns also were discovered by chance by local authorities, and ATF trace records show that the
- weapons were purchased in Phoenix
- two weeks before they were found in El Paso.
"Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Mexico City contributed to this report."
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Obama AG Eric Holder received 5 or more weekly memos addressed to "The Attorney General" (link to memos) beginning at least July 5, 2010. Portions are redacted on each memo. Unredacted, page 3:
- "1500 firearm" "straw purchases" were made to a "firearms trafficking ring." Firearms "were then supplied to Mexican drug trafficking cartels. They also have direct ties to the Sinaloa cartel..."...
Below is link to copies of memos sent to Eric Holder from Michael Walther of the National Drug Intelligence Center dating from July 5, 2010, referenced in the House document. A link provided on the House document wasn't working so I found it elsewhere, details below:
http://oversight.house.gov/images/stories/Other_Documents/ATF_10-04-11_Holder_memo_docs.pdf
The link to Holder memos is from blog, CampaignForLiberty.org, post dated 10/6/11, "Fast and Furious explained by Arizona Sheriff in less than 3 minutes"
scroll down, it's below the Sheriff's video.
via Instapundit
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