Hillary, Holder, Obama Fast and Furious
By Jim Kouri
While the release of new Fast & Furious
documents may seem a victory for many Americans, it's doubted the news
media — who are busy tearing apart Republican candidates — will even
glance at these latest records. As renowned prosecutor, defense attorney
and author Vincent Bugliosi said before dying: "The news media are a
group who can always be counted on to use a minimal amount of
intelligence in covering a story."
Many Americans believe that Obama, Holder, Clinton and others lied about their gun snafu.
With the Democrats seeking ways to salvage the political career of their heir apparent to
the White House, Hillary Clinton, who is being investigated by the FBI,
the State Department's Inspector General, the federal courts and a
number of NGO's (non-government organizations), it was decided to just
bite the bullet. The Obama administration picked this week to allow
lawmakers and the public to have access to documents from another
scandal.
The Obama Justice Department on Friday released
thousands of subpoenaed documents about the controversial "Operation
Fast and Furious" gun-walking investigation after dragging their feet
for years.
The entire operation failed — which began in 2009 and ended in 2011
— to meet its goal of stopping the gun smuggling occurring at the
southwestern border into Mexico. Planned in Washington, D.C., when Eric
Holder served as Attorney General, the Justice Department's Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and federal prosecutors
with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Arizona ran the operation.
Critics claim the operation was meant to coincide with statements
from then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, President Obama, and other
Democrats who blamed the extraordinary violence and death in Mexico on
the proliferation of firearms in the hands of Mexican crime gangs that
are provided illegally by Americans.
"The idea was to use the death and destruction in Mexico by U.S.
politicians to gain public support for tighter gun laws and a flagrant
disregard for the Second Amendment," said former narcotics officer
Glenda Mitchell. "It was a perfect operation — warts and all — for the
'Blame America First' crowd in all three branches of the U.S.
government," she added.
The gist of the operation was that the ATF knowingly allowed people
to purchase firearms illegally in the United States and sneak them into
Mexico, according to court documents.
Obama's minions called CBS and complained that journalist Sharyl
Attkisson needed to be reined in, writing that they were 'calling
Sharyl's editor and reaching out to anchorman Bob Scheiffer because
She's out of control.'
The presiding federal judge ordered the Justice Department to
release the documents to the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee, which was criticized by the Democrats and their media
sycophants for investigating Fast and Furious. GOP lawmakers were
lambasted for calling it a scandal and voting to hold Attorney General
Eric Holder 'in contempt of Congress' for obstructing the overall
investigation.
"If Holder were a Republican, there would have been calls to charge
him with perjury since he evidently lied under oath during his
congressional testimony. Hell, there probably would have been a special
prosecutor appointed if Fast and Furious occurred during a Republican
administration," said former police detective and military intelligence
operation Michael Snopes.
The thousands of records released on Friday
were about the Justice Department's secret meetings about congressional
and media inquiries regarding the investigation of the Obama White
House, the Justice Department and the ATF commanders who ran the
gun-walking operation.
But the Obama administration isn't out of the woods yet. Some Republicans lawmakers are slamming Friday's release of documents. They claim the released documents are only a smidgen of the documents requested in the federal subpoenas.
"The documents are critical to the committee's efforts to
understand and shine light on what was happening inside DOJ during the
time of this irresponsible operation," according to a statement released
by the committee chairman and Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah.
Also on Friday, Rep.
Chaffetz and his committee appealed to the D.C. Circuit Court of
Appeals requesting the remaining documents it had originally requested.
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