WASHINGTON - Facing flow of illicit weapons into Mexico, the U.S. Justice Department announced Monday that all gun shops in four Southwest border states will be required to alert the federal government to frequent buyers of high-powered rifles.
The new policy comes amid criticism of a flawed federal probe aimed at dismantling large-scale arms trafficking networks along Arizona's border with Mexico.
In the investigation, called Operation Fast and Furious, several agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives say they were inexplicably ordered by superiors to stop tracking some small-time "straw" buyers who purchased large numbers of weapons apparently destined for drug cartels.
Twenty low-level gun buyers have been charged in the operation. In December, two assault rifles, bought by one of the now-indicted small-time buyers under scrutiny in Fast and Furious from a gun shop in Glendale, Arizona, turned up at the scene of a shootout that killed Brian Terry, an agent of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. In recent congressional testimony, ATF agent John Dodson estimated that 1,800 guns in Fast and Furious were unaccounted for, and about two-thirds are probably in Mexico.
Under the new policy, federal firearms licensees in Texas, California, Arizona and New Mexico must report buys of two or more of some types of rifles by the same person in a five-day span. The requirement applies to purchases of semiautomatic rifles that have detachable magazines and a calibre greater than .22.
ATF estimates it will generate 18,000 reports a year.
Deputy Attorney General James Cole said the new reporting measure will improve the ATF's ability to disrupt illegal weapons trafficking networks that funnel firearms to criminal organizations
Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said the new policy "is exactly what ATF agents on the ground told Congress — that reporting multiple sales of military-grade assault weapons is a crucial tool to identify and disrupt Mexican drug cartels engaged in gun trafficking."
One of the critics of Operation Fast and Furious called the new policy "the height of hypocrisy." The Obama administration is restricting the gun rights of border state citizens, "when the administration knowingly and intentionally allowed guns to be trafficked into Mexico," said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, a Texas Republican.
"Limiting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens is not going to solve the problem," Smith said.
Mexico's federal security spokesman, Alejandro Poire, said his government approves Obama's action.
ATF estimates the requirement will cover nearly 8,500 gun store operators in the four states, although less than 30 per cent of those operators are expected to have multiple sales to report.
ATF will retain the information, and if no investigative leads have been realized after two years, it will be purged.
Holders of federal firearms licenses already report multiple sales of handguns. The results go to the National Tracing Center, and ATF says it has led to successful prosecutions for firearms trafficking.
The new policy comes amid criticism of a flawed federal probe aimed at dismantling large-scale arms trafficking networks along Arizona's border with Mexico.
In the investigation, called Operation Fast and Furious, several agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives say they were inexplicably ordered by superiors to stop tracking some small-time "straw" buyers who purchased large numbers of weapons apparently destined for drug cartels.
Twenty low-level gun buyers have been charged in the operation. In December, two assault rifles, bought by one of the now-indicted small-time buyers under scrutiny in Fast and Furious from a gun shop in Glendale, Arizona, turned up at the scene of a shootout that killed Brian Terry, an agent of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. In recent congressional testimony, ATF agent John Dodson estimated that 1,800 guns in Fast and Furious were unaccounted for, and about two-thirds are probably in Mexico.
Under the new policy, federal firearms licensees in Texas, California, Arizona and New Mexico must report buys of two or more of some types of rifles by the same person in a five-day span. The requirement applies to purchases of semiautomatic rifles that have detachable magazines and a calibre greater than .22.
ATF estimates it will generate 18,000 reports a year.
Deputy Attorney General James Cole said the new reporting measure will improve the ATF's ability to disrupt illegal weapons trafficking networks that funnel firearms to criminal organizations
Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said the new policy "is exactly what ATF agents on the ground told Congress — that reporting multiple sales of military-grade assault weapons is a crucial tool to identify and disrupt Mexican drug cartels engaged in gun trafficking."
One of the critics of Operation Fast and Furious called the new policy "the height of hypocrisy." The Obama administration is restricting the gun rights of border state citizens, "when the administration knowingly and intentionally allowed guns to be trafficked into Mexico," said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, a Texas Republican.
"Limiting the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens is not going to solve the problem," Smith said.
Mexico's federal security spokesman, Alejandro Poire, said his government approves Obama's action.
ATF estimates the requirement will cover nearly 8,500 gun store operators in the four states, although less than 30 per cent of those operators are expected to have multiple sales to report.
ATF will retain the information, and if no investigative leads have been realized after two years, it will be purged.
Holders of federal firearms licenses already report multiple sales of handguns. The results go to the National Tracing Center, and ATF says it has led to successful prosecutions for firearms trafficking.
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