By Dennis Wagner
A federal agent who exposed the Justice Department’s flawed
gun-trafficking investigation known as Operation Fast and Furious says
the FBI played a key role in events leading to the 2010 murder near
Nogales, Ariz., of U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.
John Dodson, a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives, contends that the bandits who killed Terry were
working for FBI operatives and were sent to the border to do a drug
rip-off using intelligence from the federal Drug Enforcement
Administration.
“I don’t think the (FBI) assets were part of the rip-off crew,” Dodson said. “I think they were directing the rip crew.”
Dodson’s comments to The Arizona Republic amplify assertions
he made in his recently released book, “The Unarmed Truth,” about his
role as a whistle-blower in the Fast and Furious debacle.
Terry belonged to an elite Border Patrol tactical team sent to a
remote area known as Peck Canyon, roughly a dozen miles northwest of
Nogales, where violence had escalated because criminal gangs were
stealing narcotics from drug runners known as mules. He was slain in a
shootout with several bandits. Two assault-type rifles found at the
scene were subsequently traced to Fast and Furious.
The operation, based in Phoenix, was launched in 2009 to identify and
prosecute drug lords, but instead allowed guns to be “walked” into the
hands of Mexican criminals. ATF agents encouraged licensed firearms
dealers in Arizona to sell more than 2,000 weapons to known “straw
buyers” who were working for cartels. Instead of arresting suspects
immediately, surveillance agents took notes and let them disappear with
the guns.
After the Terry slaying and an attempted cover-up within the Justice
Department, Dodson provided evidence and testimony to Congress. His
revelations, later verified by an Office of the Inspector General’s
report, ignited a national scandal over Fast and Furious that resulted
in a congressional contempt citation against Attorney General Eric
Holder and the replacement of top ATF and Justice Department officials.
In his book, Dodson uses cautious language to characterize his
account of circumstances surrounding Terry’s death, saying the
information is based on firsthand knowledge, personal opinion and press
reports. He asserts that the DEA had information about, and may have
orchestrated, a large drug shipment through Peck Canyon that December
night. He alleges that DEA agents shared that intelligence with FBI
counterparts, who advised criminal informants from another cartel that
the load would be “theirs for the taking.”
“Stealing such a shipment would increase the clout of the FBI
informants in the cartel organization they had penetrated,” Dodson
wrote, “and thus lead to better intel for them in the future.”...
Dodson alleges in his book that they even used “FBI money to ultimately purchase a significant portion of the firearms.”...
Dodson, who worked on an FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force after Fast
and Furious, said the FBI began using foreign counter-intelligence
methods to investigate drug cartels domestically after the 9/11 attacks.
He said agents sometimes allow or encourage criminal conduct by
operatives to help them rise within organizations, and thus to produce
better intelligence. He alleged that the attempted border rip-off that
ended in Terry’s death was one such case.
“If they can get these guys (informants) in a position so they’re
closer to the Tier 1 or Tier 2 guy (in the cartel), they’ll do it,” he
said. “They want to make these guys (operatives) rock stars” in the eyes
of drug lords.
Dodson said the practice is justified in the bureau by a perception
that “it doesn’t matter what they (informants) are doing; these crimes
are going to be happening anyway.” However, he added, the result is that
agents strengthen a cartel to gain intelligence — and other agents or
informants may do the same for rival crime syndicates.
“Essentially, the United States government is involved in cartel-building,” Dodson said.
A high-ranking cartel official facing trial in Chicago has made
similar allegations in seeking to have charges against him thrown out.
Jesus Zambada-Niebla, an associate of drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo”
Guzman and son of another narcotics boss, filed federal court motions
claiming the Sinaloa Cartel leaders had a longtime arrangement with U.S.
law enforcement.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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