Monday, January 13, 2014

ATF now promoting book it tried to kill

In a bizarre twist within a more bizarre story, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is once more promoting a book it tried to suppress and is simultaneously suing him over, recently retired agent Jay Dobyns revealed Monday on the CleanupATF “whistleblower” website.

4 comments:

FedUp said...

I'm still waiting for John Ross' book to make the ATFHQ wall of fame.

SWIFT said...

Congress is famous for creating committees, sub-committees, sub-sub-committees and probably sub-sub-sub-committees. Why not appoint a permanent, triple sub-committee, for no other purpose than oversight of ATF? B. Todd Jones would be required to report DAILY to that committee. That committee would have a permanent investigative arm, whose sole purpose would be to investigate Jones' perjuries, before the committee. Without pressure, nothing else, short of insurrection, will contain this nest of shit bags.

Longbow said...

Why is it that all those super good guys work for this agency? I keep forgetting the answer to that question. I know that if it made sense I would be able to remember. It must be old age.

Anonymous said...


NEWS FLASH!

Wait till the DEA agent who just OUTED the ATF in the Fast and Furious debacle, writes "his" book. After all, the El Universal just produced the first documented evidence the DEA made a deal with the Simenola Cartel to let them run drugs while arming the Cartel...
http://www.businessinsider.com/the-us-government-and-the-sinaloa-cartel-2014-1


quote:
"Zambada-Niebla's lawyer claimed to the court that in the late 1990s, Castro struck a deal with U.S. agents in which Sinaloa would provide information about rival drug trafficking organizations while the U.S. would dismiss its case against the Sinaloa lawyer and refrain from interfering with Sinaloa drug trafficking activities or actively prosecuting Sinaloa leadership.

"The agents stated that this arrangement had been approved by high-ranking officials and federal prosecutors," Zambada-Niebla lawyer wrote.

After being extradited to Chicago in February 2010, Zambada-Niebla argued that he was also "immune from arrest or prosecution" because he actively provided information to U.S. federal agents.

Zambada-Niebla also alleged that Operation Fast and Furious was part of an agreement to finance and arm the cartel in exchange for information used to take down its rivals. (If true, that re-raises the issue regarding what Attorney General Eric Holder knew about the gun-running arrangements.)"unquote

Holder's head must be exploding about now.