Shakeup coming at ATF in the wake of the “gunwalker” revelations?
by Hugh Holub on Jun. 18, 2011, under atf, politicsSipsey Street is reporting that Kenneth Melson, acting director of the ATF, is going to get the ax next week because of the revelations about his active role in the “gunwalker” scandal.
Gunwalker involved the ATF letting guns “walk” into the hands of the Mexican drug cartel.
Two of the ATF “walked” guns were found at the murder scene of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry south of Tucson last December.
Me and my minions (grin) worked on this rumor all day today, and all we could confirm was that there were rumors from various sources saying the same thing BUT NO CONFIRMATION. We have learned to be careful about disinformation so we sat on the rumors until something else popped up. Here it is in a Wall Street Journal story by Evan Perez and Devlin Barrett:
“Head of ATF Is Likely to Go.”
The Justice Department is expected to oust the head of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, according to people familiar with the matter, amid a troubled federal antitrafficking operation that has grown into the agency’s biggest scandal in nearly two decades.
Moves toward the replacement of Kenneth Melson, acting ATF director since April 2009, could begin next week, although the precise sequence of events remains to be decided, these people said.
The shakeup shows the extent of the political damage caused by the gun-trafficking operation called Fast and Furious, which used tactics that allowed suspected smugglers to buy large numbers of firearms. Growing controversy over the program has paralyzed a long-beleaguered agency buffeted by partisan battles. The ATF has been without a Senate-confirmed director since 2006, with both the Bush and Obama administrations unable to overcome opposition from gun-rights groups to win approval of nominees.
In November, President Barack Obama nominated Andrew Traver, the head of the ATF’s Chicago office, as permanent ATF director. The nomination stalled in the Senate after the National Rifle Association said Mr. Traver had a “demonstrated hostility” to the rights of gun owners.
Mr. Traver is set to travel to Washington on Tuesday to meet with Attorney General Eric Holder and Deputy Attorney General James Cole, the people said. The administration is weighing whether to name Mr. Traver as acting director or choose another interim chief while awaiting Senate action on his nomination, they said.
ATF spokesman Scot Thomasson said: “Acting Director Kenneth Melson continues to be focused on leading ATF in its efforts to reduce violent crime and to stem the flow of firearms to criminals and criminal organizations. We are not going to comment on any speculations.”
Mr. Melson is the most senior official so far implicated in a congressional probe of the Fast and Furious operation. The ATF Phoenix office ran the program in 2009-2010 to monitor weapons purchases by suspected gun smugglers. Agency officials hoped eventually to build a case against major arms smugglers serving Mexican drug cartels. The ATF has struggled to stanch the flow of U.S. weapons to Mexican drug gangs.
At a House hearing this week, Rep. Darrell Issa (R., Calif.), chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, disclosed internal documents showing that Mr. Melson was closely involved in managing Fast and Furious operation. One email among ATF officials described Mr. Melson’s request for an Internet link to hidden cameras the ATF had planted in gun shops cooperating with the operation, Mr. Issa said, citing the documents. That allowed Mr. Melson to watch a live feed of suspected “straw buyers,” who purchase firearms on behalf of others, buying AK-47-style rifles, he said.
Mr. Issa and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) are leading the congressional probe of Fast and Furious, which came to light after an Arizona shootout in December that killed a U.S. border agent. Two assault weapons bought in a gun shop that was part of the operation were found at the scene. The shooter and the gun used to kill the agent haven’t been identified. A Mexican national is charged in the shootout.
Republican lawmakers say the agency was “reckless” in running the program and should have known that at least some of the thousands of weapons would end up in Mexico or be used in crimes in the U.S.
The office of the Justice Department’s inspector general is investigating the matter.
Fast and Furious has grown into the agency’s worst crisis since the ATF’s 1993 raid on a religious sect in Waco, Texas, which triggered a gunbattle that killed four ATF agents. The fallout from the raid and subsequent government assault on the sect’s compound led to years of recriminations and investigations of the ATF.
The Fast and Furious operation caused dissent in the ATF Phoenix office, according to three ATF agents who testified at a House hearing Wednesday. The agents said they battled supervisors who insisted on doing surveillance instead of arresting suspected straw buyers.
Despite the Justice Department’s internal probe, the hearing helped cement the view among top Justice Department officials that Mr. Melson needed to be moved out before pressure from lawmakers grew more intense, according to the people familiar with the matter.
Ronald Weich, assistant attorney general for legislative affairs, testified at this week’s hearing but gave few details of the program. Mr. Weich said that if the investigation found “flawed strategies” or “insufficient surveillance of weapons,” the responsible officials would be held to account.
The ATF is at the forefront of the government’s efforts to stem the flow of what both the U.S. and Mexican governments say is a flood of U.S. arms to Mexican cartels. ATF agents say stopping that flow is often complicated by gun-owning traditions, particularly in border states, and laws that make it difficult to prosecute illegal weapons sales.
Gun-rights groups, which dispute that the U.S. is a major source of firearms trafficked to Mexico, have criticized ATF attempts to increase regulation of gun purchases. At the same time, the Obama administration has been under pressure from big-city mayors and others who favor tighter restrictions.
In a 2010 audit, the Justice Department inspector general criticized the ATF for pursuing too many small-buyer cases and not using its resources to find major gun traffickers.
It’s unclear how the current controversy will affect the administration’s chances of winning Senate confirmation for Mr. Traver. Mr. Traver is a 24-year ATF veteran investigator and former Navy officer. As the head of the ATF office in Chicago, he made a priority of pursuing gang cases. In particular, he focused on pursuing street gangs that had spread from urban areas into the suburbs, according to people who have worked with him.
Some ATF agents believe the scandal could help highlight how Congress’s refusal to approve an ATF leader contributes to the agency’s troubles.
White House spokesman Jay Carney, in response to questions Friday, said, “I can tell you that, as the president has already said, he did not know about or authorize this operation.”
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From Sipsey Street:
As the guy who first broke the news of the Traver nomination in early July of last year, I’ll tell you this: The Traver confirmation hearing will cover a whole bunch of skeletons. Remember that Traver has been the heir-apparent for some time. THAT MEANS HE WAS CONSTANTLY BRIEFED ON WHAT BECAME THE GUNWALKER SCANDAL BEGINNING LAST YEAR. The question then becomes what did HE know and WHEN did he know it.
Remember, the hearing will be in front of Charles Grassley. I think you can count on the Resistance to provide him with a whole ream of questions for the virulently anti-firearm freedom Mr. Traver.
Then there’s the question of what this means for Melson. Is he really ready to roll? Does the White House actually think they can hold the disintegrating dam by throwing The Gunwalker Man under the bus? Is there a promised Presidential Pardon if he accepts responsibility? Will he trade a potential jail sentence for a whispered promise? Does he REALLY trust these people that much?
Answer: If Melson goes, Melson will roll. The documents revealed so far take this far higher than him. There are all manner of laws, domestic and international, that Melson and his crew broke at the behest of his superiors. Insiders believe that he will trade Congressional immunity for a full confessional. THAT hearing will make “Black Wednesday” look like a happy affair for Eric Holder and his fellow Gunwalker conspirators.
COMMENT from VFBA: So…the ultimate question is who is going to be the goat for Gunwalker?
Will Melson take his papers and go quietly into retirement? Or will he go out in a blaze of glory and move the goat execution up another level in the federal government?
There is very strong suspicion that Melson and ATF could not have gone ahead with Gunwalker without the approval of someone really high up in the Department of Justice Attorney General’s Office.
Ultimately this is Attorney General Eric Holder’s problem.
If Holder didn’t know anything about Gunwalker then he is terminally incompetent for hiring and trusting the kinds of underlings that would hatch something like Gunwalker.
If Holder actually knew about and approved Gunwalker, he’s bar-b-qued goat.
The GOP would like nothing better than to take down an Obama cabinet-level official in a scandal….and they are hot on Holder’s trail.

June 18th, 2011 on 12:31 pm
Hehe… this is just the start. 8^)
June 18th, 2011 on 9:09 pm
The State Department’s self fulfilling prophecy.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/02/myth-percent-small-fraction-guns-mexico-come/
How many dead Border Patrol Agents does it take, Hillary??
June 18th, 2011 on 10:07 pm
Abolish this unconstitutional agency.
June 18th, 2011 on 11:45 pm
The federal government has legal concerns about congressional hearings. They should have thought of this before they started running weapons to insurgents across an international border into a friendly country.
The international border violation throws this right into the State Department’s lap, subpoena Hillary to testify under oath.
This goes all the way to the top, as in CEO Obama. Bet he is already looking for a few Ollie North’s to take the bullet and get thrown under the bus.
It gets sicker, the ATF & DOJ knew where the weapons were at any given moment. They worked with the gun shops of the Mexican cartel’s choice (ATF made it easier for them) and installed GPS tracking devices into the butt stocks of guns.
One ATF agent has already admitted they watched on laptop computers in real time as the weapons crossed the border into Mexico.
“The ATF allowed and encouraged five Arizona gun store owners to sell some 1,800 weapons to buyers known to them as gun smugglers.
- It installed cameras inside the gun stores to record purchases made by those smugglers.
- It hid GPS trackers inside gun stocks and watched the weapons go south on computer screens.”
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/06/09/justice-officials-in-panic-mode-as-new-testimony-is-expected-to-reveal-depth/#ixzz1PKOosrP9