The following from: American Thinker
Rep. Maloney Lies about Fast and Furious
By M. Catharine Evans
Shilling for Dems desperate to pass off the hot potato  known as Fast and Furious to the nearest Republican, Congresswoman Maloney  (D-NY) wrote an op-ed piece for  the New York Daily News last week entitled "Fast and Furious 'scandal'  is a Republican red herring: What we really need are tougher gun  laws."
Maloney followed the DOJ playbook on Fast and  Furious.  Terms like "gotcha games," "ill-conceived operation," "political  fodder," "political sideshow," "witch hunts," and "lax gun laws" are  everywhere.  But that's not the worst of it.  The facts don't fit her agenda, so  what does she do?  The congresswoman piles lies on top of the  propaganda.
 If not for the unspeakable grief of the Terry and  Zapata families, as well as thousands of Mexican citizens, Maloney's rant  wouldn't merit a response.  But people died, and their loved ones deserve  better.
Lie:  The "Fast and Furious Scandal is a Republican Red Herring."
Truth:  The guns retrieved at the scene of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry's murder were  real; they were later traced to the gun-walking operation.  Senator Grassley and  Congressman Issa did not manufacture a crisis, and the only "red" involved is  the blood of the victims.
Lie: "Holder is being blamed for a  program that is not his creation."
Truth:  Fast and Furious was initiated under Holder's watch in the fall of 2009.  The  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms falls under the Department of Justice,  therefore he "owns" it. 
 Lie: "But this initiative, which was  identical to one launched under the Bush administration, spiraled out of  control, with ATF agents losing track of the guns as soon as they crossed the  border." 
Truth:  The experienced ATF agents deposed by Issa's House subcommittee  said they were ordered by higher-ups not to intercept guns "being essentially  just bee lined to the drug trafficking organizations" -- a practice one seasoned  21-year veteran agent called "inconceivable ... never, ever in my wildest dreams  would I have thought this was a technique ... You don't lose guns ... you don't  let guns out of your sight."
Operation Wide Receiver  involved approximately 450 guns, not thousands; there was a serious attempt to  track the weapons; no one was killed; and Mexican authorities were told about  gun-trafficking suspects.  By all accounts, the program was shut down in 2007  after some weapons went missing. 
By contrast,  Operation Fast and Furious kept ATF agents stationed in Mexico as well as  Mexican officials out of the loop; guns were allowed to walk without  interdiction; and despite agents' vocal protestations of "outrage and disgust"  about the deadly program, Fast and Furious continued until Brian Terry's  murder.  Those in charge at the ATF Phoenix field division "ignored their  concerns" and told the agents "to get with the program" because senior ATF  officials like Special Agent in Charge William Newell had "sanctioned the  program."  Hardly "identical." 
Lie: "Americans who are outraged at  Terry's death rightly want to know whether it has been scrapped and whether  Attorney General Eric Holder who oversees ATF, is aggressively investigating  Fast and Furious. I can report that the answer to both of those questions is a  resounding yes."  
Lie: "But for Republican  congressional leaders, one botched operation is not enough to serve their  political goals. They need a scandal -- and are desperate to create one."  
Truth:  The word "botched" might be applicable if the operation out of the  Phoenix division of  the ATF had been stopped as soon as Agents like John Dodson and Olindo Casa  related their fears about the deadly program to superiors.  Agent Dodson  reported the general feeling among those in charge was that "if you're going to  make an omelet, you need to scramble some eggs." 
Agents testified they were essentially told to "stand  down" when requesting permission to interdict guns -- that "all of this was  sanctioned" and was an "acceptable practice."  At one point, an agent confirmed  for the questioner that Phoenix supervisor David Voth  regarded the increasing violence (958 killed in March 2010 according to one  e-mail) as proof that they were on the right track.  According to a June 14,  2011 staff report  prepared for Issa and Grassley, "the agents within Group VII described Voth's  reaction to all this gun violence in Mexico as 'giddy'" (36).
The chilling accounts of Phoenix Group VII special  agents, who were repeatedly ordered not to intervene when they witnessed  suspected straw purchases buying "enormous quantities of assault rifles," made  this a full-blown scandal from the beginning.
Lie: "According to recent media  reports, another Bush-era AG, Michael Mukasey, received a detailed Fast and  Furious briefing in 2007. But only Holder took decisive action in response to  these dangerous tactics."  
Truth:  Here is the memo and  supporting documents from 2007.  Congresswoman Maloney's deliberate use of "Fast and Furious" in the  same sentence as the year 2007 suggests that specific program began before the  2008 election.  It did not. 
 Furthermore, Holder has not taken decisive action.  If  former AG Mukasey was briefed on ATF's Project Gunrunner two months after taking  office, as the memo indicates, Holder's persistent denial that he knew anything  about Fast and Furious until April of 2011, more than two years after he took  over, can mean only that he's lying or seriously unhinged.  To date, no one has  been held criminally accountable for giving orders to "stand down" while mass  murder took place.
Lie: "Given the ongoing violence on  our border and the glaring loopholes in our gun trafficking laws, it's time for  Congress to drop its witch hunts and get serious. We cannot continue allowing  weapons to end up in the wrong hands." 
Truth:  I doubt that the Terry or Zapata families would consider Congress' efforts to  thoroughly investigate the murders of their loved ones a "witch  hunt."
 Congress happens to be dead serious.  For some unknown  reason, those "glaring loopholes" became craters on Holder's watch.  The  distinct feature of  Fast and Furious that sets it apart from previous operations "is that absolutely  no effort to track the guns was ever in place."
 So far, big media has gone along with the "lax gun  laws" and "Bush started it" defense.  But Americans are growing tired of the  lies -- to say nothing of representatives like Maloney who spew them and an  administration who continues to blame a former president while ratcheting up its  own so-called failed programs.Read more M. Catharine Evans at Potter Williams Report.
 
 
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