Watergate? Contempt? Laughable.
Educate yourselves.
http://features.blogs.fortune.cnn.co...furious-truth/
Watergate? Contempt? Laughable.Little Timmy Boy, it's you who needs the education; quit drinking the Kool-Aid.
Educate yourselves.
http://features.blogs.fortune.cnn.co...furious-truth/ Originally Posted by timpage
so whats your point?Again, the second paragraph in the OP's cite reads:
some get busted some dont .. posting those cases doesnt mean squat
how many guns did gunrunner turn loose and how many convictions resulted from those guns?
we need some percentages IB, PERCENTAGES! Originally Posted by CJ7
Again, the second paragraph in the OP's cite reads:
"The ATF is hobbled in its effort to stop this flow. No federal statute outlaws firearms trafficking, so agents must build cases using a patchwork of often toothless laws."
The OP's cite is 100% a lie. How's that for percentages, CBJ7? Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Without a targeted federal gun trafficking law, prosecutors are forced to rely on other statutes that agents and prosecutors say are difficult to enforce and riddled with loopholes.No hair splitting to it! The author stated in paragraph two of his article that there were no federal laws against trafficking guns; that is a patent lie, CBJ7.
Chief among them: a frequently used law against lying on the ATF’s Form 4473 at a gun shop—especially in claiming the buyer is purchasing for himself, rather than someone else. But court decisions have made this “straw buyer” charge difficult to prove and judges often don’t take it seriously. The issue has been highlighted in recent months by both U.S.
Attorneys posted along the border and the Justice Department’s inspector general.
Current laws also keep the ATF in the dark on sales of assault rifles, the cartels’ weapon of choice. Recent efforts to require that border gun stores immediately report multiple sales of these rifles to ATF—which might create investigative leads—have so far gone nowhere. And despite launching Project Gunrunner in 2006 to stop gun smuggling into Mexico with money earmarked by Congress, the ATF has only 224 agents assigned to the special effort, according to a Justice Department report. The ATF says those agents are currently managing 4,600 open investigations, along with monitoring illegal sales at 8,500 licensed gun shops along the Southwest border.
Michael Bouchard, a former ATF assistant director who oversaw the bureau’s field operations until 2007, summed up the problem succinctly. The laws, he says, are “very weak,” the resources “very few.”
seems kinda hobbled to me, not to mention youre splitting hairs between "statutes" and federal gun trafficing law. Originally Posted by CJ7
there isnt, thats why feds use vapid statutes to make cases Originally Posted by CJ7Again, since you are such an illiterate reader, CBJ7: