COBAMA'S ATF THREATENED WITH CONTEMPT CHARGE
By
NWV News writer Jim Kouri
Posted 1:00 AM Eastern
April 27, 2011
© 2011 NewsWithViews.com
Rep.
Darrell Issa (R-CA), the Chairman of the House Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform, in a biting April 25 letter to Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) Acting Director Kenneth E. Melson,
criticized the Director for failing to produce any
documents in response to a subpoena issued more almost a month ago on
March 31.
The subpoena was issued after ATF and Department of Justice officials
failed to cooperate in good faith with the Committee's investigation,
according to Rep. Issa.
Media reports have raised questions about the handling of operations involving gun trafficking into Mexico -- specifically the allegation that ATF has had a policy of permitting, and even encouraging, the movement of guns into Mexico by straw purchasers. This practice may have contributed to the deaths of hundreds on both sides of the border, including federal law enforcement agents.
"The Department's internal policy to withhold documents from what it labels pending criminal investigations may not deprive Congress from obtaining those same documents if they are pertinent to a congressional investigation – particularly in a matter involving allegations that reckless and inappropriate decisions by top Justice Department officials may have contributed to the deaths of both U.S. and Mexican citizens," Chairman Issa wrote in citing Supreme Court precedents and previous Congressional investigations.
"Let me be clear: we are not conducting a concurrent investigation with the Department of Justice, but rather an independent investigation of the Department of Justice – specifically, of allegations that the reckless and inappropriate decisions of Department officials have created a serious public safety hazard. We are asking for documents that relate to decisions such officials made. Congress is legally entitled to all of these documents," stated the conservative lawmaker.
Issa noted that the Committee's request for documents has been pending since March 16, 2011 and a request from Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Charles Grassley has been pending since January.
While the Department of Justice has not produced any documents, Issa's letter to Melson included several documents obtained elsewhere by the Committee indicating the Justice Department knew the public danger the operation created. The role of top Justice Department officials in approving the operation remains top concern for investigators.
The committee’s ranking Democrat rejected Issa’s move, saying that DOJ has informed Issa on several occasions that the release of some of the requested documents would jeopardize ongoing investigations it is conducting, including one involving murder and international narcotics traffickers that resulted in a 53 count indictment of about 20 people.
“Our committee has a responsibility to investigate allegations of waste, fraud and abuse,” Rep. Elijah Cummings (Md.) said in a statement. “However, despite my repeated requests, Chairman Issa has refused to meet with the Department of Justice to ensure that his actions do not compromise ongoing investigations and prosecutions, including a trial of 20 individuals that is scheduled to begin in June.”
"Cummings is an Obama sycophant who suddenly doesn't want access to questionable documents. The funny thing is that Rep. Cummings almost constantly berated President [George W.] Bush for not releasing secret documents that indeed would have compromised national security," said former intelligence officer and police detective Michael Snopes.
"Efforts by the Department of Justice and ATF to stonewall the Committee in its investigation by erroneously, but [Sic} matter-of-factly, citing an internal department policy as a preventative measure for denying access to documents have only enhanced suspicions that such officials have played a role in reckless decisions that have put lives at risk. The Committee continues to pursue this matter vigorously, in part, because concerned individuals have indicated they do not have confidence in the Department's ability to review the actions of its own top officials," Issa stated
Issa noted that the Justice Department's claimed concerns about sharing particular documents are undermined by their unwillingness to take steps to engage the committee in a serious conversation.
"Even if a legal basis did exist for withholding documents, the first step in evaluating this argument and the basis for a meaningful conversation between the Committee and the Department of Justice would be the production of a log of documents responsive to the subpoena with a specific explanation as to why you cannot produce each document," Issa wrote in criticizing the Department's disingenuous reasons for failing to cooperate. "The Department has failed to provide any such log."
The last time the Oversight Committee raised a contempt concern to the Department of Justice was July 2008, when then Chairman Henry Waxman prepared to move forward with a contempt resolution against Attorney General Michael Mukasey for failing to produce subpoenaed information or to assert a valid claim of executive privilege over documents related to an investigation into the identity disclosure of former CIA employee Valerie Plame Wilson.
Meanwhile on Saturday, the Mexican Navy captured one of the prime suspects in the mass murder of 145 people whose bodies were exhumed from mass graves in the northern state of Tamaulipas.
Omar Martin Estrada -- a/k/a El Kilo -- is the alleged local leader of Los Zetas, arguably the most deadly and brutal drug cartel in Mexico. He was nabbed in San Fernando, where the buried bodies were found. A $1.2 million reward had been offered for his arrest.
Most of the victims are thought to have been abducted bus passengers traveling through the area.
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In addition, Estrada is accused of being involved in the murder of 72 Central and South American immigrants whose bodies were found in the same area last year. The illegal aliens refused to work for Los Zetas as "mules" carrying drugs and contraband for the cartel, a U.S. crime scene expert working as a consultant for the police told NewsWithViews.com.
Five other suspects were also arrested, the source said, and forensic scientists and pathologists have been working to identify the bodies, some of which were taken to Mexico City for examinations and autopsies.
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