The Washington Times

Brian Terry

Latest Brian Terry Items
  • Homeland agents failed to stop ATF, Fast & Furious guns from crossing border

    Fifteen months before the Fast & Furious gun scandal was unmasked in public, Homeland Security agents along the Arizona border recognized that their colleagues at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were allowing illegal guns to flow across the border to Mexican drug gangs in violation of federal policy.


  • Illustration: Immigration by Linas Garsys for The Washington Times

    KEPHART: Inviting criminals across the border

    Come Jan. 2, 2013, 3,400 Border Patrol agents, 932 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) special agents, and 802 ICE deportation and removal officers are going to lose their jobs. Unless President Obama forces Congress to break the gridlock on budget decisions, the layoffs are certain.


  • Ex-ATF chief claims gun-running story delay

    The former head of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives told congressional investigators he discovered the Obama administration's original account to Congress about the Fast and Furious gun-running scandal was inaccurate as early as March 2011 and urged the Justice Department to correct the record, an action that did not formally occur until eight months later.


  • Testimony suggests administration knew for months Fast and Furious story wrong

    The former head of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives told congressional investigators he discovered the Obama administration's original account to Congress about the Fast and Furious gun scandal was inaccurate as early as March 2011 and urged the Justice Department to correct the record, an action that did not formally occur until eight months later.


  • In this undated photo provided by the Ivie family, Border Patrol Agent Nicholas Ivie is seen. Ivie, a 30-year-old father of two, was shot and killed in the sparsely populated desert in southeastern Arizona early Oct. 2, 2012. (Associated Press/Ivie Family, Cole Kynaston)

    Mexico holds 2 in connection with border shooting

    Federal police have arrested two men who may be connected with the fatal shooting of a U.S. Border Patrol agent just north of the Mexico-Arizona border, a Mexican law enforcement official said Thursday.


  • Law enforcement officers gather Oct. 2, 2012, at a command post in the desert near Naco, Ariz., after a Border Patrol agent was shot to death near the U.S.-Mexico line. The agent, Nicholas Ivie, 30, and a colleague were on patrol about 100 miles from Tucson, when shooting broke out shortly before 2 a.m., the Border Patrol said. (Associated Press/U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

    Wounded Border Patrol agent released from hospital

    Investigators were scouring a rugged area near the U.S.-Mexico line for evidence in the fatal shooting of a Border Patrol agent.


  • ** FILE ** A Customs and Border Protection agent patrols by car along the U.S.-Mexico border in Nogales, Ariz., in April 2010. Arizona's section of the border is the busiest for smuggling drugs and people. (Associated Press)

    Homeland Security: Border Patrol agent killed, another wounded in Ariz.

    A U.S. Border Patrol agent was killed and another wounded in a shooting early Tuesday in Arizona near the U.S.-Mexico line, according to the Border Patrol.


  • **FILE** Attorney General Eric Holder speaks July 26, 2012, in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington. (Associated Press)

    GOP sues to force Obama, Holder compliance on Fast and Furious

    A civil lawsuit filed Monday by House Republicans asks a federal court to enforce a congressional subpoena of Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. in his refusal to turn over documents sought in an investigation by a House committee into the failed Fast and Furious gunrunning operation.


  • **FILE** Suspected members of Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel hold Mario Gonzalez hostage before murdering him in October 2010.

    MURDOCK: Mexican victims of Fast and Furious

    The American people finally have heard of Brian Terry. He is the best-known victim of Operation Fast and Furious, an Obama administration conventional-weapons proliferation program. Between November 2009 and January 2011, Team Obama arranged for licensed firearms dealers to sell guns to straw buyers, who transferred them to known violent criminals in Mexico.


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