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Drug Cartel Used Fast & Furious Weapon in Failed Assassination Plot The Daily Caller Drug cartel operatives used weapons from Operation Fast & Furious in a failed attempt to assassinate a high-ranking Mexican law enforcement official, the El Paso Times reports in an article that follows up on an initial report from Breitbart News’ Mary Chastain. The gun -- which “was seized in Tijuana in connection with a drug cartel’s conspiracy to kill the police chief of Tijuana, Baja California, who later became the Juárez police chief” -- is tied to Fast & Furious. “The firearm was found Feb. 25, 2010, during an arrest of a criminal cell associated with Teodoro ‘El Teo’ García Simental and Raydel ‘El Muletas’ López Uriarte, allies of the Sinaloa cartel,” Diana Washington Valdez wrote on Monday for the El Paso Times. “Tijuana police said they arrested four suspects in March 2010 in connection with a failed attempt to take out Julián Leyzaola, and that the suspects allegedly confessed to conspiring to assassinate the police chief on orders from Tijuana cartel leaders.” “Leyzaola, a retired Mexican army officer, reportedly survived several attempts on his life while trying to bring order to Tijuana, a city torn apart by turf battles following the arrests and deaths of Arellano Felix cartel leaders,” Valdez added. Leyzaola has since moved to Ciudad Juarez, a town right across the border from El Paso, Texas, to become the police chief there. This new information comes on the heels of the release of a lengthy congressional report into Fast & Furious from House oversight committee chairman Rep. Darrell Issa and Sen. Chuck Grassley. That report -- the first of three -- named five Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives officials Grassley and Issa believe are ultimately responsible for Fast & Furious. On the same day of the report’s public release, one of those officials -- former deputy ATF director William Hoover -- resigned his position. That congressional report also saw the release of new evidence that Obama administration ATF officials sought to cover up the Fast & Furious connection to a death other than that of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry. Mario Gonzalez, the brother of then-Mexican prosecutor Patricia Gonzalez, was killed with Fast & Furious weapons in early November 2010. According to internal ATF emails congressional investigators obtained and released in this report, one ATF agent had discovered that two of the guns found at Mario Gonzalez’s murder scene were Fast & Furious weapons. That agent, Tonya English, emailed her supervisors David Voth and Hope MacCallister asking them to “not release any information” on the Fast & Furious connection to that murder. READ FULL SOURCE ARTICLE The BasicsProject.org informational and educational pamphlet series is now available for Kindle and iPad. Click here to find out more... The New Media Journal and BasicsProject.org are not funded by outside sources. We exist exclusively on tax deductible donations from our readers and contributors. Please make a tax deductible donation today. The BasicsProject.org informational and educational pamphlet series is now available for Kindle and iPad. Click here to find out more... The New Media Journal and BasicsProject.org are not funded by outside sources. We exist exclusively on tax deductible donations from our readers and contributors. Please make a tax deductible donation today.
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