Federal authorities link U.S. gun shops near Mexican
border to drug violence
March 5, 2009
After a two-year investigation, federal law enforcement
authorities built a case against an Arizona gun dealer suspected of indirectly
selling hundreds of weapons to members of Mexican drug cartels.
The dealer, whose trial began this week, is accused of
knowing that many of his customers were "straw buyers" - people whose names will
clear background checks. Authorities say 600 weapons he sold, including assault
rifles, were smuggled to Mexico.
Drug cartels are at war with the Mexican army, police,
judges, journalists - anyone their leaders believe represents a threat to the
roughly $40 billion they take in every year by keeping addicts and recreational
drug users in the United States supplied.
According to a New York Times story last week, officials
of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives estimate that 90
percent of the guns recovered from drug-related killings or drug dealers in
Mexico come from U.S. dealers.
This helps put the prosecution of one gun dealer into
perspective. According to the Times, there are 6,600 gun shops in multiple
cities and towns just north of the U.S.-Mexican border.
In December we wrote that Americans' demand for drugs is
fueling the drug war in Mexico. Now it is clear that many American gun shops are
also playing a big role, one that infuriates Mexican authorities and raises
serious safety issues here.
A federal law-enforcement operation that began
nationally about two years ago recently netted 750 people suspected of having
affiliations with Mexican drug cartels. Mountains of drugs and arms were
confiscated.
On CBS' "60 Minutes" Sunday, Homeland Security Secretary
Janet Napolitano said, "The stakes are high for the safety of many, many
citizens of Mexico, and the stakes are high for the United States."
Attorney General Eric Holder calls the situation "a
national security threat."
…And we should be nothing short of rigorous in enforcing
our gun laws. The cartels killed 6,000 people last year. Enough
said.