A crash victim reached out to Operation Safe Roads to investigate because he learned the suspect driver has been intoxicated behind the wheel before but was not charged with DUI this time around.
Cartels need firearms to support their business, said Scott Brown, special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations in Phoenix. When they find people that are either willing to flagrantly violate the law or skirt the law or not practice due diligence, that is enabling the cartels to be armed and to have a destructive impact both in Mexico and the U.S.
At least 70% of weapons seized in Mexico – including many guns used by cartels in massacres – were made in or came through America, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Some officials in Mexico and agents in the U.S. suspect the actual percentage is much higher.
A then-DEA supervisor sold assault rifles to Sinaloa Cartel associates courier-journal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from courier-journal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
the dynamics of delayed reporting. i think that s going to be a big issue. i think she s going to want to look at this in a black-and-white situation and if it s a delayed reporting, peel the layer of onion and see why and get to the truth. at the same time, she has a more difficult task with brett kavanaugh. as a career prosecute, she s used to aggressively cross-examining. she s not a yeller or a screamer but she s very methodical. i think she runs the risk of being too aggressive on judge kavanaugh but if she s not aggressive enough, others will say she s just pooching this. a really, really difficult task ahead but probably one of the most qualified people in the country for the job. great. i think you hit on the truth. i think that s what every single american wants is the truth. jason lamm, thank you.