Skip to main content
  • CNSNews.com
  • MRC TV
  • Biz & Media
  • Culture & Media
  • TimesWatch
  • Take Action!

Join Us @:
Facebook
Twitter
Amazon Kindle

Free email alerts!

NewsBusters logo
May 24, 2013
  • Home
  • Blogs
  • About
  • Forum
  • Take Action
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Search
  • RSS

Hot Topics

  • Obama Targets Fox News
  • IRS Targets Tea Party
  • Censoring the News
Home » Blogs » Jack Coleman's blog
  • Chris Matthews Trashes 'Morning Joe' for Being 'Open to All People's Points of View'
  • Thursday Morning: Fox Gives 15 Minutes to Latest IRS Scandal Details; NBC and ABC Ignore
  • On Taxpayer-subsidized PBS, Liberal Reporters Lament Benghazi Won't Go Away
  • No Mention of IRS Scandal on NBC's 'Today,' But Plenty of Time for Obama Prom Photo
  • MSNBC’s Chris Hayes Hypes ‘LGBT Injustice’ During Interview With 18-year Old Woman Charged With Sex With Minor
  • Lisa Myers: 'For a Year the IRS Essentially Knowingly Lied to Congress and No One Came Forward'
  • Network Evening Shows Don’t Name Islam in London Terror Attack
  • MSNBC’s Finney On IRS Scandal: ‘Why Didn't Romney Make More Of A Big Deal Of It?’

Ed Schultz Loves Fast and Furious Scandal Because 'It Keeps the Focus Off the Economy'

By Jack Coleman | June 22, 2012 | 16:10

A  A

Rock 'em sock 'em liberal Ed Schultz continues doing his darndest to unintentionally help conservatives by the simple act of opening his mouth and letting words spill out.

On his radio show yesterday, Schultz finally caught up with the Fast and Furious gun-walking scandal that's been brewing for 18 months since the murder of border agent Brian Terry (audio clips after page break).

Unlike other leftists in the media intent on keeping their distance from Fast and Furious as if from a stench, the ever-optimistic Schultz sees a silver lining to the fatally flawed program (audio) --

It always takes Americans a couple of days to get all the facts in before they render judgment on exactly just how bogus something is or is not. And I think we're about there on this Eric Holder situation, the attorney general. Now Marco Rubio is the Florida senator saying that, you know, I think he ought to resign. This is all about getting the president. You've got the right-wing jugheads out there and about, trying to tell the head-shaking crowd that really, President Obama is at the center of all of this. He is the one.

He's the, look, I say keep talking about it. This is what the right wing ought to do. Just keep on talk-, because you know what? It keeps the focus off the economy.

Clearly the last place Schultz and other Obamists want voters focused, especially in a tough election year. How odd indeed that Schultz suggests voters turn their attention instead to a scandal that may eventually cost Holder his job.

In an attempt to bring his listeners up to speed on Fast and Furious, Schultz invited Congressman Elijah Cummings of Maryland, ranking Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, on his radio show Thursday.

Alas, Cummings was less intent on clarifying the specifics than he was he was in muddying the waters -- and man, did he muddy them. This post to be updated with clips from his remarks, stay tuned ...

Updated at 5:06 p.m. with remarks from Congressman Cummings --

Introducing the Maryland Democrat, Schultz praised him for speaking with "tremendous clarity" about Fast and Furious -- followed by Cummings doing just the opposite (audio) --

SCHULTZ: When did this all start and who started it?

CUMMINGS: Well, first of all, you know, it started with the, uh, actually it started back in 2006, uh, when there was folks in the ATF, the Phoenix office, uh, that were, uh, in their efforts to help with, uh, you know, the war on drugs in, in Mexico. What they wanted to do was try to, uh, see where guns, when guns came out of the United States and were bought at, bought mainly in the border states and then flowed to Mexico, they wanted to see where those guns, you know, where they ended up. Well, they made a big mistake. They stopped following the guns and, uh, so basically that's what's called gun walking.

In other words, they were watching (them) be purchased at a, a, uh, like a, uh, gun shop and they would see people maybe buying a hundred guns at a time, they would follow 'em, follow 'em to the border. The aim was, they were supposed to follow 'em beyond that but they didn't. So, about 2000, so then, let's fast, fast forward. That was done under the Bush administration. There were several of these programs that were done. And then when the, uh, Obama administration came about, uh, these folks down in Phoenix were still doing this gun running, this gun walking, allowing this gun walking that happened to take place.

So, so, what happened is that, uh, eventually, uh, there was a border agent who was killed about, a little bit over a year and a half ago and his name was Brian Terry. And they found two of these guns that had bas-, walked over the border at the scene of his murder. And we've been trying to, our committee has taken it upon itself, to look into that. That's the background of how this all got started.

Got that? Guns don't kill people, guns walking across borders do.  "Tremendous clarity" indeed.

Cummings's account of Fast and Furious and its Bush era precedent, Operative Wide Receiver, bears little resemblance to a far more coherent account from Andrew C. McCarthy at National Review Online. More to follow ...

Updated again at 5:50 p.m. --

McCarthy writing at NRO --

Wide Receiver actually involved not gun-walking but controlled delivery. (emphasis in original). Unlike gun-walking, which seems (for good reason) to have been unheard of until Fast & Furious, controlled delivery is a very common law enforcement tactic. Bascially, the agents know the bad guys have negotiated a deal to acquire some commodity that is either illegal itself (e.g., heroin, child porn) or illegal for them to have/use (e.g., guns, corporate secrets). The agents allow the transfer to happen under circumstances where they are in control  -- i.e., they are on the scene conducting surveillance of the transfer, and sometimes even participating undercover in the transfer. As soon as the transfer takes place, they can descend on the suspects, make arrests, and seize the commodity in question -- all of which makes for powerful evidence of guilt.

... To the contrary, Fast & Furious involved uncontrolled deliveries -- of thousands of weapons. (again, emphasis in original). It was an utterly heedless program in which the feds allowed these guns to be sold to straw purchasers -- often leaning on reluctant gun dealers to make the sales. The straw purchasers were not followed by close physical surveillance; they were freely permitted to bulk transfer the guns to, among others, Mexican grug gangs and other violent criminals -- with no agents on hand to swoop in, make arrests, and grab the firearms. The inevitable result of this was that the guns have been used (and will continue to be used) (emphasis added) in many crimes, including the murder of Brian Terry, a U.S. border patrol agent.

... As Sen. Cornyn pointed out, there is a major distinction between Wide Receiver and Fast & Furious. The former was actually a coordinated effort between American and Mexican authorities. Law enforcement agents in both countries kept each other apprised about suspected transactions and tried to work together to apprehend law-breakers. To the contrary, Fast & Furious was a unilateral, half-baked scheme cooked up by an agency of the Obama Justice Department -- an agency that was coordinating  with the Justice Department on the operation and that turned to Main Justice to get wiretapping authority.

So much for Obama and crew cultivating better relations with allies and eschewing Bush unilateralism. More to follow ...

Updated again at 6:40 p.m. --

More from Congressman Cummings on Fast & Furious (audio) --

After that (death of agent Terry), Darrell Issa, who you well know, the chairman of the Oversight Committee, began accusing the attorney general of the United States of having known about this gun-running stuff and having been, uh, you know, basically a part of it. Well, and then he began to subpoena all kinds of records. And all of these rec-, and deposing many people. Uh, when he went through all, deposed all these members of ATF and others, he discovered what I just said, that it was a rogue operation that was operated out of Phoe-, out of the Phoenix office of ATF, and that basically the higher-ups, the ones, the folks in Wash-, Washington, in the Justice Department, knew nothing about it. Keep in mind, ATF comes under the Justice Department.

First apologetic meme from Democrats -- this began under Bush and continued unchanged after Obama took office. Second apologia -- this was a "rogue operation" -- thereby exonerating the Obama administration from any responsibility, even though we're told repeatedly that no wrongdoing occurred. Still, why take chances when one can invoke "rogue" phantoms?

More to follow ...   

Updated, 7:38 p.m. Saturday --

Cummings alleges that the ATF office in Phoenix, specifically special agent in charge Bill Newell, provided inaccurate information to the Justice Department about Fast & Furious, which in turn provided fodder for congressional Republicans in their investigation (audio) --

SCHULTZ: Who is the culprit in the ATF office in Phoenix?

CUMMINGS: A fella, fella named Newell, who was reassigned when the, when, I left one very important thing out. When, when the attorney general found out that, about these tactics and found out that what was going on, he immediately brought an end to these tactics, you know, the gun walking stuff, and he himself asked for an investigation by his IG. That's major. He asked that they investigate the whole thing as soon as he found out.

SCHULTZ: Hmm mmm.

CUMMINGS: Well, yeah, so the person who down there in Phoenix, the fella named Newell, he was basically in charge of the Phoenix office of ATF.

... before Newell became acquainted with the underside of the Obama bus.

What Cummings tells Schultz is so "major" that Schultz neglects to ask an obvious question -- did Holder's decision to bring an "end to these tactics" coincide with him learning about the death of agent Terry?

One more clip to follow ...

Final update, 9:11 p.m. Saturday --

Cummings repeats his claim that "rogue" elements in the ATF were responsible for Fast & Furious. Schultz asks about their motives; Cummings's response will make you cringe (audio) --

SCHULTZ: (Congresswoman) Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) told me on TV last night that there's been three or four other programs like this.

CUMMINGS: Yeah and then what I have said that, you know, it started back in 2006, yeah, that was under the Bush administration. There have been, there were three programs like this, again, operated out of basically a rogue, the same, some of the same folks that, uh, did it under the Obama administration, uh, did it under the Bush administration.

SCHULTZ: Were they doing it to make money or did they really want to find out who the, who the drug runners were in Mexico?

CUMMINGS: I think they were trying, I think they were, they, they were trying to, uh, actually, uh, trace, they, I don't know what they were, sure what they were, they thought they were doing. They were supposedly trying to trace these, they were supposed to be tracing these guns ...

SCHULTZ (eager to move on): All right ...

CUMMINGS: ... to see whether or not they ended up in the hands of ...

SCHULTZ : Drug dealers ...

CUMMINGS: ... various cartel members, yes.

SCHULTZ : OK, OK.

To his credit, Schultz then asked Cummings a question based on a claim from a caller earlier in the show who pointed out the differences between Wide Receiver and Fast & Furious. The caller told Schultz that ATF agents working in Wide Receiver placed tracking devices in weapons before they were sold to Mexican drug dealers --

SCHULTZ: Now, were there tracking devices on all of these firearms?

CUMMINGS: No. No. No. No. No. (yes -- five times)

SCHULTZ: Even in Operation Wide Receiver to start with there were no tracking devices?

CUMMINGS (hedging): Not to my knowledge.

Exhibit A on why Republicans in Congress don't believe they've been told the truth about Fast & Furious. How anyone can listen to Cummings's convoluted, meandering mess of an account and believe it is truthful defies comprehension.

About the Author

Jack Coleman is a recovering former liberal journalist from Massachusetts. Click here to follow Jack Coleman on Twitter.
  • 2012 Presidential
  • Brian Terry
  • Ed Schultz
  • Elijah Cummings
  • Eric Holder
  • Radio
  • Jack Coleman's blog
  • Login to post comments
  • Printer-friendly version
Stop Censoring The Gosnell Trial!

Comments

That is what the propaganda

Submitted by John21 on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:19pm.

That is what the propaganda media tries to do . There entire effort is based on cover and distraction for the incompetent administration

  • Login to post comments

The King of Boob-Nation

Submitted by Galvanic on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:24pm.

When voters are out of work, or fear that they might lose their jobs or their homes, no amount of coverage on Fast & Furious will distract them from the economy.

Fast & Furious compounds Obama's problems rather then diverting attention away from them.

Special Ed reigns supreme in Boob Nation.

  • Login to post comments

Dumb as rocks

Submitted by JeffC... on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:26pm.

Although, in defense of some rocks I've known.

Distracting the public with what the press is covering as a political distraction. Wait until the public realizes that the AG authorized the ATF to allow automatic weapons into Mexico and the hands of violent drug lords and resulted in the deaths of hundreds of Mexicans and one American Border Patrolman. What will Ed say then?

He'll probably talk about another political distraction that the press isn't giving the public the whole story. Ad infinitum.

  • Login to post comments

Better...

Submitted by TC Lynch on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:36pm.

wait until the newest target of Obama pandering, the Hispanic members of the American electorate, find out about the 200+ Mexican who got killed because of this disastrous "policy" decision. Expect Mexico's Attorney General to blow this into a full-blown international incident, because she is spitting mad this happened without the Obama administration informing the Mexican government.

"There's no point in being Irish if you don’t know the world is going to break your heart eventually.’’ Daniel Patrick Moynihan
  • Login to post comments

So the way to take the focus off the Obama economy...

Submitted by lsudolemite on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:27pm.

is to shift the focus to Obama hiding damaging information about an ever-expanding scandal that people knew nothing about until two days ago, when he destroyed his own media blackout.

Wow, Special Ed is going to need a smaller school bus at this rate.

"Liberalism is hideous.  It is the antithesis of being pro-human.  It looks at life as a burden in and of itself to be managed, rather than as a blessing to be explored and lived to the fullest." --Rush Limbaugh
  • Login to post comments

Edbonics Translation: Holder is expendable.

Submitted by SickofLibs on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:29pm.

.

  • Login to post comments

Hain't you heard Fathead Ed???

Submitted by bigdaddy on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:30pm.

"The Private Sector is Doing Just Fine."

Rinse, Repeat, Rerun all the way to November. Throw in an occasional gem from Joey Plugs and what more could you ask for?

  • Login to post comments

Right -wing jugheads?

Submitted by motherbelt on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:35pm.

Well at least he didn't call them "right-wing sluts."

I wonder if Cummings agrees with Nancy Pelosi that   it's about voter suppression

  • Login to post comments

Hush Nancy! Shhhhhhhhh!...

Submitted by bigdaddy on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 5:10pm.

...The last thing that the "Dirty Davids" (Axlegrease and Ffluff) want is to remind the folks about how Stedman gave the Nuevo Ebony Panthers a pass on that voter intimidation thing from a few years back. A bunch of thugs outside of a voting location with billy clubs is not really considered "voter supression" is it???

  • Login to post comments

In Schultz's world what he says is what the rest of us

Submitted by bfrank on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:36pm.

are experiencing? Talk about 'out of touch'. He can talk about 'Fast and Furious' all he wants. If Holder is cited for contempt or not, resigns or not, I am still out of a job and looking for work after six months. Obama can hide his head in the sand by talking about any other subject but his failure on the economy and his uber-liberal agenda will be the reasons he is defeated in November.

  • Login to post comments

Excuse me, Ed, but...

Submitted by GG_NB on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:38pm.

Americans really can keep track of two things at once. It just makes us realize even more of all the areas he's blowing it.

"If not us, who? If not now, when?"
~Ronald Reagan

  • Login to post comments

I hate to tell Red Ed, but the economy isn't going to land...

Submitted by Dave. on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:43pm.

...the Dear Ruler and his lackey in the slammer (although in Obama's case it probably should), but F & F just might nail them both.

If we're lucky.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

  • Login to post comments

Ed just identified a new way to look at the media

Submitted by CO2Maker on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:46pm.

First there was the MSM (main street media), then the DBM (Rush's "drive-by media"), the LSM (Sarah's "lame-street media"), the SUM ("suck-up media") and the FTCM ("feet to ceiling media") and now the "Whew!" Media (self-explanatory).

Their duty is to keep distracting the country from the main story, the economy, as if that could be done! Remember the old Leno joke back in the hey-day of the Lewinsky scandal? Clinton was accused of sexually harassing Juanita Broderick. Leno said, "That's a great strategy. Distracting the country from a sex scandal with another sex scandal! Yeah, that'll work."

  • Login to post comments

It's great news that Sgt.

Submitted by ricor on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 4:58pm.

It's great news that Sgt. Schultz admits the "One's" economy is going down the drain.

  • Login to post comments

Ed's New Nickname....

Submitted by bigdaddy on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 5:19pm.

..."Fat and Furious"...

  • Login to post comments

This is a ruse...

Submitted by seen the light on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 6:58pm.

I think this only shows how panicked they really are. I think it is his attempt at reverse psychology. Put it out there that this is bad for the GOP, and scare them into backing off Fast and Furious. If he really thought that, he would not mention it publicly.

This reveals him. Even if Obama wins, this will hurt liberalism for the long haul. He knows it and he's scared.

  • Login to post comments

Don’t worry, Ed.

Submitted by needle on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 7:32pm.

We conservatives can process several issues per day.

But you are correct in that once we get corrupt Eric Holder thrown out of office, we can focus a bit more on the thoroughly messed-up economy you wish were ignored.

- Looking forward to the self-annihilation of the Manipulated Stories Machine.

  • Login to post comments

Thank you, Jack, for all of the F&F updates

Submitted by needle on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 7:41pm.

As a matter of personal policy I never listen raging Ed, but I do hope Ed Schultz is reporting and discussing all of this information as it becomes available. [though I certainly would not bet on it.]

- Looking forward to the self-annihilation of the Manipulated Stories Machine.

  • Login to post comments

Oh, Ed,

Submitted by richflanj on Fri, 06/22/2012 - 10:44pm.

You silly blob. Unlike your three viewers, we can multi-task. We can remember the gaffes, the insults, the debt, the corruption, the unemployment numbers, the gas prices, the illegal executive orders, AND the deaths caused by the Oblameo administration. And it will be remembered come November. Try to remember that.

Liberals are greedy. -- Me
  • Login to post comments

Unfortunately....

Submitted by liberalsarefunny on Sat, 06/23/2012 - 1:09pm.

he is right this time....

  • Login to post comments

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Stop Censoring The Gosnell Trial!

Editors' Picks

  • Deputy kills PBS NewsHour staffer (Washington Examiner)
  • Oklahoma disaster was tragic, but larger ones have occurred (USA Today)
  • Mainstream Media Scream: Today’s Savannah Guthrie questions GOP ‘overreach’ (Paul Bedard, Washington Examiner)
  • Desperate Carney complains asking about scandals like asking about birth certificate (RCP)
  • Look at NYT's partisan-hack rewrite of the IRS hearing (Draw and STRIKE!)
  • Study: Christians who tithe have better finances than those who don't (TGC)
  • The media are willing accomplices to Obama (PolitiChicks)
  • FBI has suspects in mind in Benghazi; Obama prefers to try them in court (AP)
Ann Coulter's picture
Ann Coulter
Ann Coulter Column: When Did We Vote to Become Mexico?
Chuck Norris's picture
Chuck Norris
Chuck Norris Column: Why Tim Tebow Is an Ultimate Clutch Player
Walter E. Williams's picture
Walter E. Williams
Walter E. Williams Column: Hating America
Michelle Malkin's picture
Michelle Malkin
Malkin Column: Obama's Emptiest Benghazi Talking Point
Ann Coulter's picture
Ann Coulter
Coulter Column: Sorry, Sen. Rubio, But Your Immigration Plan Is Still Problematic
More >

RSS FeedAmazon KindleFacebookTwitter

Stop Censoring The News!

Gosnell's Just the Tip of the Iceberg
more cartoons
  • Dennis Miller: 'Nixonian' Obama Will Need Teleprompter to Say 'I Am Not a Crook'
  • Leno: Obama Knows Nothing Because They Moved ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ to the White House
  • IRS Charged With Unfair Scrutiny of Pro-Life Groups' Prayer Events, Protest Signs
  • Ex-AccuWeather's Bastardi Slams 'Ambulance Chasing' by Global Warming Theory Activists
  • Goldberg: Scandal Reporting Needs to Focus on Hard News, Not Political Spin
More >
NewsBusters

Executive Editor
Matthew Sheffield

Editor at Large
Brent Baker

Senior Editors
Tim Graham
Rich Noyes

Managing Editor
Ken Shepherd

Associate Editor
Noel Sheppard

Contributing Editors
Tom Blumer
Geoffrey Dickens
Dan Gainor
David Limbaugh
Mithridate Ombud
Clay Waters
Scott Whitlock

Senior Contributor
Mark Finkelstein

Contributing Writers
Matthew Balan
Michael M. Bates
Erin R. Brown
Jack Coleman
Kyle Drennen
Douglas Ernst
P. J. Gladnick
Stephen Gutowski
Matt Hadro
D. S. Hube
Kathleen McKinley
Dave Pierre
Amy Ridenour
Julia A. Seymour
Terry Trippany
Rusty Weiss
Brad Wilmouth

Publisher
Brent Bozell

Site Design
Dialog New Media

 

  • Home
  • Blogs
  • About
  • Forum
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Search
  • Account
  • rss
  • CNSNews
  • MRC TV
  • Biz & Media
  • Culture & Media
  • Take Action!
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Amazon Kindle
  • Advertise
  • Jobs

Copyright © 2005-2013 NewsBusters.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use