Yet another account contradicting the Department of Justice's stance.
A competent media would relentlessly pursue the three answers.
They showed up to protect the president, and showed no interest in justice for the dead.
Senator Charles Grassley says report doesn't "pass the laugh test."
The attorney general's claim regarding when he knew about Operation Fast and Furious conflicts with the released communications.
Recall that invoking the Fifth Amendment is only allowed to avoid self-incrimination.
The Justice Department may be leveraging employees to keep them from testifying.
A PJ Media article is cited as possible impetus.
Gingrich's opinion on electromagnetic pulse events is well-informed. The Times' is not.
More than a quarter of these guns ended up in cartel hands in 2009, yet the admin continued the sales program.
Reports surface of the Drug Enforcement Administration laundering cartel drug money.
From multiple sources come shocking charges of deadly ineptitude and an FBI coverup in Fast and Furious.
The victims — including children — of Fast and Furious are dead.
America should be disgusted with Holder's answers and the blame-shifting by his Democratic questioners.
She uses a Gunwalker hearing to deflect attention from federal criminal activity onto the law-abiding citizen. And she gets her gun facts comically wrong.
An attempt to turn Breuer into the fall guy for the attorney general seems to have failed.
Do we now have motive?
As the cover-up unravels, the Justice Department and a Democrat congressman play "shoot the messenger."
Darrell Issa investigates the rumored third gun present at ATF Agent Bryan Terry's murder.
One was a failed law enforcement operation. The other was a possible criminal conspiracy. (Related: Ed Driscoll asks, How would the story play in the MSM if Bush were still in power?)
Once again, the Obama administration intends to treat an act of war as a law enforcement matter.
"It was a joint operation in which DEA knew more than ATF."
The evidence continues to cast strong doubts on the attorney general's truthfulness.