Was the Killing of ICE Agent Jaime Zapata Linked to Fast and Furious?

ICE agent Jaime Zapata was killed by Mexican drug cartel members just over one year ago this week, near Santa Maria Del Rio, Mexico.  His killing was the highest-profile murder of a US government official in Mexico since 1985.

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The implications of this story, from the CBS affiliate in Dallas, suggest that the gun used to murder Zapata was linked to Fast and Furious.

On a pleasant October day at a Fort Worth gun show, the makings of a murder began.

“That breaks my heart,” said Jim Terrell, the dealer who sold a Romanian-made gun, similar to an AK-47, on Oct. 10, 2010 to a man he described as “friendly … Just kind of casual.”

“There was nothing suspicious about him, in his movements or eye contact with us,” added Terrell, who runs a gun shop in Burleson when he is not working as a North Texas firefighter.

Four months after that purchase in Fort Worth, an assassin would pull the trigger on that same gun in a highway ambush in Mexico, killing Jaime Zapata, an agent with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

Federal records obtained by CBS 11 show that only a month after Otilio Osorio purchased the assault weapon in Fort Worth, he and his brother Ranferi delivered a load of 40 guns to a government informant in a store parking lot in Lancaster, east of Dallas.

ATF agents were watching and recording, but let the Osorio brothers drive off after the exchange was complete, the reports say.

Agent Tom Crowley, spokesman for the ATF in North Texas, told CBS 11 there was good reason for letting the gun traffickers drive away, at least initially.

“There was a stop, but it was also a part of another federal law enforcement operation … by taking them down and arresting them at that time would have possibly jeopardized that investigation,” Crowley said.

“None of the tactics used in this investigation were anything similar to what was used in Arizona’s Fast and Furious, including intentionally walking firearms across the border,” he added.

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The tactics sure sound similar, and Sen. John Cornyn is asking the right questions.

“This is very troubling,” said U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican who is one of the leading critics on how the federal government has handled gun-trafficking investigations recently.

Cornyn said he wonders whether the gun from Fort Worth that was used to kill Zapata was among the thousands of weapons lost during an ill-conceived investigation by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The undercover project, known as “Fast and Furious” and primarily based out of Arizona, was meant to track down deadly drug cartels in Mexico by following U.S. shipments of government-supplied guns.

Cornyn, in an exclusive interview with CBS 11, said he feels certain guns bought in Houston are linked to the “Fast and Furious” operation. And that makes him suspicious of the weapon purchased at the Fort Worth gun show.

Sen. Cornyn’s suspicions are justified by the Obama regime’s behavior throughout Fast and Furious. AG Eric Holder has denied even knowing about Fast and Furious until a few weeks before hearings on it began in Congress, while his own deputy chief of staff not only knew about the operation, but also knew that a gun from that operation had been used in the murder of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry — the very day he was killed. There’s no reason to accept anything coming from the current administration at face value.

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