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Americas & Beyond | May 2008
ATF: Phoenix Gun Dealer Supplied Mexican Drug Cartels Brian Ross, Richard Esposito & Joseph Rhee - ABC News go to original
| (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms) | | Just hours after receiving a shipment of weapons allegedly intended for Mexican drug bosses, a Phoenix gun dealer and at least two alleged arms traffickers were arrested in a series of raids by federal and local authorities. Authorities allege the gun dealer sold more than 650 AK-47-type assault weapons to Mexican drug gangs responsible for recent shootouts that have claimed dozens of lives.
"He knowingly, willingly sold these weapons, and he even gave our guys undercover tips on how to evade the police," Pete Forceli, the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms supervisor on the case told ABC News. The gun dealer, George Khadosian, 46, was arrested on numerous Arizona state charges, and all of the inventory in his shop was seized.
"We know of 650 assault weapons he sold," said Forceli, a former New York Police Department Bronx homicide detective. "But by the time the case is done, it will be well into the thousands."
Authorities in Phoenix, Ariz., told ABC News the raids are part of a continued effort to curb the supply of high-quality weapons from the U.S. to Mexico. Those weapons - including high-powered assault rifles and "cop killer" handguns - are often bought through "straw purchasers" from legal gun dealers in California, Texas and Arizona. They are responsible for 95 percent of the gun violence in Mexico, U.S. and Mexican authorities have told ABC News' Brian Ross.
"I just learned from Mexican authorities that more law enforcement officers were killed in Mexico last year than all the people killed in New York, Philadelphia, Newark combined," Forceli said. Mexican authorities told ABC News more than 2,000 law enforcement officers have been killed in the past 18 months.
According to Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms officials on the scene, two traffickers were arrested at their homes shortly after taking a delivery of a shipment of semi-automatic weapons, and the gun dealer was arrested and the entire inventory of his store, X Caliber Guns, was seized.
According to federal and local officials, the investigation began after an ATF review of X Caliber's records showed "an obvious pattern of firearms purchases consistent with firearms trafficking." Two individuals were identified who authorities said were acquiring firearms for the purpose of sending those firearms to individuals in Mexico. Those alleged traffickers were Hugo Gamez, 26, and his brother, Cesar Gamez, 27.
During undercover purchases over the past several weeks, AK-47 variant firearms were purchased, and conversations were recorded, which, authorities said, "clearly show [the gun store] aided in the illegal purchase of firearms by firearms traffickers by allowing firearms to be added to previously filled out [federal forms] 4473s, by allowing individuals to pay for firearms."
According to authorities in Arizona, the case will be presented to an Arizona grand jury during the week. The subjects face charges of conspiracy, fraud schemes and artifices, conducting an illegal enterprise, money laundering and misconduct involving weapons (firearms).
"Ninety-nine percent of the gun dealers in the country are legitimate and follow the law, but this case shows the negative impact one percent can cause," said ATF agent Carlos Baixauli. |
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