Reese family finally headed to court
Eighteen months after Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was murdered in Arizona by Mexican bandits using guns purchased through a US government program called Fast and Furious, we still don’t know who within the Department of Justice knew about the program, much less who authorized it. Certainly there has been no serious talk about prosecuting any of the people responsible for assisting in the illegal sales of over 2000 guns to Mexican arms traffickers – guns that were subsequently involved in the murders of BPA Terry and Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent Jaime Zapata, as well as possibly hundreds of Mexican citizens. But while that investigation has dragged on, with Attorney General Eric Holder denying knowledge of the program, denying knowledge of who was involved, and denying congressional investigators access to tens of thousands of documents that might answer those questions, New Mexico gun dealer, Rick Reese and his two sons Ryin and Remington, have sat rotting in separate detention centers, jails, and prisons around the state accused of a similar crime involving some 30 guns. The Reese family, including Rick’s wife Terri, ran a gun shop in Deming, New Mexico, and were arrested in late August of 2011 on charges of knowingly selling guns to Mexican smugglers, and various other related charges. After spending 6 months in jail, Terri Reese was finally granted bail in March of this year, but Rick and the boys have been repeatedly denied bail on the pretext that they are flight risks or might try to engage in a Ruby Ridge type standoff. The rationale for denying the Reeses’ constitutional rights is that Rick knows some people in Mexico, his home has a well and solar power, and there were guns and ammunition in their homes and businesses when they were arrested. That’s right, guns and ammo in the home and business of a federally licensed firearms dealer (all of which were seized a year ago and have never been returned) is being offered as evidence that they can’t be trusted – and a judge bought it. Well, there’s also the fact that Rick and Terri were involved with a local Tea Party group. That’s probably reason enough right there.
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