“Congress deserves an answer” on huge ammo purchases
Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
March 28, 2013
Janet Napolitano has ignored a letter written by New Jersey
Congressman Leonard Lance calling for the Department of Homeland Security chief
to attend a congressional briefing and provide an explanation as to why the DHS
has committed to purchasing more than 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition over the
last year.
Lance, who first promised to investigate the matter during a Tea Party event on March 15, sent a letter five
days later noting how there was “growing public concern surrounding the
Department’s procurement of ammunition.”
“He is not asking for Napolitano to testify but to give us a
congressional briefing because Congress wasn’t aware of it. It deserves an
answer,” Lance spokesman Todd Mitchell told the Daily Record.
Over a week after the letter was sent, Lance’s office has still
not received a response, similar to how 15 other members of Congress were stonewalled by the DHS
when they demanded to know if the huge bullet purchases were an attempt by the
federal agency to restrict ammunition supplies.
Instead of a formal explanation, the federal agency released a glib statement to the
media claiming the amount of ammunition purchased was not abnormal, that the
bullets were bought in bulk “because it’s cheaper for the agency,” and that the
rounds were for training purposes only.
However, the DHS has completely failed to address the fundamental
flaw in their explanation. Most of the bullets purchased are hollow point
rounds which are twice as expensive as full metal jacket bullets,
rendering the claim the agency is buying in bulk to save money redundant.
As former Marine Richard Mason told reporters with WHPTV
News in Pennsylvania earlier this month, “We never trained with hollow
points, we didn’t even see hollow points my entire four and a half years in the
Marine Corps.”
Earlier this week, a weapons manufacturer who supplies ammunition
to the federal government told the nationally syndicated Savage Nation radio show that
the ammo purchases were an attempt to “control the amount of market that’s
available on the commercial market at any time,” by forcing manufacturers to
hold back stock.
Ammunition is in short supply across the country, with police
departments being forced to barter between themselves to meet demand while gun
stores across America have resorted to bullet rationing.
Earlier this week, the DHS put out a solicitation asking for 360,000 more
bullets to be delivered to the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in
Artesia, New Mexico, the same destination for 240,000 hollow point rounds which
were purchased only last month.
Last week, retired United States Army Captain Terry M. Hestilow sent a
letter to Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) warning that the ammo purchases represent
“a bold threat of war by that agency (DHS), and the Obama administration,
against the citizens of the United States of America.”
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