The Two Words These Google Employees Heard After Their Anti-Israel Protest Blew Up...
Here's Who Bob Menendez Might Throw Under the Bus During His Corruption Case
Biden Said He Warned Israel Not to Move on 'Haifa'
That Civil War Movie Is a Symptom of Hollywood’s Problems
Oh, So That's Why the Trump Trial Judge Excused a Juror
Conservatives Should Stop Embracing Liberals Just Because They Say Something We Like
Student Suspended for Using a Legally Correct Term in Classroom Discussion
A Lengthy Argument Broke Out Between Raskin, Comer During CCP Hearing
Undercover Video: Top Adviser Claims Who's the Second Most Powerful Person in WH...and...
Eroding the Electoral College Erodes Americans' Voting Rights
USC Is Wrong to Cancel Radical Anti-Israel Valedictorian's Speech Over Alleged 'Security'...
43 Democrats Vote Against Resolution Condemning Pro-Genocidal Phrase
Is America a 'Failed Historical Model'?
Biden’s Corporate Tax Hike Will Harm U.S Households and Businesses
Our Armchair Revolutionaries
Tipsheet

Man to Be Sentenced For Murder of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry

Manuel Osorio-Arellanes, one of four men involved in the murder of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry on December 15, 2010, will be sentenced today in Tucson, Arizona after pleading guilty to first degree murder. Osorio-Arellanes sentence will be handed down in federal court. Two other men are still on the run in Mexico and $250,000 has been offered as a reward for information leading to each of their arrests. Manuel Osario Arellanes was shot on the night Terry was killed and has remained in custody since.

Advertisement

Family members, including Terry's mother Josephine and cousin Robert Heyer, will attend the sentencing.

Operation Fast and Furious took place between September 2009 and December 2010. The United States Department of Justice sanctioned the illegal sale of more than 2500 rifles and ATF officials knowingly allowed them to be trafficking to violent cartel members in Mexico. Weapons from the operation were found at Terry's murder scene. More than 1400 of those guns are still missing in Mexico.

The Terry family and the House Oversight Committee are waiting on a court ruling to determine whether President Obama's assertion of executive privilege over Fast and Furious documents will stand. Obama asserted executive privilege over documents after denying any knowledge of the operation and on the same day Attorney General Eric Holder was voted in contempt of Congress over his refusal to cooperate with the Fast and Furious investigation. Many questions still remain unanswered.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement