Following MLeake's drift...
I would also like to thank fiddletown and the other lawyers who have responded in this thread, for making the distinctions in the law more clear to the laymen among us. I am not a lawyer, and while laws may appear clear on their face, applying them to individual circumstances can occasionally be challenging.
With respect to the BATFE's prosecution of firearms laws regarding "straw purchases", as a layman my general understanding is that US law applies equally to all US citizens, and that no one is above the law even up to the highest offices in the land. Moreover, it is my understanding that "good intentions" do not justify breaking the law, and that under US law the ends do not justify the means. It is disturbing, then, to read congressional testimony that appears to describe BATFE itself - who should understand definitions to include "straw purchasers" and the requirements of Form 4473 - as condoning straw purchases on a broad scale apparently in contravention of US firearms laws:
"The congressional hearings held this week by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform revealed that the gun smuggling investigation known as “Fast and Furious” that was implemented out of the Phoenix Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (BATFE) office was conducted in a reckless manner that led to the illegal sale of thousands of firearms. Many of those firearms ended up in the hands of Mexican drug cartels and other criminals, and may have contributed to the death of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry.
Some of the most important findings of the hearing and the investigative report compiled by the Committee staff include:
BATFE knowingly allowed as many as 2,500 firearms to be sold illegally
to known or suspected straw purchasers. One of those purchasers accounted for over 700 illegal guns. (emphasis added)
BATFE ordered its agents working the program not to arrest illegal gun buyers or to interdict thousands of guns that were allowed to “walk” into criminal hands.
Senior BATFE officials in Washington were regularly briefed on the operation and approved of the tactics employed.
BATFE agents who opposed the operation and who raised objections were told to “get with the program” and threatened with job retaliation if they continued their opposition.
A number of BATFE agents who were assigned to “Fast and Furious” testified about the operation."
The full article is here:
http://www.nraila.org/Legislation/Federal/Read.aspx?id=6927
I must admit that until straw purchases were defined and clarified in this thread, my understanding of US law that covers them was cloudy at best. It would appear either that senior BATFE officials were as misinformed as I was about laws covering straw purchases, or that senior BATFE officials did not feel compelled to abide by US laws.
(Alternately, of course, it could be the case that US law does not always apply in all cases, particularly in cases where BATFE wishes to allow some laws to be set aside.)
[Edit - no intent to hijack the thread, so Mods, if this 'drift' is excessive, feel free to delete my post.]