There Are Now More Bureaucrats With Guns Than U.S. Marines
Report:
Non-military federal agencies spend $1.48 billion on guns and ammo since 2006
Police officers from the IRS
Criminal Investigation Division / AP BY: Elizabeth Harrington June 22, 2016 3:20
pm
There are now more non-military
government employees who carry guns than there are U.S. Marines, according to a
new report.
Open the Books, a taxpayer watchdog
group, released a study Wednesday that finds domestic government agencies
continue to grow their stockpiles of military-style weapons, as Democrats sat on the House floor calling for more restrictions on what guns American
citizens can buy.
The “Militarization
of America” report found civilian agencies
spent $1.48 billion on guns, ammunition, and military-style equipment between
2006 and 2014. Examples include IRS agents with AR-15s, and EPA bureaucrats
wearing camouflage.
“Regulatory enforcement within
administrative agencies now carries the might of military-style equipment and
weapons,” Open the Books said. “For example, the Food and Drug Administration
includes 183 armed ‘special agents,’ a 50 percent increase over the ten years
from 1998-2008. At Health and Human Services (HHS), ‘Special Office of
Inspector General Agents’ are now trained with sophisticated weaponry by the
same contractors who train our military special forces troops.”
Open the Books found there are now
over 200,000 non-military federal officers with arrest and firearm authority,
surpassing the 182,100 personnel who are actively
serving in the U.S. Marines Corps.
The IRS spent nearly $11 million on
guns, ammunition, and military-style equipment for its 2,316 special agents.
The tax collecting agency has billed taxpayers for pump-action and
semi-automatic shotguns, semi-automatic Smith & Wesson M&P15s, and
Heckler & Koch H&K 416 rifles, which can be loaded with 30-round magazines.
The EPA spent $3.1 million on guns,
ammo, and equipment, including drones, night vision, “camouflage and other
deceptive equipment,” and body armor.
When asked about the spending, and
EPA spokesman said the report “cherry picks information and falsely misrepresents
the work of two administrations whose job is to protect public health.”
“Many purchases were
mischaracterized or blown out of proportion in the report,” said spokesman Nick
Conger. “EPA’s criminal enforcement program has not purchased unmanned
aircraft, and the assertions that military-grade weapons are part of its work
are false.”
“EPA’s criminal enforcement program
investigates and prosecutes the most egregious violators of our nation’s
environmental laws, and EPA criminal enforcement agents are law enforcement
professionals who have undergone the same rigorous training as other federal
agents,” Conger continued.
Other administration agencies that
have purchased guns and ammo include the Small Business Administration, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Department of Education,
and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
The report also highlighted that the
Department of Health and Human Services has “special agents” with
“sophisticated military-style weapons.” Open the Books also found $42 million
in gun and ammunition purchases that were incorrectly coded.
“Some purchases were actually for
ping-pong balls, gym equipment, bread, copiers, cotton balls, or cable
television including a line item from the Coast Guard entered as ‘Cable Dude,’”
the report said.
Open the Books appealed to both
liberals like Bernie Sanders—who has called for
demilitarizing local police departments—and conservatives in its report.
“Conservatives argue that it is
hypocritical for political leaders to undermine the Second Amendment while
simultaneously equipping non-military agencies with hollow-point bullets and
military style equipment,” Open the Books said. “One could argue the federal
government itself has become a gun show that never adjourns with dozens of
agencies continually shopping for new firearms.”
_
Update
June 23, 10:15 a.m.: Following publication of this
article, Adam Andrzejewski, the CEO of Open the Books who wrote the
report, pushed back against the EPA’s statement, and provided contract data to
back up his claims. “How can the EPA spokesperson deny
hard facts from their own checkbook?” he said. “Alongside our oversight report,
OpenTheBooks.com also released a PDF
of all raw data. This line-by-line transactional record from the EPA’s own
checkbook on page 113 clearly shows that in 2013 and 2014 the EPA purchased
tens of thousands of dollars of ‘Unmanned Aircraft’ from Bergen RC Helicopters
Inc which on a net basis amounted to approximately $34,000.” “All of the
assertions in our oversight report are the quantification of actual spending
records produced and reported to us by the federal agencies themselves,”
Andrzejewski said.
http://freebeacon.com/issues/now-bureaucrats-guns-u-s-marines/
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