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How ATF agents lost dangerous weapons while trying to nab criminals

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Dave Salkin points to a hole the ATF cut in his wall for a camera, January 3, 2013. They also cut the electrical conduit so none of the A/C wall outlets work now along that wall. (Photo by Michael Sears/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/MCT)

(MCT) — MILWAUKEE — The door had no deadbolt. The few scratches and marks told police the men had little trouble prying it open. Hard to believe it was all that stood between the burglars and a storefront full of goods belonging to federal agents running an undercover gun sting.

And who would imagine the thieves would have unfettered access to the place for three days, propping open the door with a shoe and returning the next day with a moving truck to finish the job?

But that’s what happened as burglars hit the ATF’s Fearless Distributing storefront in Milwaukee’s Riverwest neighborhood in October, making off with nearly $40,000 worth of merchandise — maybe more, according to interviews with neighbors and police reports obtained by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

The burglars knew the place. They had been there before, drawing top dollar selling guns and drugs to undercover agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, according to court records.

Thanks to a neighbor who got the license plate number of the thieves’ car, ATF agents quickly found two suspects and some of the stolen loot — shoes, purses, jeans.

And a Mossberg shotgun, stashed alongside.

The reports don’t mention if the gun was taken from the store. The Mossberg shotgun is a common weapon on the streets of Milwaukee, and agents had bought one from a felon a few weeks earlier.

The burglary reports taken by police also do not include another fact:

On the same day the burglary was reported, an anonymous person walked into Milwaukee police District 7 station and turned in an ATF ballistic shield, the type used during high-risk raids. Like firearms and body armor, the shields are supposed to be closely controlled items.

Information about the shield was filed in a separate report containing few details, nothing linking it to the Fearless operation.

And while police reports show the two suspects in the burglary quickly confessed, four months later they have not been charged with the crime.

Instead, they are charged with crimes related to selling drugs and guns to agents, including several firearms that had been purchased a short time earlier from stores such as Gander Mountain and sold to the ATF for a quick profit.

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