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How ATF agents lost dangerous weapons while trying to nab criminals

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The next day, one of the guns showed up at the ATF’s doorstep.

Marquise Jones, 19, arrived at Fearless Distributing and sold the ATF its own gun, along with a second, for $1,400, according to court documents. But Jones would not be arrested for two months.

The Fearless operation continued running. On Sept. 19 and 20, the agents purchased more guns from Childs and Gladney, as well as four others, records show.

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On Oct. 3, the agent in charge of the operation locked up, set the alarm and left, not to return for a solid week, according to police reports. The problem was there was no alarm, according to the building’s landlord. He told the Journal Sentinel the alarm system ran through the phone line, which he had taken out in February with the approval of those running the store.

On Oct. 7, a Sunday, someone knocked out the power to the building, breaking off the electrical meter outside, according to a We Energies official quoted in a police report. Now there was no alarm and no power, including for the surveillance cameras inside.

The following night, a neighbor saw a person coming out of the store carrying something, which was dropped with the person uttering an obscenity. The neighbor didn’t think much of it and went in her house.

The next day, a Tuesday, the neighbor saw something a little odd around noon: The door to the business was propped open with a single shoe. That night, the neighbor noticed the door was closed. Like the night before, she didn’t consider any of it suspicious enough to call police.

A little later that evening, a different neighbor spotted three men in a car and another driving a U-Haul truck.

They claimed to be moving into the neighborhood, but the house they said they were moving into was owned by a longtime friend of the man. He took down the license plate of the car and reported it to police.

The report says officers drove through the neighborhood but saw nothing.

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The burglary was reported to police the morning of Oct. 10, three days after the power was knocked out.

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