It's a shame that U.S. Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry had to lose his life before the myopia, incompetence, and complete negligence of the ATF and the Justice Department---as evident in the now-famous "Fast and Furious" case that recently made national news---was brought to light. It's a shame, a tragedy, and a travesty all rolled in to one, but what's even more tragic is that Brian Terry has now been quickly forgotten by an apathetic general public, spurred on by a worthless news media that cares more about racist owners of basketball teams or the latest police beats having to do with Justin Bieber.
John Dodson refuses to let Terry be forgotten. Dodson, a military veteran who has worked with the ATF and the FBI, is the whistle-blower behind the Fast and Furious scandal; a scandal which has, sadly, resulted in no arrests or anyone involved serving jail-time or facing any punishment of any kind. It has been an ongoing nightmare for Dodson, who has been defamed and slandered by political figures and news media alike, and his book, "The Unarmed Truth", which is his memoir based on his experience and involvement in the scandal, was almost not published at all. Some critics have said that the book is a "Pyrrhic" victory for Dodson, as it has been published so long after the fact, that it is now irrelevant. I suppose that's up to the reader to decide, but in my opinion, truth doesn't have an expiration date.
Dodson joined the ATF with high hopes of being part of a law enforcement agency that would actually do some good. His underlying motive---which had been his motive through his tenure in the Army, as a narcotics police officer, and a DEA agent---was a simple one: protect the public. When he was given an ATF position in Phoenix, Arizona in 2009, transferring from a successful stint in the Harrisonburg, Virginia area, Dodson was excited. He was close to the border, which was close to Mexico and the drug cartels, and he felt that he could really do some good getting illegal firearms out of the hands of dealers and cartel members.
It soon became apparent, though, that his superiors---whom he viewed as incompetent---weren't interested in the same thing. They didn't seem to care about getting guns off the streets. Dodson wasn't sure what they cared about, although he suspected that it was a combination of getting the most results by doing the least amount of work as well as a deep interest in getting promoted to bigger and better positions, preferably at the federal level, where the pay was better and their level of accountability would be next to zero.
Rather than arresting people for illegal gun purchases, Dodson and his fellow agents were told to simply observe how many purchases were made and where the guns were moved to. In most cases, the people they were observing were known straw purchasers. These are men and women---generally young, with no criminal records---who would buy large amounts of guns and would then transport them across the border to give to cartels, since cartels could not purchase guns in America. They knew exactly where the guns were going, but they were told to do nothing. This is known as "gun walking", a practice that the ATF completely denies they condoned or sanctioned.
Dodson knows that's bullshit, and he told his superiors repeatedly that what they were doing was wrong. He warned his superiors that the consequences of their sanctioned gun walking would eventually result in many innocent American and Mexican lives being killed by American guns in the hands of cartel members. Dodson received nothing but cold shoulders, shit jobs, and transfers to out-of-the-way posts meant to shut him up.
After the 2011 nighttime shootout between Border Patrol agents and Mexican bandits that resulted in Terry's death, two things happened: 1) Subsequent investigations of the crime scene resulted in the recovery of the murder weapons, all of which were guns that the ATF had allowed to get in the hands of cartel members. The very thing that Dodson had been afraid would happen, happened. 2) Dodson made a decision that would change his life forever: he was going to blow the whistle on the ATF Phoenix.
The majority of Dodson's memoir is given over to the mental battle he endured as to whether to be a whistle-blower or not, and when he finally makes the decision to do so, how to do it in a way that would be the safest for him and his family. It's no small decision to be a whistle-blower. It's a decision that affects one's career, relationships, and even one's safety and well-being. His decision, he realizes, was all the more difficult given the ridiculous politicization of the scandal. As Dodson writes, "Once politics are injected into it, the search for the truth gets thrown off track. Everyone puts up their shields and defends their side's assertion of what is the given truth. Whichever side is victorious, their "truth" now prevails, while the real truth is so often lost somewhere along the way. (p.260)"
Thankfully, there are people like Dodson who are willing to stand up and ultimately do the right thing, for the truth, for the protection of the general public, and for the forgotten fallen like Brian Terry.