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How ATF agents lost dangerous weapons while trying to nab criminals

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“There have always been problems with undercover operations because you’re dealing with criminals,” said Rory Little, a former federal prosecutor who now is a professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law. “They don’t play by the rules. You can’t run it like the Boy Scouts and expect to get results.

“There’s great benefit to these operations, and there’s great risk,” he said. “It all comes down to the details and the supervision.”

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After several months of buying guns and drugs at the undercover store in a former sign company building on E. Meinecke Street, agents had what looked like a big fish.

His name was Brandon Gladney.

Gladney had started selling guns to the agents in August, including assault-style rifles and pricey handguns — sometimes still in the box, according to a criminal complaint.

Agents, working with two officers from the Milwaukee Police Department, quickly figured out that Gladney, who could not buy a gun himself because of a juvenile conviction, was having another man buy the guns for him, a process known as straw buying.

In some cases, though, the guns had recently been bought from stores and were being resold to agents for a quick profit. One of the guns Gladney sold was a DPMS A-15 rifle, which retailed for about $1,000 at Gander Mountain at the time. The undercover agents paid $2,000 for the rifle, records show.

Legal experts say such guns likely weren’t the aim of such an extensive undercover operation, one the agency itself has said was meant to get illegal guns off the street.

Gladney, 26, sold at least 16 guns starting Aug. 1 and continuing for six weeks, according to court records. All the transactions were captured on high-quality surveillance cameras. One attorney involved in the case likened the quality of the recordings to that of a TV reality show.

As customers browsed the store, agents encouraged them to fill out slips of paper to enter a raffle to win a television. The entries were kept in a large green skull-shaped bowl.

The operation wasn’t all work.

The undercover agents, who pretended they were part of a New York biker gang selling hot merchandise, frequently blasted music and barbecued behind the building, sending smoke wafting into nearby homes. One neighbor complained to them, but said the problems continued.

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