ATF Provides Small Arms Trafficking Training for Mexican Officers
ATF Explosives Training Specialist instructs a class in the identification of detonators.
On Sept. 8-12, 2008, ATF held a small arms trafficking class for about 40 officers from agencies of the Mexican government, including the Procuraduria General de la Republica de Mexico (the PGR, the equivalent of the U.S. Office of the Attorney General), the Secretariat de Seguridad Publica (the federal police force, the uniformed and investigative branch of the PGR), the army and the navy.
The training is essential because it gives Mexican law
enforcement and military personnel thorough background
in the investigative tools and techniques at
their disposal through ongoing cooperation and coordination
with ATF. The small arms trafficking class
provides the students with the technical knowledge to
recognize indicators of firearms trafficking and to investigate
and dismantle criminal associations and infrastructure
that narcotics-trafficking cartels in Mexico use to
obtain illegal guns. The class also teaches them how to
identify and investigate bombings and other explosivesrelated
criminal activities. ATF generally holds four or five
small arms trafficking classes for Mexico per year.
The training took place at the National Center for Information,
Analysis, and Planning to Fight Crime in Mexico
City, Mexico. ATF’s International Training Branch coordinated
the class in conjunction with the ATF Mexico Office
and the Narcotics Affairs Section of the U.S. Department
of State in Mexico City.
The class encompassed numerous activities, including
practical exercises in firearms identification, classification,
handling, and safety. The class also covered the requirements
and procedures to successfully trace firearms recovered
in Mexico.
The students received a presentation on the dynamic of firearms trafficking. They learned how to identify firearms-trafficking schemes and to work with ATF to disrupt those schemes, mainly by pinpointing and eliminating the sources of the firearms. The students were presented with various case studies to acquaint them with the firearms-trafficking activities and methods that ATF most typically encounters in the United States when investigating cases related to the illegal diversion of firearms to Mexico for use by drug cartels and their enforcers.
The class included blocks of instruction on the identification and classification of explosives (including military and commercial explosives and improvised explosives devices) and the recognition of components in improvised explosive devices. The class also covered post-blast investigation, where the students were presented with explosives devices that had been detonated. They then worked as a team to piece together the debris left over after the detonation, determine the exact kind of explosives device used, describe precisely how the device worked and what parts were used to make it and give a presentation justifying their conclusions.
The classes can also continue to raise the level of awareness among Mexican law enforcement, military and legal officials about the unique and effective role that ATF can play in eliminating the flow of U.S.-sourced firearms into Mexico for use by violent drug cartels. They can also help to increase broad-based support in both countries for ATF’s Southwest Border Initiative to curb firearms trafficking and the violence associated with it.
ATF teaches students how to detect firearms trafficking patterns.