• A Look at Airport Director's Killing by ATF Agents Shows Nothing's Chan

    From Democrats Fear Independence@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 20 03:38:47 2025
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.org.batf
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, sac.politics

    The Waco disaster is one of a handful of cases there the federal
    government has shown it cannot be trusted blindly by anyone. It became a rallying cry, much like Ruby Ridge, and not without reason. The feds
    screwed the pooch, and people were killed who didn't need to be killed.
    They did it.

    But after Waco, the ATF supposedly learned. We wouldn't have another
    situation like that ever again.

    Only, we did.

    Brian Malinowski ran the airport in Little Rock, Arkansas.

    He had a good job, a loving family, and a hobby of selling guns. It wasn't
    his livelihood, so under the rules at the time, he figured he was in the
    clear. He would rent a booth at gun shows and sell some firearms. Did he
    make money? Maybe. Probably, even. But the rules for who had to have an
    FFL at the time said nothing about profit exclusively. It wasn't part of
    his livelihood, and that should have meant he was in the clear.

    That means, as far as Malinowski knew, he was complying with the law.

    The ATF, however, felt otherwise.

    Malinowski is now dead, and his widow is suing the ATF. Over at The Gun
    Writer, Lee Williams took a look at the complaint, took out the legalese,
    and broke it down so we know exactly where the ATF screwed up.

    And really, they screwed up by the numbers.

    Bryan Malinowski was a lifelong collector. As a child he started
    collecting coins, a hobby he carried into his adulthood. Several years
    ago, his father handed him down his gun collection, which sparked Bryan's interest in firearms. He became a gun collector and hobbyist.

    In March 2024, federal regulations did not require an individual seller to
    hold a federal firearms license (FFL) as a dealer in firearms unless that individual's principal objective in selling firearms was livelihood and
    profit.

    At the time of his death, Bryan Malinowski was the highest paid city
    employee in the city of Little Rock as the Executive Director of the
    Little Rock Airport, where he earned an annual salary of more than
    $260,000.

    Bryan did not believe that by selling at gun shows he was engaging in
    conduct "with the principal objective of livelihood and profit," and
    therefore did not believe he needed an FFL to sell firearms at gun shows.

    In December 2023, the ATF opened an investigation and began following
    Bryan to and from work and on the weekends, placing a tracker on his car,
    and surveilling his daily activities.

    Bryan, however, was aware of this. The ATF had never reached out to him in
    any way. Agents had ever spoken with him except a couple who interacted
    with him while undercover. He had no idea anyone suspected him of a crime.

    He was also a law-abiding citizen with no criminal history or history of violence. The ATF knew this. This appears to be clear in multiple
    documents from ATF officials.

    When they planned to serve the search warrant--it was not an arrest
    warrant, mind you--they expected it to be a short in-and-out sort of
    thing, with Bryan cooperating the entire time. They expect it to go as
    easily as it could.

    It should be noted that the Biden administration's new "engaged in the business" rule hadn't gone into effect yet. It had been announced, but was still something like a month away.

    So far as Bryan Malinowski knew, he was still following the law, so he'd
    have no reason to offer any kind of resistance. The ATF agents planning
    the operation didn't expect him to provide any, even if they thought he
    wasn't.

    Then what happened?

    According to Agent Hicks, the vast majority of the search warrants
    executed by the Arkansas ATF team are dynamic entries, and that when ATF
    makes a dynamic entry into a home, they are usually "dealing with violent
    armed career criminals and drug dealers ... [that's] the bulk of the types
    of cases that we work."

    According to the Operations Plan, if a "reasonable time" passed with no response, the entry team leader would give the command for the team to
    conduct a "limited penetration."

    A "limited penetration" is a type of dynamic entry where an ATF agent
    carrying the shield enters first. The agent with the shield then stops a
    foot or two inside the threshold of the door, followed by additional
    agents visually securing each part of the home visible from the front door threshold. Agents then call out to the occupants.

    In the wake of the chaos of ATF's 1993 raid of the Branch Davidian
    compound in Waco, Texas, the agency came under significant public
    criticism and congressional scrutiny for using excessive force in carrying
    out their enforcement responsibilities.

    The resulting federal review of ATF's use of force and operations
    concluded that a "dynamic entry, which relies on speed and surprise and
    may involve forced entry, is a preferred tactic during high-risk operations—those where ATF believes that suspects pose a threat of
    violence or in operations where evidence can be easily destroyed," and
    that "a dynamic entry could be planned only after all other tactical
    options had been considered."

    ...


    Despite knowing that Bryan did not pose a danger to them and believing
    that he would cooperate, ATF agents planned for a dynamic entry,
    approaching the Malinowski home wearing tactical gear, including ballistic vests and tactical helmets.

    Most were armed with semi-automatic Colt M4 carbine rifles chambered in
    5.56 caliber—a common weapon used by the U.S. military. They also
    possessed 9mm handguns. One agent carried a battering ram, another carried
    a ballistic shield, and another had a Halligan pry tool.

    The agents and TFOs decided to approach the home stealthily and under the
    cover of darkness and planned to cover the home's video doorbell to
    obscure their presence.

    The agents chose to prepare for and execute a dynamic entry despite the Malinowski search warrant execution not posing a threat of violence or
    evidence destruction.

    They'd aborted an earlier planned search because Malinowski had left town,
    even though it wasn't an arrest warrant, and they could have still
    searched the home without him there.

    They could have talked to him at his office, where he would likely be
    unarmed, as it's a secure facility that doesn't permit firearms.

    Instead, they made a dynamic entry on a man who had no reason to suspect
    he was under investigation by federal authorities. Further, it appears
    that their clothing did not clearly identify them as federal agents or
    local law enforcement officers, who assisted in the raid. What markings
    there were happened to be obscured by their body armor or other equipment.

    Now, let's understand something. Most people go through life with
    something of a "I have nothing to fear if I have nothing to hide"
    mentality. They don't expect the cops to bust into their homes in the wee
    hours of the morning because they're doing nothing that would warrant such
    a thing. Criminals might not be overly surprised, but regular folks? Yeah,
    they don't expect the cops to kick in the door.

    So, when a door gets kicked in by people wearing dark clothing and no
    visible insignias showing them to be law enforcement, even if they're
    screaming who they are at the top of their lungs, many gun owners are
    going to view it as a home invasion and act accordingly.

    There was a ballistic shield with the word "POLICE" on it, but guess what?
    It never made it inside the house. Malinowski never saw it.

    Other efforts to identify themselves included a local officer chirping his siren and having his car's blue lights on, but neighbors say they never
    saw or heard any of that, meaning Malinowski likely didn't either.

    But it wasn't just that, either.

    See, they'd put tape over the Malinowskis' video doorbell. They failed to
    ring that doorbell, opting to knock instead. They made no other moves to
    notify Malinowski that law enforcement was outside seeking to come in.

    From the moment when the knocking started, 28 seconds passed before agents decided to breach the door.

    28 seconds.

    Malinowski lived in a house of over 2,700 square feet. My house is nowhere
    near that large, and even if I hear the knocking at my front door
    immediately after it starts, it may take me more than a few seconds to get
    to the door. In the wee hours of the morning, before I may even be awake?
    28 seconds isn't nearly enough time.

    Based on what we're seeing here, this is really no different than how
    badly the ATF screwed up in Waco, and for what?

    A man who, by all measures, seems to have honestly believed he did nothing wrong and sure looks to have been right about that is dead. The ATF has
    yet another black eye to go along with pretty much everything else the
    agency is known for--seriously, have they ever gotten it right?--and an innocent man is gone, his family left reeling, because agents on the
    ground got jumpy, antsy, and likely wanted to feel like real badasses for
    a change.

    Absolutely pathetic.

    Editor’s Note: The Biden administration's weaponization of the ATF
    continues to do damage to our Second Amendment rights.

    https://bearingarms.com/tomknighton/2025/07/17/a-look-at-airport- directors-killing-by-atf-agents-shows-nothings-changed-since-waco-n1229292

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