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WASHINGTON — Kenneth Melson, who has faced heavy criticism in connection with the controversial Operation Fast and Furious gun-trafficking investigation, announced Tuesday that he is stepping down as acting director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Also resigning is Dennis Burke, the U.S. attorney in Phoenix whose office oversaw Fast and Furious, in which ATF agents purposely allowed weapons to be illegally purchased in the hope of catching Mexican drug-cartel leaders.

Melson said he will move back to the Department of Justice to serve as a senior adviser with the Office of Legal Programs.

Attorney General Eric Holder announced that B. Todd Jones, the U.S. attorney in Minneapolis, will replace Melson as acting director, effective today.

Despite the problems with Fast and Furious under Melson’s tenure, Holder praised the outgoing acting director.

“Ken brings decades of experience at the department and extensive knowledge in forensic science to his new role, and I know he will be a valuable contributor on these issues,” he said.

But simply transferring Melson within the Justice Department did not immediately sit well with some critics, including Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who has asked Justice officials for an accounting of all Fast and Furious cases in Texas.

“Instead of reassigning those responsible for Fast and Furious within the Department of Justice,” Cornyn said, “Attorney General Holder should ask for their resignations and come clean on all alleged gun-walking operations, including a detailed response to allegations of a Texas-based scheme.”

Under Melson’s leadership, ATF launched Fast and Furious, through which agents were to watch illegal gun sales and then use surveillance teams and electronic eavesdropping to follow the guns and learn how the weapons were moved. The goal was to arrest cartel leaders overseeing gun smuggling on the U.S. side of the border with Mexico.

But the chase for guns and cartel leaders soon hit a dead end. The ATF was attempting to follow each of the weapons as they were moved from the straw men who bought them illegally at gun shops to what officials expected would be cartel higher-ups in the U.S., who would move them to Mexico.

The agency, which didn’t have the resources to follow so many weapons, soon lost track of many of them.

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