Thanks, ktrca. On the one hand, it's nice to see my personal theory get this documented support...but OTOH, if this IS related to the Ellis County Sheriff's office stolen evidence guns (and the corruption investigation concerning those 2 deputies which may be farther-reaching), then there is also a part of me that is wishing these supportive docs had not been brought into a public forum such as this (since media, too, appears convinced that such public knowledge might hinder the investigation). It's a conundrum.
I do not remember the specific name of the type of letter, but the government has the authority to send a letter that also demands that the contents of the letter not be disclosed until an official matter has been resolved. I do not think the government needs its hand held over correspondence it chose to send out from no less an entity than the AG office. They sent it, they know it could become public information. JMO
ETA: A National Security Letter (NSL) is what I was thinking about. From Wikipedia: "...The nondisclosure order must be authorized by the Director of the FBI, and only after he or she certifies "that otherwise there may result a danger to the national security of the United States,
interference with a criminal, counterterrorism, or counterintelligence
investigation, interference with diplomatic relations, or danger to the life or physical safety of any person."[SUP]
[3][/SUP] Even then, the recipient of the NSL may still challenge the nondisclosure order in federal court.[SUP]
[4] ..."
Related to NSL's are gag orders, temporary restraining orders, etc. Since the FBI, ATF and others have been involved from the beginning, and there have been many unanswered questions about that, they could easily have stopped this letter/information from becoming public.
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