THE WHITE HOUSE AT WORK
Wednesday, June 14,
2000
PRESIDENT CLINTON: URGING CONGRESS TO FULLY FUND HIS GUN
ENFORCEMENT INITIATIVE
"I ask the Republican leadership to reverse the current course,
to live up to the rhetoric, to fully fund the national gun enforcement
initiative."
President Bill Clinton Wednesday, June 14, 2000
Today, at the White House, President Clinton called on Congress to
fully fund his FY 2001 Gun Enforcement Initiative to take dangerous gun
offenders off our streets. The House Appropriations Committee will vote today
on a bill that guts key components of the President's initiative. Last night,
President Clinton sent a letter to Committee Chairman Bill Young, urging the
Committee to provide full funding for his initiative the largest budget
ever proposed to strengthen enforcement of our nation's firearms laws.
House Bill Fails to Fund Key Investments in Gun Enforcement.
The House Appropriations Committee will vote on a bill today that falls short
by failing to include critical components of the President's Gun Enforcement
Initiative, including:
- $150 million to hire 1,000 additional state and local gun
prosecutors to work with communities, law enforcement, and federal prosecutors
on gun-related crimes to help put more dangerous gun criminals behind bars;
- $10 million in Justice Department matching grants to support
local media campaigns on gun violence and gun safety; and
- $10 million for the expansion, testing, and replication of
smart-gun technologies, which can limit a gun's use to its proper owner,
thereby preventing accidental shooting deaths of children, deterring gun theft,
and stopping criminals from seizing and using the guns of police officers
against them.
President Clinton's Unprecedented Gun Enforcement Initiative.
In addition to the proposals under consideration today, the President's Gun
Enforcement Initiative includes other elements that will be considered by
Congress in the coming weeks, including:
- Hiring 500 new ATF agents and inspectors to crack down on violent
gun criminals, and illegal gun traffickers and unscrupulous dealers that supply
firearms to criminals and juveniles;
- Implementing comprehensive crime gun tracing programs; and
- Building the first-ever national ballistics testing network to
help police catch more gun criminals.
Common-Sense Gun Measures Still Needed And Long Overdue.
Despite the continuing occurrence of numerous gun-related tragedies across
America, Congress has allowed common-sense gun safety legislation to languish
for an entire year. The President is urging Congress to put the interests of
American families above those of the gun lobby and pass legislation to:
- Require background checks at gun shows;
- Mandate child safety locks for handguns;
- Ban the importation of large-capacity ammunition clips; and
- Bar violent juveniles from owning guns for life.
A Record of Strong Gun Enforcement.Since 1992, as a result of
the Clinton-Gore Administration's efforts to focus on tough prosecutions, deter
and prevent gun crime, and enact strong new gun laws such as the Brady Act:
- The number of federal firearms cases has increased 16 percent;
- Overall gun prosecutions are up 22 percent;
- Federal gun offenders are serving sentences that are about two
years longer;
- The number of serious gun offenders sent to federal prison for
more than 5 years is up over 41 percent; and
- Gun-related crime has dropped 35 percent.
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