President Clinton Announces New Initiative To Help Prevent Violence


THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release December 29, 1998




REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
ON CHILDREN AT RISK OF VIOLENCE

The Roosevelt Room


10:00 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Eric Holder, for your leadership and your obvious intense commitment to this issue. Thank you, Chief, for your good work. When you were describing the initiatives in New Haven involving the Yale Child Studies Center, it struck a particularly responsive cord because when I met my wife, over 25 years ago at the law school, she was also working with the Yale Child Study Center. And it's a great institution.

We're delighted to be joined here by leaders of law enforcement and leaders of law enforcement organizations; Montgomery County Councilmember Marilyn Praisner. And I want to say a special word of welcome to Congressman Bud Cramer of Alabama who has supported the 100,000 police program. We thank you, sir, for your presence here.

This is an important time for us to be making this announcement because the holiday season is always focused on our children, and properly so. I want our children to be at the center of our attention every day, every week, all year long. Today we come here to talk about new actions to help millions of children who are exposed every year to violence either as witnesses or victims.

For many, many of them, it is very difficult to be a child because there is too much violence, too much cruelty, too much instability. Children experience these things in our society at younger and younger ages. That is why we have worked hard -- the Attorney General, the Deputy Attorney General, and others in our administration -- to strengthen families, to bring safety and order to our schools, our communities, our streets.

We passed a crime bill with tougher penalties and more prevention. We've enforced zero tolerance for guns in schools, expelling more than 6,000 students in 1997 who brought weapons to schools. We've expanded and want to continue to expand after-school programs to keep children off the streets during the after-school hours when juvenile crime soars.

We do have -- the Chief mentioned the 100,000 police program, the community policing program. We've now funded about 91,000 of those 100,000 police. We are ahead of schedule and under budget, and I hope we can keep going.

With these efforts and with the efforts of countless parents and teachers, principals, judges, police officers, and others, real progress is being made, as you have heard. New crime statistics released by the Justice Department this past weekend show that overall crime has dropped to its lowest level in 25 years. Property and violent crime are down more than 20 percent since 1993; the murder rate down by nearly 30 percent. Juvenile crime rates finally have also started to fall. The juvenile murder rate has dropped 17 percent in one year, and juvenile arrest rates are now down two years in a row.

These are good signs. We should be pleased, we should be thankful. But we should not be complacent, for these rates are still very, very high -- too high for any civilized society to tolerate. And there are still far too many children who are victims of violence; too many being abused and neglected; too many still witnessing serious violence with traumatic effects on them that, as you have already heard, will last a lifetime.

As the First Lady's Zero to Three Conference last year showed, children's exposure to violence has tremendous negative consequences -- for them and for all the rest of us. A child who experiences serious violence is 50 percent -- 50 percent -- more likely to be arrested as a juvenile, and nearly 40 percent more likely to be arrested as an adult. If you want to keep the crime rates going down you have to do more to break the cycle of violence to which children are exposed.

Today, we launch a new Child Exposed to Violence Initiative, sponsored by the Justice Department, directed by Deputy Attorney General Holder. The aim of the initiative is to combat violence against children, to prevent children who are exposed to violence from being victimized a second time by the justice system.

As part of the initiative, I announce today four specific actions: First, I'm asking the Justice Department to send legislation to Congress to impose tougher penalties against those who expose children to violence. I believe it's time to send a message through the court that when a man assaults or kills someone in the presence of a child, he has committed not one horrendous act, but two; time to ask why a bank robber who unintentionally kills an innocent bystander can be charged with felony murder, but a repeat child abuser who unintentionally kills a child cannot be.

Second, I'm directing the Justice Department to develop and distribute the critical information state and local law enforcement agencies need to do a better job of responding to the needs of children who have been victimized by a crime. Too often children are victimized anew by a criminal justice system that is designed by and for adults. With the help of the Justice Department's new training videos and in-the-field user guides, the first of which we are releasing today, criminal justice agencies all over our nation can begin to provide children who have been exposed to violence with the healing they need and deserve.

Third, today we announce $10 million in federal safe-start grants to 12 cities to develop the kinds of comprehensive responses to children exposed to violence that New Haven has pioneered and that the Chief so ably described just a few moments ago. The New Haven experience shows that trained law enforcement officers, paired with child psychologists, can provide the stability and comfort children need to overcome their feelings of fear and chaos that result from exposure to violence.

Fourth, I asked the Justice Department to hold a National Summit on Children Exposed to Violence next June, co-hosted by the Department of Health and Human Services, local law enforcement agencies, media organizations, elected officials, the National Network of Children's Advocacy Centers, and other groups.

By working together, we have already made significant progress against crime and violence. We have made significant progress to make our children's lives safer. But if you look at the numbers of people who are still involved, the statistics are staggering and unacceptable. So I say, the fact that this progress has been made should give us courage, should give us hope, but should steel our determination to do the much, much greater work that lies ahead.

There is no excuse for us to lose any of our children. And if we keep working and we keep our children at the center of our concerns, we can make the 21st century a much, much safer, better, more wholesome place for them than the last three and a half decades of this century have been.

Thank you very much. Happy New Year. (Applause.)



What's New - December 1998

White House Conference on Social Security

New Housing Grants

Social Security and Y2K Event

Combat Medicare Fraud

Air Strike Against Iraq

Initiative To Help Prevent Violence

Opening Remarks, White House Conference

The Air Strikes Against Iraq

General Benjamin Davis

World AIDS Day Event

Statements

Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Awards

Congressional Meeting Statement

End of Operation Desert Fox

Rose Garden Statement

Safe Drinking Water

Service Event in Washington, D.C.

New Relief Aid For Central America

The Earned Income Tax Credit

Tenth Anniversary of Pan Am 103 Disaster

Palestinian National Council Address

Unemployment at a Generational Low

The People Of Israel Address

Submission By Counsel For President Clinton To The Committee On The Judiciary Of The United States House Of Representatives


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