[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 45 (Tuesday, April 11, 2000)]
[House]
[Pages H2115-H2120]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE PROBLEM OF ILLEGAL NARCOTICS
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Pease). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 6, 1999, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Mica) is
recognized for 60 minutes.
Mr. MICA. Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to come to the floor again
tonight to talk about the subject I usually attempt to address on
Tuesday night before the House when we have these Special Orders to
call to attention to the House of Representatives, my colleagues, Mr.
Speaker, and the American people, one of the most serious social
problems we are facing as a Nation. That is the problem of illegal
narcotics, their disastrous impact on the United States, our economy,
on families across this Nation, the tremendous toll it takes on our
judicial system, and the loss of lives.
In fact, in the last recorded year, 1998, some 15,973 Americans lost
their lives as a direct result of illegal narcotics. If we take in all
of the other figures that are not reported, our national drug czar, the
director of our Office of National Drug Control Policy, Barry
McCaffrey, has testified before our Subcommittee on Criminal Justice,
Drug Policy, and Human Resources that the toll exceeds some 50,000 each
year in the United States.
That is truly a devastating number when we consider that we have
incarcerated nearly 2 million Americans, and that some 70 percent of
them are there because of drug-related offenses or committing crimes,
in most cases two and three felonies on their record, under the
influence of illegal narcotics and substance abuse, and we know that
something is seriously wrong and something needs our attention, not
only as a Congress but as a people who care about people and should
care about their fate.
Unfortunately, the toll continues to mount, the tremendous impact
illegal narcotics have had again on our Nation. Tonight I wanted to
cite just some of the most recent statistics we have, and how some of
the people who are most at risk in our national population are some of
the highest victims as far as percentage, again in this terrible
conflict with illegal narcotics.
According to the 1998 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, drug
use increased from 5.8 percent in 1993 to 8.2 percent in 1998 among
young African-Americans; again, the victims of illegal narcotics and
drug use, in particular the minority population, and in this case not
quite doubling but a dramatic increase for African-Americans.
Also, according to this 1998 survey on drug abuse, drug use increased
from 4.4
[[Page H2116]]
percent in 1993 to 6.1 percent in 1998 among young Hispanics. The
Hispanic minority in this country, and particularly the youth, have
been tremendously impacted by illegal narcotics. If we look at the
population in our prisons, if we look at the population in our
detention facilities and jails across this Nation, we would see a
disproportionate number of minorities incarcerated in those facilities,
and many of them there because of drug-related problems.
We hear a great deal about legacies at this time of year, especially
after a 7-year administration. I do not have blow-ups of these
particular charts tonight, but certainly when history records the
legacy of the Clinton administration, some of these charts must be
included in the pages of that history.
These were recently given to me by the director of our agency called
SAMHA, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Agency, Dr. Chavez. Dr.
Chavez presented me with these charts that show from 1992 problems
relating to amphetamine and methamphetamine use, and these are
admission rates for abuse treatment from 1992 to 1997.
If we look at these charts we see dramatic increases, almost turning
entirely dark on this chart here in the numbers that are now required
for treatment and addiction to methamphetamine. This is particularly
among our young people, but also among our adult population.
In fact, we get to the Midwest and the West and we have
methamphetamines in epidemic proportion and use. I am going to talk
about methamphetamine in a hearing that I did in California just
several weeks ago, and again, what has taken place in this particular
area.
If we look at heroin substance abuse treatment, again, this chart is
not very big, but we can barely see some coloring here in 1992, up to
some solid coloring in 1997. My own State of Florida is not darkened
in, but in my area and Central Florida, heroin substance abuse and use
of heroin has so dramatically increased that now last year the
headlines blurted out in what is really tranquil Central Florida, the
greater Orlando area, that heroin drug overdoses now exceed homicides;
again, part of what has not been done to address a very serious problem
and growing problem across our land.
The marijuana chart is even more revealing. We barely see any
severity in admission rates or high admission rates in 1992 for
marijuana substance abuse and admissions, particularly young people
addicted to the marijuana. And it is not the marijuana of the sixties
and seventies, with the low purity and low toxicity level. We see now
again areas almost totally darkened in from a policy of ``Just say
maybe,'' or ``If I had it to do all over again, I would inhale.''
Certainly that type of policy, those statements, have an impact,
particularly among our young people, a legacy for substance abuse that
again I think is part of the failure of this administration to address
this.
In fact, with the President we can count on probably two hands the
number of times that he has talked about drug abuse at any length. Even
in his last speech before the State of the Union, and only less than a
sentence, a passing note, did the President address this problem again
that has incredible social impact across our land.
The results are pretty dramatic. It may not be talked about. We did
spend several days of debate just in the last 2 weeks here because of
the crisis in Colombia, because of the sheer amount and volume of
illegal narcotics now pouring into our country because some of the
guards that we have traditionally had in place, such as Panama, which
was a forward operating surveillance operation for all of our drug
operations in the Caribbean and over South America, had been
dismantled, again with the Clinton administration's failure to
negotiate a treaty to allow even our drug surveillance operations to
continue in Panama.
With that closed down we have lost most of our surveillance
capability, and now have cobbled together in Ecuador and the Dutch
Antilles some minor coverage, but there is a huge gap that allows
heroin or cocaine and other illegal narcotics to pour in almost
unabated.
It certainly must be one of the primary responsibilities of this
Congress to see that illegal substances and substances that harm our
population, and particularly when we have this number of people
incarcerated, when we have somewhere in the area of a quarter of a
trillion dollars of damages to our economy and to our country every
year with illegal narcotics, and some close to 16,000 direct deaths in
just one year, that is 1998, the last recorded, and some 50,000 total,
certainly it is incumbent upon the representatives of this Nation to do
something about that problem.
{time} 2245
The Federal portion of that problem certainly is to interdict and
stop those illegal substances from coming onto our shores before they
even reach our borders, but that, in fact, has not been the policy of
this administration. It has been a policy of changing the emphasis on
taking apart successful programs of the Reagan and Bush
administrations, where we had drug abuse on a steady decline and drug
use on a steady decline, and have it now skyrocketing as these charts
so aptly describe.
I spoke for a few minutes about methamphetamine and the national
epidemic that we have. We have held several hearings on the subject of
methamphetamine, both here in Washington and field hearings. I was
shocked to find the incredible impact that methamphetamines have had in
the West, also, of course, in the Midwest, rural areas like Iowa, other
tranquil areas like Minnesota, where we heard testimony at our hearings
here in Washington of incredible amounts of Mexican methamphetamine
coming in to those areas, and the action of the individuals who consume
methamphetamine is as bizarre, as strange and damaging as anything we
had in the crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980s, in fact probably even
more of a detrimental impact on families and individuals.
One hearing that I conducted at the request of the gentleman from
California (Mr. Ose) was in his district, which encompasses part of the
capital city of California, which is Sacramento. Testimony that we had
in Sacramento by one caregiver there was particularly revealing,
something that even shocked me and I have heard testimony from a number
of witnesses that is quite moving, but this individual who testified
put together a program in Butte County, and Butte County is a small
county in California compared to others, I think it is in the 200,000
population range, and this witness testified that since 1993 they
created a drug endangered children's program which was established and
actually allowed the program to detain 601 children from drug houses.
Now, again, we have to think of this as a small county, but 601
children were rescued from drug houses. One hundred sixty-two of those
children were detained from methamphetamine labs so these children
actually lived where their parents or guardians who were producing
methamphetamine. This all came about as a result of an L.A. newspaper
staff reporter, I believe his name was Don Winkle, who began writing a
story after three children were left to burn to death by their mother
when a methamphetamine lab exploded in Los Angeles. His story brought
him to Butte County, and there this particular reporter reviewed the
program that had been put in place. The testimony by this social worker
was most revealing, and of course we hear on the news from time to time
the very attention-getting child killing child with a gun case, and I
have also cited both of the most recent cases where a 6-year-old child
killed a 6-year-old child, brought in a gun and a horrible crime and
everyone focused on the gun but very few in the media and others took
time to reveal to the public or discuss that the child came, in fact,
from a crack house, from a cocaine-infested home, if it could be called
that. The father, I believe, was in jail and had been involved in
illegal narcotics charges, but again the focus was on the gun but not
on the setting.
Many of the other children who I will talk about here have not been
publicized. This one particular case, where 3 of these children died in
Los Angeles, again illustrates some of the problems that we face from
illegal narcotics; in this case, from methamphetamines. The 601
children that this care worker
[[Page H2117]]
talked about, she went on to describe in her testimony to us and let me
read a little bit of what she said. The 601 children's names and faces
are different but each case and story is the same. One would think that
9 years later, with hundreds of suspects arrested, countless doors
kicked in and the writing of thousands of reports that I would grow
callous, but upon entering the bad guy's house again and seeing those
small, round, innocent eyes looking up at me, finally someone came to
save me, I turn a marshmallow. I do not have to make up stories or use
the same photographs or tell the worst of the worst. They are all bad.
Her testimony went on, and let me describe this, if I may, the yard
is covered with garbage, old bicycles, toys and rusted car parts. Three
or four dogs run under the house or aggressively approach. Inside the
house it is dark with no electricity. The stench of rotten food, animal
urine and feces and soiled diapers permeate the house. Chemical odors
irritate my eyes and nose. We fumble down hallways into bedrooms
stepping on filthy clothing and debris. The children are startled when
a flashlight shines in their way. They are sleeping on soiled
mattresses with no sheets or blankets. They sleep in clothes for the
third day in a row. They have not had a bath in days and cannot
remember when they last ate. They rarely attend school due to lice
infestation and cockroaches have become their pets. The soiled food
stored in an ice chest is moldy. There is no running water and the
methamphetamine laboratory is all over the kitchen. The children draw
pictures for me of mommy with a methamphetamine pipe and show me
bruises where mom's boyfriend hit them. The oldest child comforts the
younger sibling as obviously trying to parent. None of the kids cry or,
for that matter, show any emotion at all. They all exhibit a classic
attachment disorder. Domestic violence is obvious with the holes kicked
in the doors and the walls. A loaded firearm is found next to the couch
and another under the bed, both where children have access.
Again she goes on, a description of what she sees in this house and
it is unfortunately very typical. She told us that she saw these scenes
over and over and over again. She said these children were lucky. We
rescued them before they were injured, maimed or killed.
The newspaper clippings I collected from all over the State and even
a few other States tell more horrific stories. These are some of the
clippings that she provided our subcommittee and stories: Fifteen month
overdoses on methamphetamine; five month old tests positive for
methamphetamine and succumbs to death with 12 rib fractures, a burned
leg and scarred feet by a methamphetamine addict in Los Angeles; 13
month old dies of heart trauma, broken spine and neck by
methamphetamine addict. She was also raped and sodomized.
Twenty-five month old Oregon toddler overdoses on methamphetamine; a
2 year old dies with methamphetamine in the system, San Jose,
California; a 2 year old eats methamphetamine from a baby food jar in
Twenty-Nine Palms, California; a 14 month old drinks lye in water from
a parent's methamphetamine laboratory, hospitalized permanently with
severe organ damage; new baby dies from mother breast milk laced with
methamphetamine in Orange County; 8 week old, 11 pound boy dies from
methamphetamine poisoning found inside baby bottle in Orange County; an
8 year old watches and hears mom die in a methamphetamine laboratory in
Oroville, California; a 6 month old overdoses semi-comatose seizuring,
hospitalized, drank methamphetamine, also in Oroville, California; a 4
year old tests positive for methamphetamine, beaten and hair pulled out
by mom and boyfriend, Chico, California; 8 children exposed to
methamphetamine laboratory in day care center in southern California;
and mom on methamphetamine and her addicted boyfriend drown a 2 year
old in a bathtub in Sacramento.
This is just a sampling of the death, destruction and mayhem that was
provided to us by this one witness from one county in California.
Most people do not know much about methamphetamines, and the
addiction and epidemic is limited at this point to the Midwest and to
the far West, but spreading across the country. We had Dr. Leshner, who
is head of NIDA, National Institute of Drug Abuse, come and testify
before our subcommittee and give us the latest information on what
methamphetamines do to people. Most people who are involved in taking
methamphetamine really do not know that they are setting themselves up
for brain damage and destruction. We found also that the damage that is
done to the brain causes such bizarre behavior that parents abandon
their children.
In California, we were told where they attempted to return 35 of
these children to their parents, only 5 parents were capable or
willing, after being on methamphetamines, to take their children back.
We were told of one parent on methamphetamine who tortured their child
and then finished the child off by boiling the child alive.
This is the type of bizarre behavior that methamphetamine produces in
the brain in individuals who take methamphetamine.
This is the scientific data that Dr. Leshner provided our
subcommittee. This first slice of brain and this view of the brain
shows dopamine, with normal dopamine levels that are required for an
active, healthy brain. The second and third illustration here is a
gradual reduction in dopamine levels in the brain due to
methamphetamine uses. The fourth illustration here that has been
provided is a brain from an individual who suffers from Parkinson's
disease, and we can see the deterioration of methamphetamine from a
normal brain into various stages of methamphetamine, the most severe
stage, this happens to be Parkinson's but also mirrors methamphetamine.
So this is what this wonderful drug has done for one county in
California, what it can do for an individual, and again the damage that
can be imposed on individuals. It really is shocking and I do not think
most people who get hooked on methamphetamines have any idea what they
are doing to themselves or the potential damage they can do to their
family or their children.
The cases we have are just unbelievable.
{time} 2300
Again, I do not want to go into any more of them tonight, but I will
be glad to provide Members upon request additional information on what
our subcommittee has found relating to methamphetamine and its horrible
impact.
The other chart that I showed is heroin. I showed how heroin has now
caused tremendous problems across the United States. We have a heroin
epidemic in many regions of the country, including the area that I
represent, which is central Florida. Heroin use and abuse is up
dramatically.
Heroin is not the heroin of the 1960s, 1970s, or even 1980s. The
purity in those days was in the low percentile, single digits, a 9
percent pure. The heroin that we are getting in from South America and
Mexico is now running 70, 80 percent pure. That is why we have an
incredible death rate in Central Florida and around the country.
Young people and others are taking heroin. They are mixing it with
some other substance, alcohol or some other drug. Or even first-time
users are hit with this high 70 percent pure heroin, go into
convulsions, and die.
Now, I think that many people would believe that heroin has been
glorified by Hollywood, and heroin is the type of drug that the stars
and others in important places use. Most people do not realize the
severe consequence of heroin.
Unfortunately, I am one Representative that has heard more about the
tragedy of heroin than many of my colleagues. As I said, in Central
Florida, our heroin overdose deaths, particularly among our young
people, now exceed our rate of homicides.
One of the parents provided me with the permission to show the
effects of heroin. This is particularly a gruesome depiction of the end
of the life of this constituent's death, a young man in Central
Florida. This is how the coroner placed the body before the body was
removed.
Now, again, I know young people and many people across this land
think that heroin use is somewhat glamorous. The picture I am about to
show is her son as the coroner found him in Orlando, a rather gruesome
picture. I show it only to show what the potential holds for using this
high purity
[[Page H2118]]
heroin. This young man died a horrible death. His mother told me. The
autopsy would reveal that.
This is not glamor. This is not celebrity status. This is death by
heroin. The pure deadly heroin that suffocates one to death, causes
one's blood vessels to burst. It causes one to go into uncontrollable
seizures and then die one of the most horrible deaths imaginable.
Time and time again, in Central Florida, this has happened and
happened in record numbers again this last year. This is only one
victim. But people must understand what is happening with heroin and
what heroin, what methamphetamines, and some of these other narcotics
can do to their lives and their bodies. One ends up being taken out by
the coroner in this fashion. These pictures end up as the last reminder
your parents have of you or your family has of you.
Unfortunately, I have met many of the parents of young men and women
in my district whose child has or loved one has ended up in that
condition. That is one reason why I come to the floor every Tuesday
night, why I continue to hammer away to get the attention of the House
of Representatives, the Congress, and the American people on what is
taking place with illegal narcotics. We should not have one more person
fall victim as we have had in Central Florida.
Some of the most disturbing news I received is during a recent recess
when I was home and talking with our law enforcement officials. They
told me that we have, in fact, more drug-related deaths in Central
Florida, particularly heroin. Again, there is an unabated flow coming
in from Colombia, from Central and South America.
Tomorrow, we are going to focus a hearing on some of that trafficking
pattern, particularly as it relates to Haiti. We have focused on the
major source of production which is Colombia, which produced the heroin
that killed the young man whose picture I showed just a few minutes
ago.
But what is particularly sad about all of this is that, in fact, we
could prevent much more of this death and destruction. We could stop a
great deal more of the hard narcotics coming into this country.
Certainly we have a responsibility to stop illegal narcotics coming
into this country.
Unfortunately, the Clinton administration in 1993 dramatically
changed the policy that kept some of these illegal narcotics from
coming into our borders.
In fact, we were making good progress. Heroin was dramatically down.
Cocaine was dramatically down. As my colleagues saw from the charts I
presented earlier, methamphetamines were not even on the charts in
1992.
Unfortunately, this administration made a complete reversal in
policy. They decided to put all of their eggs in the treatment basket.
Since 1993, we have nearly doubled the amount of money in treatment.
In fact, we have also, through Republican efforts, added another
billion dollars in money for education. But it has been the focus,
particularly treatment, treating the wounded in this battle, rather
than conducting a war on drugs as we had in the 1980s under the Bush
and the Reagan administration.
The results are most telling. The Clinton administration slashed the
international programs, the programs of stopping drugs at their source
in the source countries by some 50 percent beginning in 1993 when they
controlled the House, the White House, and the other body.
Next they slashed the interdiction programs. Interdiction is also
cost effective in that it stops illegal narcotics before they get to
our borders. The most expensive way to go after illegal narcotics is
once it gets into our streets and communities. It requires us to put
massive police forces and massive resources in law enforcement to keep
up with the sheer volume that spreads and is diffused among our
communities and our streets and our schools throughout our society.
But a very serious mistake was made in 1993 in cutting the source
country programs and cutting the interdiction programs and use of the
military for surveillance. The military never has and never will,
because of our laws, become involved in enforcement. They merely
provide intelligence and surveillance and information, particularly to
source countries, so they could go after both the production of illegal
narcotics, the trafficking of illegal narcotics, and the transit of
illegal narcotics out of their country. A very effective strategy
because, again, we had dramatic decreases in drug use and drug
trafficking and the sheer availability of hard narcotics.
The results again are devastating. We are seeing, particularly in the
last few years, huge, huge volumes of heroin coming in.
{time} 2310
In 1993, there was almost zero, almost no heroin produced in
Colombia. Almost none. Since 1993, again through a policy that really
has been a policy of failure, the Clinton administration has managed to
turn Colombia into the major source of heroin coming into the United
States.
This is hard to believe, but in 1993, there was almost no coca, no
cocaine produced in Colombia. There was transit from Peru and Bolivia,
and some processing and transshipment from Colombia, but it was not the
source of growth of coca and production. Today, Colombia is now the
source of some 80 percent of the cocaine coming into the United States.
And, again, a much more deadly and purer form of cocaine that is
reaching our shores and killing our population.
It was not easy for the Clinton administration to make Colombia the
largest producer and transiter in some 6 or 7 years, but they did
manage to do it. And it has been in spite of protests by the Republican
majority, in spite of direct legislative actions, in spite of
appropriations trying to get resources to Colombia.
The fiasco started in 1994, when the Clinton administration stopped
information sharing to Colombia and stopped intelligence exchanges with
that country and some of the other source countries. It took us several
years to straighten out that fiasco. And, again, in the last 2 years,
the Clinton administration is now repeating the fiasco. And we see
where we have been able to decrease the production of cocaine in Peru
by some 66 percent, in Bolivia by some 55 percent. For the first time
in just the last few months some increase in production in Peru, again
because the Clinton administration has shut down some of the exchange
of intelligence.
That is all documented in a report that was provided to me by GAO. I
asked this independent agency to conduct a review of what is taking
place. This report was produced by the General Accounting Office. It
says Drug Control Assets DOD Contributes to Reducing the Illegal Drug
Supply Have Declined. This is a documentation and information of what
has taken place.
In fact, even the President's own ambassador to Peru cautioned that
the United States should not drop its surveillance information being
provided to Peru because a successful program of the information
sharing was reducing the production of illegal narcotics and transiting
of illegal narcotics in that country. So we have even the
representative of the President speaking out against the
administration's change in policy, a second disastrous change after the
1994 fiasco.
Then we have documentation here that, in fact, the DOD assets as far
as flight times have dramatically decreased; that, in fact, flying
hours dedicated to tracking suspect shipments in transit to the United
States declined from 46,264 to 14,770, or a 68 percent decline in
flight time.
So, basically, when they closed down the war on drugs, they did a
very effective job not only with flight surveillance but also with the
maritime shipments. This report also indicates a 62 percent decrease in
maritime tracking of illegal narcotics shipments. Again, documentation
of a policy that has failed and steps, including the decertification of
Colombia without a national interest waiver, which would have allowed
resources to get to Colombia to fight illegal narcotics.
So, basically, for the last number of years, they have allowed
Colombia no assistance. Aid even appropriated and designated by this
Congress has been denied to that country. And that is what has brought
us to the situation we currently find ourselves in requesting the
President coming forward, with a region in disarray, with 35,000 people
being killed in Colombia, with complete disruption of that important
and
[[Page H2119]]
strategic region of our hemisphere, the President coming forward at the
last minute with a request for a billion dollar-plus aid package. We
have passed that in the House. We hope that the Senate will take action
on that.
That is a little bit of the history of where we are and how we have
gotten ourselves into this situation with Colombia and also with the
tide of illegal narcotics coming into the United States. We know the
programs we have put in place, where we have been allowed to in Peru
and Bolivia, will work if properly resourced, and with very little
money, very few funds in comparison to a $17.8 billion drug budget
having gone to the source country programs or to alternative crop
substitution programs or stopping drugs at their source or before they
get to our border.
The other thing that I wanted to address tonight is the attack on
some of the zero tolerance policies. We know that zero tolerance
policies have worked very well across the landscape where they have
been instituted. Probably the most successful example of a zero
tolerance drug policy in the United States has been that of New York
City and that devised by the current mayor, Rudy Giuliani.
I know that Rudy Giuliani has been attacked recently for some of the
problems that they have had with their enforcement of some of the laws
in that community. And to watch television and to hear the liberal
media, one would think that New York City police are out of control and
that, in fact, a zero tolerance policy somehow is a policy of
intolerance and a policy that would abuse the rights of individuals.
A story by, and I guess an editorial piece by columnist Judy Mann in
the Friday March 24 Washington Post really set me off, and I spoke
before about this, but the title of her liberal piece was The War on
Drugs Can't Help But Run Amuck. She's a very determined liberal and she
has used the case of Patrick Dorismond, who was shot in New York City,
as a case in point for a zero tolerance drug policy that has run amuck;
a war on drugs that cannot work.
She went on in her article saying that the attempted drug buy that
led to Dorismond's death was part of Giuliani's latest scheme to reduce
the rising homicide rate in the city.
{time} 2320
This liberal reporter would have you believe that murders and
homicides are up under Mayor Giuliani. Our subcommittee called Mr.
Giuliani in last January, we have updated some of this information.
Before Mayor Giuliani came into office in New York, there were
actually over 2,000 murders per year in New York City. In 1998, it was
629, and it rose slightly to about 670 in 1999, last year, which we do
not have on the chart. Does this in any way show an increase in murder?
In fact, if we had stayed at the same rate, we would be killing some
1,300 to 1,400 per year under this policy.
Now, this liberal columnist would also have you believe, and she says
so, civil liberties have been another casualty on the war on drugs.
This is the type of liberal nonsense that she spews out.
In fact, we looked at New York City from our subcommittee research,
and we found the latest statistics revealed that crime is down 57.6
percent overall for major crimes. Murder is down 58.3 percent. Rape is
down 31 percent under the Giuliani plan. Robbery is down some 62.1
percent. Felony assaults are down 35.4 percent. Burglary in New York
City is down 61.7 percent. Grand larceny is down some 41.9 percent.
Grand larceny auto is down some 68.8 percent.
Now, Ms. Mann and the liberals on the other side of the aisle here
would have you believe that the Giuliani policy is a failure. These
happen to be the facts. Now, of course, the liberals do not like to
deal with facts. The facts only confuse the situation. These are the
facts about crime in New York City under a zero tolerance policy.
Now, Ms. Mann and the liberals and the media out there would have you
believe that there is some type of intolerance, their loss of civil
liberties, or that the New York City Police department or Mayor
Giuliani is in some way out of control, and that there are these
rampant shootings by police officers and abuse by police officers.
The facts are, and we checked this carefully, our subcommittee did,
for example, the number of fatal shootings by police officers in 1999,
11 was the lowest any year since 1973. What is absolutely more amazing
is Mayor Giuliani increased the police force by 25 percent. Now, that
may sound like just a small figure, or a minor figure, but New York
went from 30,000 to 40,000 police, a 25 percent, 10,000 increase in
police officers, and the lowest number of fatal shootings by police
officers since 1993.
This zero tolerance policy that is so offensive to the liberal
population, it has probably saved thousands and thousands of lives,
people that would have been murdered. And we cannot even calculate the
number of people that would have been raped, robbed, victims of felony
assault, burglary, grand larceny or auto larceny.
Now, they go on. They would have you believe that, in fact, this drug
policy and zero tolerance policy enforcement would take its toll in
some other way. I wonder where Ms. Mann and the liberals were when
Mayor Giuliani was not in office back in 1990, under that
administration in the city. In 1990, 41 police killings took place with
a fewer number of police. Moreover, the number of rounds intentionally
fired by police declined 50.6 percent since 1993.
This is tough policy that is so impossible for the liberals to deal
with, and the facts relating to what has taken place in New York City
and the number of intentional shootings, incidents by police dropped
66.5 percent, while the number of officers actually increased during
that period some 37.9 percent.
In the last 5 years alone, there were 159 cases in which police were
fired upon and did not return fire, 42 officers were wounded and 6
killed in those incidents. There is probably not a more restrained-on
an incident basis or population basis, police or law enforcement agency
in the United States of America.
Now, where were the liberals when David Dinkins was in office? There
were 62 percent more shootings by police officers per capita in the
last year of David Dinkins' administration than last year under Mayor
Giuliani. Specifically in 1993, there were 212 incidents involving
police officers in intentional shootings; in 1994, there were 167; in
1998, under Mayor Giuliani, there were 111.
It is terrible when the liberals have to deal with fact. Heaven
forbid Ms. Mann should ever research fact. Heaven forbid she should
ever look at the actual statistics relating to New York City and what
Mayor Giuliani has done, but she can slam a zero tolerance enforcement
policy, a zero tolerance on drug policy. She can slam and try to twist
facts that murders have somehow increased.
These listed are the seven major felony categories from 1993 to 1998
from 429,000 down to 212,000. I am not great at math, but I think that
is about half, 50 percent reduction. Ms. Mann and the liberals would
want you to be confused and make you think that zero tolerance and
tough law enforcement is done in some harmful way.
These, in fact, are the facts. These, in fact, are the statistics. I
always liked to contrast them, and I will close tonight, contrast with
the liberal policies, the hero of the liberal side, try those drugs,
folks, they are fine for you. Go ahead, let your kids use them. God
forbid we should have any enforcement.
Baltimore, Maryland is the example. Thank heavens Mayor Schmoke is
gone. Thank heavens we have a new mayor, Mayor O'Malley. We conducted a
subcommittee hearing there a little over a week ago, the best thing
that came from that hearing, I believe the mayor fired the police
chief, and we have hired in Baltimore one of the prime developers of
the New York City's zero enforcement policy, but this is the record of
Baltimore, where Mayor Schmoke said we are not going to enforce.
I was stunned at the hearing to find out that HIDTM, high intensity
drug traffic money, made available by the Federal Government for tough
enforcement in Baltimore, the police chief, who again was removed, told
me that they did not use those funds to go after major open drug
markets. These are the results, the deaths in 1998, 212; 1999, 300.
[[Page H2120]]
In the last 8, 10 years under this policy, probably 3,000 young
people in Baltimore were slaughtered. These are the constant kinds of
numbers that we have seen in Baltimore.
{time} 2330
What was more stunning with this liberal policy that the other side
embraces that Ms. Mann thinks is the way to go in Baltimore is now,
from the chart that we have here that was provided by DEA, Baltimore
has gone from some 39,000 drug addicts to somewhere between 60,000 and
80,000 drug addicts in just the City of Baltimore. It is absolutely
incredible, the damage that has been done to Baltimore through this
liberal policy. In fact, one of the City Council Members, Councilwoman
Ricki Spector, said it is more like 1 in 8 is now a drug addict in
Baltimore.
The former Mayor Schmoke's non-enforcement liberal policy provided
these things for Baltimore. In 1996, Baltimore led the Nation in drug-
related emergency admissions, 785 per 100,000 population. Of 20 cities
analyzed by NITA, or the National Institute of Drug Abuse, Baltimore
ranked second in heroin emergency admissions. Baltimore accounted for
63 percent of all of Maryland's drug overdoses.
This is the policy that the other side is advocating, along with the
liberal commentators. This is just a health problem. The tough
enforcement will harm people, their civil rights will be violated,
there will be shootings, that there will be some type of harmful
enforcement.
This is the harm, an addicted city population, dead in incredible
numbers. Remember the numbers in New York City, which is 20 to 30 times
the population of Baltimore, is just about double this figure, and that
is a reduction of some 60 percent since Mayor Giuliani took office.
So these are the facts, these are the options. Tomorrow our
subcommittee will focus on the emerging drug threat from Haiti, part of
the Clinton Administration's failed foreign policy no one likes to
focus on, but a policy in which we spent nearly $4 billion in taxpayer
money in nation building, primarily to support a law enforcement and
judiciary which is now in charge of the biggest drug trafficking
operation in the Caribbean and probably the source of more transit of
illegal hard narcotics into the United States from across Haiti through
the Dominican Republic up through Puerto Rico and the Caribbean into
Florida and other parts of the United States, and then into our streets
and schools, and their gift to our children, after spending so much of
the money of American taxpayers in that nation in an effort to rebuild
it.
Tomorrow we will hear that failed story, and we will find out where
the Clinton Administration intends to go from here, and, hopefully, we
can develop a better policy, learn by the mistakes, learn by the
failures of this administration, and not repeat them. To do otherwise
would be an injustice to the American people and to the next
generation.
Mr. Speaker, I know my time is about to expire and I will not return
until after the break for one of these, when we will provide another
update, but I do appreciate your indulgence, Mr. Speaker, and the
staff, who stayed to this late hour. But this is an important message.
It needs to be repeated over and over again, until we have action by
the Congress, until we have interest by the American people, and that
we turn this deadly situation and plague on our population around.
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