[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 95 (Thursday, July 14, 2005)]
[House]
[Pages H5901-H5905]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROTECT OUR CHILDREN
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mrs. Drake). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 4, 2005, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Poe) is
recognized for 60 minutes.
Mr. POE. Madam Speaker, Cary Ann Medlin, 8, Tennessee; Nicole Parker,
8, California; Chris Byers, 8, Arkansas; Sherrice Iverson, 7, Nevada;
Amanda Brown, 7, Florida; Christina Long, 13,
[[Page H5902]]
Connecticut; Michelle Vick, 14, Washington; Samantha Runnion, 5,
California; Maryann Measles, 13, Connecticut; Polly Klaas, 12,
California; Amber Hagerman, 9, Texas; Adam Walsh, 6, Florida; Megan
Kanka, 7, New Jersey; JonBenet Ramsey, 6, Colorado; Sarah Lundy, 13,
Florida; Danielle Van Dam, 7, California.
{time} 1745
Carlie Brucia, 11, Florida; Jessica Lunsford, 9, Florida; Dylan
Groene, 9, Idaho.
Madam Speaker, unfortunately, this list of abducted and ultimately
murdered children goes on and on and on. And if the sadness of their
stolen lives is not enough, many of these precious young people were
also brutally raped and sexually assaulted before they were murdered.
Madam Speaker, these are some of their stories.
Dru Sjoden: Dru was a happy, happy child. Her cheerful personality
was evident from the day she entered this world. As a child, she was
dedicated to being a good student. She was active in gymnastics,
swimming, track and skiing. She was artistic from a very young age, and
art was her number one love. Through her creativity, her passion for
art, she was always creating handmade cards and crafts for her friends
and sent them to members of her family. She enjoyed the outdoors and
fishing. She constantly thought of other people. She was nominated and
won Homecoming Queen during her senior year at high school. She
attended college at the University of North Dakota and was just as
popular among her college friends as she was among her high school
friends.
Madam Speaker, this is a photograph of Dru shortly before this 22-
year-old University of North Dakota student was murdered. She left her
job at the Columbia Mall in Grand Forks, North Dakota, at 4 p.m. on
November 22, 2003, and she was never seen alive again. Her body was
found in April of 2004, thrown in a ravine in Minnesota.
She was talking with her boyfriend on her cell phone when he heard
her say, ``Oh, my God.'' Then her phone went dead. Chris Lang, her
boyfriend, received another call from Drew's phone a few hours later,
but there was only static on the other end of the line.
On December 1, 2003, although her body had yet to be found, Alfonzo
Rodriguez, Jr., a registered sex offender from Minnesota who had
recently completed a 23-year prison term, was charged with abducting
Dru Sjoden. After Drew's body was discovered on April 17, 2004, near
where Rodriguez lived, a Federal Grand Jury charged Rodriguez with
kidnapping and murder.
Because the victim was transported from North Dakota to Minnesota, it
was a Federal crime under the old Lindburgh baby kidnapping case. The
defendant will be tried in Fargo, North Dakota, next March. Madam
Speaker, the indictment alleges that the murder was done ``in an
especially cruel and harmful and depraved manner, including torture and
constant abuse.'' The defendant, two previous convictions in Minnesota
for sexual assault and rape, once at knife point, has also another
conviction after he left the penitentiary for kidnapping.
Dru was 22 when she was murdered. Dru is the same age as my youngest
daughter, Kellee Lyn. You know, daughters are special to fathers, and
to lose a child by any means, especially violence, is a tragedy to any
family. The government in this case is seeking the death penalty
against the offender, and rightfully so.
Dru Sojun, 22.
Carlie Brucia is remembered best by some of the things her
grandmother said about her. ``She has been described as blond and
bubbly. Carlie was affectionate, a great hugger, and when she was in
New York, she loved to go to the movies with her dad, go shopping and
go out for ice cream, things little kids like to do. Her favorite ice
cream was mint chocolate chip. Her grandmother says, I always had that
in the House for her when she visited me.
``When she came to our house, we would shoot baskets in the driveway.
She would shoot those with Aunt Jeannie; play softball in the back yard
with her other Aunt Katelyn, and the rest of the family. We would have
barbecues, and she loved to roast marshmallows. It's a beautiful memory
thinking about Carlie with her sticky fingers and marshmallows all
around her mouth. What a cutey.
``She liked music. She especially liked Jennifer Lopez; knew all the
words to every song, and would sing on the radio when Jennifer Lopez
would come on.
``Carlie liked to help her dad out at home, especially when her dad
had the family over for dinner. She pitched right in, helped him with
all the chores, serving, and cleaning up after supper. I can picture
her loading up the dishwasher,'' says her grandmother. She was a good
student. Voted most popular, best math whiz at McIntosh Middle School.
Carlie Brucia, 11: She was a real person, Madam Speaker, like all of
the people I will be talking about tonight. This is who she was, before
life was stolen from her by an offender, a sexual predator.
Carlie Brucia, 11, disappeared on February 1, 2004. She was walking
home from a friend's house in Sarasota, Florida. A surveillance camera
behind a car wash taped Carlie's abduction by a man. This sixth grader
may have walked through the car wash parking lot as a shortcut to go
home.
Friends described her as a beautiful girl who loved watching Jennifer
Lopez. She liked to go the mall, greet friends with a warm hug, and she
was headed home from a slumber party when she was abducted. Carlie's
remains were discovered 5 days later, a few miles from the car wash
where a surveillance camera captured the image of her abduction.
The defendant, Joseph Smith: The Sarasota police questioned Joseph
Smith who had been in their custody since the day after Carlie was
abducted on an unrelated parole violation. A woman who said that she
lived with Smith was one of the tipsters who contacted the police. Of
course, the defendant refused to admit anything and refused to admit
his involvement with Carlie Brucia's disappearance until February 5,
when he finally told investigators where he had dumped her body.
On February 6, it was announced that Carlie Brucia's body had been
found. She had been murdered and left in a church parking lot just
miles from her home. Joseph Smith, 37-year-old car mechanic, father of
three, had been arrested 13 times in Florida since 1993, had been
charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment, and he is the main
suspect, of course, in this brutal murder.
On February 20, Smith was indicted on first degree murder and
separate charges of kidnapping, capital sexual battery and other
charges. He has been to the courthouse before, Madam Speaker.
Aggravated battery, carrying a knife, possession of heroin with intent
to sell, possession of blank prescriptions, possession of drugs without
a prescription, intent to obtain controlled substances by fraud,
possession of cocaine. All of those resulted in convictions of this
sexual predator.
November 7th of this year the defendant will see his day in court,
where the State of Florida has charged him with capital murder.
Carlie Brucia, 11.
Madam Speaker, Jessica Lunsford was born in Gastonia, North Carolina.
She came to Florida a year ago. She was her grandma's girl. Grandma
called her ``my daughter'' from the time she was one. Jessica's mother
and dad split up about that time. She and Grandma Ruth loved to go
shopping together. They would go to JCPenney's. They would go to the
mall, and Jessica Lunsford especially liked Wal-Mart.
Jessica wanted to be an Olympic swimmer; a fashion designer. She
would cut up old dress-up clothes and make clothes for her dolls. She
and her grandma collected dolls together and would make clothes for
them. She loved the Disney Channel, and she had a collection of Disney
videos. She especially loved, The Princess Diaries.
Church was a big part of Jessica's short life, and she was a big part
of the Faith Baptist Church in Homosassa, Florida. She attended what is
called the King's Kids Wednesday night program. There were 35 kids in
this bible school class, and she was one of six who recently memorized
the names of all the books of the New Testament. She even had a
favorite verse memorized, Philippians 4:13: I can do all things through
Christ who strengthens me.
She was daddy's girl, and she would call her father, Mark Lunsford,
as soon
[[Page H5903]]
as she got home from school each day. She would visit him at work and
she liked to play in a sand pile.
Just before she disappeared, she had been to the State fair, where
Mark had gone with her and bought that now famous pink hat that she has
on in a photograph. Jessica did not like hearing about people being
harmed and hurt, and she never liked to see anybody cry.
Madam Speaker, Jessica Lunsford was a real person. She was a little
girl. She was daddy's girl. She is shown in this photograph with that
hat she had on that Mark had given her. Nine years old, life stolen
from her because of a sexual predator.
That person, John Couey, was a convicted sex offender. He was staying
down the street in a mobile home, even though he did not use this as
his registered address, as he was required by law to do. Where he was
staying was near the Lunsford home. And unbeknownst to the Lunsfords,
he was on watch of their activities. Here is what he said he did.
He said he snuck into Jessica Lunsford's house through an unlocked
door at about 3 o'clock in the morning, February 24. He kidnapped
Jessica and took her to his place, his bedroom. With Jessica in his
custody, Couey said that he watched the sheriff's command center pull
up in front of the Lunsford home. He put Jessica in his closet, where
he kept her till he was ready to abuse her.
He said, after he was through with her, he decided he would bury her
after he learned that the Citrus County Sheriff's Department was
looking for him. So the weekend after Jessica's disappearance, in rainy
weather and fog, he decided to do his dastardly deed of murdering this
little girl.
After having his way with this 9-year-old for as many times as he
wished, keeping her locked up in the closet, he decided it was time to
get rid of her. So he took this 9-year-old girl, he tied her hands and
feet with stereo wire. He wrapped her inside two large plastic garbage
bags. He dug a hole, and he buried her alive.
She suffocated to death. Jessica Lunsford, when she was found, was
still clutching the tiny blue stuffed dolphin she had taken from her
bedroom when she was stolen in the middle of the night by John Couey.
The police found where she had poked her fingers through the plastic
bag seeking air to breathe. That is the way that Jessica Lunsford died.
John Couey. Well, who is he? He is a convicted sex offender with a
criminal history a mile long. It includes 24 arrests and goes back over
30 years. Two of the arrests were allegations of home invasions, where
he had molested little girls.
Madam Speaker, I have talked to Mark Lunsford at length. He is a good
guy. He loved his daughter, as all fathers do. Girls are special to
those of us who are fathers, and he says he will never get over the
fact that he lost his daughter and the way that she was murdered. Of
course, he will not get over it. And hopefully, none of us in this
United States will get over it.
Jessica Lunsford, 9, State of Florida.
Madam Speaker, Dylan and Shasta Groene were declared missing May 16
this year after police found the beaten and bound bodies of their
mother, their older brother, and their mother's boyfriend. Shasta was
discovered on July 2, just a couple of weeks ago, in a local restaurant
with Joseph Edward Duncan, III, of course, a registered sex offender
who had fled Fargo, North Dakota.
Human remains were discovered at a remote western Montana campsite
later, and they were identified on July 10, a few days ago, of those of
Dylan Groene, 9 years of age.
Investigators have not revealed what they believe happened to Dylan
or how long they believe the boy was alive after the children's mother,
13-year-old brother, and their mother's boyfriend were beaten to death.
Sheriff Rocky Watson has said he believes the motive for the killings
was to acquire these two children for sex. Watson also said authorities
believe the family was chosen at random, but the attack was carefully
planned and executed by the criminal.
{time} 1800
The police have interviewed Shasta, the daughter, a couple of times,
and the details are agonizing and slow in being revealed, but she has
provided helpful information. Sheriff Watson does not go into all the
facts and say what he believes happened to the girl and to Dylan, but
those actions are not good.
Dylan, he was 9. Like the others that I have mentioned, he was a real
person. He wanted to live like all kids, but he never made it to his
10th birthday because of the criminal, this individual by the name of
Duncan.
Duncan: By the time he was 16, he had committed 13 rapes. In 1980,
Duncan was arrested for breaking into a neighbor's house, stealing guns
and then accosting a 14-year-old boy and raping him at gun point. He
was convicted of rape and sentenced to the maximum of 20 years in the
penitentiary. However, in lieu of prison, somebody sent Duncan to the
Sex Offender Treatment Center at Western State Hospital.
In 1980, an evaluation at Western State Mental Hospital found that
Duncan, who was only 17, met the definition of a sexual psychopath.
Western State Hospital had given up on Duncan. He was 19, and he
announced that he wanted to leave treatment and serve the rest of the
time in prison. So he served 14 years for the rape and three more for
parole violations. When he got out of the penitentiary, he moved to
Fargo, North Dakota.
Duncan, after leaving the penitentiary, he decided to create a blog
on the Internet, and many of the entries appear to focus on his own
sexual abuse crimes; he seems to be proud of it; and his rage over how
sex offenders are treated in our community.
Brenda Groene and her boyfriend, Mark McKenzie, and 13-year-old Slade
Groene were killed in their home some time on May 15 by Joseph Edward
Duncan, III. They were beaten to death. Duncan, after kidnapping
Shasta, he told her what he did to these other three before he murdered
them. He said he had watched the house and specifically had watched her
for 2 or 3 days. At night, he would peer inside the home, and he said
it was simple. He said he used a night vision goggle set to learn about
the family's layout before breaking into the home.
Duncan was charged with first-degree murder and first-degree
kidnapping in the bludgeoning deaths of this family. He bragged to
Shasta about killing her family with a hammer and even taunted her with
the hammer after he had kidnapped her.
McKenzie, Brenda Groene's boyfriend, took the kids fishing to Wolf
Lodge Creek to catch crawdads. The last time Dylan's father, Steve, saw
Dylan and Slade alive was about 3 weeks before the murders. They spent
the weekend with him. Dylan and Slade liked to play games on
PlayStation. Dylan, 4 feet, 60 pounds, blond crewcut, blue eyes, and 9
years of age when he was murdered.
Madam Speaker, Sarah Lunde was 13. She led a troubled life because
she was abused as a child, so she sought peace with her church group.
She was last seen on April 9, 2005, shortly after she returned home
from a church trip and about the time a registered sex offender
unexpectedly paid a visit to her home.
The teen was reported missing Monday when her mother learned she was
not at a friend's home and reported that to the police. Investigators
found Sarah Lunde's body abandoned in a fish pond on April 16, 2005.
Madam Speaker, Sarah Lunde, she was a real person as well, a child in
our community of children.
David Onstott, he was a convicted sex offender, 35, and he has been
arrested for the murder of Sarah Lunde. Onstott has been indicted for
first-degree murder, sexual battery. He confessed to choking Sarah to
death, dumping her partly clad body in a pond near her home in rural
Hillsborough County, Florida. He has a lengthy history of violence
against women, sexual deviance and failure to even pay child support.
He once beat a man with a baseball bat, and later, he was accused of
attacking another with a machete. He once stalked a former girlfriend
and scared her so badly she moved to a different city. He was a heavy
drinker, and he liked to use cocaine.
He was convicted in August 1995 of raping a 25-year-old woman in
Florida. During the sentencing phase of that trial, his former wife and
step-daughter testified against him. Onstott's ex-wife
[[Page H5904]]
testified he raped her repeatedly and even fondled the 16-year-old
daughter. He was a registered sex offender. In November 1990, Onstott
picked up the step-daughter from school, fondled her and even left
marks on her chest.
In May, David Onstott, the convicted sex offender, was in jail and
charged with the murder of Sarah Lunde. While in jail awaiting trial,
he was caught trying to dig his way out of the jail. He had stolen some
type of metal object and was digging into the concrete floor. He waits
for his day in court.
Sarah Lunde, 13.
Madam Speaker, the assault on children continues. The last example I
would like to discuss occurred in Houston, Texas. It happened this
year. I want to read and paraphrase from different articles of the
Houston Chronicle which relate the events better than I can. According
to the Houston Chronicle, on February 4, 2005, a 6-month-old little
girl showed up at Texas Children's Hospital severely abused, physically
and sexually, and was put on life support by the hospital authorities.
She was only able to breathe because she was on a respirator. This 6-
month-old little girl had been penetrated and raped vaginally and
anally. Her tongue had been severed almost completely off. The baby,
mind you, six months of age, was in critical condition at the hospital.
The baby's parents were arrested, put in police custody and charges
have been filed against them.
According to the hospital authorities, one said, ``it is the worst
case I have ever seen where a child has suffered such horrific types of
injuries and is still alive . . . The pain that this baby girl must
have suffered.''
Doctors have found other signs of abuse since the baby's admittance.
The parents, who are not married, are in their early 20s. They took
this child to Doctor's Parkway Hospital and told the staff she had some
problems. The medical staff obviously became suspicious of abuse and
transferred the 6-month-old baby and another child, a 15-month-old, the
sister of the 6-month-old, to Texas Children's Hospital. Texas
Children's Hospital examined both of the kids and noticed that the 15-
month-old had an old broken rib and skull fractures. Children's
protective services took official legal custody of both girls, and the
15-month-old is now in foster care.
When the 15-month-old was a month old, she suffered a fracture to her
leg. She also had hemorrhaging in different parts of her body which was
indicative of shaken baby syndrome, according to child protective
services. They are not sure who did this, so the father was charged
with injury of a child in December 2003, but for some reason, the case
was dismissed in October. Once again, this is the 15-month-old
daughter.
The mother had gone to some parenting classes and some therapy and
told some officials that she had left the older child with the father
and was living with her parents, but for some reason, the toddler was
sent home to her mother. These children are vulnerable. They cannot
tell anyone, and they do not have anyone to turn to.
According to the Houston Chronicle, the 6-month-old was still
fighting for her life. She had been physically and sexually abused. She
was covered with brutal injuries, according to the police. She has been
partly blinded by the injuries, and now, the parents, Ivan Castaneda,
22, and Donna Marie Norman, 19, are each charged with injury to a child
and being held without bond. If this 6-month-old dies, they would be
charged with capital murder.
This little girl, however, is a remarkable person. Even though she
had been admitted to the hospital in February, her kidneys ceased
functioning, she was put on dialysis, she had skull fractures, injuries
to her lungs, liver, kidneys and her eyes, she continues to live and
continues to live to this day.
I have talked to Lieutenant Stanley of the Houston Police, and he
said that the investigators investigating these cases are having
difficulty handling the abuse that they personally saw. However, the 6-
month-old has defied all odds. The reddish-haired infant, described as
the miracle baby, has been released to a family that hopes to adopt
her. The baby has been in hospital for some time, but according to a
hospital spokesperson, it was a great day because this child survived
the most brutal of all attacks. Physically and sexually abused, every
part of her body bruised, but some way she survived. So they call her
wonder baby, six months. She lived to the age of six months when she
was physically and sexually abused, but today she is still alive.
She is the only person I will talk about tonight that survived these
brutal attacks.
Madam Speaker, these are just a few stories of real people, real
children in our communities that were preyed on by some sexual
predator. There is some hope, however. Things are happening to protect
children in the United States. Here in Washington, D.C., we have the
National Children's Alliance. It was the idea of the gentleman from
Alabama (Mr. Cramer) who sits on the other side of the aisle, proof
that child abuse, child protection, is a bipartisan issue. What this
National Children's Alliance does is protect children that have been
abused and sexually assaulted throughout the country. There are some
400 different centers where children who are assaulted sexually can go
and be treated. Their medical and emotional needs can be met, and they
can be interviewed so criminal prosecution can take place against the
perpetrator.
We probably have the best one of these centers in Houston, Texas,
called the Children's Assessment Center. The reason for these centers
is this: It used to be, when I first started prosecuting cases and then
when I was a criminal court judge, when a crime was committed against a
child, especially a sexual assault crime, the system continued to
sometimes commit crimes against the child. The justice system was not
really justice for the kid. What I mean is, they would be interviewed
by a police officer, then taken to a hospital and interviewed by
medical personnel. They would sit in the emergency room with other
people, sometimes for hours. Then they would go downtown and be
interviewed by the police. And sometimes, the children would be on the
elevator at the police station, and who else would be on the elevator?
The perpetrator going to be interviewed for the criminal conduct.
{time} 1815
They would be bounced around all over the city, interviewed by
different prosecutors. But now, thankfully, because of the National
Children's Alliance and the Children's Assessment Center in Houston,
those days are over. When kids are sexually assaulted, they go to one
center where all of their needs are met. They are interviewed. Their
physical needs are met. When they are continuing to need more physical
or mental therapy later, they go back to this same center. The people
that are there are experts in child sexual assault cases and those
people are available for trial when the perpetrator is caught and his
day in court arrives. That is some good news. Unfortunately, we have to
have these centers throughout the United States where children go who
are sexually abused by the predators in our community.
Mr. Speaker, this year before the House and the Senate, it was
learned that money that goes to protect victims of crime was being
depleted and removed from the budget. Let me explain. In 1994, the
President of the United States established what is called VOCA funding,
Victims of Crime Act. What that allows is for a person who is convicted
of a Federal crime, they contribute moneys into a fund and that money
goes to victims of crime for their medical and physical needs. What a
wonderful idea, make criminals pay for the system that they have
created by establishing this VOCA fund.
Once again, this is not money that is obtained from taxpayers. It is
obtained from criminals. This year there was about $1.6 billion in the
VOCA funding, and there was an attempt and thought to remove this money
and put it into the general fund. Thanks to the efforts of numerous
victims groups throughout the United States and individuals on both
sides of the aisle in not only the House but the Senate, that fund has
been restored and victims organizations throughout the United States
will be able to get that funding.
Where does it go? It goes to domestic violence shelters. It goes to
child abuse sexual assault centers like the Children's Assessment
Center and numerous organizations that receive funds
[[Page H5905]]
that criminals have contributed. That is some good news.
Mr. Speaker, we have also started this year the Victims Rights
Caucus. I, along with the gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Harris) and the
gentleman from California (Mr. Costa) from the other side of the aisle,
have started the first-ever Victims Rights Caucus to raise the profile,
the plight of victims throughout the United States. This is a good
start.
It is important that judges throughout the United States be on the
first line of defense of our children. What I mean by that is when
individuals are caught sexually assaulting our children and they come
to court and they have their day in court and they are convicted,
judges need to understand they have a responsibility to punish those
individuals. We need to lock them up. That is why we build prisons. It
may be important to prosecute thieves and drug dealers and all those
other types of criminals, but we build prisons to house and warehouse
people who commit sex crimes against our children. That is why we build
those institutions and judges have an obligation to send them there.
The cases that I recited earlier, many of them, they had gone to
prison, but not for long enough because they got out and did it again.
We know the fact that almost everybody who goes to prison gets out
eventually. We also know this about sexual predators on our children,
that the overwhelming number of them, when they leave the penitentiary,
repeat that conduct.
So we have an obligation when they get out of the penitentiary to
keep up with them, to track them, so they can no longer haunt our
schools, our Boy Scouts, our churches and our neighborhoods.
That is why I introduced legislation called the Child Predator Act of
2005. This legislation requires registration of sex offenders
throughout the United States. When they cross State lines, we lose
them. They fall through the cracks. This legislation will require them
to register when they move across State lines, they must notify the
community; and by failure to notify, they have committed a Federal
offense.
This act, this bill, has been incorporated in a larger bill sponsored
by the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr. Sensenbrenner), sponsors from both
sides of the House, called the Child Safety Act. This bipartisan
legislation, when hopefully passed this summer, is a measure that will
protect the safety of children. It will allow for the Internet access
of parents and law enforcement of those sexual predators that live in
their communities. States will be required to notify each other when an
individual who is a sex offender crosses State lines. There are
numerous other provisions that protect children from sex offenders. But
basically we will track these individuals when they leave the
penitentiary, and we will track them for the rest of their lives. That
is the price they pay when they choose to commit a crime against
children.
We know this about child predators: they are slick; they are cunning;
they are evil. And they continue to repeat their conduct. Most sexual
predators that show up at the courthouse that have committed sex crimes
against children, it is understood that they have committed several sex
crimes against that one victim and that there are at least 10 other
victims that they have committed sex crimes against.
There is a war on terror going on in this world, and we say it is
somewhere else. We have a war on terror not only abroad but we have it
at home. The terror here, they are child molesters. They are the bad
guys. And they can no longer run and hide, because we are going to keep
up with them. We know that they cannot be rehabilitated. All statistics
show that. So if we do not keep them in prison, we need to track them
when they leave the penitentiaries.
It is probably the hope of most of us when we leave this world, when
we die, that we want to be surrounded with the most important people in
our life, probably our kids. This week I had my third grandchild born 2
days ago, Elizabeth. I have four kids, three girls, a son, and now
three grandkids. They are all very special to me. I hope that when I
die, I am surrounded by those kids.
The worst thing I think that could ever happen to a parent is to lose
a child and especially lose a child to a crime of violence. But none of
these children that I talked about tonight left this world surrounded
by the people that love them. They were found in holes in the ground,
dumped on parking lots, thrown in rivers and lakes. Some of their
bodies were burned. The last person they saw on Earth was not their
mother, their father, their brother, their sister, but a sex offender.
That is the last person they saw before they died.
We need to be sensitive as a people to our children, not just our own
personal kids but the children down the street, our neighbors' kids. We
need to watch for them and protect them. We have that obligation. We
have that moral and legal obligation as a people. These kids, these
children, they had the right to life. They had the right to grow up,
play in their backyard, go to school, have a picnic, run through the
fields, believe in Santa Claus, play sports, be in the school play, be
in the high school prom, find a mate. All these things were stolen from
all of the kids that I mentioned to you tonight, and they were stolen
by a child predator.
We must hold these criminals accountable for their conduct. As a
judge, I heard all types of excuses by these sexual predators about why
they did what they did. Those comments by those individuals were
nothing more than excuses. Some of them said they had a bad childhood.
Their mom was not a nice person. They saw too much TV violence. They
played video games. They watched the Internet. They continued to blame
something or someone else for their own personal choices. Mr. Speaker,
we now seem to live in the land of excusable conduct. All of us are
responsible for the choices that we make. Every choice we make, we are
personally responsible for that choice. We are accountable for making
those choices, and those choices must result in consequences,
regardless of what that crime is.
Our greatest resource in this country is not our oil, it is not the
trees in the West, it is not other natural resources, it is not our
wealth. The greatest resource we have in the United States is our
children. We as a people must realize that. We are not judged by the
way we treat the rich, the famous, the influential, the important
people in our culture. We are judged by the way we treat the weak, the
innocent, the children. Children are our greatest natural resource. We
have a legal and moral obligation to protect them. The first duty of
government is public safety and providing safety for children should be
our primary concern and the duty of government.
Mr. Speaker, I close the way I began this comment, because I think
the names of these people, these real people, these children, are names
that we should not forget.
Dru Sjoden, 22, North Dakota.
Cary Ann Medlin, 8, Tennessee.
Nicole Parker, 8, California.
Chris Byers, 8, Arkansas.
Sherrice Iverson, 7, Nevada.
Amanda Brown, 7, Florida.
Christina Long, 13, Connecticut.
Michelle Vick, 14, Washington.
Samantha Runnion, 5, California.
Maryann Measles, 13, Connecticut.
Polly Klaas, 12, California.
Amber Hagerman, 9, Texas.
Adam Walsh, 6, Florida.
Megan Kanka 7, New Jersey.
JonBenet Ramsey 6, Colorado.
Sarah Lundy, 13, Florida.
Danielle Van Dam, 7, California.
Carlie Brucia, 11, Florida.
Jessica Lunsford, 9, Florida.
Dylan Groene, 9, Idaho.
Wonderbaby, 6 months, Houston, Texas.
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