[Congressional Record Volume 154, Number 17 (Monday, February 4, 2008)]
[Senate]
[Page S598]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              GUN VIOLENCE

  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, the flags are at half-mast today in the 
village of Tinley Park, IL.
  They will be lowered for 5 days, 1 day for each victim of the tragic 
and senseless shootings that took place last Saturday.
  Five lives were cut short that morning: Carrie Chiuso, of Frankfort, 
IL, a social worker and counselor of high school students at Homewood-
Flossmoor High School, dedicated to her community and to her family; 
Rhoda McFarland, of Joliet, who had served as a nurse practitioner in 
the U.S. Air Force and who was engaged to be married; Jennifer Bishop 
of South Bend, IN, a nurse who had worked for 13 years saving lives at 
South Bend Memorial Hospital; Connie Woolfolk, of Flossmor, IL, a 
working mother, with a 16-year-old and a 10-year-old; And Sarah 
Szafranski, of Oak Forest, only 22 years old, a young woman who had 
just recently graduated from Northern Illinois University and started 
on a promising career.
  We offer our support and our prayers to the friends and families of 
these victims. We mourn with them in their time of loss.
  There are also reports that a sixth victim was shot in this robbery 
attempt and that she has survived. Our thoughts and prayers are with 
her and her family as well.
  An investigation by law enforcement authorities is underway, and we 
hope that the person or persons responsible for these killings will be 
swiftly brought to justice.
  Edward Zabrocki, the mayor of Tinley Park, said, ``This is a tragedy 
that should not happen to any town.'' He is right.
  After a gun-related tragedy, we often hear that now is not the time 
to talk about gun violence in America. But when is it time?
  In America, we lose 81 people to gun violence every day--81 people a 
day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
  In 2004, the latest year for which the Centers for Disease Control 
has complete information, 29,569 people died from gun violence in 
America. That is more than twice as many people who died that year from 
HIV/AIDS.
  And that doesn't count those who are wounded by gunfire. In 2004, 
64,389 people were injured by gun violence. That is an average of 176 
people every single day.
  Firearm violence is at epidemic levels in this country. No matter who 
we are or how safe we think we are, any of us could be among the dozens 
of victims each day who end up on the wrong side of a gun.
  We need to change the way we talk about gun violence in this country. 
It is time to move past the stereotypes of ``gun nuts'' and ``gun 
grabbers'' pitted against each other. The majority of those who own 
guns in this country obtained their guns legally and use them lawfully.
  But we also need to recognize that every year tens of thousands of 
shots in this country are fired at human beings. And while some are 
fired lawfully in self-defense or in the line of duty, thousands of 
gunshots end with suicide, homicide, assault, or accidental death.
  We need to reduce these violent shootings, without placing undue 
burdens on the legal uses of guns.
  Here are some principles that should guide us:
  No. 1, those who own guns have an obligation to store those guns 
safely.
  No. 2, those who sell guns have a duty to sell them only to those who 
are authorized by law to purchase them. Whether you are selling at a 
store or a gun show, you should not turn your head the other way and 
ignore a buyer's background.
  No. 3, those of us who make laws have a duty to balance the rights of 
people to own and use guns safely and legally with the need to prevent 
gun violence.
  We have had too many funerals for Americans like Carrie Chiuso, Rhoda 
McFarland, Jennifer Bishop, Connie Woolfolk, and Sarah Szafranski. Too 
many American lives suddenly and brutally cut short. Gun violence is an 
epidemic in this country, and each of us needs to take seriously our 
responsibility to end this violence.

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