[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 60 (Thursday, May 5, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S2721]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING CARL PIKE
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I rise today to once again touch on a
subject that is important to me. I know it is very important to the
Presiding Officer because the Commonwealth of Virginia and the great
State of Maryland have a large number of Federal employees. As the
Presiding Officer knows, this week we celebrate Public Service
Recognition Week to honor public servants at all levels of government
for their admirable patriotism and contributions to our country.
I wish to begin by commending our military intelligence professionals
for the coordinated and painstaking work that was responsible for
tracking down Osama bin Laden. There are a number of nameless, faceless
Federal workers who have been investigating his whereabouts for more
than a decade. I was proud to be in this Chamber with the Presiding
Officer and colleagues from both sides of the aisle when, on Tuesday
afternoon, this body recognized their work.
Our military and intelligence professionals are not the only ones on
the front lines of keeping our country safe. Today, I rise to honor a
resident of Reston, VA, Carl Pike, the Assistant Special Agent in
Charge of the Special Operations Division at the Drug Enforcement
Administration, DEA. This is a photo of Carl and his whole team.
We have all seen reports in recent years detailing the violent and
inhumane acts of the Mexican drug cartels that terrorize cities and
control a significant percentage of the narcotics flowing into the
United States. Mr. Pike is the head of a complex multiagency task force
set up to catch many of these violent criminals and disrupt the flow of
drugs. Last year, he and his team led the largest strike ever against
La Familia, one of the most ruthless Mexican drug cartels and a major
trafficker of methamphetamine in the United States. The strike, dubbed
``Project Coronado,'' was an operation that spanned 20 States, 50
cities, 2 countries, and multiple Federal agencies. Attorney General
Eric Holder said the ``unprecedented, coordinated U.S. law enforcement
action'' was a ``significant blow to La Familia's supply chain of
illegal drugs, weapons and cash flowing between Mexico and the United
States.''
The strike would not have been possible without Mr. Pike, as so many
of his colleagues attest. One DEA Special Assistant Agent in Charge
said:
He oversaw the broad interests of the law enforcement
community, displayed phenomenal negotiating and planning
skills, and facilitated collaboration between agencies and
international partners that often had competing interests.
In the end, Project Coronado led to the arrest of 1,200 associates of
La Familia and the seizure of 1\1/2\ tons of methamphetamine, $32
million in cash, and 400 weapons. It truly was a significant
achievement.
Carl Pike and his team should be recognized for removing dangerous
drugs and criminals off our streets--something for which we can all be
grateful.
I hope my colleagues will join me in honoring Mr. Pike and his team
as well as all those at the DEA for their excellence and service to our
Nation.
I was also proud to be part of a group earlier today recognizing a
number of Federal employees--nine from the Commonwealth of Virginia and
many from the State of Maryland--who were part of a national
competition that recognizes quality work of government workers.
As we see this week in broad display those military intelligence
professionals in this most dramatic action against Osama bin Laden, as
we see Mr. Pike and his team taking on drug cartels, and as we see the
hundreds of thousands of other Federal workers who day-in and day-out,
often without recognition, do the job of keeping our government
operating and in many ways keeping our country safe, I hope my
colleagues will join in saluting those efforts and recognize that this
week, Public Service Recognition Week, is to honor all of our public
servants.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, do I understand correctly that we are
continuing in morning business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Yes.
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