[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 191 (Tuesday, December 13, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H8733]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE CARIBBEAN BORDER INITIATIVE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Puerto Rico (Mr. Pierluisi) for 5 minutes.
Mr. PIERLUISI. Mr. Speaker, American citizens in the Caribbean are
facing a security crisis. While the national murder rate has declined
in recent decades, the number of homicides in Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands remains unacceptably high. Since 2008, the murder rate
in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands has been about five times the
national average and about twice as high as that of any State.
Most of the murders committed in Puerto Rico and the USVI are linked
to the drug trade. As Attorney General Holder and other officials have
acknowledged, the Federal Government's effort to prevent traffickers
from transporting drugs across our Nation's southwest border is causing
traffickers to turn increasingly to the Caribbean to ship drugs into
the United States. As the National Drug Intelligence Center recently
observed, violence by traffickers in the two territories has ``become
indiscriminate, endangering the lives of . . . innocent bystanders.''
In response to questions I posed, Attorney General Holder recently
called drug-related violence in Puerto Rico and in the USVI a national
security issue that we must confront. At my urging, Congress has also
taken notice of the problem, directing Federal law enforcement agencies
on three separate occasions to devote more attention to the Caribbean
region.
According to briefings provided to my office, 70 to 80 percent of the
cocaine that enters Puerto Rico is transported to the U.S. mainland.
Because Puerto Rico is a U.S. jurisdiction, once drugs enter the
island, they are easily delivered to the States through commercial
airlines and container ships, without having to clear customs or having
to otherwise undergo heightened scrutiny. Once in the States, these
drugs destroy lives and communities in my colleagues' districts. So
this is a problem of national, not simply regional, scope.
That said, the primary reason the Federal Government must do more to
reduce drug trafficking in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands is that
U.S. citizens in these two territories are dying in unprecedented
numbers. Our Nation has devoted considerable resources in confronting
drug gangs that are operating along the southwest border, and
rightfully so. Yet Puerto Rico's murder rate is four to five times
higher than that of any Southwest border State.
According to a recent piece in The Washington Post, since 2008 the
island has received less than one-fifth of the funding that the Federal
Government has provided to combat the drug trade and associated
violence in Mexico and Central American nations.
{time} 1020
The number of authorized positions at key Federal law enforcement
agencies in Puerto Rico is too low. The number of vacancies is too
high. And interdiction assets, like planes and boats, are in short
supply.
Since taking office, I have urged the Federal Government to devote
resources to Puerto Rico at a level commensurate with the severity of
the problem it faces. Specifically, I have asked the White House drug
czar to establish a Caribbean border initiative modeled after the
successful Southwest Border Initiative.
The time for half measures and piecemeal efforts has passed. What is
needed instead is a well-planned, well-funded, well-executed,
governmentwide strategy that will encompass all Federal agencies
charged with fighting drug trafficking and related violence. To protect
the lives of the U.S. citizens in the Caribbean and to reduce the flow
of drugs headed to the States through that region, the Federal
Government must make a commitment of resources to Puerto Rico and the
USVI that is similar to the commitment it has made to the southwest
border.
The challenge we face today is similar to the one we faced back in
1994. I was Puerto Rico's attorney general back then and lobbied
successfully for Puerto Rico and the USVI to be federally designated as
a high-intensity drug trafficking area, which contributed to a
significant reduction in the island's violent crime rate. The problem
has evolved over time, and the Federal response must evolve along with
it. I will not rest until it does.
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