[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 86 (Monday, June 17, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4507-S4508]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I appreciate the great work my colleagues,
Senator Durbin, Senator Schumer, Senator Rubio, and others, have done
on the immigration bill. I am going to be pleased this week to support
their work. But I came to the floor, as I have most weeks since being
sworn in, to talk about the issue that has dominated discussions in my
State over the past 6 months; that is, the issue of gun violence.
Last week we commemorated the 6-month anniversary of the deadly
shooting in Sandy Hook, CT, in which 20 6- and 7-year-olds, first
graders, were gunned down, and 6 of their teachers, including as well
the gunman and his mother. A lot of families came down here last week
to continue to lobby both the House and the Senate.
The look on their face is a complicated look. It is clearly first and
foremost the look of incalculable grief as these families still try to
figure out how to live the first summer of their life without their
loved one, whether it be a first grader who would have been heading
into second grade or a mother or a teacher or a brother or sister.
But there is also, in combination with this grief, this look of
shock, this look of shock that frankly gets worse every time they come
down here as they try to understand how this place could stand by and
do nothing, absolutely nothing, in the wake of the horror that Newtown,
CT, has seen.
At least we have taken a vote on the Senate floor. Very much like the
description that Senator Durbin gave earlier of his attempt several
years ago to pass the DREAM Act, we got 54 votes on the floor of the
Senate. Under our Draconian and backward rules, that was not enough to
get the bill done. But the House has not even scheduled a debate on gun
violence legislation. Families in Newtown, CT, cannot understand that.
They cannot understand how Senators and House Members can look them in
the eye, can hear the story of their grief and do nothing.
They certainly cannot understand it after, almost to the day of the
6-month anniversary, another mass shooting occurred, this time on the
other side of the country. We almost know the story before we hear it:
Mass shooting; four dead; others wounded. In Newtown, we did not even
have to pick up the paper to know it was going to be an assault weapon;
it was going to be high-capacity magazines, once again.
Every story is a little bit different. So this one was an assault
weapon that was partially handmade. This time there was a lot of
ammunition that may not have been used. But it is a story that gets
repeated over and over: Lots of people dead, assault weapon used, high-
capacity magazines.
So for those people who say we cannot do anything about it, we can.
We can. Because we can keep these dangerous, military-style weapons in
the hands of law enforcement and people who are hired and trained to
shoot these weapons for a living. We can say that 8, 10, 15 rounds is
enough, that you do not need 30 rounds in a magazine, you do not need
100 rounds.
We can do something about our mental health system, try to reach out
and give some help to people who are struggling, but we do not. That is
what is so hard for the families of Newtown to understand. What is
additionally hard for them to understand is this number. Since those 28
people were killed in Newtown on December 14, 5,033 people have died at
the hands of gun violence across this country. This chart is a couple
of days old, so we can take down the 33 and add a handful more.
I hope people here have gotten to understand the stories of people
such as Jack Pinto and Dylan Hockley, Grace McDonnell. I hope people
here have come to know the stories of the 20 little boys and girls whom
we will never know their greatness because they were cut down in their
youth.
But I wish to tell some other stories, about the common, everyday,
almost routine gun violence that for some reason we have decided to
live with in this country. So I am coming down here every week to tell
another handful of stories about victims. Today, instead of telling
detailed stories about specific victims, I wish to talk about one
weekend in New York City.
About 2 weeks ago, the weekend of May 31 to June 2 was kind of the
first truly warm outdoor weekend we had in the Northeast. The police,
in places such as New York City and Bridgeport and Hartford, have come
to dread that first real hot summer weekend because the summers tend to
come with a lot of guns and a lot of gun violence and a lot of
shootings in places that maybe not a lot of Americans are used to,
living in the safety and security of their neighborhoods.
Let me tell you what happened on that one weekend in one city, New
York, NY. That weekend 25 people were shot over the course of 48 hours.
Six people were killed over one single weekend in New York City. It
started with Ivan Martinez, 21 years old, who was approached at about
3:25 a.m. on Friday night by a 20-year-old gunman and a woman in the
Bronx. The gunman shot Martinez once in the head. Then he ran off with
the woman.
Over the course of the weekend, 12 people were shot in Brooklyn, 8
people were shot in the Bronx, 4 in Queens. It went like this on Sunday
night: At 12:10 a.m., a 21-year-old man was shot in the leg; at 2:36
a.m., a 22-year-old man was shot three times on East New York Avenue in
Brooklyn; about an hour later at 3:30, a 20-year-old man was shot in
the leg at Bedford Park in the Bronx; at 4:12 a.m. that morning, a 35-
year-old man brought himself to Jamaica Hospital with a gunshot wound;
at 11:40 a.m., a 15-year-old was shot in the leg and the back--at 11:40
a.m., middle of the day on Sunday, a 15-year-old shot in the leg and
the back. At about 3:25, a gunman opened fire at the corner of Bedford
and Lenox at Prospect-Lefferts Gardens.
The carnage in one weekend barely made news across this country. Most
people would not know it if I did not come down to the Senate floor and
tell this story. That is what we have come to accept in this country.
This represents a dramatic drop in gun violence in New York City. So
far we have had 440 shootings in New York City. That is a 23-percent
reduction from last year. This has been a good year in New York City,
and 440 people have been shot.
We do nothing about it. We cannot even bring ourselves to say
criminals should not have guns, that gun trafficking, done out of the
back of vans on the side streets of the Bronx and Brooklyn and Queens
should be a crime. We cannot even do that on the floor of the Senate.
That weekend, maybe the most tragic shooting was one that didn't end
up in a death, and that was the shooting of a little girl named Tayloni
Mazyck.
Three men opened fire in a wild episode that weekend in Brooklyn.
People said it sounded as though it was the 4th of July, so many
gunshots were going off in this neighborhood. It was likely gang
activity, but the consequence of the shooting wasn't a gang member, it
was a little 11-year-old girl who was struck through her neck. The
bullet lodged in her spine. Although Tayloni lived, she will never walk
again.
Listen, I grieve every single morning and every single night for the
20 little girls and boys who died in Newtown, CT. If that is what has
prompted us to
[[Page S4508]]
finally have a serious discussion here on the floor of the House and
the Senate about gun violence reform, then so be it.
This is an average summer weekend in New York, with a little girl
getting paralyzed and shootings throughout Saturday and Sunday night.
People are getting shot in the middle of broad daylight on a Sunday
afternoon. We can do something about it. We don't have the power to
eliminate gun violence, we can't make bad people stop doing bad things,
but we can pass commonsense laws such as background checks to check if
criminals are getting guns or people with serious, dangerous mental
illness. We can increase the resources of social workers and
psychologists to try to reach some of these kids to try to teach them
other ways of dealing with their anger than going in and reaching for a
gun. We can lock up anybody who takes a bunch of guns from a gun show,
throws them into a sack and sells them to criminals on the streets of
New York, Bridgeport, Los Angeles, or Chicago.
We are not helpless. We have power in this place to do something
about the mass shootings in Newtown, the mass shootings in Santa
Monica, and the 5,033 people who have died across this country since
December 14, in the 6 months since. It is not too late. We have a
chance to come back to this floor after immigration, perhaps after the
summer, let cooler heads prevail and allow this body to do something
about the scourge of gun violence that so far this place has had no
answer for. It causes the families of Newtown and the families of these
victims to leave this place shaking their heads.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum
call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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