[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 97 (Tuesday, July 9, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H4217-H4218]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE IN CHICAGO
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, entire neighborhoods in my city of Chicago
are being torn apart by violence.
Last week, from Wednesday evening through Sunday evening, more than
70 people were shot in Chicago, 11 of whom died. Last year, over 500
people
[[Page H4218]]
were murdered in my city. Of these murders, 80 percent were gang
related, and nearly 90 percent were at the hands of a gun. The numbers
speak for themselves. The city of Chicago is facing an epidemic of
violence and the reasons behind it are clear.
There are many ideas to solve this problem. One--rounding up 18,000
members of the Gangster Disciples--is simply not legally or financially
feasible. What is feasible and a significant way to stop gun violence
in my city is to stop the flow of illegal guns into Chicago.
One reason the violence is at record levels is because gang members
have such easy access to illegal guns. It's time for the Federal
Government to step in and do something about it.
Despite the city's tough gun laws, Chicago cops are recovering
illegal guns at nine times the rate of their counterparts in New York
City. That's nearly three times the number of weapons in a city one-
third the size. These outrageous numbers call for nothing short of a
Federal response. We need a renewed effort at the Federal level to
prosecute gun traffickers who put illegal weapons in the hands of gang
members. We need to give our law enforcement the tools they need to put
these guys away.
Last year, Chicago ranked last among Federal jurisdictions and
Federal gun prosecutions. This is simply unacceptable. Gun traffickers
should know that if you traffic illegal weapons in the city of Chicago,
you will be spending a long time in a Federal penitentiary. We can no
longer let these criminals be charged with mere paperwork violations.
I welcome the nomination of Zachary Fardon as Chicago's new Federal
prosecutor and urge him to prosecute more of these cases in Federal
court. But to try more gun traffickers in Federal court, we need to
give law enforcement the tools and funding they need to do so. That
means finally passing a Federal law making gun trafficking illegal,
with stiffer penalties for those who violate the law; that means
increasing funding for Federal COPS grants to put more police on our
streets instead of ignoring municipalities across the country that have
been forced to cut their public safety budgets in these difficult
economic times; and that means finally giving law enforcement the
proper tools to go after corrupt gun dealers.
One percent of gun dealers are responsible for half the guns used in
crimes in this country; yet current law foolishly limits things like
inventory inspections. If law-abiding dealers reported inventories, the
ATF would be much more effective in identifying lost and stolen weapons
and combating corrupt gun dealers. That's why I introduced the TRACE
Act this Congress, which would allow the ATF to require dealers to
perform inventory checks and to report lost and stolen guns.
Mr. Speaker, people are being gunned down in my city every day. And
while we continue to spend billions of dollars on nuclear weapons,
tanks, and wars overseas, we're ignoring the gang war that is happening
here at home. It's time for the Federal Government to step up to the
challenge by stopping gun violence where it starts.
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