[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 4 (Friday, January 9, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H184-H186]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LAW ENFORCEMENT APPRECIATION DAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Bost). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Jolly) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. JOLLY. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the time, and I would like to
claim this time to spend a few moments on the floor of this House to
express the appreciation of myself and my colleagues to those who serve
every day in our law enforcement community.
There is no better way to kick off this time than to yield to a
colleague of mine from the State of Washington, a former sheriff of 30
years in law enforcement, and a former Sheriff of the Year from King
County, my colleague from Washington (Mr. Reichert).
Mr. REICHERT. I thank the gentleman for yielding and his kind
introduction.
Today, Mr. Speaker, is National Law Enforcement Appreciation Day. I
hope this becomes a yearly thing. It is sponsored today by the National
Sheriffs'
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Association, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the
FOP, and other law enforcement organizations--national, State, and
local organizations.
As Mr. Jolly said, I served 33 years in the sheriff's office in
Seattle, starting in a patrol car and eventually ending my career as
the sheriff. I know from my own personal experience in serving those
years that a cop's mission is to protect their community.
I know this from working with law enforcement not only in the
sheriff's office in Seattle, but with the Seattle Police Department,
all the police departments and sheriffs' offices in the State of
Washington and even across this country. I have had the opportunity to
work with a number of law enforcement organizations--local, State, and
Federal.
Mr. Speaker, they come each day with the heart of a servant. They
come each day knowing that, when they put on that badge and that
uniform, that they may not go home. They know that, but they do it
anyway.
Why do they do that? Why do they take that risk? Why did I take that
risk for 33 years? Let me tell you, Mr. Speaker, I did come close
several times in my career to losing my life to protect the community I
served.
Let me also say that I lost some dear friends over those 33 years.
One was my best friend, Sam Hicks, who was shot and killed in June of
1982. Another good friend in 1984 was stabbed to death.
It is a dangerous job, but it is a job they choose to do because they
choose to serve the community. They choose to put their life on the
line to protect and serve all of us, protect our families, our
children, our businesses, and our property each and every day.
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But no one is perfect, we know that. There are good police officers
and there are bad police officers. There are good mechanics and there
are bad mechanics. There are good lawyers and there are bad lawyers. We
all come from the human race. There is good and bad in all of us. So no
police department is perfect, and no police officer is perfect, and
sometimes things go wrong. They are required to make split decisions,
life-and-death decisions. In a moment's notice, you can have a gun
pointed at you, and you have to make that decision: Do I shoot or not?
Can I talk that person out of that gun? I have been in that position,
too. Fortunately, I was able to talk that person out of his gun and
took him to jail.
But sometimes things go wrong, and when it does, police, rightly so,
must be under the microscope. There must be public scrutiny. Cops know
that. Police chiefs know that. Sheriffs know it, and we accept that,
too. But when things go wrong and we watch these incidents and these
events unfold over the media, let us all remember that police officers
have constitutional rights, too. They are allowed due process, too.
They are American citizens, too. They have constitutional rights and
protections also.
The Constitution, as was mentioned earlier, was read today, reminding
us that we all have those constitutional rights. You are innocent until
proven guilty. So when something happens that we think is wrong, let's
pay attention to the facts. Let's let the process go forward; and then
based on the facts--based on the facts--let's work with the community,
with the police department and the mayor and city council and change
the policy, change the procedures, and make sure that it doesn't happen
again.
But today, let us also remember the service of the men and women, the
brave and dedicated men and women who put that uniform on every day. I
am going to name a few police officers from Washington State who, 5
years ago--and this is the 5-year anniversary of the death of these
police officers, gunned down, four of them gunned down while sitting in
a coffee shop in Lakewood, Washington--paid that ultimate sacrifice,
that ultimate price that we often hear talked about: Sergeant Mark
Renninger, Officer Ronald Owens, Officer Tina Griswold, Officer Greg
Richards, as well as Seattle Police Officer Timothy Brenton and Pierce
County Deputy Kent Mundell, all from Washington State, all not with us
today, all of their families missing them.
During these difficult times, Mr. Speaker, we need to come together
as a community, as a country, as a nation, and recognize the service of
these police officers across the country. I will end with the simple
act that comes so easily for us with people who serve in the military,
just a simple ``thank you.'' If you see a police officer today as you
go about your duties, your day's duties, please walk up and say ``thank
you.'' Please tell them you appreciate their service. That means the
world to them.
Mr. JOLLY. I thank my colleague from the State of Washington.
Today, on Law Enforcement Appreciation Day, I would like to yield to
a champion supporter of law enforcement, the gentleman from Alabama
(Mr. Byrne).
Mr. BYRNE. I thank the gentleman for yielding me this time and for
scheduling this Special Order to honor the men and women who put their
lives on the line every day, as we just heard from our colleague from
Washington.
Last year in the United States of America, 119 law enforcement
officers lost their lives in the line of duty; 119 lives snuffed out.
It was not because they did anything wrong, but they were performing
their duty to protect you and me so that every night when we go to
sleep, we put our heads on our pillows and sleep soundly.
We take it for granted. There is something about it that we think is
just natural. There is nothing natural about someone who goes out every
day and consciously gives of themselves and puts their life on the line
for someone else. Jesus said there is no greater love than this, than
someone who would lay down his life for his brother. And law
enforcement officers do that every day.
Yet sometimes when we get these incidents in America, we somehow
forget that. We forget that they have husbands and wives and children
and parents and sisters and brothers and friends, that they are people,
too. They are citizens in our community, just like we are, and they go
out every day to protect you and me and give us a quality of life that,
as I say, we take for granted. So it is altogether fitting that we
would take today and recognize them, salute them, recognize them, honor
them, thank them for what they do for all of us.
I hope that we won't just do it for today. I hope we do it 365 days a
year, because they are here for us 365 days a year.
So on behalf of my constituents in the First Congressional District
of Alabama, I say to law enforcement officials in my district and
throughout America: We thank you. We salute you. God bless you.
Mr. JOLLY. Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleague from Alabama.
Mr. Speaker, I rise today as well to say thank you to law enforcement
officers throughout Pinellas County, Florida, and across the Nation.
Thank you for your service and thank you for your sacrifice. And I
thank your families.
Each day in Pinellas County, Florida, the community I have the
opportunity to represent, as well as across the country, thousands of
law enforcement officers serve and protect us, often at great sacrifice
to their families and at risk to their very own lives.
This was the case on December 21 when Officer Charles Kondek of the
Tarpon Springs Police Department in Pinellas County responded to simple
a noise complaint. It would be Officer Kondek's end of watch as he
tragically lost his life at the hands of a gunman, a gunman whose
actions represent the type of inhumanity that we entrust our law
enforcement officers each day to protect us from. Officer Kondek was
only 45 years old, and he is survived by, and his memory lives on
through, his wife and his six children.
Sadly, Mr. Speaker, this story repeats itself throughout communities
across the country. The Nation witnessed, on December 20, in New York,
two law enforcement officers who were assassinated by an individual
with one intention: to take the lives specifically of law enforcement
officers.
Mr. Speaker, in my hometown of Pinellas County, the brotherhood of
law enforcement officers, the sisterhood of law enforcement officers
who protect us each day understands, just like law enforcement officers
across the country, the very risk to their safety and to their lives
and the risk and
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the heartbreak of their families and their children, that that risk is
very real.
In our county, we have lost a total of 24 officers, including, in
recent years, St. Petersburg officers David Crawford, Jeffrey
Yaslowitz, and Thomas Baitinger, each representing a precious loss of
life while serving and protecting us.
And yet we find ourselves today listening to some, a minority in our
society, who wish to give voice to those who undermine the very honor
of law enforcement officers, who undermine the very sacrifice of our
law enforcement officers, and who undermine the very danger that these
law enforcement officers face each day. Instead, we should be rising to
say ``thank you'' to the men and women of law enforcement, ``thank
you'' to the men and women in our communities who protect and defend
us.
So, Mr. Speaker, I rise today to do just that, to say ``thank you.''
Thank you to Officer Kondek of Tarpon Springs for his service, and
thank you to his family for sharing him with a community that will
forever remember his ultimate sacrifice. Thank you to the families of
all fallen law enforcement officers, and thank you to those who
continue to serve each day.
I want to thank our local law enforcement leadership in my hometown
of Pinellas County: Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, Clearwater
Police Chief Dan Slaughter, St. Petersburg Police Chief Anthony
Holloway, Chief Terry Hughes of my hometown of Indian Shores, Belleair
Police Chief Bill Sohl, Gulfport Police Chief Robert Vincent, Kenneth
City Police Chief Kevin Matson, Largo Police Chief Jeffrey Undestad,
Pinellas Park Police Chief Dorene Thomas, Pinellas County Schools
Police Chief Rick Stelljes, Tarpon Springs Police Chief Robert Kochen,
Treasure Island Police Chief Tim Casey, and Chief David Hendry of the
University of South Florida, St. Petersburg.
I especially want to thank all members of law enforcement in my
hometown and those throughout Pinellas County who get in their cars
each day and walk the streets, respond to crime, investigate crimes and
respond to disturbances and ultimately protect us. I want to thank
those I am privileged, within the law enforcement community, to call
friends, officers from the Clearwater police force: my dear friend
Detective Jonathan Walser, Detective Michael Stonelake, Detective
Christopher Precious, Sergeant John Brown, Officer Bill Renfro,
Lieutenant Juan Torres, and Lieutenant Richard Harris. And from the
Pinellas County Sheriff's Department, my friend, Sergeant Steve Wagner.
Thank you to each of you.
And I want to thank the Capitol Police officers who protect each of
us here as Members of Congress and the thousands of Capitol visitors
each year that are protected from threats that at times can be
tragically real. Thank you to all who serve, from Pinellas County,
throughout the State of Florida, communities across the country, and
right here in this very Chamber. Thank you for protecting us. Thank you
for serving. Thank you to every law enforcement officer for your
commitment to duty, your service to your community, and your service to
your fellow man.
As my colleague, Bradley Byrne said, blessed are those who would lay
down their life for their brethren. That is the oath--to risk their
life to protect others--that our law enforcement officers renew each
day.
Indeed, may our loving God richly bless each one of you who put on
the uniform of law enforcement, and may God richly bless your families.
May God's loving hands protect and defend each of you every day of your
service, just as you protect and defend each one of us. Please know
that this Member of Congress and millions of people across the country,
including those in Pinellas County and Florida's 13th District,
including communities throughout our Nation, are forever grateful for
the service of law enforcement officers, your service to your fellow
man. So today, on behalf of millions of Americans, I simply say to each
of you serving as law enforcement officers, thank you.
With that, I yield to a new colleague of mine from Texas, Mr.
Ratcliffe.
Mr. RATCLIFFE. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from Florida for
yielding me this time.
This week, I was honored and grateful to be able to vote for and help
pass several bills that will improve the lives of so many hardworking
Americans.
Earlier today, I was proud to be an original cosponsor of H.R. 3, the
Keystone XL Pipeline Act. I am grateful to be pushing this bill across
the finish line because the Keystone runs through the Fourth
Congressional District that I am privileged to represent. It is a long
overdue, commonsense piece of legislation which will create good-paying
jobs, will grow our economy, and will support more manufacturing and
trade in this country.
During its construction, it is estimated that 42,000 jobs will be
created by the Keystone, and it will put more than $2 billion in the
pockets of American workers.
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To put this impact in perspective, those 42,000 jobs are 12,000 more
than the unemployed population in the Fourth Congressional District of
Texas.
Unfortunately, President Obama has indicated that he will veto the
Keystone if it passes both Houses. I hope that this is just an idle
political threat because, if it is not, then the President is
intentionally harming the middle class Americans that this great job
creation bill is going to help.
I hope and pray that our President won't play politics with
legislation that will provide opportunities to create jobs for tens of
thousands of Americans to support their families.
This week, I was also proud to be able to support H.R. 30, which
changes the definition of a full-time employee from 30 hours a week to
40 hours a week under the perversely named Affordable Care Act.
ObamaCare's 30-hour rule places an impossible burden on individuals
and small businesses in my district and across this country, and I am
glad to be able to help pass a bill which repeals a terrible provision
from a terrible law.
But I say we haven't gone far enough. I know the people that I
represent in east and north Texas won't be satisfied until we repeal
every provision of the Affordable Care Act.
I was sent here to Washington to deliver results for the hardworking
people of north and east Texas, and these bills show that I am doing
that, and it is what I intend to keep doing because, while these are
great bills and I am proud that we passed them this week, it is just a
start.
We need more good bills to combat the President's executive
overreach; to restore fiscal sanity; to secure our borders; to repeal
all of ObamaCare; and, most importantly, to defend our great
Constitution.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Members are reminded to direct their remarks
to the Chair.
Mr. JOLLY. Mr. Speaker, I have no further speakers for this time.
With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
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