[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 88 (Wednesday, June 3, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H3766-H3767]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BERTIE'S RESPECT FOR NATIONAL CEMETERIES ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Barletta) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BARLETTA. Mr. Speaker, our national military cemeteries are
hallowed ground. And I ask my colleagues to agree and support my bill,
H.R. 2490, Bertie's Respect for National Cemeteries Act.
On October 15, 1969, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, a man named George
Emery Siple shot and killed Bertha Smith, known to everyone as
``Bertie.'' Siple was convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in
prison without parole. Thirty years later, he died in prison. Because
he was a military veteran, he was buried in Indiantown Gap National
Cemetery in 1999.
He was buried there despite a Federal law that was passed in 1997.
That law said that veterans convicted of Federal or State capital
crimes are not permitted to be buried in Veterans Affairs national
cemeteries or Arlington National Cemetery.
For Bertie Smith's family, this is a heart-wrenching situation that
has gone on for three decades. Jackie Katz, Bertie's daughter, has
called it ``hell'' and a ``horror'' to live with the fact that George
Siple was memorialized and buried with full military honors.
When I first began to look into this issue, it was clear to me that
it was as frustrating as it was heartbreaking.
Back in 1997, led by our Pennsylvania Senators, Congress passed a law
that
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said that veterans found guilty of capital crimes could not be buried
in our national veterans cemeteries. At the time, you may remember, the
country was still reeling from the Oklahoma City bombing. And veterans
everywhere were justifiably appalled that Timothy McVeigh, a military
veteran, could be buried with full military honors.
Now, McVeigh did not receive that burial. But a major problem we
discovered was that the law was not actively enforced for others until
2006.
Since then, the VA has relied on an ``honor system,'' which requires
family members to willingly report their relative's criminal record.
In 2013, Congress once again sought to protect our VA national
cemeteries by passing a law to explicitly allow the VA to remove
veterans from cemeteries if they had been convicted of a Federal or
State capital crime. However, this law does not extend to veterans
buried between 1997 and 2013, a time period that includes George Emery
Siple.
That is why I have introduced Bertie's Respect for National
Cemeteries Act. What this law will do is require Veterans Affairs to
take every reasonable action to ensure that a veteran is eligible to be
buried, including searching public criminal records. It will clarify
Congress' original intent by providing Veterans Affairs the explicit
authority to remove veterans convicted of capital crimes who were
wrongly buried after 1997. And it will specifically provide for the
removal of George Emery Siple from Indiantown Gap National Cemetery.
This bill really only reaffirms what Congress intended in the first
place. And it enjoys the support of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
There were precedents for the removal of convicted murderers from
veterans cemeteries--from Arlington National Cemetery and VA cemeteries
in Michigan and Oregon, to name just a few.
Additionally, nothing in the bill would withdraw previous military
honors, such as Purple Hearts or medals for valor, otherwise earned by
the deceased veterans.
The discussion of military veterans who have been convicted of murder
often raises the issue of mental health treatment and posttraumatic
stress disorder. There is no question that PTSD is a real condition
affecting many servicemen and -women, and I have always stood for
funding the evaluation and treatment of those who may be afflicted.
That said, those who have been convicted of capital murder by our
judicial system have been declared guilty of the worst offense
possible, and any mitigating factors would have been considered at
trial and sentencing.
I don't think it is too much to say that murderers should not be
buried next to true American heroes. And the memories of victims like
Bertie Smith should not be disregarded.
I ask my colleagues for their support in saying that real, true honor
really means something in our national military cemeteries.
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