[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 114 (Tuesday, July 21, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5185-S5186]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE LIVES OF FIVE AMERICAN HEROES
Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I am here with our senior Senator Lamar
Alexander to speak on something very tragic that occurred in our State
and in my hometown.
I rise to honor the lives of five American heroes--the five American
heroes we honor today with the lowering of the flags here at the U.S.
Capitol. Our community is heartbroken, as has been said many times, our
State is heartbroken, and I believe our Nation is heartbroken that
these outstanding young men died in the way they did, but we honor
their lives. We mourn their loss. We think of the greatness they
embodied: Thomas Sullivan, David Wyatt, Carson Holmquist, Skip Wells,
and Randall Smith.
I think as the Nation has learned about these individuals carrying
out what many would consider to be mundane activities in support of our
U.S. military, those who protect us, they understand the greatness they
symbolized, most of them having served in Afghanistan and Iraq and some
of them younger, beginning their careers, but all having excellent
backgrounds and exemplifying the very best America has to offer.
Our Nation mourns, our community mourns, and we have lost five of our
greatest. Also, hospitalized in Chattanooga today is a young man named
Dennis Pedigo, whose mother and father both served on the Chattanooga
Police Department, and he has followed in their footsteps.
I think people have heard all around our country the tremendous
heroism that was exemplified by the Chattanooga Police Department,
which rushed at the assailant and brought him to his end--by the way,
trained to do so, trained to go at them. This was not a SWAT team, but
these were patrol squads that were trained to deal with this kind of
situation and no doubt saved the lives of other people in doing so. So
we honor them. We honor all of them. We celebrate them. As a community
we have been harmed, and our community has prayed.
We had a vigil on Friday night that was extraordinary. Senator
Alexander was there with our Governor, our mayor, county officials, and
others. It was an extraordinary time of our community coming together
around what has happened.
I do believe that what people all over the country and the world have
heard about ``Chattanooga strong'' is true, and I think our community
will be even stronger because of what has happened, and our Nation must
understand where we are in the world and that these types of activities
will possibly continue.
I had a very good conversation on Friday with the Pentagon to talk
about what they are doing. I know threat activity has been rising for
some time, and they are looking at what needs to be done to ensure this
doesn't happen again.
I had a very good conversation this morning with Senator McCain, who
I know is leading efforts with House Members to figure out if there is
a way to add something to the NDAA, a piece of legislation that we can
deal with very quickly here so we can make sure we have policies to
protect lives.
Our community is praying for these individuals. It is my hope that we
will put policies in place to ensure we appropriately protect these
individuals.
In addition to that, there are tangible things we can do. I know that
when something like this happens,
[[Page S5186]]
there are certain types of Federal benefits. Our offices are working
together with outside groups to coordinate that.
Thankfully, our community has come together to make sure these
families have the financial support they need beyond that. There is an
effort under way in Chattanooga now--and I hope people around the world
will participate--to make sure that the financial support that is
necessary to sustain these families in light of what happened occurs.
My friend and a great Tennessean--or at least we claim him as that
because he lives in Chattanooga for part of the year--Peyton Manning,
has lent his name to this effort. My sense is that we will see a
generous outpouring to ensure that, at a base level, some of the
financial needs of these families, if not all, will be dealt with in an
appropriate way.
I will close by saying this. Our community has been shocked, as has
the world. We have lost five outstanding people, and it has shaken
their families.
I had the opportunity to meet briefly with the family of the fallen
sailor, the last person who passed. He was riddled with bullets, and
the Erlanger trauma squad worked with him for hours and hours and hours
trying to save his life. Finally, after a tremendous fight, he lost his
life--again, in the line of duty.
The needs of these families are great. While our community is
praying, they will try to meet their needs in other ways.
How do we respond to this? Lamar and I have both mentioned what comes
out of this, and the fact is that I feel that our community is like
none I have witnessed from the standpoint of its compassion to others.
My sense is that the way our community is going to respond to this is
much like what I would refer to in Genesis 12, where God said to the
Jewish people that they were blessed to be a blessing. I think most
people in our community, our State, and our Nation believe we have been
incredibly blessed, and my sense is that in addition to responding to
the specific needs that need to be dealt with both here in Washington
and back home and certainly at the State level, our community is going
to rise up and ensure that, because we have been blessed, we continue
to be a blessing to others. That is my hope, and that is what I am
seeing happen. I have never seen such an outpouring of compassion
anyplace else in my life.
I am proud to represent Tennessee. I am proud that my hometown has
responded in the way that it has, in spite of a deep mourning and grief
that we have for these outstanding men who lost their lives in the line
of duty.
Senator Alexander and I will submit a resolution later today, and my
sense is that the entire Senate will want to be a part of it.
With that, I will turn to my distinguished friend, a great colleague,
and one of the greatest Senators our State has ever had, Lamar
Alexander.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. ALEXANDER. Mr. President, I thank Senator Corker for his eloquent
and obviously heartfelt comments. He mentioned the word that we have
heard most often since last Thursday, when he and I first got word of
this tragedy, and the word is ``heartbroken.'' We are heartbroken for
the lives that were lost, heartbroken for the families that remain, and
heartbroken for the community of Chattanooga.
We can see the deep emotion that Senator Corker has expressed. As a
resident and former mayor of Chattanooga, that community is very
special to him.
On Friday at 5:30 p.m., in Mount Olivet Baptist Church, there was a
memorial service that nearly 1,000 people attended. Senator Corker, our
Governor, the police chief, and others spoke.
I know most people in the country know about what happened that day.
Most of them would have liked to have been there to do what they could
in a time such as this. You never know quite what to say. Sometimes all
you can do is just be there.
This is especially hard because these were young men--young men in
the service of our country, young men whose lives were filled with
happiness, young men who had the expectation of a long life for
themselves, young men who were filled with duty and service.
They were living in a strong community. Faith and the sense of
helping one another is strong Chattanooga faith. Chattanooga is a place
of good neighbors. Chattanooga was recently named the best midsize city
in America. Everything in Chattanooga seemed to be going in the right
direction, and then this happened. So it is especially heartbreaking in
the community of Chattanooga.
On Friday, I thought--while trying to think about what words I could
add to the words that were being said--about the time in 1985 when 289
members of the 101st Airborne Division lost their lives in a plane
crash in Newfoundland, and President Reagan came to Fort Campbell to
meet with the families to talk about it.
I was Governor then, and I drove up to hear what he had to say. He
spoke of those men and women--as these five were--as peacekeepers. They
were there to protect lives, protect the peace, and to act as a force
for stability and trust for our country.
President Reagan said of those 289 men and women, which can be
equally said of these five men, that their work was the perfect
expression of the best of the Judeo-Christian tradition. They were the
ones of whom Christ spoke when he said: ``Blessed are the peacemakers
for they shall be called the children of God.''
President Reagan said of the 289 who lost their lives 30 years ago
what could be said of these five this week and what a poet said of
soldiers in another war:
They will never grow old; they will always be young. And we
know one thing with every bit of our thinking: They are now
in the arms of God.
Chattanoogans said last Friday the words ``Chattanooga strong,'' and
they were repeated by Senator Corker, the Governor, and most of the
members of the community. People were standing up and supporting each
other and the families who had been heartbroken by the loss of their
loved ones.
I am enormously impressed with the people of Chattanooga and their
current leaders: the mayor, the Governor, and their Senator, who is
also their former mayor. I believe Chattanooga will be strong.
I think it is important, as we reflect and grieve here in the Senate
with Chattanooga--not just with the families and the people who knew
the five who passed--that we not only honor the five, but that we also
honor the city and its response to this terrible tragedy.
I pledge to continue to work with Senator Corker to do all that I can
to help those five families and help create an environment that can
keep Chattanooga strong.
I thank the Presiding Officer, and yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
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