[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 79 (Wednesday, May 18, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H2704]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE DUI REPORTING ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of the DUI Reporting
Act, a bill which I filed yesterday with my Judiciary Committee
colleague, Steve Chabot of Ohio. If enacted, this bill would plug a
glaring hole in our Nation's drunk driving laws that enables repeat
offenders to be tried as first-time offenders, and repeat offenders are
the ones most likely to cause serious accidents and death.
Currently, when police make a driving-under-the-influence arrest,
they don't always have access to information about all of the driver's
previous DUI convictions or arrests. The reason is because not all
agencies report DUI arrests and/or convictions to the National Crime
Information Center, known as the NCIC. That is the national crime
database that is made instantly available to police and law enforcement
right in their patrol cars.
The consequences of this lack of reporting can prove tragic. Last
year, there was an awful, awful accident, a crash in northern
Mississippi just outside of my district. Two teenage girls, Maddie
Kruse and Rachel Lynch, were headed out of Memphis on the way to a
vacation. Their grandmother was driving the car. At about 6:30 in the
morning, a man who had registered .17 at 6:30 in the morning hit their
vehicle and killed Maddie and Rachel. This man had accrued seven DUI
charges since 2008 but had been allowed to plead guilty five times to
DUI first. He represented himself and had five first-offense DUI
convictions. Mississippi didn't have a system and still doesn't have a
system to require those reportages.
This story broke my heart and, I believe, the hearts of everybody in
the Midsouth who read about it.
This was a drunk driver who should have been in jail serving time off
the road or have received treatment. The reason he wasn't, according to
local investigations, is because none of his DUI history had been
reported to the NCIC and was not available to the highway patrolman.
When that patrolman ran his driving record in the national database,
his past DUI convictions never showed up because they weren't reported.
This is shameful in this day and age. This information should be
reported so that law enforcement can get access to it and get drunk
drivers off the road and save lives like Maddie's and Rachel's. Our
bill would make that happen by creating a financial incentive for
States to require DUI arrests and convictions to be reported to the
NCIC and, therefore, available to law enforcement.
The bill is bipartisan. It has the support of people throughout the
country; but in Memphis, Billy Bond, at the Prosecutor's Office, worked
on this for a while and tried to get laws like this passed. We have had
a good response from MADD.
This bill will save lives. Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to pass
it quickly.
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