[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 96 (Thursday, June 16, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4292-S4293]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GUN VIOLENCE
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I am coming to the floor today to join so
many of my colleagues who have spoken over the last day to encourage
bipartisan cooperation on commonsense legislation to address the gun
violence epidemic that plagues our Nation and my home State of
Delaware. I want to thank my colleagues, Senators Murphy and
Blumenthal, for their consistent and unwavering commitment in
addressing this very real national crisis.
In the aftermath of the tragic mass shooting of Orlando, I have been
filled with many emotions, as have so many of my colleagues--grief for
the victims and their families, concern for the city of Orlando, grief
for the greater LGBTQ community across our Nation and world, anger
toward the perpetrator and the extremists who spread hatred, violence,
and fear around the world, and a powerful, deep-seated frustration that
our government, our Congress, this Senate, has not taken needed steps
to keep dangerous and unstable individuals from getting access to guns.
The atrocity that took place at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, FL, was
more than just a cowardly act of terrorism and a despicable, violent
rampage of hate against our LGBTQ brothers and sisters; it was also an
attack on the very freedoms in our way of life. From the brave first
responders and law enforcement officers who rushed to the scene, to the
hundreds, even thousands, of Floridians who lined up in the days since
to donate blood, tragedies like these so often showcase the very best
and worst of humanity in the same heartbreaking moment.
This mass shooting--the worst mass shooting in American history--
should force us to confront a number of powerful but unanswered
questions: Are we going to be a nation that celebrates our diversity or
one that stokes fear, division, and hatred? Are we going to engage the
American Muslim community in pursuing our shared goal of defeating the
scourge of terrorism, or are we going to malign and alienate 1.6
billion people from one of the world's great religions? Are we together
going to pass commonsense safety measures addressing gun violence, or
is this Senate, yet again, going to accept the status quo?
Our Nation, my State, my constituents, my neighbors, are crying out
for the Members of this body to have the courage of our convictions and
to address this moment. Regardless of the Orlando attacker's intentions
or his background, Congress must act to prevent known or suspected
terrorists from having the unfettered ability to purchase high-powered
military grade weaponry. That means ensuring that we have a universal
system of background checks when a firearm is purchased. It also means
ensuring that the U.S. Department of Justice gets notified when a known
or suspected terrorist goes to buy a gun so that the Department can
investigate or stop a transaction that might immediately endanger
citizens' lives.
Today an estimated 40 percent of all gun sales are sold by unlicensed
dealers who are not required to conduct any
[[Page S4293]]
criminal background checks under Federal law. In the aftermath of the
atrocity in Orlando, Deputy Attorney General Yates noted that the
Justice Department ``would have liked to have known'' that Omar Mateen
had gone to purchase an assault rifle.
Our Constitution protects the fundamental individual right to bear
arms, but no freedom is absolute, and no one amendment can subvert all
the others. Orlando deserved to have the security of a functioning
universal background check system that keeps guns out of the hands of
people known to be dangerous. So, too, do the people of my hometown of
Wilmington.
Earlier this week, late Tuesday night, in my hometown of Wilmington,
less than a block away from a business owned by one of my treasured
staff members, four young teenagers, ages 12, 13, 15, and 16, were
shot. The 15-year-old boy remains in critical condition in Christiana
Hospital. He was shot in the stomach, hand, and leg.
Earlier this week in Wilmington, a 15-year-old girl was shot during
an argument at a party. There have been so many instances of gun
violence on the streets of my hometown in the weeks and months of this
year, last year, and the year before that we have become numb to it. We
have almost lost count of them. Yet this daily carnage continues in my
hometown and in towns all across this country.
Orlando deserves the amount of attention it has received as one of
the worst mass American atrocities occurring in history. Yet we cannot
forget the week-in and week-out tragedies where one, two, and three
individuals are shot in what now seems to be, sadly, routine gun
violence all across this country.
We have heard in speeches given by my colleagues about incidents all
over our country. From Orlando to San Bernardino to Newtown, from
Wilmington to Chicago to Los Angeles, Americans fall victim to gun
violence each and every day. It doesn't have to be this way.
Americans are 25 times more likely to be murdered with a gun than
people in any other developed country. We can and we must do more to
prevent senseless acts of gun violence.
So today, this week, we mourn the lives taken from us too soon in
Orlando, and I mourn and many of my neighbors and constituents mourn
the lives lost in Wilmington. But we all pray that the families and
friends grieving the loss of their loved ones will find strength and
purpose in the days to come and will bring encouragement from actions
by this Senate.
Tragedies like these don't just draw our attention, don't just hold
our gaze, and don't just break our hearts; they also challenge our
values as a nation. In response to the atrocities in Orlando, America's
message to the world must not be one of fear and anger and isolation as
some propose. Instead, I think we can and should take action to protect
all of our citizens of any ethnicity, any faith, and any sexual
orientation with commonsense gun legislation. I am encouraged to know
there have been filed bills that this body will take up and act upon
next week and that my colleagues, Senators Murphy and Feinstein, have
been able to submit for consideration by this body--bills relating to
background checks and to closing the terror gap that I look forward to
supporting next week when we return.
I would like to thank all of my colleagues of both parties who have
advanced proposals or have come to the floor to participate in an
important effort to show the people across the country that we can work
across the aisle, that we can listen to each other, and that we can, I
hope, legislate.
I specifically thank my colleague Senator Murphy for his discipline,
his engagement, and his work in an important filibuster to show the
people of our country that we are listening, we are paying attention,
we are working, and we will soon take action.
With that, I thank the Presiding Officer.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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