[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 163 (Wednesday, October 11, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H7924-H7925]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE MEMORY OF FIRST SERGEANT CHARLESTON HARTFIELD OF THE
NEVADA ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Nevada (Ms. Rosen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROSEN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor the memory of my
constituent, First Sergeant Charleston Hartfield of the Nevada Army
National Guard. Our community lost a true-blue American hero on the 1st
of October. Since the age of 18, Officer Hartfield valiantly served our
country and our community, spending 16 years in the Army both on Active
Duty and in the Nevada National Guard and 11 years in our local law
enforcement.
First Sergeant Hartfield spent a year deployed to Iraq with the 82nd
Airborne Division as part of the initial invasion in 2003, where they
were awarded the Combat Action Badge for having bravely engaged in
combat operations.
Those who knew Officer Hartfield remember him for his kindness to
others and for pouring his heart into our community as a husband, a
father, a friend, and a youth football coach.
Officer Charleston Hartfield was taken from us far too soon by a
senseless tragedy. Our valley and this Nation will mourn his loss, and
we will carry forward his spirit of courage and selflessness.
{time} 1030
Reducing Gun Violence
Ms. ROSEN. Mr. Speaker, it is hard to put into words the devastation
and heartbreak my community suffered on October 1, 2017. This horrific
violence has forever altered the lives of countless families in Las
Vegas and across this country.
My heart breaks for those who lost a parent, a child, a sibling, and
a friend. And while this was the deadliest mass shooting in modern
American history, I know that we join a long list of communities: Sandy
Hook, Aurora, Tucson, San Bernardino, and Orlando, all who have
suffered way too much through similar heart-wrenching violence.
I have lived in southern Nevada for nearly 40 years, and I will tell
you that I have been overwhelmed by the resilience of Las Vegas. We are
not just ``Sin City'' or the glittering lights of the strip. We are
also a tight-knit, compassionate community of hardworking families. The
shooting on October 1 exemplified the worst of humanity, but our
response represented the very best of people.
As we try to figure out how to move forward, I can tell you that we
are finding strength and hope and courage in our brave first
responders, in the heroic self-sacrifice of men and women who risked
and gave their lives for others, and for the kindness of strangers who
helped transport the wounded to the hospital, who stood in line for
hours to donate blood, and who came together to support the survivors.
I implore my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to find that same
courage to come to the table and have real conversations about
commonsense solutions to address gun violence. There is no single
policy solution, but I know we can support the Second Amendment while
taking reasonable steps to reduce the carnage inflicted on our
communities by gun violence and mass shootings.
Mr. Speaker, devices designed to cause mass casualties, like bump
stocks and high-capacity magazines, have no practical purpose for
hunting or self-defense. They only increase the threat for potential
victims trying to find safety, like those at the Mandalay Bay, and they
make it more challenging for law enforcement to confront and neutralize
an active shooter.
I urge all of my colleagues to please join together in a bipartisan
effort. We need to take commonsense steps in Congress to decrease the
scope of widespread destruction and tragic mass shootings.
[[Page H7925]]
No community should ever be forced to experience the grief and trauma
that my constituents are now confronting. It is more urgent than ever
that we take meaningful action to reduce the toll of widespread gun
violence. The time is now.
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