[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 204 (Thursday, December 14, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H9929-H9930]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AN AMERICAN HERO
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2017, the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Garrett) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. GARRETT. Mr. Speaker, 47 years ago, August 11, a baby boy was
born to a mother and father in Detroit, Michigan, named Brian Terry.
Some 18 years after that, Brian made a commitment to serve his
country by enlisting in the United States Marine Corps, where he served
3 years honorably, including a tour of duty in harm's way in Iraq.
Discharged from the Marine Corps honorably in 1994, Brian Terry
followed his calling to serve by becoming a police officer. He then
made another commitment not to serve just his community, but our
Nation. In 2007, he joined the Customs and Border Protection.
But this wasn't good enough for what his mother characterized as a
brave, strong defender of people. Brian decided to join the elite
Border Tactical Team of the Border Patrol unit.
Seven years ago today, Brian was part of a four-person team tasked
with pursuing and apprehending a ``rip'' crew. This rip crew has been
alleged to be affiliated with the Mexican drug cartels. What they did
was exploit those who took advantage of the unwillingness of those in
leadership in this country to perform that basic, principled
responsibility, which is to secure our borders.
{time} 1300
The rip crew would rob drug mules as they carried drugs across the
border, but would also routinely detain and shake down those who snuck
through our porous borders. This cartel-affiliated rip crew had
weapons, and they used those weapons to rob, terrorize, and exploit in
the worst possible ways people who were essentially invited here by our
failure to do our jobs.
Seven years ago today, Brian Terry and three of his colleagues set
out not just to protect our border, but to protect innocent people, who
came with their entire life savings, because we chose to leave that
border porous.
Yesterday, the House Homeland Security Committee took up H.R. 4433.
H.R. 4433 is entitled Securing DHS Firearms Act of 2017. We learned
during testimony on this bill that in a 2-year period, just over 200
firearms were stolen from people who worked for the Department of
Homeland Security, or lost. At least one person was killed by these
firearms. I would concur that that is unacceptable.
I certainly support the bill, but having served in the United States
Army as a leader of soldiers on deployment, all of whom were issued at
least one weapon, I wonder if it literally requires an act of Congress
to suggest that the DHS promulgate regulations to oversee the loss or
theft of DHS supplied weapons.
Yes, over 200 weapons is horrible. Yes, one life lost is horrible.
But should there be an act of Congress?
Because, as I recall, as a leader in the army while deployed
overseas, we had protocol for dealing with lost weapons, with lost
sensible items, and with lost COMSEC. We didn't need an act of Congress
to tell us to promulgate it.
While I support this bill, it began to make me wonder and then think
of a Bible verse, Matthew 7:3:
``Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and
pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?''
Certainly it is unacceptable that over 200 weapons should be lost or
stolen from DHS employees in a period of 2 years. But it is, quite
literally, one-tenth of the scale of the weaponry that our government
intentionally put into the stream of commerce to be used by those who
would visit harm not only on their neighbors and family members south
of our border, but right here on our own soil.
So, weapons like this, to the quantity of over 200, were lost or
stolen from members of DHS. Meanwhile, 7 years ago, weapons like this
were put into the stream of commerce by our very government. Weapons
like this took the lives of at least one person. Weapons like this, put
into the stream of commerce by our very government, have taken, at the
very least, 70 times as many lives.
Yesterday, the Committee on Homeland Security promulgated a bill--an
act of Congress--to address 200-some weapons like this that have cost
at least one human life. And 7 years after Brian Terry set out on
patrol that fateful night in Arizona, days before he was to fly home to
Michigan to see his family for Christmas, nobody is talking about the
weapons like this that our government intentionally placed into the
stream of commerce, where we knew, to a metaphysical certainty, they
would go to those who would do harm to their neighbors and their
families and Americans.
Seven years later, we have seen justice. The killers of Brian Terry
have been arrested. The first man arrested for having shot Mr. Terry in
the back with a military-style rifle, leaving him to bleed to death in
the medical chopper that flew him out in an effort to save his life,
had, I think, ironically, already been deported from this country seven
times.
The night that Brian Terry set out to protect not only the borders of
this Nation, but the people who seek to enter it because we will not
uphold our responsibility, the man who killed him was about robbing the
very people who were coming here because we allowed it by not doing our
jobs, and he had already been deported seven times.
Now, we know that close to 70 people have died because we
intentionally, as a nation, put into the stream of commerce military-
style weapons. In fact, we have lost track of over 1,400 of the over
2,000 weapons that the Obama administration thought it would be a good
idea to intentionally let go to Mexico.
[[Page H9930]]
The weapon pictured next to me is a Barrett M-82 .50-caliber anti-
personnel and -materiel rifle. There are Members of this body who have
spoken on how this weapon should be illegal because, conceivably, it
can take down an airplane.
Why do I digress?
Because that weapon was recovered in the hideout known to be used by
the most notorious murderer in North America in the last 100 years: El
Chapo Guzman.
The United States Government watched while a weapon that some Members
of this body would suggest can take down an airplane was trafficked to
a man who is trafficked in death to the point where the next slide I
show will blow any thinking person's mind.
Many of the 160,000, roughly, deaths of civilians in Mexico can be
traced directly back to this man. And we know, because it was
recovered, that at least one of the military-style weapons that he
received came from us.
So, 7 years ago today, an American hero named Brian Terry, who had
served as a law enforcement professional, as a marine in Iraq, and on
the elite border tactical squadron, set out to protect America, but to
also protect those who sought to enter it, whether legally or
illegally. And, when he did so, he did so understanding fully, as those
who take an oath to defend this Nation do, that some things in this
world are worth standing, fighting, and dying for. And, tragically, 7
years ago tonight, Brian Terry made that sacrifice.
I had no intention of standing and speaking on this today until H.R.
4433, the Securing DHS Firearms Act of 2017, came before the Homeland
Security Committee yesterday, but it struck me as ironic. Not only did
I serve in uniform as a combat arms officer for nearly 6 years, but I
spent just under 10 years as a prosecutor, and I have a passion for a
number of things, but foremost among these is justice.
So while it gives my heart some condolence, I can't begin to imagine
the feelings on the 7th anniversary of the family members of this
American hero, knowing that, while the people who pulled the trigger
have been convicted, the weapons that they used were provided to them
by the very Nation that he died to protect.
Mr. Speaker, with that, I would submit this: I have faith that in
life or after life, there will always ultimately be justice.
I will tell you this: In the case of those who, with intent, put the
firearms into the hands of the individuals who took the life of this
American hero, I hope that justice comes in this life and not the next.
So, while we move about our business of promulgating laws to dictate
to the DHS that they should have a policy to address the loss of
firearms, I hope we don't take our eye off the ball of the very
firearms that we intentionally trafficked, like the two that were
recovered from the scene of the murder of Brian Terry, and that we will
continue until we find it to seek justice for this man and act in a
manner such that there are no more Brian Terry tragedies going forward.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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