[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 14]
[House]
[Pages 19428-19429]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                    EXCESSIVE USE OF FORCE BY POLICE

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Bost). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Rush) is 
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
  Mr. RUSH. Mr. Speaker, I rise to address this esteemed House of 
Representatives on an issue that is facing the American people, an 
issue that is facing our great Nation from coast to coast. This is the 
issue of wanton, senseless murders of unarmed young Black men and women 
throughout this Nation.
  This past year, Mr. Speaker, we have all seen on the many news 
platforms all across this Nation--the morning news, the noon news, the 
evening news--all have been punctuated with videotapes of unarmed Black 
men mostly, Hispanic men, men and women, boys and girls, teenagers, 
being shot down in cold blood by just a few--I want to emphasize ``a 
few''--rogue cops that hunt our Nation's cities, that hide behind a 
badge and a gun. These rogue police officers operate not to serve and 
protect, but to commit murder and mayhem and use their badge, their 
official status to get away with it.

                              {time}  1400

  This popular television show, ``How to Get Away With Murder,'' could 
use many departments all across this Nation as a formula, indeed as the 
plot of ``How to Get Away With Murder.''
  I bear witness that this has been going on, these murders--wanton, 
senseless, lawless murders--have been going on in this Nation for far 
too long.
  Last year, Mr. Speaker, at this same time I stood before the Members 
of this body sharing with the Members of Congress the life and the 
murder of my best friends in Chicago, Fred Hampton and Mark Clark. They 
were both members of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party.
  They were young men full of leadership abilities, young men who were 
committed to serving their neighbor, young men who were committed to 
try to uplift the African American community and similarly situated 
communities all across this Nation.
  At this very time last year, I talked about December 4, 1969, the day 
that Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were killed by the Chicago Police 
Department and the State's Attorney's police department in my city of 
Chicago. They were shot.
  Our pathologists indicated that, at the time that the police raided 
their apartment, Fred Hampton lay sleeping in his bed, that he had been 
drugged with a drug called Seconal, and that Fred had in his body at 
the time of his murder enough Seconal to immobilize an elephant. That 
is what the science and our pathologists indicated to us.
  On December 4, 1969, at 4 o'clock in the morning, members of the 
Chicago Police Department sneaked into the streets on the west side of 
the city of Chicago in utility trucks, trucks that had been decorated 
with the signage of the local gas company, and came in with murder in 
their hearts. They knocked on the door of the apartment.
  Mark Clark answered: ``Who is it?''
  The police at the front door said: ``Tommy.''
  Mark said: ``Tommy who?''
  The police at the front answered: ``Tommy Gun, Tommy Gun.''
  At that time, after kicking the door down, they came in shooting with 
a machine gun and other automatic weapons, aiming to kill everybody in 
that apartment.
  After the first shot was fired in the front door, then that was a 
signal to those who were gathered in the rear, and they came bursting 
in, firing. Ninety-nine shots all total went into that apartment.
  A Federal grand jury indicated after the investigations were 
concluded that possibly only one shot exited that apartment. One shot 
fired out and 99 fired in. Cold-blooded murder 46 years ago.
  Fast-forward to today. All across this Nation cops are killing 
citizens, cold blooded, without any justification, and getting away 
with it. It is not only in Chicago, but all across this Nation, all 
across America.
  Dontre Hamilton was a 31-year-old African American male killed by the 
Milwaukee Police Department in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on April 30, 2014, 
just a little over a year ago.
  Eric Garner, an unarmed 43-year-old father, was killed by the New 
York City Police Department on July 17, 2014, a little over a year ago.
  On August 9, 2014, Michael Brown, an 18-year-old unarmed teenager, 
was killed by the Ferguson, Missouri, police department, a little over 
a year ago.
  A little over a year ago, Mr. Speaker, Ezell Ford, an unarmed 25-
year-old mentally ill man, was killed by the Los Angeles Police 
Department, Los Angeles, California, August 11, 2014, a little over a 
year ago.
  Mr. Speaker, Laquan McDonald, a 17-year-old teenager, was killed by a 
member of the Chicago Police Department on October 20, 2014, a little 
over a year ago.
  A little over a year ago, Mr. Speaker, in Cleveland, Ohio, Tamir 
Rice, a 12-year-old boy, was killed by the Cleveland Police Department 
on November 22, 2014.
  In the State of my birth, in DeKalb County, Georgia, Anthony Hill, a 
27-year-old unarmed Air Force veteran, was killed by the DeKalb County 
Police Department on March 6, 2015, less than a year ago.
  Less than a year ago, Nicholas Thomas, a 23-year-old unarmed Black 
man, again in my birth State of Georgia, in Smyrna, Georgia, was killed 
by the Smyrna Police Department on March 24, 2015, less than a year 
ago.
  Less than a year ago, Mr. Speaker, Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old Black 
man, while in custody of the Baltimore Police Department in Baltimore, 
Maryland, was killed on April 12, 2015, less than a year ago.
  We all remember Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old woman who was found 
hanging in a jail cell in Waller County, Texas, on July 13, 2015, less 
than a year ago.
  The list goes on, Mr. Speaker.
  November 16, 2015, Jamar Clark, a 24-year-old unarmed Black man, was 
killed by a member of the Minneapolis Police Department, less than a 
month ago.
  Mr. Speaker, there are many, many others. In my city, a few years 
back, about 3 years ago, Rekia Boyd was killed by a police officer who 
was out of uniform, firing over his shoulder and striking Rekia Boyd in 
her head, killing her.
  The now-terminated ex-police superintendent of the Chicago Police 
Department, Garry McCarthy, at the time of Rekia Boyd's murder had the 
unmitigated gall to stand before the citizens of Chicago and say that 
this unarmed, young Black woman who was killed was the target, that the 
police officer aimed at the person who he killed.

                              {time}  1415

  This statement has been repudiated so many, many times. He fired over 
his shoulder into a crowd of people.
  There is a conspiracy in our police departments, a cancer in our 
police departments, all across our very Nation. State by State, urban 
area by urban area, large cities and small cities, young Black men and 
young Black women are targets, fair game, for some who are wearing a 
badge and a gun and

[[Page 19429]]

hiding behind a uniform and a vow that they don't believe in and that 
doesn't govern their lives and their official and unofficial duty.
  They don't believe in serving and protecting. They believe in: How 
can we commit murder and get away with it? How can we murder those who 
don't look like us, murder those who we stereotypically view as 
criminals and thugs? We have a right because we wear a badge. We have a 
gun and we have a uniform to hide behind. We have an unmitigated right 
to shoot them down at will.
  There are laws in this Nation that protect even wild animals from 
being killed.
  In Chicago, Illinois, my city, there are only about 30 officers who 
have in excess of 10 citizen complaints against them. This police 
officer who was just indicted for the first time in the history of our 
city--only one police officer indicted for the murder of an unarmed 
Black man in Chicago--had 18 citizen complaints against him--18--mostly 
for excessive use of force.
  Why was he even on the street? Why was he wearing a uniform? Why were 
our tax dollars being used to pay for his livelihood when he had no 
appreciation for the lives and the rights of American citizens 18 
times?
  He shot Laquan McDonald while Laquan was walking away from him. That 
is what the video showed. Laquan McDonald wasn't even within 20 feet of 
this police officer, now ex-police officer.
  But he shot him 16 times, 15 times when Laquan McDonald was on the 
ground. He couldn't have threatened him at all. He fired 16 rounds, 15 
of them while Laquan McDonald was on the ground. He fired 16 rounds in 
15 seconds.
  Forty-six years later we have these kinds of police atrocities 
occurring throughout the Nation. It is up to this body, Mr. Speaker, 
this Congress, to finally stand up and protect all of the people of 
this great Nation from these rogue cops who are roaming to and fro in 
our communities mercilessly, wantonly murdering our citizens, mostly 
Black and Latino young men and young women.
  Mr. Speaker, I will be introducing in a matter of days a resolution 
to establish a permanent select committee on the excessive use of force 
by America's police departments, a permanent and select committee on 
excessive use of force by America's--yours and mine, the Members of 
this body--police departments.
  Mr. Speaker, if we can have a select committee on Planned Parenthood 
and women's health, we can have a select committee on excessive use of 
force by America's police departments.
  This select committee will be authorized and directed to conduct a 
full and complete investigation and study and to issue a report and 
recommendations of its findings to the House of Representatives 
regarding each of the following:
  Number one, a uniform definition of excessive use of force;
  Number two, create national guidelines on excessive use of force;
  Number three, collect accurate and reliable data on police shootings 
and use of excessive force, both lethal and nonlethal;
  Number four, implement and create a national database to make 
available public data of citizen complaints filed against police 
officers and departments;
  Number five, include demographic data on police officers involved in 
shootings in the Uniform Crime Reporting Program;
  Number six, require mandatory FBI reporting of police departments on 
the number of justifiable homicides committed by those departments;
  Number seven, create effective training methods and mental counseling 
of police officers to increase their understanding of the word 
``threat'' and weed out any indication of racial animus and hostility;
  Number eight, create adequate training for police officers dealing 
with mentally ill persons.
  Yes, we have mentally ill patients and police do not know how to deal 
with them. Under this resolution, this select committee will require 
training for our Nation's police to deal with mentally ill patients.
  Number nine, require transparency of internal police discipline and 
police accountability;
  Number ten, report to this Congress on the rising cost of lawsuits 
and settlements that are indicative of problematic policing and civil 
rights violations and civil rights abuses.
  This is the resolution that I will be introducing over the next few 
days, Mr. Speaker.
  Mr. Speaker, I just want to conclude by repeating something that I 
said last year, and I intend to repeat this throughout the remaining 
days of my life.

                              {time}  1430

  The murders, the political assassinations, the cold-blooded murders 
of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark on December 4, 1969, will not be in 
vain.
  The murders of American citizens, particularly young, unarmed African 
American boys and girls, Hispanic American boys and girls, other 
minorities, unarmed mentally ill Americans, unarmed White Americans, 
these murders by America's police agencies must come to a screeching 
halt. Justice demands it. This Congress ought to promote it.
  This Congress, this esteemed body, ought to protect all of our 
citizens. We have to show and demonstrate, beyond a shadow of a doubt, 
that just because you have a badge, you wear a badge, just because you 
are dressed in a uniform, just because you have a gun, with a license 
to arrest and detain, just because you have those assets, those powers, 
you do not have a right, the authority, the power to commit cold-
blooded murder. And don't believe, not for 1 millisecond, that you will 
continue to get away with it.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

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