[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: George H. W. Bush (1991, Book I)]
[March 11, 1991]
[Pages 244-246]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks Announcing Proposed Crime Control Legislation
March 11, 1991

    Thank you all very much for that warm welcome. Mr. Vice President 
and Mr. Attorney General; and then the State attorneys general with whom 
I just met, so many here today; distinguished Members of the United 
States Congress; other law enforcement officials; and community leaders: 
Really, it is an honor on this occasion to welcome you all back to the 
White House.
    Last week before Congress I saluted a group of hometown heroes, the 
finest combat force that this nation has ever assembled: the brave men 
and women of the United States military. We honored them with our 
cheers, with our prayers, and come this summer, I'm looking forward to 
it, because then I think the whole country will honor them again with 
the biggest Fourth of July since the Liberty Bell first rang.
    But as I said last week, the real way to honor them is to welcome 
them back to an America that is worthy of their sacrifice by joining 
together with Congress to move forward on the domestic front.
    Last month we launched an innovative package designed to assure real 
opportunity for all Americans. And our veterans deserve to come home to 
an America of improved schools, better jobs, stronger laws against 
discrimination, increased homeownership, and families that are healthy 
and together. And most of all, our veterans deserve to come home to an 
America where it is safe to walk the streets. Well, we can't do that 
before they come home, but we can have that on our minds as something we 
are determined to do.
    Economic opportunity is impossible for citizens who cannot be safe 
and feel safe in their homes, in their schools, in their jobs, and yes, 
their churches. And that's what I mean when I say a most basic civil 
right is quite simply the right to be free from fear.
    Some of you may remember that shortly after I took office we met 
with the 50 AG's at the White House. It was 2 years ago almost to the 
day. And I told you how a few days earlier I had gone to New York to 
meet the family and friends of Everett Hatcher, a brave DEA agent who 
was gunned down in the street. And they told me that it used to be 
unthinkable to shoot a cop. But now the culture has changed. And when 
the bad guys hear the word ``police,'' they just turn around and start 
shooting. I'll never forget that conversation.
    Two months later, on that rainy day on Capitol Hill, we launched an 
effort to pass our crime legislation, legislation designed to help 
protect our cops by giving them the tools they need to get their job 
done. We proposed stiff new penalties for criminals using semiautomatic 
weapons, an improved exclusionary rule designed to protect the truth and 
punish the guilty, an habeas corpus reform that would stop frivolous 
appeals and ensure that punishment was not only just but also swift and 
certain, and most of all, it would have finally given us a Federal law 
to uphold a simple rule of justice: Those who kill must be prepared to 
pay with their own life.
    And today, 2 years later, the Congress has still failed to act on 
these critical core provisions. And today, 2 years later, another 294 
police men and women are dead--294, almost 3 times the number of 
precious American lives lost during this entire Gulf war. The killings 
must stop. And it must stop now.
    Today, it's time to stand up and be counted. It's time to stand up 
for what's right. We stood by our troops. And today it's time to stand 
up for America's prosecutors and police.
    Last week, many of you joined together with the Attorney General and 
me in an unprecedented crime summit, America's

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first. For 3 days, you freely traded ideas, insights, suggestions, and 
support. And when I visited that group Tuesday, the mood was contagious. 
It was powerful and confident and, most of all, driven by a sense of 
urgency. And so, when it was over, we wasted no time: I told Dick 
Thornburgh that we wanted the crime bill ready in final form before 
another week was out. And today, 5 days later, we have it here.
    Of course, we had a head start. The truth is, the vast majority of 
these core proposals are identical to those that we sent up 2 years ago. 
These fundamental, badly needed reforms have been argued over the years. 
But the American people are not clamoring for more debate. Today they're 
demanding action--action to stop violent crime, action that translates 
to a straight up-or-down vote on these core commonsense proposals. As I 
said Wednesday night, if our forces could win the ground war in 100 
hours, surely the Congress can pass this legislation in 100 days.
    Our core proposals have also been strengthened by some potent new 
additions. These include new laws to protect men and women and children 
against violence and abuse. And most important of all, they include 
tough new laws that will protect our people and our police by helping 
prosecutors put away America's most violent offenders.
    One of the most important of these provisions recognizes that 
reducing firearms violence must mean exclusionary rule reform. I'm not a 
lawyer, but I put great stock in common sense. And it never did make 
sense that, because a policeman has made a mistake, a dangerous criminal 
can get off scot-free.
    The Supreme Court has invited legislative experimentation with 
direct action to prevent illegal searches and seizures. And so, today I 
am announcing that we are accepting that invitation. Our plan would 
authorize the Attorney General to develop alternative administrative 
sanctions for any Federal agent who improperly seizes a gun in violation 
of the fourth Amendment. Once these protections were in place, firearms 
in serious drug, violent, and certain other cases would always be 
admissible in certain Federal cases involving armed felons. It is simply 
intolerable that these armed criminals should go free when good solid 
evidence is available.
    Our message is simple: The time to act is now. The time to schedule 
congressional hearings is now. The Attorney General is ready to testify 
now. And most of the other experts needed are probably right here in the 
East Room now.
    So, looking out here today, I see a group of principled, all-
American heroes whose dedication at home matches that of our people 
overseas. Heroes like Attorney General Mike Moore of Mississippi, who 
stood with us in the Rose Garden last fall and described the terrible 
ordeal, due to current habeas rules, in which victims and their families 
can never draw the curtains on tragic murders and rapes. Heroes like 
Louisiana's district attorney Richard Ieyoub, who called the efforts to 
gut last year's crime bill a major fraud on the American people--the one 
that, for all practical purposes, would have shut down the death penalty 
in the 37 States where it now exists. Heroes like Dan Lungren, 
California's new AG, whose miracle end run in Congress in `84 produced 
some of the most far-reaching criminal law reforms in our nation's 
history.
    Mike and Richard, we are on a 100-day clock. And we hope you and 
your colleagues are ready to roll up your sleeves again today. And Dan, 
we're hoping you can lend your magic to the cause once more. Because 
this week marks the anniversary of the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List. And 
I'm here to tell you that this new crime bill is on America's most 
wanted list of pressing national business.
    And as I said last fall, America's prosecutors will not accept a 
phony crime bill that is tougher on law enforcement than it is on 
criminals. No more loopholes; no more rolls of the dice. I urge the 
Congress to heed the voices of our people, our police, our prosecutors, 
and help us take back the streets. Together, let's act on this crime 
bill now.
    Thank you all very, very much for coming. Good luck. May God bless 
our country. And now I'll put a signature to both of these documents. 
Thank you very much.

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                    Note: The President spoke at 11:40 a.m. in the East 
                        Room of the White House. In his remarks, he 
                        referred to Vice President Dan Quayle; Attorney 
                        General Dick Thornburgh; Everett Hatcher, slain 
                        Drug Enforcement Administration agent; Mike 
                        Moore, Mississippi attorney general; Richard 
                        Ieyoub, Louisiana district attorney; and Dan 
                        Lungren, California attorney general.