News Release
THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release April 28, 2000
Washington. D.C. 4:06 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. First of all, let me say a word of
appreciation to you, Chief Ramsey, for your outstanding leadership of
this very fine department. Thank you, Mayor Williams, for the energy and
direction you have brought to City Hall and to this entire city. Thank
you, Eleanor Holmes Norton, for always advocating for Washington. D.C.
I think no one will ever know how many times you have called me or been
to see me in the last seven years and three months to get me to do something
else, how many times you have reminded me that I, for my tenure here,
and my wife are citizens of Washington. D.C. And I have tried to be a
good and faithful citizens, and insofar as we have succeeded, it's in
no small measure because of you.
Thank you, Congressman Patrick Kennedy, for being here and for your longstanding
concern for reducing crime and violence. And I want to thank D.C. Council
member Sandy Allen. And I'd like to say a special word of appreciation
to our HUD Secretary Andrew Cuomo, who is here, who has been very, very
vigorous in this area. I think no HUD Secretary has ever tried to do as
much as he, not only to build and maintain and improve the public housing
units of America, and to provide more vouchers for people to find their
own housing, but actually to make that housing safe. And I thank him for
that.
I'd like to thank all the members of the D.C. Police Department who are
here for your service, and I'd like to congratulate this class of fine
police recruits behind me, and thank them for their commitment to the
safety of this community.
As Chief Ramsey said, I have tried to be a good partner to law enforcement
throughout the country. There are a lot of reasons for that. By the time
I got elected President I'd been involved in law enforcement in one way
or another for nearly 20 years. I asked Janet Reno to become Attorney
General largely because she'd be the first Attorney General in a long,
long time who had actually been a local prosecutor in a fascinating and
challenging context, in Dade County in Miami. And we got people together
who had been working with local law enforcement officials to write the
crime bill in '94 and to pass that Brady Bill, and to do the other things
which have been done. And I hope that it's worked.
Underneath all that there was something else. I'd actually spent time
as a governor and as a candidate for President looking at places where
the crime rate had gone down. And I found all over America most people
just took it for granted that the crime rate would always go up and that
all of you who put on a badge and a uniform every day would always be
fighting a losing battle. That's what most people thought back in 1992.
And they respected you, they were grateful. They cried when they saw the
pictures of the children being shot in the newspaper, but they basically
thought it would go on forever.
I thought it was intolerable. I did not think it was inevitable,and I've
seen enough evidence to know that we could drive the crime rate down.
Now, over the last seven years, the things we have done together, people
in their communities all over the country, have given us the lowest overall
crime rate in 25 years, the lowest homicide rate in 30 years, and gun
crime alone is down 35 percent since 1993. In Washington, crime is at
the lowest level since the early 1970s. Gun crime is half what it was
just five years ago. And that's a real tribute to the people in the police
department and to the people in the community that are working with you.
But as the Mayor said earlier, I don't think there is a soul in America
that believes that we're safe enough. And when we remember the Columbine
tragedy, when we experience the tragedy of what happened at the zoo here
a few days ago, when we pick up the newspaper on any given day, we know
that this country can do better.
You know, again, I say, in 1992, a lot of people didn't believe that.
Now -- just look at these numbers -- we now know, therefore, we have no
excuse for not continuing to do things we know will work, because now
we've got the evidence. Yet, 12 young people still die every day from
gun violence, about 40 percent of them from accidents and suicide.
Now, as I look ahead -- I've asked for a lot of things from this Congress.
I've asked them to close the gun show loophole, put child trigger locks
on all the guns, to allow us to trace all the guns andbullets used in
crimes. I've asked them to ban the importation of large-capacity ammunition
clips, which make a mockery out of our assault weapons ban. I've asked
them to give me funds for another 50,000 police officers to put them in
the highest crime neighborhoods. But I've also asked them to give me $15
million, which is not much in the context of the federal budget, to support
Secretary Cuomo's gun buy-back initiative.
Now, I want to talk about this a little bit, and this is not in my notes,
but I think we need to make the sale here. Because I can tell you what
the people in the media are thinking back there. They're saying, gosh,
they're must be a couple hundred million guns in America. What can you
buy in D.C. with a quarter of a million bucks? What's 3,000 -- I'm glad
you got 3,000 guns last year in a few days, but what does that mean?
Well, the first thing I want to say is, all those numbers that float around
are misleading. A lot of the weapons are in the hand of lawenforcement
officials, people in the military, and legitimate, honest hunters and
sportspeople. The number of guns that are floating around on the streets
in our cities is massive, but not a mountain we can't climb.
And I'm doing my best to get the best data I can, and I'm doing some work
on that -- I was hoping I would have it ready by today, but I don't --
because Eleanor and the Mayor, when I called them, after that terrible
tragedy at the zoo, and asked them what I could do to help, they said,
well, why don't you help our gun buy-back program? And that's why we're
all here today, because we want to move now, while people are thinking
about this.
But if you just think about this -- every one of you knows if you can
produce 3,000 guns in Washington, D.C. in a couple of days, and you pay
people about $50 -- they either get a small amount of cash or some sort
of gift certificate and then the guns are destroyed, can you imagine what
would happen if, on a per capital basis, that was done in every community
in this country? And if we did it a couple of times a year for the next
two or three years, how much that would drive down all these statistics?
And that's why I wanted to come here today. When I talked to the Mayor
I told him, even though we haven't passed our bill through Congress yet,
I'd try to go back and get some money. And he told me what he was going
to do. So I told him, and I'll tell you, we're going to give $100,000,
through HUD's program, to go with what the city is putting up. (Applause.)
That will enable you, in this few days, Chief, instead of getting 3,000
guns, to get more than 7,000 guns this year. You can more than double
what you did last year. Every one of the guns taken out of circulation
could mean one less crime, one less tragedy, one more child's life saved.
Our Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms is also committing today to
trace every gun turned in during this buy-back period to see if it has
been stolen or used in a crime --part of a larger partnership with the
D.C. Police Department to trace the source of every gun used in a crime
in this city.
So far, this work we've been doing together has proven extremely effective
in shutting down flows of illegal guns coming in here. In one case, officials
traced literally dozens of guns used by gang members and other criminals
to commit murder and other crimes here in the District, to a single illegal
gun trafficker, who originally bought the guns at a gun show in the Midwest,
where he did not have to undergo a background check. But he is now in
jail. (Applause.)
If our budget passes, law enforcement will be able to trace every gun
and every bullet used in every gun crime. We'll have more local anti-crime
efforts like your Operation Cease-fire here. We'll hire more ATF agents
and inspectors to crack down on illegal gun traffickers and bad-apple
dealers, and more federal, state and local prosecutors to help put violent
gun criminals where they belong, behind bars.
But I will say again, we also need more prevention. Congress should help
us close the gun show loophole, require those safety locks with new handguns,
and ban the importation of large-capacity ammunition clips.
Now, if we do all this, are we going to stop every gun crime? Of course
not. But my answer to those who say, well, if you do all this, it wouldn't
have stopped this incident or that incident or the other incident, if
we had listened to that kind of argument back in 1992, we would still
have the crime rate going up. We didn't put 100,000 police on our streets
because we thought it would solve every crime, we just knew it would prevent
some and solve others quicker. We didn't pass the Brady Bill because we
thought it would stop every person with a criminal or other problem in
the background from getting a handgun, but we knew it would stop some.
It turned out to stop a half million.
How many people are alive today because of that? No one knows, but a lot.
We didn't ban assault weapons because we thought it would make all the
ones that were already out there vanish, but we knew it would make some
difference. And that's the way we need to look at this buy-back program
and every single one of these issues. The last seven years should have
proved to you, and to every person wearing a uniform in every community
in the United States of America, that if we have smart law enforcement,
smart prevention and committed community involvement, we can drive the
crime rate down and save people's lives.
You are in a successful enterprise, and you ought to tell everybody that.
Amidst all the tragedy and heartbreak and all the people here wearing
uniforms who have suffered the loss of their family members and their
partners and others, you should take enormous pride. One of the enormous
success stories in the last seven years -- right up there with the stock
market exploding and the longest economic expansion in history, and 21
million new jobs -- is that you proved you could bring the crime rate
down. And everyone in America is better off because of it. And what that
means is, we have no excuse now not to keep doing what works and to do
more of it.
And I'll tell you what my goal is. My goal is not the lowest crime rate
in 25 years. I want America to be the safest big country in the entire
world. And you can do it if we give you the tools to do it. (Applause.)
So that's what this is about. I want you to go out and prove you can pick
up another 7,000 guns. I want you to help me pass this program in Congress.
And then, I want us to go out and use this buy-back program to get local
government contributions, state government contributions, private sector
contributions.
Look, we can buy millions of guns out there. Just think about it. Fifty
bucks a pop on the average to get millions of guns off the street. I don't
know about you, but based on the evidence, I'd say it's worth it.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
END 4:20 P.M. EDT