
Office Of The Mayor
Thomas M. McMahon
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
For More Information:
Ginny Hand , 610-655-6234
Members Of Mayors Against Illegal
Guns Stand With Police Chiefs
And Members Of Congress To Urge Repeal Of TIAHRT Amendment
House Appropriations Committee Set to Consider Tiahrt
Amendment This Week
Over 225 Mayors, 34 National, State, and Regional Law
Enforcement Organizations, 212 Law Enforcement Executives
and 28 Editorial Boards Are Opposed to the Tiahrt Amendment
The bi-partisan coalition of Mayors Against Illegal
Guns today stood on Capitol Hill with law enforcement
officials and members of Congress to urge the repeal of
the Tiahrt Amendment. The event comes on the eve of a
crucial vote in the House Appropriations Committee. The
mayors oppose the Tiahrt Amendment, named after Kansas
Representative Todd Tiahrt who has sponsored it, because
of how it restricts the access of cities and law enforcement
to gun trace data, an essential crime fighting tool. The
removal of the Tiahrt Amendment is the top legislative
priority of the over 225-member Mayors Against Illegal
Guns coalition, co-chaired by New York Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg and Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino, who led today’s
event.
“The Tiahrt Amendment is the most anti-cop, soft-on-crime
law Congress has passed in years,” said Mayor Bloomberg.
“It prevents our police officers from tracking the
illegal gun trade – and locking up those who engage
in it. Imagine if Congress put the same constraints on
police when investigating illegal drug sales – no
one would stand for it. Later this week, the House Appropriations
Committee is scheduled to vote on a bill that currently
includes the Tiahrt Amendment. If the bill is passed,
it would be an insult to thousands of police officers
who face the threat of illegal guns.”
“Mayors from across the country, who are on the
front lines of public safety, are saying enough is enough,”
said Mayor Menino. “It is time Washington stopped
ignoring the violence caused by illegal guns every day.
We need to stop protecting rogue gun dealers and start
protecting our police by removing the Tiahrt Amendment
and the restrictions it imposes on law enforcement.”
The Mayors’ campaign to remove the Tiahrt Amendment
enjoys wide support from law enforcement. Thirty-four
national, state and regional law enforcement organizations
have come out against the Tiahrt Amendment – including
the National Sheriffs’ Association, the International
Association of Chiefs of Police, the Illinois Fraternal
Order of Police and the Texas Association of Chiefs of
Police. Further, 28 newspaper editorial boards are on
the record opposing the Tiahrt Amendment, including the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Cincinnati Enquirer,
the Indianapolis Star, the Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune
and the Wichita Eagle – the hometown paper of Representative
Tiahrt. Also, 212 law enforcement executives have come
out against the Tiahrt Amendment on behalf of their jurisdictions.
“The police in Chicago and every other city are
working day and night to keep illegal guns out of the
hands of criminals, and they need help – not hindrance
– from their senators and representatives in Washington,
D.C.,” said Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. “I
can’t believe that anyone who’s in favor of
law and order would want to tie the hands of our police
when it comes to tracing the guns used in crimes. Instead
of protecting the gun lobby, Congress should be protecting
the people of this nation from the gun violence that claims
the lives of 30,000 of their constituents each year.”
“This law has made it more difficult for police
to protect us from harm,” said San Francisco Mayor
Gavin Newsom. “The only people the Tiahrt Amendment
protects is rogue gun dealers.”
“Given the alarming increase in violent crime and
drastic cuts in federal assistance for vital local law
enforcement programs, it is critical now more than ever
that sheriffs have access to more information to combat
crime not less,” said Ann Yom, Legislative Director
for the National Sheriffs’ Association. “We
believe that the Tiahrt amendment debilitates law enforcement’s
ability to effectively share information with other agencies
and object to its
restrictions relating to gun trace data.”
“This is the right thing to do if we want to give
our law enforcement officers the best available tools
to fight illegal gun trafficking and keep our citizens
and communities safe from violent crime,” said Representative
Peter King (R-NY).
“The Tiahrt Amendment handcuffs our cops not criminals,”
said Representative C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger. “As
a former prosecutor, I know how important it is to give
our law enforcement officials the tools they need to keep
our families and our communities safe.”
“Not even the most avid gun owners should be opposed
to tracing the sources of illegal guns. This is about
cracking down on criminals, and no one else,” said
Senator Charles E. Schumer.
“We all want to fight crime and get illegal guns
off the streets, but in order to do that, we must give
law enforcement the information and resources they need
to do their jobs effectively,” said Senator Hillary
Clinton. “For years, the Tiahrt amendment has made
it more difficult and more dangerous for police officers
to combat illegal gun trafficking. I want to commend Mayor
Michael Bloomberg and the other Mayors Against Illegal
Guns for their leadership on this issue. It is well past
time for Congress to follow their courageous lead.”
“At a time when bloodshed on our streets is on
the rise, making sure that our law enforcement officers
have all the tools they need to fight crime should be
our top priority,” said Senator Barack Obama. “But
instead of providing those tools, the Tiahrt Amendment
ties the hands of police in their effort to halt illegal
gun trafficking and sales. I am proud to join the Mayors
Against Illegal Guns in their fight against this dangerous
legislation. Our communities and the brave men and women
who risk their lives everyday to protect us deserve more
from Congress.”
The Tiahrt Amendment, a version of which has been inserted
into the Department of Justice appropriations bill each
year since Fiscal Year 2003, places broad restrictions
on the use of gun trace data, which gives investigators
information on where a gun was purchased and who it was
sold to. The Tiahrt Amendment also prevents local governments
and police from accessing federal gun trace data from
areas outside their immediate geographic jurisdiction;
prevents cities from using trace data in state and local
civil enforcement actions, including gun license revocations;
and prevents the ATF from publishing reports that use
gun trace data to analyze nationwide gun trafficking patterns.
Mayors Bloomberg and Menino were joined by Mayors Against
Illegal Guns members Mayor Douglas Palmer of Trenton,
New Jersey, also the President of the United States Conference
of Mayors; Mayor Sheila Dixon of Baltimore, Maryland;
Mayor Herb W. Bergson of Duluth, Minnesota; Mayor Tom
McMahon of Reading, Pennsylvania; Mayor Adrian Fenty of
Washington, D.C.; Mayor William B. Euille of Alexandria,
Virginia; Mayor Philip Amicone of Yonkers, New York; Mayor
Ernest D. Davis of Mt. Vernon, New York; Mayor Ray Nagin
of New Orleans, Louisiana; and Mayor Donald Cresitello
of Morristown, New Jersey.
Members of Congress at the event included: Senator Frank
R. Lautenberg (D-NJ), Representative Chaka Fattah (D-PA),
Representative Patrick J. Kennedy (D-RI), Representative
Carolyn B. Maloney (D-NY), Representative Carolyn McCarthy
(D-NY) and Representative C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-MD).
Police officials at the event were New York City Police
Department Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly; Philadelphia
Police Commissioner Sylvester Johnson; Louisville Police
Chief Robert C. White; Chaska, Minnesota Police Chief
Scott Knight; Baltimore Police Chief Leonard Hamm; Yonkers,
New York Police Commissioner Edmund Hartnett; New Carrollton,
Maryland Police Chief David G. Rice and Alexandria, Virginia
Police Chief David Baker. Also at the event were Ray Schoenke,
President of the American Hunters and Shooters Association;
Ann Yom, Legislative Director, National Sheriffs’
Association; Ronald Hampton, Executive Director, National
Black Police Association and Chuck Wexler, Executive Director
of the Police Executive Research Forum.
Contact: New York City Mayor’s Press
Office (212) 788-2958
Boston Mayor’s Press Office (617) 635-4461
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