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U.S. SENATOR PATRICK
LEAHY
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CONTACT: Office of Senator
Leahy, 202-224-4242 |
VERMONT |
Statement
of Senator Patrick Leahy,
Ranking Democratic Member, Senate Judiciary Committee
ADVANCING
JUSTICE THROUGH DNA TECHNOLOGY ACT (S.1700)
September 9,
2004
I am pleased that we are finally
turning to S.1700, the Chairman’s DNA bill. I discussed the bill at some
length before the recess, and I want to start working through any
amendments that may be offered, so I will keep my remarks today brief.
This bill was introduced last October. The
House passed it with overwhelming support in November. It has been on this
Committee’s agenda since early June, bottled up by nominations and the
Chairman’s flag amendment, among other things. We have more than enough
votes to pass it in the Senate; in fact, I believe that it would pass the
Senate today with the same sort of overwhelming support that it had in the
House.
I know the Administration opposes this bill,
and I am frankly puzzled by this. The bill contains many provisions that
President Bush has claimed he supports, and we worked hard to make the
overall package “fair and balanced,” as one news organization would say.
My staff reached out to the Justice Department several times during the
recess, hoping to start a constructive dialogue about the bill; those calls
and e-mails were finally returned only yesterday.
We have wasted a lot of time in reporting this
bill out of Committee. Every day that the bill is stalled is another day
that rape kits go untested for lack of funds; another day that inmates with
colorable claims of innocence are denied access to the DNA evidence that
could set them free and put the real criminals behind bars.
I want to thank Kirk Bloodsworth and Debbie
Smith for being here today, and for their deep commitment to this
legislation. Kirk was a young man, just out of the Marines, when he was
arrested, convicted, and sentenced to death for a heinous crime that he did
not commit. DNA evidence ultimately freed him and identified the real
killer. Debbie was the victim of a violent crime in her home. Her
attacker was eventually caught, again because of the power of DNA
evidence.
Both Kirk and Debbie have worked tirelessly to
promote the use of DNA technology, both to solve crimes and to exonerate
the innocent. Two of our bill’s grant programs for the States are named in
their honor, and I am honored that they are here today.
DNA typing is the miracle forensic tool of our
time. It has the power beyond any other to convict the guilty and
exonerate the innocent. And this is a bill to unleash the power of this
tool more fully in every American community.
There already have been needless delays set in
the path of this bill, month upon month and year upon year. What excuse
can we possibly give to the citizens we represent, for delaying this bill
even one more day? Listen to the crime victims, who are appealing not on
their own behalf, but so that others will not suffer as they have.
Delaying this bill for yet another year may not seem like a long time to
some on Capitol Hill. But ask the innocent person sitting on death row
what even another day of waiting is like. Ask Kirk Bloodsworth that
question. Ask the family of a murder victim who is denied closure about
the death of their loved one. Or ask the victims who live day to day
knowing the rapists who assaulted them are still out on the streets, while
rape kits continue to stack up, untested, in police labs, for lack of lab
equipment, technicians and funding.
We owe it to Kirk and Debbie, and other
victims of injustice and violent crime, to pass this bill this year.
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