Leahy
Hails House Passage Of DNA Bill,
Calls On President Bush And Attorney General Ashcroft
To ‘Get Out Of The Way’ Of Bipartisan Package
That Has Overwhelming Bipartisan House And Senate Support
(WEDNESDAY, Oct. 6) -- The U.S. House of
Representatives Wednesday again overwhelmingly passed bipartisan
legislation – The Justice For All Act -- that would help state and local
governments use DNA evidence in convicting the guilty and exonerating the
innocent. Today’s House margin -- 393 to 14 -- was even larger than the
vote a year ago, when the House passed a similar version of the bill in a
vote of 357 to 67.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), chief Democratic
sponsor of the bill in the Senate, commended the House’s action and the
leadership of House Judiciary Chairman Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wisc.) and
Reps. William Delahunt (D-Mass.) and Ray LaHood (R-Ill.) in winning the
bill’s passage. “How often do you see bills pass by margins like that?” he
asked, noting that the bill also would be expected to easily pass the
Senate if it reaches the floor for a vote. But Leahy said the bill’s
Senate passage in the waning days of the congressional session continues to
be threatened by holds by Republican Senators Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), Jeff
Sessions (R-Ala.), and John Cornyn (R-Texas), buttressed by opposition from
President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft.
The Senate Judiciary Committee on Sept. 21
approved the bill – sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah)
and Leahy, after months of its being slowed by resistance by three
Republican members of the panel.
“If the White House kills this bill it will
be a travesty,” said Leahy, ranking member of the Judiciary Committee and
author of the Innocence Protection Act, which is included as Title 3 of the
DNA package. “Putting this off another year may seem fine to the President
or the Attorney General, but another year is a long time if you’re a crime
victim or if you’re wrongly accused, waiting on death row for the chance to
prove your innocence. Another year will pile more untested rape kits to
the thousands already stacking up in hundreds of crime labs across the
country.
“This bill is a rare example of bipartisan
cooperation for a good cause, and instead of helping, the White House has
only hindered,” Leahy said. “They have been unwilling to lead. They have
been unwilling to follow. Now, when all it would take is for them to get
out of the way, they’re even unwilling to stand aside. The time has come
for the President to understand what is happening here, and to become part
of the solution instead of part of the problem.”
“DNA is the miracle forensic tool of our
lifetimes,” Leahy continued. “It has the power to convict the guilty and
to exonerate the innocent. And as DNA testing has become more and more
available, it also has opened a window on the flaws of the death penalty
process. But our crime labs and courts haven’t caught up with the DNA
revolution. Across the country, DNA backlogs are massive and growing.
Crime labs haven’t been able to keep pace with advances in technology. The
legal system hasn’t fully recognized DNA’s value.
“This is a bill to put this powerful tool
into greater use in our police departments and our courtrooms. It also
takes a modest step toward addressing one of the most frequent causes of
wrongful convictions in capital cases – the lack of adequate legal
counsel.
“These reforms, to put it simply, will mean
better, faster, fairer criminal justice, and President Bush and Attorney
General Ashcroft deserve to be held accountable if they prevent these
reforms from happening.”
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