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U.S. SENATOR PATRICK
LEAHY
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CONTACT: Office of Senator
Leahy, 202-224-4242 |
VERMONT |
Congress Passes Bill Renewing Leahy Program
Providing Bulletproof Vests To Police Officers
…Program Has Allowed Vt. Depts. To
Buy 1,900 Vests; Bill Now Moves to President’s Desk for Signature
(TUESDAY, October 12) – Working through the holiday
weekend, Congress passed a measure renewing a successful program initiated
by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) to provide up to $50 million in federal
matching grants over the next three years for state and local law
enforcement agencies to purchase bulletproof vests for police officers.
Leahy, the sponsor of the bipartisan amendment, was the coauthor of the
charter – with Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.) -- that established
the program within the Department of Justice (DOJ) six years ago. Leahy is
the ranking Democratic member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which has
jurisdiction over DOJ programs. Since the program’s inception, it has
provided officers in 16,000 jurisdictions around the country with nearly
350,000 new bulletproof vests. In Vermont, 60 municipalities have received
funding to buy 1,900 vests for their officers. The measure, part of a
larger bill reauthorizing various DOJ programs, goes to President Bush’s
desk for his signature. Below is Leahy’s statement on the passage of the
legislation.
Statement of Senator Patrick Leahy,
On House Passage Of
The Leahy Amendment To H.R. 2714
To Extend The Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Program
October 9. 2004
MR. LEAHY: Mr. President, I am pleased that late last
night the House of Representatives passed H.R. 2714 with the Leahy-Hatch
amendment to reauthorize the highly successful Department of Justice
Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Program. I thank the Chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Hatch, for joining me on this
amendment. This bipartisan legislation now goes to the president for his
signature into law.
Our amendment contains the same legislative language
as the Campbell-Leahy-Hatch Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Act of 2003,
S. 764. The Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Act passed the Senate by
unanimous consent on July 15, 2003, and has been awaiting consideration by
the House of Representatives since then.
This measure marks the third time that I have had the
privilege of teaming with my friend and colleague Senator Campbell to work
on the Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Program. We authored the
Bulletproof Vest Grant Partnership Act of 1998, which responded to the
tragic Carl Drega shootout in 1997 on the Vermont-New Hampshire border, in
which two state troopers who did not have bulletproof vests were killed.
The federal officers who responded to the scenes of the shooting spree were
equipped with life-saving body armor, but the state and local law
enforcement officers lacked protective vests because of the cost.
Two years later, we successfully passed the
Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Act of 2000, and now we will go 3-for-3
this time around. Senator Campbell brings to our effort invaluable
experience in this area and during his time in the Senate he has been a
leader in the area of law enforcement. As a former deputy sheriff, he
knows the dangers law enforcement officers face when out on patrol. I am
pleased that we have been joined in this effort by 12 other Senate
cosponsors, including Senator Hatch.
Our bipartisan legislation will save the lives of law
enforcement officers across the country by providing more help to state and
local law enforcement agencies to purchase body armor. Since its inception
in 1999, this highly successful Department of Justice program has provided
law enforcement officers in 16,000 jurisdictions nationwide with nearly
350,000 new bulletproof vests. In Vermont, 60 municipalities have been
fortunate to receive to receive funding for the purchase of 1,905 vests.
The Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Act of 2003
will further the success of the Bulletproof Vest Partnership Grant Program
by re-authorizing the program through fiscal year 2007. Our legislation
would continue the Federal-State partnership by authorizing up to $50
million per year for matching grants to state and local law enforcement
agencies and Indian tribes at the Department of Justice to buy body armor.
We know that body armor saves lives, but the cost has
put these vests out of the reach of many of the officers who need them.
This program makes it more affordable for police departments of all sizes.
Few things mean more to me than when I meet Vermont police officers and
they tell me that the protective vests they wear were made possible because
of this program. This is the least we should do for the officers on the
front lines who put themselves in danger for us every day. I want to make
sure that every police officer who needs a bulletproof vest gets one.
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