Senate Panel Holds Hearing On
Rising Violent Crime
In Aftermath Of Hurricane Katrina
WASHINGTON (Wednesday, June 20) – The
Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing, “Rising Violent Crime In The
Aftermath Of Hurricane Katrina” on Wednesday focusing on the growing
crisis of violent crime in the city of New Orleans and the Gulf region
following Hurricane Katrina.
“Violent crime in New Orleans has reached
near-epidemic proportions and emerged as the most serious threat to its
recovery since the storm. In the first three months of this year,
violent crime is up more than 100 percent compared to the same time a
year ago,” said Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.). “New
Orleans has lost nearly half its population since the storm, but the
number of murders, armed robberies, and assaults are on track to match
totals from before Katrina. In just the last 10 days, there have been 8
more murders, bringing the total to more than 90 so far this year.”
Senator Mary Landrieu, (D-La.), who
announced a comprehensive plan earlier this year to combat violent crime
in the region, testified before the Committee on Wednesday, along with
Senator David Vitter, (R-La.), and various law enforcement officials
from the region.
Statement Of Sen.
Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee
Hearing On “Rising Violent Crime In The Aftermath Of Hurricane Katrina”
June 20, 2007


When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans
and the Gulf Coast nearly two years ago, no one knew the extent of the
devastation, or how long it would take to recover from this tragedy. As
we all know now, the federal government's emergency response was
inadequate, uncoordinated, and left far too many to suffer far too long
after the storm. Today, the Committee examines the latest challenge to
recovery from Katrina -- the growing crisis of violent crime in the City
of New Orleans.
Violent crime in New Orleans has reached
near-epidemic proportions and emerged as the most serious threat to its
recovery since the storm. In the first three months of this year,
violent crime is up more than 100 percent compared to the same time a
year ago. New Orleans has lost nearly half its population since the
storm, but the number of murders, armed robberies, and assaults are on
track to match totals from before Katrina. In just the last 10 days,
there have been 8 more murders, bringing the total to more than 90 so
far this year.
The murder rate per capita is now the
highest in America, more than 20 percent higher than in the any other
major city. At its current rate, New Orleans has 12 times as many
homicides as New York City, 3 times as many as Philadelphia, and twice
as many as Washington, D.C. The crisis is so severe that National
Guardsman and state police have been brought in to help patrol the city
streets.
The criminal justice system was battered
by Katrina and is now strained to the breaking point. The New Orleans
police department has lost more than 500 active officers since the storm
-- that's roughly 30 percent of the force. The police department
continues to lose more than 15 officers a month to retirement,
resignation, and the inability to hire and train new recruits. The
courts, prosecutors, and police often work out of temporary facilities,
as the Police Commissioner and the District Attorney's offices still
rely on FEMA trailers for office space. Only four of 11 jail facilities
in the city have been reopened, and, in some cases, temporary FEMA
facilities are even used to house inmates. Just this year, the city
reopened its crime lab in a rented facility, but it still has a current
backlog of more than 1,600 cases, and only one fingerprint examiner and
one firearms examiner for the entire city.
In its weakened condition, the criminal
justice system has struggled to keep order and bring justice to
offenders. Last year, there were more than 160 murders in the city, and
so far, only one murder case has led to a conviction -- just one. The
police have only brought a quarter of those cases to the district
attorney to be charged, and the office has accepted only half of those
for prosecution. In the remaining 20 odd cases, securing convictions
has become increasingly difficult with the lack of forensic
capabilities, delays in court proceedings, and the reluctance of
witnesses to come forward where the system cannot protect them from
retaliation. And the problem is not unique to murder cases. In more
than 3,000 criminal cases last year, the charges had to be dismissed and
suspects released, at least temporarily, where in many cases indictments
could not be brought within 60 days, as required by Louisiana law. The
overall conviction rate is among the lowest in the country.
There can be no question that restoring
order and security to the streets of New Orleans must be among our
highest priorities in the rebuilding effort for Louisiana and the Gulf
region. Unfortunately, the response of this Administration to this
crisis has often been too little, too late. And while the Administration
has written a blank check for the war in Iraq, it cannot seem to find
the necessary support for those who need it in New Orleans and the Gulf
coast here at home.
Federal funds for rebuilding can be
structured in ways that make it impossible for the cities and towns in
the region to get the help they need. Too often, federal agencies
require prepayment or partial payment by local communities, which is
impossible where the tax base has been decimated, and there are no funds
to even start work on projects. In fact, much of the assistance this
Congress has authorized for those in need after Katrina remains unused,
and far too many are still waiting for the federal help we have
promised. This is also true for those working to restore the criminal
justice system in New Orleans.
Two weeks ago, Attorney General Gonzales
announced a new violent crime program in response to the second year of
FBI statistics showing violent crime is increasing nationally.
Unfortunately, this program included no money at all for new state or
local police officers on our streets. And regrettably, Attorney General
Gonzales failed to even mention the violent crime problem in New
Orleans, which is clearly among the most serious in the Nation.
Over the last six years, the
Administration has abandoned any commitment to the COPS program, which
in the 1990s was the model for reducing violent crime to historical lows
in this country. In fact, the COPS program is widely credited with
reducing the murder rate in New Orleans by 30 percent -- its lowest rate
ever - from 1995 to 1999. But as this Administration defunded the
program, effectively taking more and more cops off the street, the
murder rate in New Orleans predictably rose to higher and higher levels
until Hurricane Katrina.
So far, the largest federal response to
rising violent crime in New Orleans has come at the insistence of
Congress, and in particular it has come from the leadership of Senator
Mary Landrieu, one of the witnesses the Committee will hear from this
morning. We welcome Senator Landrieu and her colleague from Louisiana,
Senator Vitter. In January of this year, Senator Landrieu announced a
10-point plan to combat violent crime in the region, and she laid out a
roadmap to restore the criminal justice system in New Orleans and
Louisiana by giving help directly to those who need it most. She called
for measures that I have long supported, such as an emergency COPS
grants to restore the police officer ranks and immediate block grant
funding to restore drug rehabilitation services. She called for the
Administration to speed up its reconstruction projects for criminal
justice facilities. And she called for the Department of Justice to
increase the number of federal agents assigned to New Orleans.
Following her lead, in the past few
months, the Department of Justice announced plans to send 20 more
federal agents to New Orleans and the region, and to hire six more
federal prosecutors. And we learned just last week -- after this
hearing was announced -- the Justice Department released $5 million in
new Byrne grant funding for law enforcement in Louisiana, some of which
can be used for New Orleans. This new support is welcome and needed,
but it is a small step in longer journey to restore the police
department to a robust force that is needed to patrol the city's
streets, and help local prosecutors and investigators raise the
historically low conviction rates. We need to do more, and we can do
more.
There is a clear roadmap for success in
battling violent crime in cities, such as New Orleans, and Congress must
continue to show the Administration the way forward on this issue. With
Senator Landrieu’s leadership, Congress has already provided $50 million
for law enforcement reconstruction in Louisiana, which was part of the
supplemental appropriations bill signed into law just this month. The
Administration can now follow the path proven to reduce violent crime in
the past, by supporting full re-authorization of the COPS program and
using these newly committed funding to hire and train new police
officers in New Orleans, rebuild the city's courts and jails, and make
their criminal justice system even better than it was before the storm.
I hope today’s hearing will be a step
toward recovery for the Gulf region, and send a signal to this
Administration that we can fight violent crime in this country by
working cooperatively with our state and local law enforcement
partners. Only then can we bring back the vitality and pride of one of
our Nation's greatest treasures, the City of New Orleans and the Gulf
coast region, and make it a secure and prosperous home again for all its
citizens.
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