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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Speech File Draft Files Subseries: Chron File, 1989-1993 OA/ID Number: 13585 Folder ID Number: 13585-002 Folder Title: Law Enforcement Memorial Dedication 10/15/91 [OA 6038] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 26 17 3 7 LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION \ JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 \ 2:45 P.M. THANK YOU, SEN. D'AMATO AND CRAIG FLOYD. I WANT TO RECOGNIZE SEN. PELL AND SEN. THURMOND AND THE OTHER MEMBERS OF CONGRESS HERE TODAY. I ALSO WANT TO SALUTE ACTING ATTORNEY GENERAL BILL BARR AND FORMER ATTORNEY GENERAL ED MEESE. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. 11 THIS NATION HAS ERECTED MANY MONUMENTS TO GENERALS AND ADMIRALS, TO PRIVATES AND SEAMEN, WHO DEFENDED OUR NATION'S FREEDOM AGAINST TYRANNY AND OPPRESSION. 199 - 2 - WE GATHER HERE TODAY TO DEDICATE THIS MEMORIAL TO UNIFORMED HEROES OF ANOTHER SORT: THOSE WHO ENFORCE THE LAW AND KEEP US SECURE HERE AT HOME. FOR TOO LONG, AMERICA'S LAWMEN AND WOMEN HAVE BEEN THE FORGOTTEN HEROES -- FORGOTTEN UNTIL THERE'S TROUBLE, UNTIL WE'RE STRANDED ON THE ROAD, OR FRANTICALLY DIALING NINE-ONE-ONE AT HOME. - 3 - TODAY WE REMEMBER THESE HEROES AND HEROINES. "Now THE REAL HEALING CAN START," SAYS VIVIAN ENEY [EE-NEE], WHO so MANY OF YOU KNOW. "WHEN THE GRAVE DOESN'T LOOK NEW ANYMORE, WHEN THE GRASS HAS GROWN OVER IT," SHE SAYS, "THIS WILL BE THE PLACE TO COME, To SEE THE NAMES -- TO TOUCH THE NAMES." VISITORS WILL COME HERE. SOME WILL BE CHILDREN, PERHAPS LOOKING FOR A FATHER OR MOTHER THEY NEVER REALLY KNEW. - 4 - WHO WERE THESE PEOPLE? THEY WILL ASK. \ THEY WERE POLICEMEN AND POLICEWOMEN, MARSHALS AND SHERIFFS, STATE TROOPERS AND SPECIAL AGENTS. THEY GAVE THEIR LIVES IN THE LINE OF DUTY. THEY WERE YOUNG AND OLD, RANGING FROM 19 To 81. THEY HAD NAMES AS DIVERSE AS AMERICA ITSELF: DONALD KOWALSKI, PATRICK O'MALLEY, FREDDIE LEE JACKSON, TOMMY DELAROSA, JOSÉ GONZALES, DONNA MILLER. THEY HAD WIVES AND HUSBANDS, MOTHERS AND FATHERS, AND so MANY YOUNG CHILDREN. - 5 - MOST OF ALL THEY HAD LOVE -- LOVE FOR THEIR PROFESSION; LOVE FOR THEIR COMMUNITIES; LOVE FOR THEIR FAMILIES; LOVE THAT CAN STILL BE FELT 11 IN THIS SPECIAL PLACE 11 RIGHT HERE TODAY. 11 THEY DEVOTED THEMSELVES TO THE TIMELESS VALUES THAT SOCIETY SHARES. THEY VALUED THE LAW. THEY VALUED PEACE -- THE PEACE OF A CIVILIZED COMMUNITY THAT PROTECTS CHILDREN AT PLAY, FAMILIES AT HOME, AND STOREKEEPERS AT WORK. - 6 - THEY VALUED HUMAN LIFE -- so MUCH THAT THEY WERE PREPARED TO GIVE THEIR LIVES TO PROTECT IT. THEY GAVE MUCH, AND ASKED LITTLE. THEY DESERVE OUR REMEMBRANCE. HERE IN AMERICA'S CAPITAL, FOR AS LONG AS THESE WALLS STAND, THEY WILL BE REMEMBERED. NOT FOR THE WAY THEY DIED, BUT FOR HOW THEY LIVED. THEY DIDN'T ASK FOR HONORS, THOUGH HONOR THEM WE WILL. WE HONOR THEM WITH THESE WALLS -- WITH THESE TREES AND GRASS AND QUIET POOL OF WATER. - 7 - BUT WE CAN HONOR THEM IN A MORE PROFOUND WAY -- A MORE LASTING WAY -- BY STRENGTHENING THE LAWS THEY SWORE TO UPHOLD. SINCE 1989, ON A RAINY SPRING DAY I KNOW MANY OF YOU REMEMBER, I HAVE TRIED To PERSUADE CONGRESS THAT OUR POLICE NEED HELP. Too MANY TIMES, IN TOO MANY CASES, TOO MANY CRIMINALS GO FREE BECAUSE THE SCALES OF JUSTICE ARE UNFAIRLY TIPPED AGAINST DEDICATED LAWMEN AND WOMEN LIKE YOU. WITH YOUR HELP, THAT WILL CHANGE. - 8 - WE NEED A CRIME BILL THAT WILL STOP THE ENDLESS, FRIVOLOUS HABEUS CORPUS APPEALS THAT WASTE TIME PROSECUTORS COULD BE SPENDING ON NEW CASES. WE NEED A CRIME BILL THAT SAYS TO POLICE, IF YOU ACT IN GOOD FAITH, EVIDENCE WILL NOT BE SUPPRESSED IN COURT BASED ON NEEDLESS TECHNICALITIES. WE NEED A CRIME BILL WITH TOUGH PENALTIES -- SUCH AS A 10-YEAR MINIMUM SENTENCE TO ANYONE USING A SEMI-AUTOMATIC WEAPON IN A VIOLENT OR DRUG-RELATED CRIME -- WITH NO PLEA BARGAINS AND NO PAROLE. - 9 - AND WE NEED A CRIME BILL THAT WARNS WOULD-BE KILLERS OUT THERE: BE PREPARED TO PAY WITH YOUR OWN LIFE. I ASKED CONGRESS TO PASS THESE PROPOSALS MORE THAN TWO YEARS AGO. I'VE GOTTEN ONLY A PIECEMEAL RESPONSE. THIS WEEK, THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES IS VOTING ON A CRIME BILL. BUT FOR THAT BILL TO BE WORTH ANYTHING, IT MUST CONTAIN THE CRUCIAL ELEMENTS I'VE CITED -- ELEMENTS THE HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE REFUSED TO INCLUDE IN THE BILL. - 10 - CONGRESS IS ONLY A FEW BLOCKS AWAY. THEY'VE HEARD FROM ME; THEY NEED TO HEAR FROM YOU. THERE'S A WAR GOING ON OUT THERE -- A WAR BETWEEN CRIMINALS AND A GOOD SOCIETY. WE KNOW THAT WAR WILL NOT END, AS LONG AS EVIL DWELLS IN MEN'S SOULS. BUT WE CAN WORK TO LOCK UP THOSE WHO ARE TOO VIOLENT To LIVE IN CIVILIZED SOCIETY. WE CAN SUPPORT THE LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS WHO ARE ON THE FRONT LINES DAY AFTER DAY. - 11 - AND WE CAN PUT NEW LAWS ON THE BOOKS TO KEEP NEW NAMES OFF THESE WALLS. PRESIDENT COOLIDGE TOLD US, "THE NATION WHICH FORGETS ITS DEFENDERS WILL ITSELF BE FORGOTTEN." \ WE WILL NOT FORGET. AMERICA \ WILL NOT FORGET. WE WILL NOT FORGET THOSE WHO HAVE DIED. AND WE WILL NOT FORGET THOSE WHO PROTECT AND SERVE EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR. 111 IN THE OVAL OFFICE, MANY IMPORTANT PAPERS AND DOCUMENTS CROSS MY DESK EACH DAY. - 12 - MOST OF THEM STAY THERE BUT A DAY OR TWO. BUT INSIDE THE DRAWER, ONE THING STAYS: A NEW YORK CITY PATROLMAN'S BADGE -- NUMBER 14072. IT BELONGED TO EDDIE BYRNE, A ROOKIE COP WHO WAS GUARDING A WITNESS WHEN HE WAS GUNNED DOWN ON THE ORDERS OF A DRUG DEALER IN JAIL. EDDIE'S FATHER ASKED ME TO KEEP THAT BADGE AS A "REMINDER OF ALL THE BRAVE POLICE OFFICERS WHO PUT THEIR LIVES ON THE LINE FOR US EVERY SINGLE DAY." 11 WELL, I'VE KEPT IT. - 13 - I HAVE IT WITH ME HERE TODAY, AND I WILL ALWAYS KEEP IT. 11 WHEN SOCIETY ASKS SOMEONE TO PUT ON A BADGE AND PLACE IT OVER THEIR HEART, WE MAKE A SACRED COVENANT -- A COVENANT THAT SAYS: "WE AS A SOCIETY STAND BEHIND THOSE WHO ENFORCE THE LAW AGAINST THOSE WHO BREAK THE LAW." THAT'S WHAT EDDIE BYRNE'S BADGE MEANS TO ME. - 14 - THIS MEMORIAL GIVES MEANING TO THAT COVENANT, GIVES MEANING TO THESE LIVES, GIVES MEANING To THE LAW AND WHAT IT STANDS FOR. No NUMBER OF WORDS OR WREATHS, NO AMOUNT OF MUSIC OR MEMORIALIZING, WILL DO JUSTICE HERE TODAY, BUT WE HAVE BEGUN THE REMEMBRANCE, AND BEGUN THE HEALING. THANK YOU FOR ALLOWING ME To SHARE THIS MOMENT WITH YOU. AND MAY GOD BLESS AMERICA'S LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS. # # # THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON October 10, 1991 MEMORANDUM FOR TONY SNOW FROM: ROGER B. PORTER RBP SUBJECT: Presidential Remarks: Law Enforcement Memorial Dedication We have reviewed the attached remarks and have noted one suggested change on page three of the draft. Please let us know if you have any questions or if we may help in any other way. CC: Phillip D. Brady Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 SUBJECT: ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT > HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY > REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has Refused to include iN tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." " We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION SUBJECT: JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH N/C MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: - MAST PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 01 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and enlisted nen (BT) no Nation's (BT) yes admirals, privates and seamen, who defended our/freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. They will ^ Who ask were (BT) these people? they will ask. aske) \ The They answer were is that 40 no policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against We need a crime bill that says to police, if you act in good faith, evidence will not be suppressed in Count based on needless 3 technicalities. (DOJ) dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous habeas Corples appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new (DOJ) cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and CSP (DOS) no parole And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life.) I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week, the a (Porter) House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for The Dill sent out by committee is more a criminal prolection act than anticrimenture (D05) that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only @ few blocks refused to includein (Porter) or rejected (mcclure) away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. between criminals of a There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We good know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's society (D2) souls. CBD30 But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can will they put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. an addams? new President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. my crime bill provides for the death penalty for the killing of no any 'aw enforcement officer or cny state or Bear officer working w/fed. off. (DOT) 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. In the Oval- Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. 276872ss 91 OCT 10 P3: 43 WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 SUBJECT: ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT > HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: See comments PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 31 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the ? may not happer House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for this week that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial Hale 43121 elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION SUBJECT: JUDICIARY SQUARE TUES. 10/15/91 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: good work DD PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 31 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. \\ They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week, ] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. between cummits There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime We good know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's said; souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. 111 In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day. " Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # meclure'sments CT 10 AID: 11 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 01 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place \\ right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has rejected from the bill Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM JI OCT 10 All:31 DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 SUBJECT: ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: Good- 9 few thoughts. PHILLIP D. BRADY B5 for SR Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 01 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] Nation's This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to enlistelmen privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really The knew. ans is that Thillash, Who were these people? They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week, ] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can will the put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. add new President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its names? defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." \\ Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. \\ When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM JI OCT 10 A9: 41 DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 SUBJECT: ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: Comments from Cabinet Affairs are attached. Thanks, E Elizabeth Luttig PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 91 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous "colpush habeas appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new (Justice) cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and we Need a Give bill that says to police, if you act in good faith evidence will Not be suppressed in no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers court bas cop (Justice) on Needle out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. technicalities My crime bill provides for the death penalty for the killing of any federal How inforcement I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years Justice) ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week, the officer or see insert House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. A But for any State or local that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial officer workin with Federal elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has officers. tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks (Jusice) away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. The bill sent out by Committee is Nore a ciminal protection act than an anticrine measure. (Justice) 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # THE WHITE HOUSE 91 OCT 10 A8:20 WASHINGTON October 9, 1991 MEMORANDUM FOR ROBERT ANTHONY SNOW DEPUTY ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR COMMUNICATIONS AND DIRECTOR OF SPEECHWRITING FROM: CHESTER PAUL BEACH JR. Chester Paul Beach, ): ASSOCIATE COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Presidential Remarks: Law Enforcement Memorial Dedication Judiciary Square Counsel's Office has no legal objection to the Presidential remarks referenced above. Thank you for the opportunity to review this matter. Attachment CC: Phillip D. Brady Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION SUBJECT: JUDICIARY SQUARE - TUES. 10/15/91 ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 01 OCT 8 P6: 16 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt \\ in this special place right here today. 11 They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." " Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # as al H Document No. 276872ss WHITE HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM P6: 28 DATE: 10/8/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: THURS. 10/10/91 NOON PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUES. 10/15/91 SUBJECT: ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMIT MCBRIDE CARD SNOW DEMAREST FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: Please forward your comments directly to Tony Snow, Rm. 122, x2930, no later than NOON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, with a copy to this office. Thank you. RESPONSE: Shy PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 Simon Oct. 8, 1991 Draft 3 POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing 911 at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney, who SO many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly loaded against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will the stop endless, frivolous appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi-automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on my crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee has tried to strip from the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war against crime. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." We will not forget. America will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. 4 And we will not forget those who protect and serve year in and year out. In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # THE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN THE WHITE HOUSE st WASHINGTON 91 OCT 10 P2: 36 October 10, 1991 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT THROUGH: DAVID DEMAREST TONY SNOW TS Veryice CA FROM: ROBERT SIMONS SUBJECT: NATIONAL LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION 10-" I. SUMMARY On Tuesday, October 15, at 2:00 p.m., you will dedicate the National Law Enforcement Memorial at Judiciary Square. An audience of 9,000 police officers and survivors is expected. II. DISCUSSION The memorial contains the names of all 12,500 officers killed in the line of duty since the U.S. was founded. You broke ground at the site on October 30, 1989. A quotation from that speech is now on the memorial. The remarks (8 minutes, on cards) pay tribute to these fallen officers and calls on Congress to pass the crime bill. Simon Oct. 10, 1991 Draft 4 / POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our nation's freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing nine-one-one at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney [EE-nee], who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. 11 They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly tipped against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crimettill that will stop the endless, frivolous habeus corpus appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi- automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. We need a crime bill that says to police, if you act in good faith, evidence will not be suppressed in court based on needless technicalities. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on a crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee refused to include in the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war between criminals and a good society. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. 4 President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." \ We will not forget. America \ will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. And we will not forget those who protect and serve every day of the year. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." 11 Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. 11 When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against those who break the law." That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. 5 Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # # Document No. WITTE P5:20 HOUSE STAFFING MEMORANDUM DATE: 10/10/91 ACTION/CONCURRENCE/COMMENT DUE BY: --- SUBJECT: PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: NAT'L LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION ACTION FYI ACTION FYI VICE PRESIDENT HORNER SUNUNU MCCLURE > SCOWCROFT PETERSMEYER DARMAN PORTER BRADY ROGICH BROMLEY SMITH CARD MCBRIDE DEMAREST SNOW FITZWATER GRAY HOLIDAY REMARKS: The attached has been forwarded to the President. RESPONSE: PHILLIP D. BRADY Assistant to the President and Staff Secretary Ext. 2702 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON 01 OCT 10 P2: 36 October 10, 1991 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT THROUGH: DAVID DEMAREST TONY SNOW TS FROM: ROBERT SIMON SUBJECT: NATIONAL LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION I. SUMMARY On Tuesday, October 15, at 2:00 p.m., you will dedicate the National Law Enforcement Memorial at Judiciary Square. An audience of 9,000 police officers and survivors is expected. II. DISCUSSION The memorial contains the names of all 12,500 officers killed in the line of duty since the U.S. was founded. You broke ground at the site on October 30, 1989. A quotation from that speech is now on the memorial. The remarks (8 minutes, on cards) pay tribute to these bill. fallen officers and calls on Congress to pass the crime Simon Oct. 10, 1991 Draft 4 / POLICE PRESIDENTIAL REMARKS: LAW ENFORCEMENT MEMORIAL DEDICATION JUDICIARY SQUARE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1991 2:00 p.m. Thank you, Craig [Floyd]. Members of Congress. Ladies and Gentlemen. [other acknowledgements] This city has erected many monuments to generals and admirals, to privates and seamen, who defended our nation's freedom against tyranny and oppression. We gather here today to dedicate this memorial to uniformed heroes of another sort: those who enforce the law and keep us secure here at home. For too long, America's lawmen and women have been the forgotten heroes -- forgotten until there's trouble, until we're stranded on the road, or frantically dialing nine-one-one at home. Today we remember these heroes and heroines. "Now the real healing can start," says Vivian Eney [EE-nee], who so many of you know. "When the grave doesn't look new anymore, when the grass has grown over it," she says, "This will be the place to come, to see the names -- to touch the names." Visitors will come here. Some will be children, perhaps looking for a father or mother they never really knew. Who were these people? they will ask. \ They were policemen and policewomen, marshals and sheriffs, state troopers and special agents. They gave their lives in the line of duty. They were young and old, ranging from 19 to 81. They had names 2 as diverse as America itself: Donald Kowalski, Patrick O'Malley, Freddie Lee Jackson, Tommy DeLaRosa, Jose Gonzales, Donna Miller. They had wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, and so many young children. Most of all they had love -- love for their profession; love for their communities; love for their families; love that can still be felt in this special place right here today. 11 They devoted themselves to the timeless values that society shares. They valued the law. They valued peace -- the peace of a civilized community that protects children at play, families at home, and storekeepers at work. They valued human life -- so much that they were prepared to give their lives to protect it. They gave much, and asked little. They deserve our remembrance. Here in America's capital, for as long as these walls stand, they will be remembered. Not for the way they died, but for how they lived. They didn't ask for honors, though honor them we will. We honor them with these walls -- with these trees and grass and quiet pool of water. But we can honor them in a more profound way -- a more lasting way -- by strengthening the laws they swore to uphold. Since 1989, on a rainy spring day I know many of you remember, I have tried to persuade Congress that our police need help. Too many times, in too many cases, too many criminals go free because the scales of justice are unfairly tipped against 3 dedicated lawmen and women like you. With your help, that will change. We need a crime bill that will stop the endless, frivolous habeus corpus appeals that waste time prosecutors could be spending on new cases. We need a crime bill with tough penalties -- such as a 10-year minimum sentence to anyone using a semi- automatic weapon in a violent or drug-related crime -- with no plea bargains and no parole. We need a crime bill that says to police, if you act in good faith, evidence will not be suppressed in court based on needless technicalities. And we need a crime bill that warns would-be killers out there: be prepared to pay with your own life. I asked Congress to pass these proposals more than two years ago. I've gotten only a piecemeal response. [This week,] the House of Representatives is voting on a crime bill. But for that bill to be worth anything, it must contain the crucial elements I've cited -- elements the House Judiciary Committee refused to include in the bill. Congress is only a few blocks away. They've heard from me; they need to hear from you. There's a war going on out there -- a war between criminals and a good society. We know that war will not end, as long as evil dwells in men's souls. But we can work to lock up those who are too violent to live in civilized society. We can support the law enforcement officers who are on the front lines day after day. And we can put new laws on the books to keep new names off these walls. 4 President Coolidge told us, "The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." \ We will not forget. America \ will not forget. We will not forget those who have died. And we will not forget those who protect and serve every day of the year. III In the Oval Office, many important papers and documents cross my desk each day. Most of them stay there but a day or two. But inside the drawer, one thing stays: a New York City patrolman's badge -- Number 14072. It belonged to Eddie Byrne, a rookie cop who was guarding a witness when he was gunned down on the orders of a drug dealer in jail. Eddie's father asked me to keep that badge as a "reminder of all the brave police officers who put their lives on the line for us every single day." Well, I've kept it. I have it with me here today, and I will always keep it. 11 When society asks someone to put on a badge and place it over their heart, we make a sacred covenant -- a covenant that says: "We as a society stand behind those who enforce the law against 1, those who break the law. " That's what Eddie Byrne's badge means to me. III This memorial gives meaning to that covenant, gives meaning to these lives, gives meaning to the law and what it stands for. No number of words or wreaths, no amount of music or memorializing, will do justice here today, but we have begun the remembrance, and begun the healing. 5 Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you. And may God bless America's law enforcement officers. # # #