Press Release, Message of President Harry S. Truman to the United States House of Representatives
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OCR Page 1 of 2HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
July 9, 1945
CONFIDENTIAL : To be held in STRICT CONFIDENCE and no portion,
synopsis or intimation to be given out or published until the
READING of the President's Message has begun in the House of
Representatives. Extreme care must therefore be exercised to
avoid premature publication.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
The enrolled bill H. R. 2856, "To provide for better enforcement
of law within the District of Columbia, and for other purposes," is
returned herewith without my approval.
NARA
The language of section 1 of the bill, although obscure and
indefinite, is apparently intended to transfer jurisdiction over
&
felonies committed within the park areas in the District of Columbia
from the United States Park Police to the Metropolitan Police of the
District of Columbia in situations where detective services are re-
quired. I am convinced that the effect of such legislation would be
to impair rather than to improve law enforcement in these park areas.
In the event that felonies are committed on park lands without the
perpetrators being immediately apprehended, the provisions of section
1 would seem to place any members of the United States Park Police,
functioning in connection with the solution of such felonies, under
the control of the detective force of the Metropolitan Police. During
this time the United States officers, regardless of rank, would be
subject to the orders of the Detective Bureau and precinct detectives
of the Metropolitan Police force. This would require the members of
the United States Park Police force to serve two masters whose authority
over them would be uncertainly divided, and would necessarily have
a
demoralizing effect on that organization.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice
and the Metropolitan Police are now authorized to participate with the
United States Park Police in solving felony cases wherever their services
are necessary. Approval of the bill would unsettle the practical working
arrangements already set up for this purpose, without adding to the
means available for the detection and apprehension of offenders.
An additional objection to the provisions of section 1 is that
they would remove full authority over the United States Park Police
force from the Secretary of the Interior, who is charged by law with
the exclusive charge and control of the National Capital Park System.
Section 2 of the bill declares that no appropriation from the
revenues of the District of Columbia shall be used to pay the salaries
or for equipment of the United States Park Police, and section 3 would
make this requirement effective from July 1, 1945. Although the reports
of the committees which considered the bill state that the practical
effect of section 2 is merely to require that members of the Park Police
force who perform truly Federal services and are under the control of
Federal authorities be paid out of the funds of the Federal Government,
nevertheless the fact of the matter is that the appropriation for this
purpose contained in the District of Columbia Appropriation Act for the
fiscal year beginning July 1, 1945, has not been made from Federal funds.
Because of the terms of section 3, approval of the bill might well be
construed as a repeal of so much of this appropriation as would otherwise
be available for the salaries and equipment of the personnel involved.
Both the Department of the Interior Appropriation Act for the fiscal
year beginning July 1, 1945, and the Second Deficiency Appropriation Act
have been passed by the Congress in a form which makes no provision for
the 70 members of the United States Park Police force -- a majority
of
that organization -- whose salaries and equipment are, under the terms
of the District of Columbia Appropriation Act, payable from revenues of
the District of Columbia rather than from Federal funds. Hence the
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