Hutchison,
Feinstein Re-introduce
AMBER Alert Legislation
Senators
introduce legislation on seventh anniversary of Amber’s death
January 14, 2003
WASHINGTON
-- U.S. Senators
Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) today re-introduced
legislation to expand nationwide the AMBER Alert communications network that
helps law enforcement find abducted children. Their legislation was passed
by the Senate last year and endorsed by President Bush, but the bill stalled
in the House Judiciary Committee.
An
AMBER Alert is activated by law enforcement officials to enlist the public’s
assistance in finding an abducted child. An official Alert triggers information
that can be released on highway electronic message boards and broadcast on
radio and television.
“We have seen AMBER Alert plans in many
different communities work to bring children home safely. To date, AMBER Alerts
have helped recover 43 children nationwide. While many communities and states
have outstanding AMBER plans, a number of states do not yet have comprehensive,
statewide plans,” Sen. Hutchison said. “This legislation will help states
develop AMBER Alert plans and allow them to effectively communicate with law
enforcement agencies across the country. This is critical if an abducted child
is taken across state lines.”
The
AMBER Alert program began in North Texas six years
ago. The alert was named for Amber Hagerman, a nine-year-old girl who was
kidnapped and murdered while visiting relatives in Arlington,
Texas. Currently, a total of 85 cities,
regions and states have AMBER Alert plans. “This week, the seventh anniversary
of little Amber’s tragic death, it is especially important that we move on
this legislation and help ensure other parents do not suffer the loss of their
precious child.”
“I’d like to thank Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison for
her leadership on this issue, and for moving this legislation so quickly through
the Senate last year,” Senator Feinstein said. “Unfortunately, the House did
not take up and approve this legislation before the Congress ended. But I
am confident that the bill will meet with similar support in the Senate this
year, and it is my hope the House of Representatives will approve the bill
as well.”
“Simply
put, this legislation will save kids lives,” Senator Feinstein said. “Since
the State of California first adopted AMBER alerts just six months ago, 16
AMBER alerts have been issued involving 20 victims. Nine of the victims were
abducted by strangers. Six of the victims were abducted by family members.
And five were abducted by family acquaintances. But most importantly, each
of the AMBER Alerts ended with the child being united with their families.
You can’t argue with results like that.”
The Hutchison-Feinstein bill, known as
the National AMBER Network Act, would:
·
Establish an AMBER Coordinator
within the Department of Justice to enhance the operation of the AMBER Alert
communications for the recovery of abducted children;
·
Establish voluntary, minimum standards
for coordination between various AMBER plans, particularly between states;
·
Provide for a grant program in
the Department of Transportation to fund, on a 50-50 matching basis, AMBER
Alert programs. The bill authorizes $20 million; and
·
Provide for a grant program in
the Department of Justice to fund on a 50-50 matching basis, education, training,
and related equipment for AMBER Alert programs. The bill authorizes $5 million.
Joining Senators
Hutchison and Feinstein as co-sponsors of the National AMBER Network Act are:
Sens. Hatch,
Leahy, Frist, Clinton, Ensign, Miller, Voinovich, Crapo, Lugar, Bingaman,
Stabenow, Fitzgerald, Feingold, Biden, McConnell,
Nelson (Bill), Bennett, Dodd, Landrieu, Collins, Allard, Rockefeller, Wyden, Harkin, and Durbin.
Last
year, President Bush issued an executive order to administratively set in
place many of the provisions of the legislation.
But he also asked Congress to pass the bill so that it could become
law, to codify the network for future Administrations.
The
Hutchison-Feinstein legislation is supported by the National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children and the National Association of Broadcasters
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