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On September 14, 2005,
Rep. Myrick was joined by Rep. Mike McIntyre (D-NC), Scott
Gardner's mother, Emily Moose, his cousin, Donna Lawson,
and friends of the family, Will Newman and Heidi Hall, at
a press conference in Washington, DC to introduce the
Scott Gardner Act and the 10K Run for the Border Act.
Scott Gardner was a Social Studies teacher from
Gaston
County who was killed by a drunk driver in July.
After the wreck, it was discovered that the driver was
also an illegal alien with five prior DWI convictions.
Rep. McIntyre, from the 7th Congressional District, is an
original co-sponsor of the Scott Gardner Act. Rep.
McIntyre stated, “Our immigration system is in shambles,
and passage of the Scott Gardner Act would be a great
first step to help clean it up. The tragedy that the
Gardner family experienced personifies the need for
expanding efforts to stop illegal immigration, improve our
border control, and discourage illegal immigration in the
United States. I thank Congresswoman Myrick for her
leadership role in this effort, and I look forward to
working toward this bill’s passage”. Below are Rep.
Myrick's comments at the press conference about the two
immigration bills she introduced in Congress.
The Scott Gardner
Act
"The Scott Gardner Act will make it mandatory to detain
and deport any illegal alien convicted of DWI. DWI’s
threaten the lives of everyone on the road, and it should
be a deportable offense- not just a slap on the wrist.
It’s just common sense.
The Scott Gardner Act will also require State and local
law enforcement officers to collect immigration
information during the course of their normal duties and
enter this information into Federal immigration databases.
This is important because if law enforcement officials had
a database they checked for each DWI pullover, the man who
killed Scott Gardner would have never been on the road.
They would have stripped his drivers license when they saw
his DWI convictions. This bill will provide state
and local law enforcement with the resources they need to
accomplish this goal. And if they don’t, they will lose
their State Criminal Alien Assistance Program funding…a
federal funding program that most states utilize.
The Scott Gardner Act will also require that all DWI
convictions be included in the FBI’s National Criminal
Information Center database within 30 days from the time
of the incident. To ensure that this information is
entered into these databases, and actually used, the Scott
Gardner Act will provide State and local law enforcement
with the training and resources to get the job done. I’m
also going to push for State and local law enforcement
agencies to use The Law
Enforcement
Support Center, run by the United States Immigration and
Customs Enforcement. It serves as a national clearinghouse
of immigration status and identity information for all law
enforcement officials. The Scott Gardner Act will
insist Immigration and Customs market and promote the Law
Enforcement Support Center to local law enforcement
personnel. It will also require states to get their
officers trained to deal with illegal immigrants, which
will be funded by the Department of Homeland Security.
This training will allow State and local law enforcement
officers to put illegal aliens who are driving drunk into
mandatory detention and transport the illegal aliens so
they can be quickly and efficiently deported."
The 10K Run for the Border Act
"I’m also introducing another bill today called the 10K
Run for the Border Act. You often hear people say we need
to seal off the border to stop the flow of illegal
immigrants into our country. I wholeheartedly agree. But
we also need to attack illegal immigration from the demand
side. People are coming here because they are getting
jobs. Let me be frank- hiring an illegal alien is a crime.
Right now across the country many legitimate business
owners are struggling to compete against businesses who
cheat the system and hire illegal aliens to keep their
payroll low. I was once a small business owner, so I know
how hard it is to scrap by and make a living. But, I never
broke the law to make a profit. The 10K Run for the Border
Act will raise the penalties businesses face for
knowingly hiring illegal aliens. Currently, the fine
is $250 per illegal. My bill will raise the fine to
$10,000. It will also give an 80% cut of the fine to the
local law enforcement agency assisting in the arrest. They
can use this money to increase their efforts to curb
illegal immigration. These two bills are just a start of
reforming our broken Immigration System. There will be
more to come from myself and my colleagues in Congress."
Rep. Myrick also stressed
that these bills will help provide local and state law
enforcement with the funding and tools they need to carry
out the duties outlined in the bill. She also
pointed out that these bills have enforcement mechanisms
so that if these bills become law, they will not be idle
on the books, but will be enforced. In addition,
Rep. Myrick also spoke about a new program that the
Department of Homeland Security will be introducing that
will allow businesses to check the immigration status of a
potential employee by just a few clicks on the internet.
The program is very simple and gives a yes or no answer to
the employer. |
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On
September 14, 2005, Rep. Myrick voted for, and the House
passed, H.R. 3132, the Children’s Safety Act of 2005.
This bill will strengthen laws regarding sexual offenders,
and is hailed as the strongest legislation to protect
children since the Amber Alert. “If there is
anything we can do to protect children, we should do it.
This bill will make our children safer by tightening the
laws on sexual offenders. It will make sure sexual
offenders are more closely monitored so repeat offenses
will be less likely to occur,” said Rep. Myrick.
H.R. 3132 requires sex offenders to register prior to
their release from prison so they cannot slip through the
cracks. It ensures there will be a mandatory minimum
punishment for violent and sexual crimes against
children. H.R. 3132 also expands the coverage of child
sex offenders to include any misdemeanor sex offenses as
well as felony sex offenses. |
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On September 7, 2005, Rep.
Myrick participated in an Energy and Commerce Committee
Hearing on Hurricane Katrina's effect on gasoline supply
and prices. The hearing had executives from oil and
gas companies, representatives from the Energy Department,
and energy experts. Myrick pressed the panels and
asked tough questions about price gouging and price
spikes. Rep. Myrick also urged the Committee to take
an in-depth look at the oil futures market, which sets the
price of oil and gas. Rep. Myrick believes that
speculators in these markets may be manipulating the
system in order to drive up the price of gas and oil.
Gas prices in North
Carolina have recently dropped after the gas supply was
fully restored. As the country regains its footing
after Katrina, gas supplies and prices should stabilize,
baring another hurricane.
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