DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT 1982

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July 15, 1981
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I10~, Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 141iA' July 14 1981 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE H 4329 cient administration of public philan- thropy, encouraged careers in social work and fought to prevent pauperism through adequate wages and humane working conditions. Mary Lyon (1797-1849) utilized her Inheritance of $37,000, her religious fervor, teacher training, and her devo- tion to women's education to raise the funds and the public interest to found Mount, Holyoke College. Frances Perkins (1880-1965) was the first female Cabinet member in the Nation's history who brought to her position as Secretary of Labor, three decades of commitment to social reform. Under her direction, the Im- migration and Naturalization Service was purged of racketeers, the Bureau of Labor Statistics was greatly expand- ed, the Division of Labor Standards was established, the Women's and Children's Bureaus turned in highly competent performances, and an up- graded Federal Mediation and Conci- liation Service gained the confidence of most labor leaders. Lucy Stone (1818-93) was the first Massachusetts woman to take a col- lege degree and founded the Women's Journal which for 47 years was the voice of the women's movement in the United States. A ceaseless abolitionist and feminist, she helped to organize, and served on the executive committee of the American Equal Rights Associ- ation, designed to press for both Negro and women's suffrage. Phillis Wheatley (circa 1753-84). the first black woman poet in America, was bought directly off a slave ship in Boston at age 6, speaking no English. Her talent for memorial, religious, and occasional verse,won national approval and was cited as proof of the antislav- ery argument that people of her race could profit by education. It is these }2 outstanding Massachu- setts women, and countless others from the other 49 States, who will at last receive appropriate recognition The Clerk read the Senate ? joint res- olution, as follows: S.J. REs. 28 Whereas American women of every race, class, and ethnic background helped found the Nation In countless recorded and unre- corded ways as servants, slaves, nurses, nuns, homemakers, Industrial workers. teachers, reformers, soldiers, and pioneers;, Whereas American women have played and continue to play a critical economic, cultural, and social role In every sphere of our Nation's life by constituting a signifi- cant portion of the labor force working in and outside of the home; Whereas American women have played a unique role throughout our history by pro- viding the majority of the Nation's volun- teer labor force and have been particularly important In the establishment of early charitable philanthropic and cultural insti- tutions in the country; Whereas American women of every 'race, class, and ethnic background served'as early leaders in the forefront of every major pro- gressive social change movement, not only to secure their own right of suffrage and equal oppo'tunity, but also in. the abolition- 1st movement, the emancipation movement. the industrial labor union movement, and the modern civil rights movement; and Whereas despite these contributions, the role of American women in history has been consistently overlooked and undervalued In the body of American history: Now, there- fore, be It Resolved by the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the week be- ginning March 8, 1981, Is designated as "Women's History Week", and the Presi- dent is requested to issue a proclamation calling upon the people of the United States to observe such week with appropriate cere- monies and activities. AMENDMENT OFFERED BY MR. GARCIA Mr. GARCIA. Mr. Speaker, I offer an amendment. The Clerk read as follows: Amendment offered by Mr. GARCIA: Page 2, line 3, strike out "March 8, 1981," and Insert in lieu thereof "March 7, 1982,". The amendment was agreed to. The Senate Joint resolution was or- dered to be read a third time, was read the third time, and passed. The title was amended so as to read: "Joint resolution'designating the week beginning March 7, 1982, as 'Women's History Week'." A motion to reconsider was laid, on the table. NATIONAL CYSTIC FIBROSIS WEEK Mr. GARCIA. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that the Commit- tee on Post Office and Civil Service be discharged from further consideration of the joint resolution (H.J. Res. 212) to designate the third week of Septem- ber as "National Cystic Fibrosis Week," and ask for its immediate con- sideration. The Clerk read the title of the joint resolution. The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from New York? There was no objection. The Clerk read the joint resolution, as follows: H.J. Rss. 212 Whereas cystic fibrosis is the number one genetic killer of children in America, and be- tween one thousand five hundred and two thousand five hundred are born each year in this country with the disease; and Whereas public understanding of cystic fi- brosis is essential to enhance early detection and treatment of the disease and reduce the misunderstanding and confusion concerning the symptoms of cystic fibrosis; and Whereas a national awareness of the cystic fibrosis problem will stimulate inter- est and concern leading -to increased re- search and eventually a cure for cystic fi- brosis: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the third week of September of each year Is designated as "National Cystic Fibrosis Week", and the President Is authorized and requested to issue a proclamation calling upon the people of the United States to observe that week with appropriate ceremonies and activities. Mr. GARCIA. Mr. Speaker, House Joint Resolution 212 designates the third week in September as "National Cystic Fibrosis Week." This week is designed to Increase public under- standing of cystic fibrosis, which is the No. 1 killer of children in America. Na- tional awareness of the cystic fibrosis problem will stimulate Interest and concern leading to increased research and eventually a cure for cystic fibro- sis. House Joint Resolution 212 has been cosponsored by over 218 Members. AMENDMENT OPIUM BY BM GARCIA Mr. GARCIA. Mr. Speaker, I offer an amendment. The Clerk read as follows: Amendment offered by' Mr. GARCIA: Page 2, line 3. strike out "The third week of Sep- tember of each year" and insert in lieu thereof "the week beginning September 13 through 19, 1981.". The amendment was agreed to. The joint resolution was ordered to be engrossed and read a third time, was read the third time, and passed. The title was amended so as to read: "Joint resolution designating the week beginning September 13, 1981, as "Na- tional Cystic Fibrosis Week." A motion to reconsider was laid on the table. GENERAL LEAVE Mr. GARCIA. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members may have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks, and include extraneous matter, on the joint resolutions just passed. The SPEAKER. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman from New York? There was no objection. DEP EFEN SR. HORIZATION A Mr. PRICE. Mr. Speaker, I move that the House resolve itself Into the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union for the further consideration of the bill (H.R. 3519) to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 1982 for the Armed Forces for procurement; for research, develop- ment, test, and evaluation, and for op- eration and maintenance, to prescribe personnel strengths for such fiscal year for the Armed Forces and for ci- vilian employees of the Department of Defense, to authorize appropriations for such fiscal year for civil defense, and for other purposes. The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion offered by the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. PRICE). The motion was agreed to. IN THE COMMITTEE or THE WHOLE Accordingly the House resolved itself Into the Committee of' the Whole House on the State of the Union for the further consideration of the bill, H.R. 3519, with Mr. DANIEL- soN, Chairman pro tempore, in the chair. Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 H 4330 CONGRESSIONAL. RECORD - HOUSE The Clerk read the title of the bi] 11 1050 The CHAIRMAN pro tempore. When the Committee of the Whole House rose on Tuesday, July 14, title .IX had been considered as having been read and open to amendment at any point. Pending was the amendment recom- mended by the Committee on the Ju- diciary, as amended, and an amend- ment offered by the gentleman from Florida (Mr. SHAW) to the committee amendment, as amended,' on which a recorded vote had been requested. Does the gentleman from Florida (Mr. SHAW) insist on his request for a recorded vote? Mr. SHAW. I do, Mr. Chairman. RECORDED VOTE The CHAIRMAN pro tempore. The pending business is the demand of the gentleman from Florida (Mr. SHAW) for a recorded vote. A recorded vote was ordered. The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were-ayes 248, noes 168, answered "present" 1, not voting 15, as follows: Akaka Albosta Alexander Andrews Anthony Archer Ashbrook Badham Bafalts Bailey (MO) Barnard Beard Bedell Benjamin Bennett Bereuter Bethune Bevill Bliley [Roll No. 1291 AYES-248 Derwinskl Hubbard Dickinson \ Huckaby Dicks Hunter Dorgan Hutto Doman Hyde Dougherty Ireland Dowdy Jeffries Dreier Jenkins Duncan. Johnston Dunn Jones (OK) Dyson Jones (TN)' Early Kazen Edwards (AL) Kramer Edwards (OK) LaFalce Emerson Lagomarsino English Latta Erdahl Leath Erlenborn LeBoutillier Lee Levitas Lewis Livingston Loeffler Lott Lowery (CA) Lujan Lungren Madigan Marlene Marriott Martin (IL) Martin (NC) Martin (NY). Mavroules McCollum McCurdy McDade McDonald MeEwen McGrath Boggs Evans (IA) Boner Evans (IN) Bouquard Fascell Bowen Fazio Breaux Fiedler Brinkley Fields Broomfield Fithian Brown (CO) Flippo Brown (OH) Florio Eroyh)d Fountain Burgener Fowler Butler Frenzel Byron Fuqua Campbl. Gaydos Carman Gephardt Chappell Gibbons Chappee Gingrich Cheney Ginn Clausen Goldwater Clinger Gramm Coats Grisham Coleman Collins (TX) Conable Corcoran Coughlin Courter Coyne, James Craig Crane, Daniel Crane, Philip Daniel, Dan Daniel, R. W. Dannemeyer Daub .Davis de Is Cana Derrick Hagedom McKinney Hall (OH) Mica Hammerschmidt Michel Hance Miller (OH) Hansen (ID) Minish Hansen (UT) Molinari Hartnett Montgomery Hatcher Hefner Heftel Hendon Hightower Hiler Hlllls Holland Holt Hopkins Morrison Mottl Myers Napier Neal Nclligan Nelson Nichols Nowak O'Brien Parris Pashayan Patman Patterson Pepper Porter Pritchard Quillen Railsback Regula Rhodes Ritter Roberts (KS) Roberta (SD) Robinson Roemer Rogers Rose Rostenkowski Roth Rousselot Rudd Sawyer Scheuer Addabbo Anderson Annunzio Atkinson AuCoin Bailey (PA) Barnes Beilenson Benedict Biaggi Bingham Blanchard Boland Bolling Bunker Brodhead Brooks Brown (CA) Burton, John Burton, Phillip Carney Chisholm Clay Coelho Collins (IL) Conte Conyers Coyne, William Crockett D'Amours Danielson Daschle Dellums Dingell Dixon Donnelly Downey Dwyer Dymally Eckart Edgar Edwards (CA) Emery Ertel Evans (DE) Fary Fenwick Ferraro Findley Fish Foglietta Foley Ford (MI) Ford (TN) Forsythe Frank Schneider Schulze Sensenbrenner Shaw Shelby Shumway Shuster Siljander Skeen Skelton Smith (AL) Smith (IA) Smith (NE). Smith (NJ) Smith (OR)' Snowe Solomon Spence St Germain Stangeland Stanton Staton Stenholm Stratton Stump Tauke NOES-168 Tauzin Taylor Thomas Traxler Trible. Walgren Watnpler Watkins Weber (MN) Weber (OH) Whitehurst Whitley Whittaker Whitten Williams (OH) - Wilson Winn Wolf Wortley Wylie Yatron Young (AK) Young(FL) Young (MO) Zablocki Frost Murtha Garcia Natcher Gejdenson Oakar Gilman Oberstar Glickman Obey Gonzalez - Ottinger Gore Panetta Gradison Paul Gray Pease Green Perkins Gregg Petri Guarini Peyser Gunderson Pickle Hall, Ralph Price Hall, Sam Pursell Hamilton Rahall Harkin Rangel Hawkins Ratchford Heckler Reuss Hertel Richmond Hollenbeck Rinaldo Horton. Rodino Howard Roe Royer Roukema Hughes Russo Jacobs Sabo Jeffords Schroeder Kastenmeler Schumer Kildee Seiberling Kindness Shamarwky Kogovsek Shannon Leach Sharp Lehman Simon Leland Snyder Lent Solarz Long (LA) Stark Long (MD) Stokes Lowry (WA) Studds Luken Swift Lundine Synar Markey Udall Marks Vento Matsui Volkmer Mattox Walker Mazzoli Washington McClory Waxman McCloskey Weaver McHugh Weiss Mikulskl White Miller (CA) Williams (MT) Mineta' Wirth Mitchell (NY) Wolpe Moakley Wright Moffett Wyden Mollohan Yates Murphy Zeferettt ANSWERED "PRESENT"-1 Roybal NOT VOTING-15 Applegate DeNardis Mitchell (MD) Aspin Goodiing Rosenthal Bonior Jones (NC) Santini Cotter Kemp Savage Deckard Lantos. Vander Jagt 01100 July 15, 1981 The Clerk announced the. following pairs: On this vote: Mr. Jones of North. Carolina for, with Mr. Mitchell of Maryland against. Messrs. DYMALLY, EMERY, J XP- FORDS, ECKART, and BONKER changed their vote from "aye" to no. Messrs. PORTER, ANTHONY, HA- GEDORN, LEVITAS, Mrs. BOU- QUARD, Messrs. HIGHTOWER, LAFALCE, BEVILL, PRITCHARD, BROWN of Ohio, FRENZEL, and NEAL changed their vote from "no" to "aye." . So the amendment to the Judiciary Committee amendment, as amended, was agreed to. The result of the vote was an- nounced as above recorded. Mr. NELSON. Mr. Chairman, I would like to take this opportunity to express my strong support for Mr. SHAW's amendment to H.R. 3519, an' amendment that would significantly enhance the power of civil authorities to deter and eliminate the damage that drug-related crime is inflicting upon our society. ' I have Just returned from an 11-day, 29-stop tour with government officials in the Caribbean region and I have studied firsthand the transfer point on the drug traffic highway. Our Nation's Coast Guard and civil law authorities have been losing the war in combating an increasing flow of illegal drugs to the United States and as a result, have strained our current resources for drug enforcement to the limit. We are losing this battle because of our inabil- ity to use all of the available resources and equipment in our effort against il- legal drugs. My own State of Florida has long been a receiving point for drug-related traffic. The Coast Guard and civilian authorities occasionally seize and ap- prehend offenders, but all too often the offenders escaje or go undetected and the only traces are the bales of marihuana that wash ashore on the public beaches or. the shells of hol- lowed out planes that are abandoned on deserted airfields. I support Mr. SHAw's amendment because I believe it is vitally important that we combine our efforts in order to enhance the power of and the coop- eration between our Federal, State, and local authorities. Our U.S. Armed Forces have the equipment and the ca- pability to render assistance to the ci- vilian authorities in locating and seiz- ing ships and aircraft involved in drug trafficking and I urge strong support of this amendment so we may signifi- cantly enhance our position in this war on drug crime. Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 July 15, 1981 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE ^ 1110 PARLIAMENTARY INQUIRY Mr. HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, I rise to make a parliamentary inquiry. The CHAIRMAN. The gentleman will state his parliamentary inquiry. Mr. HUGHES. As I understand the parliamentary situation, Mr. Chair- man, It is that the Hughes amend- ment, as amended by the Shaw amendment which just carried, is now pending before the House. So, as I seek an aye amendment on the Hughes amendment, that is the next order of business? The CHAIRMAN. So the, Chair can restate, we have before the Committee now the Judiciary Committee amend- ment, as amended by both the White and Shaw amendments. Mr. HUGHES. So the situation is that the Hughes amendment is pend- ing, as modified by the White amend- ment, which was accepted by the Judi- ciary Committee, and as just mofified by the Shaw amendment? That is the next order of business? The CHAIRMAN. That is correct. Mr. STRATTON.'Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the requisite number of words. Mr. Chairman, I take this time in an effort to clarify a point that has been raised by the adoption of the Shaw amendment. The White amendment, which was adopted previously with the approval of the Committee on the Ju- diciary, said in effect that no equip- ment could be operated in the land area of the United States, except for the use of monitoring:and communi- cating air and sea traffic;; or, second, is engaged in entering or leaving the land area of the United States. The Shaw ? amendment, which amended the White amendment, says that the Armed Forces can assist drug enforcement officials in drug seizures or arrests outside the land area.of the United States. My question to the gentleman from Texas '(Mr. WHrrE), the author of the original amendment, is just how he in- terprets-and I think we ought to have it in the legislative history-just what As the area involved in "entering or leaving" the land area of the United States? Are we talking about the 200- mile limit, which would severely limit these antidrug activities. I think this is a matter that might be of interest to Members of the House if they are ever entering or leaving the coastal waters in their own boats, and I think we ought to define precisely what is in- volved. Is it the 200-mile limit or Is it just the area directly In shore? I would appreciate the gentleman from Texas giving his understanding. Mr. WHITE. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? Mr. STRATTON. I yield to the gen- tleman from Texas (Mr. WHixE). Mr. WHITE. I thank the gentleman for yielding. The amendment contem- plated that this equipment could be used to monitor, track, and conduct surveillance at any point of the land area. That did not mean the 200-mile limit, but right to the land. In fact, the Attorney General's office inter- prets this to permit hot pursuit. With the Shaw amendment added on to the bill, forgiving the power of arrest at sea, principally at sea, then I would assume, then, that hot pursuit could also cover arrests, too. In other .words, if a would-be violator or sus- pected violator were to dodge Into a reef area or make the land, then I would believe they could come to that land area to grab them, and to arrest at that point. This was the objective, not to give them a sanctuary over the 200-mile limit. This amendment authorizes the use of military personnel, uniformed and civilian, to assist civilian law enforce- ment officials in the operation and maintenance of equipment which has been made available under proposed section 372 of title 10. This type of direct operational assistance Is gener- ally prohibited by the Posse Comita- tus Act (18 U.S.C. 1385). The tradition of creating exceptions to the impor- tant, doctrine of separating the. mili- tary from civilian law enforcement is maintained by limiting the application of the section to three sets of specific criminal statutes and to narrowly pre- scribed circumstances. The type of military assistance which will be rendered under this sect- gion consists of the operation and maintenance of sophisticated equip- ment in circumstances where it would not be practical or feasible to train ci- vilians. The types of laws which can justify the requests for military assist- ance. are Federal statutes which fre- quently involve the movement of ves- sels or aircraft into or out of the United States. Three separate types of offenses are listed: Drug laws, immi- gration laws, and customs-related stat- utes. The first two sets of statutes are included by reference to the criminal statutes which would form the basis of the investigation and possible criminal charge. The third category, that is customs related laws, is described ge- nerically. The word "arrival" is used to encom- pass all those criminal statutes which prohibit the introduction, bringing in, entry or Importation. of property Into the United States. The term "depar- ture" is used to mean the exportation or attempted exportation of goods or ,materials from the United States in contravention of a criminal statute. For example, the arrival of certain merchandise is proscribed by the Tariff Act of 1930, the Gun Control Act, for example (18 U.S.C. 892(a)(3), 18 U.S.C. 922(a)) and by chapter 27 of title-18. The departure branch-of this type of statute includes violations, orr attempted violations, of 22 U.S.C. 401, relating to illegal exportation of war materials; 22 U.S.C. 2778, relating to control of arms exports and imports; 50 U.S.C. App. 2401 et seq., relating to 114331 the Export Administration Act of 1979. The other terms used with re- spect to violations of the customs laws are defined by reference to an existing statute. These terms are used in order to preserve the judicial and adminis- trative Interpretations used In the ref- erenced citation. The grant of authority to the mili- tary personnel to take such action in- cidental to the operation or mainte- nance of equipment is meant to be read in conjunction with the limita- tions-of section 374. Proposed section 374 requires the Secretary of,Defense to promulgate regulations which pro- hibit the use of military personnel in "any search and seizure, and arrest or other similar activity." The use of the term "incidental" is designed to con- tinue the current policy of the Depart-. ment of Defense which authorizes mil- itary, personnel to take actions to defend themselves and Federal proper- ty when such action is undertaken in response to the exigencies of the situa- tion. See, for example, Department of Defense Directive 3025,12 V-C-1-b, August 19, 1971. Subsection (b) of proposed section 375 places several limitations on the types of operational assistance which may be granted. Nothing in this sec- tion limits the permissible locale of maintenance assistance authorized under subsection (a). Under subsection (b) the operational assistance must take place in the land area of the United States with certain defined ex- ceptions. The exceptions are set forth in order to meet legitimate law en- forcement needs and to answer ques- tions which arose in the Committee on the Judiciary when a similar amend- ment was under consideration. See House Report 97-71, part II at 12 n. 3. The term "land area of the United States" is used to create a line of de- marcation which will permit the oper- ation of equipment in coastal waters, estuaries, and other 'major. navigable bodies of water. These waterways are frequent routes of drug trafficking into the United States. Examples of places where such operational assist- ance would be authorized Include the coastal waters surrounding offshore is- lands of South Carolina, Georgia, and North Carolina. The estuaries where such assistance could take place in- clude places like the Chesapeake and Delaware Bays. It is not intended, however, that military personnel be used to operate equipment to interdict pleasure craft whose passengers may be using illegal drugs while cruising on inland waters, lakes, and rivers. The two exceptions to this rule against domestic assistance by the mil- itary are designed to meet legitimate law enforcement concerns. The first exception would allow the operation of radar or other types*of electronic surveillance or tracking equipment. The second exception 'covers two dif- ferent types of situations. The first branch of this exception reaches oper-. Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 ti H 4332 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 '1.v1vvl%lraa1U1NAL Kh(;UKD - HOUSE July 15, 1981 ational assistance on the land area of States. That is the modification which - The real reason I want a vote on this the United States when such oper- has been made as a result of the Shaw is because I would hope that we would ation is the point of departure or ar- amendment. I would hope that in this pass that you could seize on land. And rival of the equipment. For example, form this body would see fit to sup- why would I want to seize on land? an Air Force pilot based in the United port -the Judiciary Committee `amend- Well, really, there is only one place States could operate an aircraft when ment, as amended by the amendments that I have much concern about, and the law enforcement mission was to that have been adopted which were of. that is the Rio Grande. I do believe occur outside the United States. The fered by the gentleman from Texas that once the drug smugglers feel that second circumstance ? under which (Mr. WHITE) and the gentleman from they are cut off from the sea and from operational assistance, could occur Florida (Mr. SHew). within the land area of the United, Mr. STRATTON. I think the crucial tthe air, will use te hundreds of housands they of millions h, h or so, a year States would be when a suspected vio- question is what the amendment of- that come In illegally from Mexico, lator was entering the air or sea space fered by the gentleman from Texas and the sellers will try to prevail on of the United States and the military (Mr. WHITE) did, and I am happy that those people to bring in the dr:_gs. equipment was tracking such entry. it has not provided a 200-mile sanctu- Well, I think that pushers ought to This type of tracking would most fre- ary: quently result from hot pursuit by Mr. McCLORY. The language re- thknow that is not a that em Therefore, Idoor would p is oen to refer military ships or aircraft, but could, on lates to the physical land area of the having the Hughes amendment, as occasion, be the result of electronic ob- United States, not the 200-mile limit, perfected as it is. I would rather have servations. Mr. SEIBERLING. Mr. Chairman, I the thing that is actually In the bill. If Mr. STRATTON. In other words, move to strike the last word. there are an im this might allow the AWACS, for ex y perfections that are ample, to determine what pwere Mr. Chairman, the gentleman from not just exactly perfectly written In coming to o what boats what planes l le ere Illinois (Mr. MCCLORY) inadvertently the amendment which I drafted origi-were Mr. WHIT w I think the AWACS referred to the Hughes amendment, as nally-I do not know of any-but If could have been used in any event, amended by the White and Shaw there are any things of that type, they whether have eene used Shaw amend- amendments, as allowing searches and can be handled In the conference. mentor not, because it was for surveil- seizures on offshore. It does not allow The reason I asked for this 5 min- lance and tacking. - searches. One of the anomalies of the utes was just simply to express that Mr. STRATTON. I thank the gentle- Shaw amendment is that it allows ar- when the'vote comes upon the Hughes man. rests and it allows seizures,- but it does amendment, I will ask for a recorded Mr. HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, will not allow searches. How are you going vote. I hope some Members will stand Mr-gentleman yield? . to determine whether a person should up with me. I hope we will have a re- the re- Mg nTRATTON. Iyield to the gee- be arrested, how are you going to de- corded vote. I hope we will vote down tleman . from New Jersey. what should be seized, if you the Hughes amendment, even though Mr. HUGHES. Just for further en- cannot make a search? it has been very much improved, be- Mr. HUGHES. larea that en- I just think the record ought to be cause that will leave the original lan- light to, ent, the land t we made clear that we have a very guage of the bill intact. , is ree r t too of course the United States. land h area of anomalous thing in the language of Mr. SAWYER.,. Mr. Chairman, I the Shaw amendment. move to strike the last word. 0 1120 Mr. McCLORY. If the gentleman Mr. Chairman, I would just like to Mr. HUGHES. And we envision the will yield, I thank the gentleman for address the gentleman from Florida taking off from and landing of air- the clarification. (Mr. BENNETT), If I may have 'the gen- planes or helicopters, for instance, on But I was just trying to explain the tleman's attention. bases in the interior of the country, as status of the legislation. I accept the Let me clarify that the only thing well as the right to use that equip- gentleman's clarification. that is not permitted is actual arrests ment in the estuaries and along the Mr. SEIBERLING. I just wanted the or seizures by the military. coast of the United States, because record clear so that somebody reading The DEA, Customs, and other law often the pursuit. does involve those it would not think that it also author- enforcement agencies are totally em- estuaries. ized searches, which would be an even powered to make such arrests and set- Just so the record is clear, that we greater infringement. zures, with the assistance of military have tried to anticipate allof those sit- Mr. BENNETT. Mr. Chairman,, I equipment. uations where the law enforcement move to strike the last word. Mr. BENNETT. The gentleman's ob community will need that equipment Mr. Chairman, I want to congratu- servatlon is correct. - or that manpower to operate the late the House on giving very careful Mr. SAWYER. The military, the equipment. thought to this matter that was PLEA, and others testified in hearings Mr. STRATTON. I just wanted to brought to their attention, everybody before our subcommittee that they make sure that we did not have a 200- doing exactly what they thought was have adequate personnel always avail- mile sanctuary area where a lot could best for our country, and, I think the able to do the actual arresting and happen that was not too good. results have been good, seizure. So I do-not think we have a Mr. McCLORY. Mr. Chairman, will I do feel that, when it comes to a problem. the gentleman yield? vote on the Hughes amendment, since Mr. BENNETT. As long as you are Mr. STRATTON. I yield to the. gen- it does leave out a substantial thing, not actually seizing anybody, as long tleman from Illinois (Mr. MCCLORY). . which .1 think ought to be added, I am as you are not actually making an Mr. McCLORY. I thank the gentle- going to ask for a recorded vote; and arrest, you have plenty of people to do man for yielding. hopefully a majority vote since the bill ' it. Mr. Chairman, what the Judiciary as unamended is still a stronger meal- The point Is,, we are not getting Committee did was to provide the full ure range of activities that was recom- But I must say that, from my stand- enoIt Is ugh kind these people. to say ent mended by the Armed Services Com- point and the view that I have of this that when your are losing ssing gm g5nt r mittee, with the exception of searches, matter, it Is about a 90-percent victory, of, the stuff that Is enteeriigthisecot n- seizures, and arrests by the military. as it now is, because it does allow most try, you have got plenty of people to Under the amendment offered by of the things that the original legisla- seize it. Well, of course you have the' gentleman from Florida (Mr. tion, the amendment to the Armed plenty of people to seize it, because Sxaw), which was just adopted the Services Committee bill, allowed. d It is searches, seizures, and arrests can take The thing that It does not allow Is, it you like saying if you are not gong to place beyond the land area, that is the does not allow the possibility of seiz- arrest anybody, you have plenty of physical land area,, of the United ing on land. people to arrest them. I think that is Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 `July 15, 1981 CONGRESSIONAL. RECORD - HOUSE true. But I think the bill .would be Im- proved by turning down the Hughes amendment, as amended. Mr. HERTEL. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the last word. Mr. Chairman, I think if we look clearly under all of the confusion here in the House, we'see that the Hughes amendments, as amended by White, is good. It Is good because the great problem that we found throughout this controversy is that we cannot use legally the AWACS to give the infor- mation to local and State law enforce- ment agencies, to intercept, to arrest, which is their duty. It is ironic that when this House has cut the Coast Guard budget, when one of the primary duties of the Coast Guared is to interdict this type of il- legal traffic, that here we are saying, "Now,, the Army and the Navy should do the job that is charged to the Coast Guard." The Coast Guard has testified in op- position to the Army and Navy getting involved. And I ask the question at this time: Since we lose a lot of our drug arrests in court because the ar- rests are not done properly, under proper procedures, is there any money in the amendment that was just passed by this House to train Army and Navy personnel to make proper drug arrests? Because we have a great problem with even our local law enforcement officials not always doing that. Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? Mr. HERTEL. I yield to the gentle- man from Michigan. Mr. CONYERS. Mi., ? Chairman, I want to thank my colleague, the gen- tleman from Michigan, for yielding to raise this question: Where is the money going to come from? Well, the military has already ? testi- fled that the reason that they do not want it is because it will require addi- tional resources, additional training, different from that of military person- nel, to enforce civilian laws. So the answer is probably it Is not coming from anywhere, which means that the Secretaries of the respective branches of the armed services under the exemptions included in the Hughes amendment are not going to do a? darn thing about sending1 in the military because it is a Catch-22.situa- tion. ^ 1130 Mr. HERTEL. Mr. Chairman, I would say that what the House should be doing is spending the money prop- erly. Increasing the Coast Guard budget is the job we have got to do rather than cutting the Coast Guard budget. The money we are going to lose, especially when we are under- staffed now in our Armed !Services! by diluting the strength in trying to train new people for new jobs, could more effectively be spent by putting that money where it should be and to in- crease 'greatly the Coast Guard budget. Mr. CONYERS. Mr.. Chairman, will my colleague yield further? Mr. HERTEL. I yield. Mr. CONYERS. I thank my col- league for yielding. The reason that we are In a more difficult situation is contrary to the statement of my other colleague from Michigan, from Grand Rapids, who said that the DEA testi- fied before this committee that it has adequate resources. They testified just the opposite. As a matter of fact, the former head of DEA no longer works there anymore. Pete Bensinger has now gone the way of the CIA chiefs, and we are meeting here today with testimony in the subcommittee of this committee chaired by the gentleman from New Jersey, that they did not even have the adequate forces to cover the perimeter of the United States, in- cluding the Florida area, which the gentleman from Florida (Mr. BENNETT) has been so persistent in arguing that we are inadequate in supplying the re- sources. And so there you have it. Do we have enough resources? Well, if we had enough we would not have to bring the military into this in the first place. In the second place, the testimo- ny before that committee was that the head of the DEA does not have suffi- cient resources,' does not have man- power, does not have equipment, and does not have the cooperation of the other branches of law enforcement. So, ? the gentleman's point is ? well stated. The CHAIRMAN. The time of the gentleman from Michigan has expired. (At the request of Mr. BIAGGI and by unanimous consent, Mr. HERTEL was allowed to proceed for 4 additional minutes.) Mr. BIAGGI. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? Mr. HERTEL. I yield to the honor- able chairman of the Merchant Marine Subcommittee. Mr. BIAGGI. I thank the gentleman. for yielding. Mr. Chairman, this is the second day of debate on this issue. It is the kind of an issue that interests all of us. The surest way to attract attention in law enforcement is to raise the specter of narcotic trafficking. In fact, it is more than a specter, it is a reality. For the new Members of this House, I would like to inform them of the fact that I spent 23 years of my life in the police department of the city of New York, on patrol and in charge of detec- tives, and no one is more committed to the enforcement of our drug laws in this House than myself. I have served as chairman of the Coast Guard Sub- committee. While I served in that posi- tion we had hearings, especially In the. Caribbean area, and we found out very clearly that there were a number of loopholes. The Congress last year re- sponded in closing one of the loop- holes to put some teeth in the pros- ecution, the ability of law enforcement H 4333 officials to arrest and prosecute suc- cessfully, as contrasted to the previous experience of turnstile process. The arrest was made, the prosec- tuion would fail to prosecute because they did not have the authority nor the evidence. The law was changed. Another thing we learned is that we had the facilities, the land agencies .had the facilities to make arrests, but they did not have the required infor- mation, information that was readily available and obtainable, If the AWACS had the authority to transmit that information to the land agencies. The fact of the matter is, they were prohibited by virtue of posse comita- tus, and that is one of the reasons- frankly, that is the only reason and the only need that the law enforce- ment agencies require, an ability to obtain information. When the AWACS, which is always in the air for those who are uninformed, it is always' flying and it is always making observa- tions, and it can very effectively detect the typical profile of the aircraft that is transporting narcotics day after day, and can Identify the typical vessel that transports narcotics. All that is necessary is the identification and lo- cation, and then the land agencies can come into play, effectively come into play and interdict at that point. That is all the law enforcement agencies re- quire. Now, the notion of bringing in the military and to in fact substitute them, supplement the law enforce- ment agency, make them policemen, Is a little strange. To begin with, there is sufficient testimony to the fact that the military is not interested. The mil- itary does not have resources. That Is clear; that is clear. I know why people vote for certain amendments. It is an easy political vote. I understand it, but 'it is 'not a correct vote. It is not responding pre- cisely to the need, and we are endan- gering the total question by perhaps trespassing into - the constitutional area. I do not know whether it is or is not. I have heard debate back and forth, and some people say yes, and some people say no. But, I think we should put that question aside. It does not belong here. . We should deal more narrowly with the immediate need. The language we find in the Hughes amendment is criti- cal language, as amended by White. That is all that is necessary. I ask the Members of the House, do not think in terms of easy political vote; think in terms of what is necessary and what can be productive because in the end the actual implementation of the amendment by Mr. SHAW, who is in full support and is as concerned as any one of us-and he is to be commended for his efforts and I understand his special concern, coming from Florida- in the end the military will not be able to effectively deal with the matter. I suggest that they wilt not respond Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 4334 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 HOUSE July 15, 1981 given the notion that the Secretary of tration, the Justice Department, and Mr. MINISH. Mr. Chairman, will the Defense opposes it. _ the Defense Department have asked gentleman Mr. HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, I for certain guidelines, and we have Mr. HUGHE HES? move to strike the requisite number of tried to incorporate S. I yield to the gentle- words. porate those into the Ju- man from New Jersey. (Mr. HUGHES asked and was given diciary Committee legislation. Mr. MINISH, Mr. Chairman, I thank permission to revise and extend his re- Let me just tell the Members briefly the gentleman for yielding. mars.) some pf the differences between the it is my understanding that in Ger- rk HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, col- so-called Hughes version and the Ben- many, where they do have a drug leagues of the House, I hope that I nett version. In the Bennett version of problem as certified by the militar, , and if the bill there. Is provided the right of and sonny member of the Armed will the Members not need rthe e full just 5 ust bear minutes, If the military to assist in arrest and seiz- Forces is involved, can the military for just a few mill jes perhaps we can ure. There Is no suggestion that they police make an arrest under the gen- gen- move on t the mvotes other inutes and on to we can would have the authority, however, to ? tleman's amendment? Issues. operate equipment. The very thing We have right now, for the first time that the law enforcement community not 'HUGHES. Of c ssc We have in along time, two members leading needs-equipment and manpower to enforcement. that. This is y i vhian law operate it-is not covered In the Ben- pnn. The military has pre the Crime Subcommittee with a lot of nett version of the bill, mart responsibility for arrests in the experience in law enforcement-the Mr. military community. entire- ranking minority member, who was a man yield? r. Chairman, will the to c that. problem, . and is an do not prosecutor for a number of years, and gentleman yieltouch that. probl, and we do not this mwho has served for 10 Mr. HUGHES. I will be happy to We are talking about civilian law en- this member, mber enforcement. Our Sub- yield after I have finished. en- committee on Crime Is going to give Mr Chairman, the second problem forcement The Justice Department is the Members an opportunity in the is that-inadvertently, I am sure-the months ahead to vote on a tough anti- Bennett version would make the Coast crime package, and our first priority, Guard, which is one of the lead agen. let me assure the Members, Is in the Gies in drug enforcement, subservient area of drugs. But, let me tell the to the Department of Defense. -Here Members what they have done in the we have an agency-the Department budget now before the Congress. of Defense-that -does not want to co- Do you realize that there is not one operate, and we are going to take penny-I will repeat that-not one them In peacetime and. make them penny in this budget for an anticrime subject to the Secretary of Defense. package? Do you realize that the Drug Does, that make sense to the Mem- Enforcement Administration since bets? It does not make sense to me. 1978 has lost real dollars each and I will ask the Members to listen to every year, that in fact ? their task this next provision. It is incredible. In force operation was to have been dis. the Bennett language the Secretary of mantled tinder the budget one of the Defense, in order to provide th , e e equip s, They are not most successful task force operations ment and in order to provide the per- versed in law enforcement. We have that we have in law enforcement? sonnel for assisting in arrest and seiz. enough difficulty preserving. evidence That training program's are bein ure, has to make a findi to court with trai d l g ne ng that the aw enforcement gutted? If Members will look at the drug enforcement operation would not officials without making that task Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco, and Fire. succeed without personal military as. even more difficult. arms, in the area of arson in and Fire- sistance. How In the' world can the So, Mr. Chairman, I urge my col- tions, it. Is being dismantled. Their Secretary of Defense make that find. leagues to support the so-called handgun tracing efforts are in peril. ing? He is not a law enforcement offs- Hughes amendment. The FBI and the Marshals programs cial with such expertise. How can he Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Chairman, I have been cut. know whether a A We have cut across the board, at a time when the crime rate is taking off. What have we done? What we have said in essence is that we are going to take money from the military budget to beef up the training for the military to give soldiers the right to arrest and seize, but deny those funds and re- sources to our police. So what we have said in essence is that' we are not going to give law en-. forcement officers more training, but we are going to give our soldiers and sailors that.trafning in order for them to assist law enforcement. Neither the military nor the law enforcement com- munity wants or needs the right to arrest and seize. It is incredible that we have done this. But we have, and I respect the will of this body. So where do we go from here? The fact of the matter is that the Judiciary Committee did take extensive testimo- ny, and we have tried to craft a bill that meets'the needs of the law en- forcement community.- The adminis- rug operation is move to strike the requisite number of going to succeed without his assist. words. ante? Yet we have help subject to that (Mr. CONYERS asked and was given finding. permission to revise amid extend his re- The difficulty we have had with the marks.) Defense Department Is that they do Mr. CONYERS. Mr. Chairman, not want to cooperate at times. Field before we get ready to vote, we might commanders are now rejecting from Just want to determine what the testi- time to time requests for equipment mony was before the $ubcommfttee on and assistance from the Drug Enforce- Crime, which heard from Peter Ben- ment Administration because of a lack singer, former head of the DEA, on of clear policy directives. Here we are, the drug problem. One member of the giving the Defense Department an. subcommittee who was there has said other out. All the Defense Depart- that Mr. Bensinger testified that DEA ment has to do is to say that they . has adequate resources. cannot determine the operation would I happen to have been there and succeed without assistance, so we are questioned him rather carefully on actually undermining what good we this subject, and I happen to have have done.. We at least now have an in. heard something different. formal understanding between the De- What did Mr. Bensinger say? Did he fense Department and the law en-- say that we need the military, the forcement community to share intelli- Army, the Navy, and the Marines, to Bence, equipment, and personnel from join with the Coast Guard, with the time to time. We are even undermin- DEA-which operates worldwide on ing that by this language, about $10 billion per annum-with the So, Mr. Chairman, in essence there FBI, with the CIA, and with all the are some major differences even now State governments' law enforcement between the Bennett bill and the agencies? Did he say that we need the ' Hughes version. military? adamantly opposed to that approach,' and evey law enforcement agency which testified before our committee is opposed to that. The CHAIRMAN. The time of the gentleman from 'New Jersey (Mr: HUGHES) has expired. (By unanimous consent, Mr. HUGHES was allowed to proceed for 1 additional minute.) ? Mr. HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, the Defense Department does not want the arrest and seizure authority for a good reason-they want to keep their personnel as soldi r Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 July 15, 1981 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- HOUSE Well, I want to tell the Members that Mr. Bensinger said we need re- sources inside DEA. He said we need additional personnel and additional re- sources. We are not even covering the perimeter of the United States in Flor- ida, where planes can be seen flying in narcotics cargoes and where, if the drug pushers Just fly in five planes. they will get one through on the law of averages. DEA does not have the re- sources to cover the perimeter on a 24- hour-a-day basis. What I am suggesting to the Mem- bers is that what we have done here Is to confound the issue utterly. I am now predisposed to" offer an amend- ment to strike the entire posse comita- tus provisions from he defense bill under which it has been so unthought- fully brought: I will ask the Members to please hold their applause down. It is not in order to raise these public outcrys of approval. We have taken on an amendment that permits the military to make ar- rests and permits the military to make seizures but not searches. Imagine the situation of a law, enforcement officer who makes an arrest and a seizure and in court finds out, when the bag is opened, that the contents are sawdust and not dope? There is no search per- mitted under the amendment just Mr. Chairman, I apologize for impos- ing upon the time of an obviously im- patient House, but I speak as chair- man of the Subcommittee on the Coast Guard in this Congress. One of the reasons I was not able to participate in -the debate yesterday was-and I find this somewhat ironic- that the Subcommittee on the Coast Guard was having the second in a series of six oversight hearings on the entire mission of the U.S. Coast Guard, and I rise at this point simply to point out that we, I fear, are In the process of doing one of those things which we do best, which is kidding ourselves. If any Member of this House thinks seriously that the proposition we are in the process of debating, and tin- doubtedly adopting in a moment, is going to have any constructive, major. substantive impact on the interdiction of Illegal drug trafficking In this coun- try, he Is indeed kidding himself. As has been pointed out by a number of Members, there is not one penny of additional resources made available for the Armed Forces In this bill, and let me tell my colleagues sofnething about the U.S. Coast Guard. The Coast Guard estimates that they are at the moment interdicting, adopted. . approximately 15 percent of the illicit Mr. Chairman, I urge that the Mem- narcotics which they are targeting. bers consider what we have done here The Coast 'Guard has just been cut today and how we might best straight- again for the umpteenth consecutive en it out. My solution is to strike the year by this body in Its infinite entire section from this bill. ' wisdom in the adoption of the current Mr. BEARD. Mr. Chairman, will the budget. We are losing. gentleman yield? The Coast Guard has a number of Mr. CONYERS. I yield briefly, if it missions, as Members know, in addi- is appropriate to what I have just said. tion to drug enforcement. One of them 'Mr. BEARD. Certainly. I would happens to be search and rescue, the never do otherwise, I say to my col- responsibility for the safety of life and league. I property at sea. More Americans are Mr. CONYERS. The gentleman fre- dying, lives that could, in the judg- I ment of the Coast Guard, have' been quently does otherwise That is wh . y made that condition. Mr. BEARD. Mr. Chairman, let me Just ask the gentleman this: I think the gentleman's point about the search aspect or the lack of search ca- pabilities in the bill or the amendment Is a very appropriate one.. Would the gentleman be disposed to support or offer an amendment to include the search? ^ 1150 Mr. CONYERS. No; I will 'not. Would the gentleman who asked me that question be predisposed to offer one? Mr. BEARD. I ' think I might just consider that. Mr. CONYERS. Then tie gentleman may just offer It and find out what this gentleman does on it at the point the gentleman does make that offer. I will be waiting with baited bfeath to see what the gentleman does. , Mr. BEARD.-I take that for granted. Mr. STUDDS. Mr. Chairman, I move to strike the requisite number of words. H 4335 We have given them the resources to interdict roughly 18 percent, and In the budget just adopted by this House. in real dollars, we cut that and we cut it substantially. It Just seems to me that while it might make some, of us' feel better and `some feel worse, depending on wheth- er we have constitutional reservations about what we are about to do. let me assure the Members that with respect to the substance of the question, the potential interdiction of illicit narcot- ics, we are accomplishing absolutely nothing. While we may, as I said at the begin-' ning, be doing what we do so remark- ably well, namely kidding ourselves and in the process, perhaps, the American people, we are not solving, the problem. Mr. FASCELL. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? Mr. STUDDS. I yield to the gentle- man from Florida. Mr. FASCELL. I thank the gentle- man for yielding. Mr. Chairman, I certainly share the gentleman's frustrations with respect to the Coast Guard. I cannot think of any service that is more worthy, that has been treated more shabbily by this Congress, and the administration. I would vote for a $2 billion Increase in the budget for the Coast Guard right now so they could do their job, but I am frustrated; too. This adminis- tration wants to abolish DEA; It did not fund LEAA; it cut back on funds for the Immigration and Naturaliza- tion Service and other law enforce- ment-all to cope with a drug problem that is subverting the entire country, not just the State of Florida. So, I look at $1,650 trillion to _be spend in the next several years for the defense budget, and they are going to have to spend about $1, billion a day for the next 5 years. of the judgment of this Congress that The cooperation sought by the we should reduce rather than Increase the resources of the U.S. Coast Guard. The Commandant of the Coast Guard, in response to a question as to what additional resources he would need in order, to interdict 50 percent of the drugs which, he is after, said, "I would need additional appropriations of between $1% and $2 billion." Let me tell my colleagues two things, first of all. about the entire budget of the Coast Guard. The annual budget of the U.S. Coast Guard is roughly $2 billion. The Commandant informs us that, in order to interdict roughly one- half of the drugs estimated to be coming in, he would need that budget doubled again with the increase devot- ed solely to drug interdiction. Let me give my colleagues another figure. We are told that in order to have any meaningful impact on the trade, in order to seriously impact it, we would have to interdict 75 percent of the drugs. That Is the target offi- cially,of the Coast Guard. They are at- tempting to interdict 75 percent. amendment will make no dent in that budget. Frankly I am so frustrated at the failure of the Federal Government to come to grips with the crime and drug problem and with the inability to enforce our immigration laws, I am ready to turn it all over the the mili- tary. They have the budget--but for now I urge my colleagues to support the effort of the distinguished gentle- man from Florida and the pending amendment. Mr. STUDDS. I appreciate the gen- tleman's frustration and I, too, sup- port the amendment. Mr. HUGHES. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? Mr. STUDDS. I yield to the gentle- man from New Jersey., Mr. HUGHES. I thank the gentle- man for yielding. Mr. Chairman, I serve on the Coast Guard Subcommittee and I was the member who asked the Commandant the question referred to by my col- league from Massachusetts (Mr. STUDDS) as to the size and shortcom- Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 H 4336 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE July 15, 1981 ings of the Coast Guard budget. Let me make one more. observation. The one man in the entire administration, Peter Bensinger, who was trying to do something about putting money back into the budget for drug operation, was fired. He was fired precisely be- cause he sought additional moneys to combat the illicit traffic in drugs. What a tragedy for this country. I would assume my colleague sup- ports the Hughes amendment and I would hope that we can get on to a vote. POSSE COMITATUS O Mr. YOUNG of Florida. Mr. Chair- man, I want to express my strong sup- port for the efforts to amend the Posse Comitatus Act to allow assist- ance from our military forces in the fight against drug traffickers. This legislative effort is long over due. I am a sponsor of similar legislation, H.R. 3506, which is also aimed at ad- dressing this growing problem that is devastating not only my home State of Florida but our entire Nation. I want to take a moment to compli- ment my good friend and colleague from Florida (Mr. BENNETT) for his Ini- tiative in utilizing this fiscal year 1982 DOD authorization bill as the vehicle for accomplishing our mutual objec- tive. He has done a tremendous service to our Nation and I believe we all owe him a debt of graditude. As Members from the State of Flor- ida, Mr. BENNETT and I know first hand. the problem our law enforce- ment officials are running into in at- tempting to stem the tidal wave of drugs that continue to pour into our country from foreign nations-princi- pally, Colombia, Jamaica, Bolivia, and Peru. Our State is practically caught In the middle of a war between the heavily armed and equipped drug smugglers and our law enforcement of- ficials. Unfortunately, as of today we are still losing the battle. It is time for us to declare war on the drug traffick- ers. Utilization of the assets of the Department of Defense will enable our law enforcement officials to meet this threat head on and hopefully we can win this war eventually and save mil- lions of Americans from the misery and horrors of drugs. According to Florida's attorney gen- eral, Jim Smith: It is estimated that at least 40 percent of all marihuana and cocaine shipments from South America, regardless of where deliv- ered, in some way touch Florida. Even If the actual delivery takes place elsewhere, the negotiations, importation arrangements and payments take place here in transactions worth $25 billion a year. Adding to this problem is the fact that Florida's topography is a major asset to the drug smuggler. Florida's shoreline Is over 8,000 miles which allows any of the 200,000-plus private- ly.owned boats to off-load contraband with little fear of being caught. In ad- dition, the large number of rural roads and undeveloped flat terrain are used to off-load and refuel aircraft. There are in excess of 9,000 privately regis- tered -aircraft in Florida and more than 250 registered airports. Even though the State of Florida requires landing strips to be registered, there are literally dozens of unregistered strips capable 'of handling DC-3's and C-46's. A clear example of the severity of the drug problem in the State of Flor- ida is the increase in the number of violent crimes being committed, much of which is due to drug-related vio- lence. In 1980, there were a total of 1,387 murders committed in the State of Florida, an increase of 28 percent over 1979. By way of comparison, the national increase was 7 percent. In 1980, the volume of reported crime in Florida increased 18 percent, while the increase nationally was 10 percent. In 1980, arrests for narcotics violations in Florida were up 12.2 percent over 1979. In addition to the serious crime asso- ciated with the immense quantities of drugs moving into the United States through Florida, there are other obvi- ous considerations: The Drug Enforce- ment Administration estimated that drug transactions through Florida are worth $25 billion annually. It is also estimated that $2.5 billion in drug profits have been invested in Florida real estate, much of it in the anonym- ity of blind trusts concealing the iden- tity of the owners. In one recent investigation, the Flor- ida Department of Law Enforcement estimated that a narcotics importer had been grossing $7 million per month in one drug smuggling oper- ation. In another investigation, the drug smuggling organization was bringing an average of one to three loads of marihuana per week Into the State of Florida. Each of these loads averaged 40,000 to 80,000 pounds, with a street value of $500 per pound, of marihuana. The estimated value per load, then, was $20 to $40 million. As has been mentioned earlier by other speakers, the gross value of the nar- cotics industry in the United States is, at the very least, in excess of $60 bil- lion per year.. It is apparent to me that if we are going to be successful in our war against the drug smugglers we need to utilize all the resources at our dispos- al. We need to enhance the capabili- ties of the DEA, the Coast Guard and the Customs Service both in terms of manpower and equipment. By allowing our law enforcement officials to utilize the assets of the Department of De- fense we will be greatly enhancing the capability of our country In the war against the drug smugglers. Amending posse comitatus is by no means the final answer to this problem, but it nevertheless represents a major step forward and puts the world on notice that the United States is indeed seri- ous about attacking the narcotics problems The CHAIRMAN. The question is on the Judiciary Committee amendment, as amended. The question was taken, and, the Chairman announced that- the ayes appeared to have it. RECORDED VOTE Mr. BENNETT. 1 Mr. Chairman, I demand a recorded vote. A recorded vote was ordered. The vote was taken by electronic device, and there were-ayes, 362, noes 49, answered "present" 6, not voting 15, as follows: (Roll No. 1301 AYES-362 Addabbo de Is Garza Hartnett Akaka DeNo,rdls Hatcher Albosta Derrick Heckler Alexander Derwinski Hefner Anderson Dickinson Heftel Andrews Dicks Hendon Annunzio Dingell Hertel Applegate Dixon Hightower Archer Donnelly Hiler Ashbrook Dorgan Hollenbeck Atkinson Downey Horton AuColn Dreier Howard Badham Duncan Royer Bailey (MO) Dunn Hubbard Bailey (PA) Dwyer Huckaby Barnes Dyson Hughes Bedell Early Hutto Beilenson Eckart Hyde Benedict Edgar Ireland Benjamin Edwards (AL) Jeffords Bereuter Edwards (CA) Jeffries Bevill Edwards (OK) Jenkins Biaggi Emerson Johnston Bingham Emery . Jones (OK) Blanchard English Jones (TN) Bliley Erlenborn Kazen Boggs Ertel ? . Kemp Boland Evans (DE) Kildec Bolling Evans (GA) Kindness Boner Evans (1A) Kogovsek ? Bonlor Evans (IN) Kramer Bonker Fary LaFalce Bouquard Fasces) Lagomarsino Bowen Fazio Leach Breaux Fenwick Leath Brinkley Fiedler LeBoutilller Brodhead Fields Lee Brooks Findley Lehman Broomfield - Fish', Leland Brown (CO) Fithian Lent Brown (OH) Flippo Levitas Broyhill Florio Lewis Burgener Foglietta Livingston Burton, John Foley Loeffler Burton, Phillip Ford (MI) -Long(LA) Butler Ford (TN) Long (MD) Byron Forsythe Lott Campbell Fountain Lowery (CA) Carman Fowler Lowry (WA) Carney Lujan Chapple Frenzel Luken Cheney Frost Lundine Clausen Fuqua Lungren Clay Garcia Markey Clinger Gaydos Marks Coats Oejdenson Marlenee Coelho Gephardt Marriott Coleman Gilman Martin (IL) Collins (IL) Gingrich Martin (NC) Collins (Tx) Glickman Matsui Conable Goldwater Mattox Conte Gonzales Mavroules. Corcoran Gore Mazzol l Coughlin Gradison McClory Courter Gray McCloskey Coyne, James Green- McCollum Coyne, William Gregg . McCurdy Craig Grisham McDade Crane, Daniel Guarini McEwen ? Crane, Philip Gunderson McGrath D'Ainours Hall (OH) McHugh Daniel, R. W. Hall, Ralph McKinney Danielson Hall. Sam Mica Dannemeyer Hamilton Michel Daschle Hansen (ID) Mlkulskl Daub Hanson (UT) Miller (CA) Davis Harkin Miller (OH) Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0 July 15, 1981 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE Mineta Richmond St Germain Minish Rinaldo Stanton Mitchell (NY) Ritter Stark Moakley Roberts (KS) Staten Moffett Roberts (SD) Stokes Molinari Robinson Studds Mollohan Rodino Swift Moore Roo Synor Moorhead Roemer Tauke Morrison Rogers Tauzin Mottl Rose Thomas Murphy Rostenkowski Traxler Murtha Roth Udall Myers Roukema Vander Jagt Napier Ruttsselot Vento Hatcher Roybal Volkmer Neal Rudd Wnlgren Nelligan Russo, Walker Nelson Sabo Wampler Nowak Sawyer Watkins O'Brien Srheuer Waxman Oakar Schneider Weaver Oberstar Schroeder Weber (MN) Obey Schulze Weber (OH) Ottinger Schumer White Panetta Sciberting Whittaker Parris Sensenbrenner Whitten Paabnyan Shamansky Williams (MT) Patterspn Shannon Williams (OH) Paul Sharp Winn Pease Shaw t Wirth Pepper Shelby Wolf Perkins Shumway Wolpe Petri Shuster Wortley Peyser Sil)ander Wright Pickle Simon Wyden Porter Skeen Wylie Price Smith (AL) Yates Pritchard Smith (NE) Yatron, Kahan Smith (N3) Young (AK) Railsback Smith (OR) Young (MO) Ratchford Snows Zablocki Regula Snyder zeferetti Rhodes Solari NOES-49 Anthony Hammerschmldt Reuss' Befalls Hance Skelton Barnard Hillis Smith (IA) Beard Holland Solomon Bennett Holt Spence Bethune Hopkins Stangeland Chappell Hunter Stenholm Daniel. Dan Jacobs , Stratton Doman Kastenmeier Stump Dougherty Latta Taylor Dowdy McDonald Trible Dymally Montgomery Whitehurst Erdahl Nichols Whitley Gibbons Putman Wilson Ginn Pursell Young (FL) Gramm Quillen Hagedorn Rangel ANSWERED "PRESENT"-6 Chisholm Dellunrs Washington Conyers Hawkdns Weiss NOT VOTING-18 Arpin Ferraro Martin (NY) Brown (CA) Ooodling Mitchell (MD) Cotter Jones (NC) Rosenthal Crockett Lantos Santini Deckard Madigan Savage 01210 Mr. BAFALIS changed his vote from "aye" to "no." Messrs. VOLKMER, LEATH of Texas, UDALL, HUTTO, HARKIN, BEVILL, FOUNTAIN, and SMITH. of Alabama changed their votes from "no" to "aye." So the Judiciary Committee amend- men , as amended, was ,agreed to. r. FOWLER., Mr. Chairirlan, I move to strike the requisite number of words. (Mr. FOWLER asked and was given permission to revise and extend his re- marks.) Mr. FOWLER. Mr. Chairman, I intend to vote for H.R. 3519 because, on balani e, many of its major provi- sions are necessary for our Nation's defense. Among the specific initiatives contained in H.R. 3519 that I heartily endorse are:. Its provision of a much more ade- quate, and realistic, level of funding for such essential readiness items as spare parts, training, and mainte- nance; ? Its programs aimed at upgrading our Reserve and National Guard Forces; Its support for mobility forces, espe- cially fast sealift and readily available airlift; Its support ' for more cost-efficient production levels for a number of major weapons systems; and Its establishment of a new armed services procurement policy, including statutory authority for multiyear de- fense contracting which should pro- duce significant cost savings over time. However, as one might expect in any legislation that authorizes $136 billion in Federal spending, I do have serious reservations about a number of the provisions of H.R. 3519. I recorded my H 4337 numbers are 14.4 percent projected by the Reagan administration and 18.9 Percent estimated by CBO. For re- search and development the story is similar: 16.4 percent inflation in the Reagan budget, 21.9 percent. inflation assumed by CBO. When you add all these numbers up; based on CBO projections H.R. 3519 is underestimating real defense inflation costs by $6.4 billion. Even halfing the differences between the OMB and CBO estimates produces a shortfall of $3.2 billion. Clearly, there are deficien- cies In our current defense budgeting procedure and unless we move to cor- rect them, from both sides of Pennsyl- vania. Avenue, we will see a continu- ation of the problems cited in the Armed Services Committee report: Cuts in procurement of equipment, stretchouts of critically needed pro- grams, and highly publicized cost over- runs. A second area that I am concerned about in H.R. 3519 is the bill's lack of attention to vital command, control, and communications-C'-programs. Here the problem is. not just money, though I am troubled by cuts in the concerns' about -the particular' M-X ;extremely, low frequency (ELF) pro- and strategic bomber programs man- gram for communications with our dated by the House Armed Services strategic submarine fleet and in other Committee .last week during the amendment process. Now, prior to final passage of the fiscal year 1982 defense authorization, I would like to register a few more general reservations -that could not be addressed by simple amendment. First of all, I join with the House Armed Services Committee in being "deeply concerned with the systematic underestimation of inflation rates in the defense budget." To quote further from the committee report on H.R.. 3519: During the fiscal year 1982 authorization hearings, the committee heard witness after witness decry the unrealistically low infla- tion indices that were imposed by the Office of Management and Budget ? ? Historical- ly, this has led to reductions in defense equipment purchases, stretch-out of vital programs, and highly visible cost overruns ? ? ? The defense programs requested in the fiscal year 1981 supplemental and fiscal year 1982 budget have been subjected to the same unrealistic budgeting processes that have been practiced in the past ? ' ? The fiscal year 1982 budget assumes a lowering of the inflation rate from the previous Ad- ministration's unrealistically low 9.7 percent to a rate of 8.7 percent. ' Yet despite these findings, all of which I concur with, the bill before us makes those same unrealistic budget assumptions. If the executive branch has a responsibility for truth in de- fense budgeting, so does the Congress. Based on figures I have received from the Pentagon and from the Con- gressional Budget Office, for the period 1980 to 1982, the President's de fense budget and H.R. 3519 assume a compounded inflation rate for oper- ations and maintenance of 19.4 per- cent compared to CBO's projection of 25.7 percent. For procurement the C' programs. What is"more disturbing, however, is the lack of visibility and priority that is afforded to C', not just in the Con- gress but in the Pentagon as well. The other body made a step in the right di- rection, in my opinion, by including In this year's Department of Defense au- thorization committee report a sepa- rate section devoted to strategic C and the committee's Initiatives in this area; but throwing more money at the problem is not the total answer. Last session we heard a great deal about the need for heightened con- gressional attention to operations and maintenance. I wholeheartedly agree with this assessment and Iam pleased with the initial results from the new operations and maintenance authori- zation procedure. . In my opinion, we now need to focus the same degree of attention and con- cern on command, control, and com- munications, both strategic and tacti- cal. We cannot afford to let programs like the ELF communications system or the E-4B airborne command post be canceled or stretched out by default. It Is my belief that our C3 systems, whether strategic or tactical, are the most vulnerable link In our military forces and are hence the most likely to face initial enemy attack. Unless we devote adequate effort and resources to upgrading these systems all of our other, far more massive weapons in- vestments, whether for new ICBM's, strategic bombers, or conventional ar- maments, will be seriously compro- mised. I strongly concur with the other body's directive to the Secretary of Defense: A Approved For Release 2008/10/24: CIA-RDP85-00003R000100020005-0