Crime and Safety
Rep. Chu meets with El Monte Police Officers.
“I am committed to keeping our communities safe from crime. We must do more to ensure law enforcement has all the tools it needs to stop crime and violence.”
- Rep. Judy Chu
I am hard at work keeping our streets safe. While in Congress, I have focused my efforts on keeping guns out of dangerous hands, cutting off the money flow that finances drug crimes, and equipping our local law enforcement with the resources they need to effectively fight crime. Through my position on the House Judiciary Committee, specifically the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, I have upheld my commitment to protect our communities from those seeking to cause harm.
My crime and public safety priorities include:
Federal Funding for Local Law Enforcement
Keeping our Youth Safe from Crime
Making Our Cities Safer for All
Cutting off Funding for Drug Cartels
Federal Funding For Local Law Enforcement
With our economy in trouble and state and local budget strained, funding for law enforcement is in a precarious position. Many law enforcement agencies across the country have implemented hiring freezes for both sworn officers and civilian positions. Federal funding can help address these concerns and more by getting more cops on the street and providing more safety equipment for our police officers.
- I am pushing for full funding of the Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) and have consistently voted against efforts to cut funds from this essential grant program.
- I strongly support President Obama’s American Jobs Act, which would direct $5 billion toward the hiring and retention of local law enforcement officers and first responders.
Keeping our Youth Safe from Crime
The most effecitve way to reduce juvenile crime rates is to keep our youth from ever entering the system. That’s why I am an original co-sponsor of the Youth PROMISE Act (H.R. 2721).
This legislation will shift our country away from the ineffective policies of punishment and incarceration towards ones devoted to preventing juvenile crime before it ever begins. The bill provides over $1.1 billion to reduce juvenile crime and delinquency through methods already proven to be effective. It focuses on efforts like individualized treatment plans, the hiring of more youth-oriented police officers, and partnering with local community groups who are best able to reach youths in need.
It also provides the juvenile justice system with more funding. With these resources, we can truly make a difference and move these at-risk youth away from gangs and crime and instead towards schools and jobs.
Making Our Cities Safer for All
Every year, tens of thousands of Americans are senselessly murdered by criminals armed with guns. And what’s even more troubling is that the number of police officers killed by gun violence is on the rise. In many of these incidents, the killer was prohibited under current law from possessing a firearm. That is why I am a cosponsor of The Fix Gun Checks Act of 2011 (H.R. 1781), which requires states to improve their reporting of records on criminals, drug abusers, domestic violence offenders and the seriously mentally ill to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). More specifically, the bill will:
- Improve the NICS Background Check System: The National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) was put in place to facilitate background checks on prospective gun buyers and prevent dangerous people from purchasing firearms. According to a recent analysis by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, 28 states have submitted fewer than 100 mental health records to the federal database. Ten states have submitted none. This legislation would boost incentives for states to comply with reporting requirements.
- Close Loopholes that Allow Gun Sellers to Get Around the Background Check Requirements: Under current law, only federally licensed firearm dealers must conduct background checks. Around 40 percent of U.S. gun sales, however, are conducted by individuals who are not licensed dealers and are not required to run checks. The bill would require these private sellers to verify, either with local law enforcement or through certified gun dealers that the person they are selling a gun to is not on the national NICS list.
Cutting Off Funding for Drug Cartels
Drug cartel money continues to be a major concern for states along the United States – Mexico border. Cartels use financial systems, bulk cash smuggling, and trade based methods to move money through the U.S. and into Mexico. Up to $38 billion a year may be sent to Mexico by the cartels, and Los Angeles is one of the most significant money laundering bases where a cartel leader takes direct control of the money. I am working to cut off the money flow by:
- Freezing foreign illegal assets: I authored the Preserving Foreign Criminal Assets for Forfeiture Act of 2010, which became law on December 22, 2010. This Act ensures that U.S. courts can freeze assets subject to a foreign legal proceeding at the beginning of those proceedings. This bill is vital in the fight to combat money laundering and other illegal crime because it allows federal law enforcement to seek a temporary restraining order on potentially illicit assets that are often shielded from foreign forfeiture proceedings.
- Pushing for funding of critical programs: I am fighting for funding for the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program, which since 2005, has dismantled or disrupted close to 14,000 drug trafficking and money laundering organizations. The Los Angeles HIDTA was responsible for “Operation Knock Out,” the nation’s largest-ever gang sweep.
Contact Me
E-newsletter Sign Up
Help with a Federal Agency
On the Issues
Voting Record