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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release November 15, 1997
                              RADIO ADDRESS
                            BY THE PRESIDENT
                              TO THE NATION
      
                           The Roosevelt Room  

THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. Today I want to talk about the progress we're making in our fight against crime and the steps we're taking to build on that progress. All over our country, crime is dropping. Responsibility and respect for the law are on the rise. But the true measure of our progress is whether our children can play in their front yards, whether they can walk to school in safety, whether our parents can unlock their front doors, whether our grandparents can walk down the streets with confidence, free from the fear of violence.

To give our families that security, we've put in place a comprehensive plan to bring the crime rate down -- with 100,000 new community police officers, tougher punishment, stronger anti-gang prevention, the Brady Bill. And we've led an unprecedented effort to join the forces of national, state and local law enforcement to fight crime in every community in America.

In the three years since I signed the Crime Bill into law, we know our strategy is having a real, measurable impact. Crime has dropped now for a record five years in a row. Today, we have even more dramatic proof of our progress -- the Annual National Crime Victimization Survey. It says that in 1996, crime rates fell to their lowest recorded level in nearly 25 years. Property crime is down. Violent crime is down.

Since 1993, murder has dropped by 22 percent, 10 percent in 1996 alone. This remarkable drop in the crime rate is no accident. The hard work of people from Washington to every community in the country made it happen.

Community policing is at the center of this success. In only three years, we've already funded 65,000 new police officers under the Crime Bill and we're close to meeting our goal of putting 100,000 new police officers on our streets.

Our nation's police officers will tell you that our ongoing effort to ban lethal assault weapons has also been critical to their ability to do a better job. We've banned these guns because you don't need an uzi to go deer hunting, and everyone knows it.

But as effective as the assault weapons ban has been, we know that some foreign gun manufacturers are getting around the ban by making minor modifications to their weapons that amount to nothing more than cosmetic surgery. Well, we didn't fight has hard as we have -- to pass the assault weapons in the first place -- only to let a few gun manufacturers sidestep our laws and undermine our progress.

Assault weapons in the hands of civilians exist for no reason but to inspire fear and wreak deadly havoc on our streets. They don't belong on our streets or in our schoolyards, and they shouldn't be aimed at our children. That's why we banned them three years ago and why we're taking action today.

Effective immediately, the Secretary of the Treasury is suspending the importation of all modified assault weapons for 120 days while we study whether they can be permanently blocked from our borders and banned from our streets. We must continue to do everything we can to crack down on illegal firearms and the organized criminals, terrorists and drug lords who seek them. Yesterday, President Zedillo of Mexico and I signed an unprecedented international convention to help fight illegal gun trafficking in our own hemisphere and to strengthen law enforcement's ability to combat this deadly trade.

Working together over the last five years, we've proven that we can drive down the crime rate. Now we have to press on, confident that we can take our streets back from crime, take assault weapons and illegal firearms out of the hands of criminals, enact a tough but smart juvenile justice bill, and eventually, give our families and our children the real security they deserve.

Thanks for listening.

END