Garland Asks For An Additional $37 Billion, Sen Kennedy Ripped Him A New One

AG Garland asked for another $38 million of federal funding—aka tax dollars when they are already set to receive almost $3 billion. Why? Supposedly to help fight crime. The issue with just handing it to them is Biden’s DOJ messaging. Democrats ‘defund movement’ has left officers vulnerable. Before taxpayers spend another dime, they need to fix the real problem and support the police.

Thankfully, at a hearing to discuss the money request, LA Sen John Kennedy was able to voice that concern:

“I think the Justice Department is losing. I think you’re losing on crime,”LA Sen John Kennedy said during a Tuesday Senate Appropriations Committee. The DOJ is requesting $37.65 billion in federal funding for [the] Fiscal Year 2023, a $2.63 billion increase over current levels.

Garland should encourage CPD to reinstate stop-and-frisk policies to curb homicides, Kennedy said.

“We haven’t made any inroads in stopping the killing. Chicago is now the world’s largest outdoor shooting range. We know that a lot of the shootings come from gangs. Why wouldn’t you want to call the police chief and the mayor in Chicago and say, ‘Look, you know who these gang members are. When you have reasonable suspicion under Terry v. Ohio, an objective standard, more than just a hunch, why don’t you aggressively stop, question, and frisk these gang members?’” he asked.

“The best way for the federal government to stop violent crime is to work at each local level and determine, and let the state and locals determine what the best use of their own resources is,” Garland dodged before Kennedy cut him off.

“I’m sorry to interrupt, but I’m trying to get some answers. Why won’t you do that? Just tell me why you won’t do that. Your opinion matters,” Kennedy pressed.

“Because there is no one solution fits all that the federal government can suggest to state and local law enforcement. We believe state and local law enforcement knows best as to what to do there. We provide our technical expertise. We put lots of resources into joint task forces,” the Attorney General answered.

“You are asking in the middle of raging inflation for 7% more money, $2.63 billion, to provide technical increase, technical advice? I mean, we’re going backwards here on crime, General. You are the country’s chief law enforcement officer. You won’t even answer my question about how you feel about stop, question, and frisk?” Kennedy shot back.

Watch

Kennedy questioned how the DOJ would support law enforcement officials in cities like Chicago, which has already seen 169 murders in 2022. Nearly 800 people were killed in the city of Chicago in 2021, the highest number since 1996. The Chicago Police Department (CPD) arrested only 201 people for homicide in 2021, although it claimed a case closure rate of 50%, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. CPD rules allow officers to claim a case “closed” if they believe a suspect is dead, prosecutors decline to charge or police decline to arrest a chief suspect.

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