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PA Bill Number: HB2311

Title: Establishing the School Mental Health Screening Grant and Development Program.

Description: Establishing the School Mental Health Screening Grant and Development Program. ...

Last Action: Laid on the table

Last Action Date: Sep 23, 2024

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Briefings on San Bernardino attacks leave Congress uncertain what to do :: 12/11/2015

WASHINGTON (TNS) — Members of Congress received secret FBI briefings Thursday on the San Bernardino shooting and were left still scrambling for answers about what happened and what can be done.

California Democrats demanded the lifting of a decades-old ban on federal research into gun violence, while some Republicans in Congress said the shooter’s neighbors didn’t report suspicious activity to law enforcement because of “political correctness.”

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said that among the unanswered questions were why Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik decided to attack Farook’s workplace rather than a more symbolic target. Republican Rep. Peter King of New York, chairman of the House of Representatives subcommittee on counterterrorism, called for round-the-clock surveillance of the Muslim community.

Several lawmakers called for tightening the process for getting a fiancee visa, which Malik, a Pakistani national, used to get into the United States. But with little information on how Malik, despite interviews and background checks, was able to avoid detection of her radical views, it’s not clear what can be done.

“We’ve got to learn from this,” said Rep. Ami Bera of California, a Democrat. “Lone wolf cases like this are very difficult to track.”

California Democrats are aggressively calling for gun control measures in the wake of the shootings, and they demanded Thursday that a lifting of the ban on research into gun violence be included in a spending bill needed to keep the government from shutting down after Friday.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.) of St. Helena used a Capitol Hill event commemorating the third anniversary of the deadly mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, to call for ending the research ban.

“For nearly 20 years, experts at the CDC have been prohibited from researching the causes and best ways to prevent gun violence,” Thompson said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hasn’t gone near the gun issue since Congress blocked funding for such research in 1997.

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) when he was asked about the demand by California Democrats to include language lifting the research ban as part of the must-pass spending bill, said, “I’m not going to negotiate current negotiations through the media.”

FBI Director James Comey, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and John Mulligan, deputy director of the National Counterterrorism Center, briefed members of the House and Senate in classified sessions Thursday.

Republican Rep. Bob Goodlatte of Virginia, chair of the House Judiciary Committee, told reporters afterward that neighbors of the San Bernardino shooters saw “suspicious things occurring around where these two killers were living” but didn’t tell law enforcement.

He and other Republicans said the neighbors apparently “didn’t want to be accused of being discriminatory” against Muslims by reporting them.

“They saw activities going on in and out of the garage at various times of the day and night that they thought were suspicious,” Goodlatte said.

Schiff said it wasn’t clear from the investigation that anything members of the public saw would have been enough to prevent the shooting or was suspicious enough to be “apparent without the benefit of hindsight.”

Schiff said it was still a mystery why the shooters, who amassed a large arsenal of ammunition, chose to attack Farook’s co-workers instead of another target.

“The early indications that there was some kind of an argument at the site have proven to be erroneous,” he said.

Lawmakers from both parties are considering more restrictions on the visa programs that allow foreigners to come to the United States.

Schiff said the issue came up in the classified briefing, with discussion of “whether there are holes in that process that need to be plugged and some other ways we can strengthen that process to prevent people from using either the fiancee visa or the marriage visa or any other visa program to enter the country with the purposes of ultimately carrying out an attack.”

Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) said Congress was looking at whether there had been missed opportunities to stop the shooting but hadn’t found them.

“The work that was done leading up to the incident was as good as it could be. There don’t seem to be any smoking guns, unfortunately, except for the ones that killed so many people,” he said.

Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas said, however, that after listening to FBI director Comey at the briefing he was very concerned about U.S. security. He cited encrypted messages sent from a shooter in Garland, Texas, earlier this year to an overseas terrorist that the FBI hasn’t been able to decipher.

Rep. King of New York went further than other lawmakers and called for “surveillance in the Muslim community here in the United States.”

“The only way you’re going to find out this in advance is to do the same type of 24/7 surveillance that was done in Italian-American communities when they were going after the Mafia and in the Irish communities when they were going after the Westies,” he said, a reference to an Irish-American gang active on New York City’s West Side.

http://personalliberty.com/briefings-on-san-bernardino-attacks-leave-congress-uncertain-what-to-do/