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## Regarding your request:
   sendfile 56366

                         THE WHITE HOUSE

                  Office of the Press Secretary
                       (Chicago, Illinois)
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                               June 17, 1994

	     
                     REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
      IN TOUR OF CHICAGO HOUSING AUTHORITY POLICE SUBSTATION

	     	  
                        Chicago, Illinois



9:50 A.M. CDT
	     
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  Now, all these assault weapons, 
these tech knives and these weapons with the big magazines, will 
all be banned under the crime bill.  That's where -- they started 
the conference yesterday, and since both Houses have adopted the 
assault weapons ban, if they reach agreement, send it back and 
both Houses pass it, and the assault weapons that are here --
those with multiple magazines and -- I mean, multiple ammunition 
in the magazines and that otherwise qualify would be banned.
	     
	     We just left -- in the next room over here, this is 
a representative sample, but we left -- in this one police 
station, there are 1,500 of these weapons that were confiscated 
from public housing units of all these kind of weapons.
	     
	     This is a huge problem.  The police don't have a 
chance and these people can't live in safety unless we give them 
some means at least to get the most dangerous weapons out of 
here, and then provide more police officers so they'll be able to 
deal with the other problems.

	     Q	  Mr. President, the 1,500 weapons in the other 
room, do you have some sense of how many would be covered by the 
assault weapons ban?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  No, I didn't disaggregate it.  But 
the largest number in the other room that I saw were these Tech-
9s.  They have them just stacked up row after row after row of 
four and five of them.  They sort of -- these little weapons have 
kind of become the weapons of choice, haven't they?
	     
	     Q	  Do you think that the crime bill would get --
the gun ban would get gang members from -- keep them from getting 
these anyway?  If they want them, aren't they going to get them?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that it will make a 
significant difference.  I think there will be fewer of them in 
circulation.  I think you're going to see a lot of gun buy-back 
programs in every major area in the country.  We want to support 
those.  And I think over a couple of years it can make a 
significant difference.
	     
	     I think that the percentage of weapons which are 
assault weapons -- automatic and semi-automatic assault weapons 
-- will go down dramatically over the next few years.  Now, this 
problem didn't develop overnight and it's going to take us some 
time to deal with it.  But the ban needs to pass.  It's a very 
important thing.
	     
	     Q	  Mr. President, you've supported sweeps in the 
past as a method to get guns and stop crime in public housing.  
Do you still support the sweeps?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  I support this policy 
here very strongly.  We got a court decision which said there 
were some things wrong with it.  So Secretary Cisneros, as you 
know, came here, spent the night, worked with Mr. Lane and others 
here and put in a sweeps policy that I strongly support.
	     
	     People have a right to live in a place without being 
subject to this.  There are children here.  There are working 
people.  There are mothers, there are fathers.  They deserve a 
chance to live in safety.  They have -- the right of the 
community to live in safety and wholeness is the first and most 
important right of any civilized society.  
	     
	     Q	  But should people have to choose between the 
right to privacy and the right to living in safety and security?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  No, but we all are willing to give 
up some of our privacy rights from time to time.  For example, no 
American complains anymore about going through a metal detector 
at an airport.  And no one even considers it an invasion of 
privacy anymore.  At least I don't.  I'm more than happy to do it 
for the security I have when I get on an airplane that I'll get 
to my destination, other things being equal.
	     
	     Q	  Sir, were you urged to deal on the racial 
justice amendment in order to get the crime bill through?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, they just started the 
conference yesterday.  We're going to have to wait and see where 
the people are.   Give the conferees a chance to work through it.  
The most -- I'll say this:  The most important thing of all in my 
opinion is to get the 100,000 police out; to get the assault 
weapons ban out; to get the programs out on crime prevention, 
drug treatment, giving these kids things to do -- you know, some 
activities after school and jobs in the summer and things that 
will really give young people a chance to say yes to something 
and not just to say no to something.  The things that will really 
hammer down the crime rate.  And I think that -- the one thing I 
will say is that the Congress cannot walk away from this.  This 
is an enormous opportunity.  This will be the most major piece of 
anticrime legislation ever passed by the United States Congress 
beyond question.  It must pass and it ought to pass now.
	     
	     Q	  Mr. President, could we try one more time for a 
clarification on the difference between what President Carter --  

	     THE PRESIDENT:  I don't know what he said and I 
don't know that you know what he said.  I don't know what he said 
and I don't know that you know what he said.  All I know is what 
I said, and what I said is the policy of the United States of 
America.  
	     
	     Q	  And the pursuit of sanctions will continue at 
the present time?
	     
	     THE PRESIDENT:  That's -- I explained yesterday what 
the conditions for resuming negotiations and suspending the 
pursuit of sanctions were.  Nothing has changed.  That is the 
policy of the United States.

                               END9:56 A.M. CDT


