Genocide bill waits for floor vote
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The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors lent its unanimous
support to a bill that would recognize the deaths of 1.5 million
Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as a genocide.
The bill, introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff, passed the House
International Relations Committee last week, but still has to get to
the floor for a vote.
The mark-up was the Armenian Genocide Resolution’s final hurdle
before it can be voted on by the full House of Representatives.
The committee approved the bill with a bipartisan vote of 36 to
11.
It seeks to guarantee that the foreign policy of the U.S. reflects
appropriate understanding and sensitivity relating to human rights
and ethnic cleansing associated with the Armenian Genocide.
“We have the support of both sides,” said Tony Bell,
representative for Supervisor Michael Antonovich. “We’re hoping that
when it reaches the House floor, we’ll have successful results.”
Officials crack down on fleeing fugitives
Rep. David Dreier and Rep. Adam Schiff introduced an updated
version of the Peace Officer Justice Act Tuesday to crack down on cop
killers who flee south of the border, Schiff said.
The new bill, Justice for Peace Officers Act, will still make it a
federal crime to murder a peace officer and flee the country, but it
will also call for increased penalties and will give the federal
government priority in prosecuting suspects, he said.
“It will give the federal government priority to prosecute these
cases and it will also send a message to Mexico that the federal
government will use its power to bring these people to justice,”
Schiff said.
The Justice for Peace Officers Act will raise the jail time for
second-degree murder to a minimum of 30 years to life in prison, and
also assigns a minimum of 15 years to those who aid the flight of a
suspected peace officer killer, he said.
“Both David [Dreier] and I both consider it high enough priority
that this is an area the federal government should have its voice be
heard,” Schiff said.
Liu check fraud bill signed into law
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a check fraud bill, written by
Assemblywoman Carol Liu (D-La Canada Flintridge), which will restrict
the recycling of checking account numbers, officials said.
The law will require banks to wait three years before reusing
account numbers to battle the rising threat of identity theft crimes,
officials from Liu’s office said.
The bill, which will take effect Jan. 1, 2006, was driven by the
banking industry’s habit of passing account numbers from one client
to the next, officials said.
DISARM confiscates weapons from probationers
The Los Angeles County Probation Department seized 23 weapons,
including handguns and knives, from 67 probationers last month,
officials from the office of Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D.
Antonovich said.
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