The House : Interdicting Drugs
By a vote of 237 for and 177 against, the House adopted an amendment requiring presidents to use whatever military might is needed to substantially halt the illegal flow of drugs into the United States. This would mark the first diversion of the armed services from their military mission to the war on drugs. Presidents would deploy air, sea and land forces against drug smugglers in coastal and border areas.
The amendment was attached to a multi-pronged legislative attack on America’s growing drug problem, a measure that will cost more than $1.5 billion in fiscal 1987 and upwards of $3 billion over the next three years.
The bill (HR 5484) was sent to the Senate, where liberals are threatening to filibuster some of its provisions.
Critics of the amendment included liberals who said it is dangerous for the armed services to become involved in civilian law enforcement, and conservatives who said the Pentagon has enough to do already.
While the bill provides special funding to prevent drug abuse, its emphasis is on enforcement. It toughens laws against drug traffickers, provides money for more prison space, upgrades government interdiction activity and penalizes countries that fail to curb drug exports to America.
Members voting yes wanted the Pentagon to be enlisted in the war on drugs.
How They Voted Yea Nay No vote Rep. Dreier (R) x Rep. Martinez (D) x Rep. Moorhead (R) x Rep. Roybal (D) x Rep. Torres (D) x
Rules of Evidence
The House adopted, 259 for and 153 against, an amendment setting conditions under which evidence obtained illegally in warrantless searches can be admitted in criminal drug trials. Under this proposed softening of the exclusionary rule, such evidence would be admissible if police acted in “good faith” in seizing it. The vote occurred during debate on HR 5484 (above). Members voting yes wanted to loosen restrictions on the admission of illegally obtained evidence in drug trials.
How They Voted Yea Nay No vote Rep. Dreier (R) x Rep. Martinez (D) x Rep. Moorhead (R) x Rep. Roybal (D) x Rep. Torres (D) x
WHERE TO REACH THEM David Dreier, 33rd District
112 N. 2nd Ave., Covina 91723(818) 339-9078
Matthew Martinez, 30th District
1712 W. Beverly Blvd., Suite 201, Montebello 90640(213) 722-7731
Carlos J. Moorhead, 22th District
301 E. Colorado Blvd., Room 618, Pasadena 91101(818) 792-6168
Edward R. Roybal, 25th District
300 N. Los Angeles St., Los Angeles 90012(213) 894-4870
Esteban Torres, 34th District
8819 Whittier Blvd., Suite 101, Pico Rivera 90660(213) 695-0702
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.