PLEASE HELP SUPPORT H.R. 3695 HELP FIND THE MISSING ACT (Billy's Law) - FEDERAL CO-SPONSORS NEEDED - IN EVERY STATE! - PERSEVERANCE GETS THINGS ACCOMPLISHED!
H.R.3695 HELP FIND THE MISSING ACT (Billy's Law) has been introduced and we are asking if you would so kindly open the link : http://criminaljustice.change. org/actions/view/support_for_ hr_3695_the_help_find_the_ missing_act_billys_law review and complete the easy questions in the box provided then hit send. A letter will be sent to your Federal Congress person asking for support and co sponsorship
If your life has been personally touched by a missing person, please ADD COMMENTS of your life altering experience, a brief history of the person, when and how you feel they they disappeared, your legislators will see the human aspect and the need to support such a bill.
Filling in the Gaps of the Nation’s Missing Persons Systems
Endorsed By: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, Fraternal Order of Police, National Associations of Police Organizations (NAPO), Connecticut Department of Public Safety, National Forensic Science Technology Center, National Center for Forensic Science, Doe Missing Persons Network, Families of Homicide Victims and Missing Persons, Inc., Peace4TheMissing, Please Help Find The Missing Group, Project EDAN, LostNMissing Inc., Center for Hope, CUECENTER, Surviving Parents Coalition
Sponsored by Representatives Chris Murphy (D-CT) and Ted Poe (R-TX)
Current Cosponsors: Walt Minnick (ID-I), Ed Whitfield (R-KY) Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH)
We are appreciative of the endorsement for H.R. 3695 from the National Associations of Police Organizations. (NAPO)
Please click here for link to their endorsement letter: http://tinyurl.com/NAPO-HR3695
This legislation is named after Billy Smolinski of Waterbury, Connecticut who went missing on August 24, 2004 at the age of 31. Billy’s family knows all-too-well the systemic challenges in trying to find the missing. They quickly learned that while federal law mandates law enforcement report missing children, there are no such requirements for adults – or unidentified bodies. Compounding this problem is the fact that local law enforcement agencies, medical examiners, and coroners, often don’t have the resources or training to voluntarily report these cases. Finally, even when missing adults and remains are reported, the wide-range of unconnected federal, state, local, and non-profit databases to help match the missing with unidentified bodies, makes finding a match an often insurmountable challenge.
Billy’s Law builds upon recent efforts to address these issues by:
- Authorizing, and therefore helping to ensure funding for, the National Missing Persons and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs), which was created in July 2007 by the Department of Justice (DOJ) to provide a missing persons/unidentified database that the public could access and contribute;
- Connecting NamUs with the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC) in order to create more comprehensive missing persons and unidentified remains databases and streamlining the reporting process for local law enforcement;
- Creating an incentive grants program to help states, local law enforcement and medical examiners/coroners report missing persons and unidentified remains to NCIC, NamUs, and the National DNA Index System (NDIS);
- Calling on the DOJ to issue guidelines and best practices on handling missing persons and unidentified remains cases in order to empower law enforcement, medical examiners and coroners to help find the missing.
In closing, I thank you again for your review and hopeful support. Should you have any questions or needs, I am sure that Representative Chris Murphy (D-CT) and Ted Poe (R-TX) would be honored to respond to your inquiries.