Rock Island, IL: The world is all abuzz as the newest Star Wars chapter opens. Readers will have a chapter of their own as the Rock Island Library offers Use the Force: READ! winter reading contests in January and February.

The library kicks off winter reading in a galactic way with a special event, Awaken the Reading Force, on Saturday, Jan. 16. Offered during Be a Tourist in Your Own Backyard weekend, the Star Wars inspired experiences include opportunities to play the Jedi Obstacle course, tour the Death Star spacecraft station, fight the dark side, make Star Wars crafts and buttons, and enjoy many other Star Wars activities within the Rock Island Library galaxy. Free family activities, games and fun for children, teens, and adults take place from 2:00 to 3:30 pm in the Rock Island Main Library Community Room, 401 19th Street. Wear your favorite Star Wars garb for extra fun!

Use the Force: READ! Winter Reading forms will be available for pick up at the event  and at any Rock Island Library after Jan. 16. Winter reading programs provide a way to fight the dark side of winter by encouraging children, teens and adults to read for fun and relaxation. Readers who reach their goals prove the power of the reading force, and will win prizes or entries into larger prize drawings. The Use the Force: READ mission starts Saturday, Jan. 16 and concludes Saturday, Feb. 27. Reading contests are
free and open to anyone.

Regularly scheduled library programming during the Use the Force: READ Winter Reading contest period includes Toddler Tales story times, Play and Grow events, family craft times,' tween and teen gaming nights, teen anime nights, library book clubs, independent movie nights, adult coloring, and special events focusing on genealogy and the fact and fiction of Sylvan Slough island. Special events planned around the Winter Reading theme include :

Tween Galaxy Scavenger Hunt, Monday, Jan. 25, 6:30 to 7:30 pm, Main Library Community Room and Children's Room. A library scavenger hunt just for kids ages 8 to 12. There's a great disturbance in the force, and it's your mission to fix it by finding all the clues in the library galaxy. Prizes awarded to winners.

Family Movie Fest: Monday, Feb. 15, at 3:00 pm, Main Library. A space-themed family movie

Teen Galaxy Night, Thursday, Feb. 18, 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm, Rock Island Main Library. Teens

All events are free and open to the public, and do not require registration or participation in the winter reading program. But with chances to win prizes and show your Jedi reading skills, there's no reason not to pick up Use the Force: READ entry forms at any Rock Island Library from Jan. 16 to Feb. 27. For more information about Rock Island Library hours, services and programs, visit the library's online branch at www.rockislandlibrary.org, call 309-732-READ, or follow the library on Facebook or Twitter.

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(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today appointed Mark E. Kruse judge to the District Court in the 8B Judicial District created by the retirement of the Honorable Cynthia H. Danielson.

Kruse, of Burlington, received his law degree from University of Iowa Law School and undergraduate degree from Morningside College.  He currently serves as a District Associate Judge for Iowa Judicial District 8B.

District 8 includes the following counties: Appanoose, Davis, Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Keokuk, Lee, Louisa, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, Van Buren, Wapello and Washington.

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DES MOINES, IA (12/17/2015)(readMedia)-- Two new members were elected to the Iowa State Fair Board of Directors and five were re-elected during the Iowa Association of Fairs Conference and Annual Meeting held December 11-13 in Des Moines. Delegates from six geographic State Fair Board districts elect two board members each for a total of 12 directors. All terms are staggered two-year terms.

Directors re-elected to serve two-year terms and their districts are: Bob Schlutz, Columbus Junction (southeast); C.W. Thomas, Guthrie Center (southwest); Randy Brown, Osceola (south central); Alan Brown, Hampton (north central); and, John Harms, Monticello (northeast).

Two new board members and their districts are: Darwin Gaudin, Primghar (northwest), elected to serve a 2 year term for former Board member, Bill Neubrand, who passed away this year. Tennie Carlson, Stratford (north central), elected for a 1 year term to complete the term of board member, James Romer, who moved out of state this year. Tennie joins a notable list of women who have served on the Iowa State Fair Board including most recently, Leona Ashman (south central) who served as president in the 90s and Jeannie Partlow (northwest) who served as treasurer and retired from the Board in 2010.

In 2016, Alan Brown will serve the Board as president, John Harms will serve as vice-president and Dave Hoffman will serve as treasurer.

Other Board members include : Paul Vaassen, Dubuque (northeast); Gary VanAernam, Exira (southwest); Jerry Parkin, Earlham (south central); and Gary McConnell, Bloomfield (southeast). Directors by office held are Governor Terry Branstad (represented by Lt. Governor Kim Reynolds), Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey (represented by Michael Naig), and Iowa State University President Dr. Steven Leath (represented by Dr. John Lawrence).

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Frequently ranked as one of the top events in the country, the Iowa State Fair is the single largest event in the state of Iowa and one of the oldest and largest agricultural and industrial expositions in the country. Annually attracting more than a million people from all over the world, the Iowa State Fair located at East 30th and East University, just 10 minutes from downtown Des Moines is Iowa's greatest celebration with a salute to the best in agriculture, industry, entertainment and achievement. For more information, visit www.iowastatefair.org.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Senator Chuck Grassley today on the Senate floor asked unanimous consent for the Senate to begin consideration of a bill to ensure that inspectors general across the federal bureaucracy have timely access to all records needed to complete a thorough and independent investigation.  Grassley's unanimous consent request was objected to by Senate minority leader Harry Reid in an effort to hide the identities of members who are holding up passage of the bill.  The objection was made in violation of the spirit of the Standing Order of the Senate that says members who have holds on legislation must be identified.

In a statement after the objection, Grassley said, "This bill is about giving inspectors general the tools they need to provide proper oversight of the executive branch.  These are common sense solutions to helping root out waste, fraud and abuse.  Objecting to a bipartisan bill whose authors have been working for months in good faith, without offering constructive assistance to improving it, reflects poorly on the Senate as a whole."

The text of Grassley's speech on the Inspector General Empowerment Act is below.

Video of Grassley's floor speech can be found here.

DAVENPORT, IA–Waste Commission of Scott County facilities will close at noon Thursday, Dec. 24 and will remain closed Friday, Dec. 25. However, no appointments will be available for drop-off of household hazardous materials on Saturday, Dec. 26. Facilities will reopen Monday, Dec. 28.

 

Facilities also will be closed Friday, Jan. 1. The Scott Area Landfill and Household Hazardous Materials Facility will reopen Saturday, Jan. 2, and all facilities will be open on Monday, Jan. 4.

 

Facilities include the following:

  • Scott Area Landfill, 11555 110th Ave., Davenport
  • Scott Area Household Hazardous Material Facility, 11555 110th Ave., Davenport
  • Electronic Demanufacturing Facility, 1048 East 59th St., Davenport

The Scott Area Recycling Center, 5640 Carey Ave., Davenport, remains closed for construction, which will allow for single-stream recycling operations. The facility is expected to re-open in summer 2016. While the facility is closed, the recycling drop-off bins on-site continue to be available to residents. In addition, residents with compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) or full medical sharps containers may drop them off at the adjacent Electronic Demanufacturing Facility, where they also may pick up new containers for sharps.

Waste Commission of Scott County is an intergovernmental agency whose mission is to provide environmentally sound and economically feasible solid waste management for Scott County. For more information about the Commission, please call (563) 381-1300 or visit www.wastecom.com.

# # #

All Current LeClaire Chamber of Commerce Members

are invited to vote for the 2015 Annual Awards recipients

and for the 2016 LeClaire Chamber Board of Directors

 

Please visit the Chamber website,

www.LeClaireChamber.com

to cast your vote or to write in your favorite!

Click on 2015 Awards Ballot on the Homepage

The direct link to the ballot is:

 http://visit.leclairechamber.com/2015-annual-awards-ballot.html

Deadline to vote, December 28, 2015, 11:59 p.m.

 

Only one vote allowed per membership.

Award Winners will be announced at the Annual Dinner,

Saturday, January 30, 2016, Davenport Country Club.

Invitations will soon be sent to Chamber Members,

but anyone is invited to attend.

 

Reservations are $35 per person, paid in advance.

Please RSVP by January 22, 2016 to First Central State Bank

563-289-2265 or email dmulvania@firstcentralsb.com

 

Thank you for your participation!

DES MOINES, IA - On December 14, 2015, Michael Dekota McRae, 28, appeared before the Honorable John A. Jarvey and pled guilty to conveying false information concerning a biological weapon, announced Acting United States Attorney Kevin E. VanderSchel.

According to the plea agreement, McRae, a former legislative clerk to Iowa State Representative Ako Abdul-Samad, admitted to writing a threatening letter addressed to
Representative Abdul-Samad. The letter contained racial slurs and threats to kill both McRae and Representative Abdul-Samad. McRae subsequently inserted the letter, along with a white powdery substance, into an envelope which he placed into a legislative mail receptacle. On April 3, 2012, McRae opened the threatening letter on the chamber floor during an active session of the Iowa Legislature. When McRae opened the letter, the white powder was released and came into contact with McRae and Representative Abdul-Samad.

McRae also admitted in the plea agreement that he intended the white powder simulate a biological agent or toxin, and he perpetrated the hoax for the purpose of creating fear in others.

McRae is scheduled to be sentenced before Chief Judge Jarvey on March 25, 2016, at 9:00 a.m. in Des Moines, Iowa. Conveying false information concerning a biological weapon is a felony that carries up to five years imprisonment and up to a $250,000 fine. McRae may also be required to reimburse the state for costs associated with the commission and investigation of this crime.

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DECEMBER 11, 2015

WASHINGTON - In a letter sent today to Secretary of State John Kerry, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley wrote that cooperation from the State Department had increased, but the committee's highest priority request remained unanswered.

Grassley said that the committee's top priority, a request regarding Bryan Pagliano's emails, had not been fulfilled.  Pagliano worked at the department as an information technology specialist but was concurrently paid by the former Secretary of State to maintain the personal server at her home while he was a State Department employee.  He may have unique information regarding Clinton's personal server, its set-up, whether it was subject to Freedom of Information Act requests, and if it was appropriately configured and secured considering the highly sensitive information running through it.  He asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination rather than speak to the committee.  Grassley is seeking copies of his official State Department emails relevant to the committee's inquiry before considering whether it might be appropriate to grant him immunity and compel his testimony.

According to State Department officials, the department cannot locate any copy or backup of Pagliano's official emails, except the limited number they are able to retrieve from other department employee email files.  The retrieval is also apparently hampered by the fact that the FBI has possession of Pagliano's State Department computer.

Grassley reiterated his request on Pagliano's emails because it is the highest priority that has yet to be fulfilled.  Out of a prioritized list of 22 requests pulled from letters to the department, the committee has received seven fully complete responses, including three witness interviews, and nine partially complete responses.  Grassley wrote that assuming the committee receives the additional items promised by State Department staff in a recent meeting, he intends to take action to recognize this progress before Congress adjourns for the year.

A copy of the letter can be found here.

WASHINGTON - The Senate Judiciary Committee has passed bipartisan legislation that would strengthen the United States' national security laws by ensuring that the government can successfully investigate and prosecute nuclear terrorists.  The bill was introduced by Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and cleared the Judiciary Committee by a sweeping 17-3 margin.

The bill implements three changes to federal criminal law that had been requested by both the Bush and Obama administrations on multiple occasions, most recently in 2011, but were not acted on by the committee until now. They were also omitted in House-authored legislation passed earlier this summer that created new offenses involving nuclear and maritime terrorism.

The first provision of the bill would allow the Department of Justice to go to court and obtain a wiretap if there is probable cause that a defendant is committing one of the new offenses.

The second provision would allow the newly-created offenses to be predicates for the separate crime of material support for terrorism.  The provision helps to ensure that all who help plan, finance and aid terrorist attacks can be brought to justice.

The third, and final provision, would permit the Department of Justice to seek the death penalty, in appropriate cases, for terrorists who commit acts of nuclear and maritime terrorism that kill Americans.

"The recent terrorist attacks in the United States and abroad show just how vulnerable our country is.  These are complex attacks that are planned for months or even years," Grassley said.  "Nuclear terrorism isn't just theoretical; it's a very real threat.  The government needs the ability to seek the death penalty for nuclear terrorists under the appropriate circumstances.  It's also common sense that we provide the government the ability to prosecute those who provide material support to these terrorists, including by financing them.  And, it's important that authorities have the capacity to seek lawful wiretaps, authorized by a federal judge, to investigate these terrorists.  These are tools that were requested by both Presidents Bush and Obama that will help keep Americans safe."

Two amendments expressing a "Sense of the Senate" were also added to the bill.  The first recognized that excluding people from coming to America solely on the basis of their religion is contrary to the country's founding principles.   The second amendment recognized that the United States was not founded on religious liberty alone, and depriving Americans of other core constitutional rights, like the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms, is also contrary to the country's founding principles.

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Bill Introduced to Improve Medicare Coverage for People Living with Lymphedema

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), joined by Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Mark Kirk (R-IL), and Chuck Schumer (D-NY), introduced bipartisan legislation to improve Medicare coverage for lymphedema patients. The bill would provide for Medicare coverage of physician-prescribed compression therapy equipment used to treat lymphedema, part of the clinically-recognized standard of care for the condition.

"With more than 6,300 Medicare beneficiaries in Washington and millions of Americans suffering from Lymphedema, we must update Medicare to reflect necessary and effective treatments for this condition. This legislation is a common sense measure that improves care for Medicare beneficiaries living with lymphedema and reduces costly hospitalizations," said Senator Cantwell.

"Medicare ought to reflect the modern practice of medicine," Senator Grassley said. "The equipment to treat lymphedema is something doctors recommend and that patients need.  Lymphedema is more common than people might realize.  It can affect breast cancer surgery survivors, for example."

"More than 11,700 Medicare patients in Illinois are living with lymphedema and they shouldn't be denied access to medically-necessary compression treatment," Senator Kirk said. "This bill will help patients with lymphedema effectively manage their condition and reduce the likelihood that they suffer from serious and often costly complications."

"This important bill will finally make sure that those living with Lymphedema have access to the healthcare treatment they need to lead healthy, productive lives while also lowering the hospitalization rates for these patients. As a co-sponsor of the Lymphedema Treatment Act, I pledge to work with my colleagues in Congress to continue to improve Medicare coverage on behalf of Lymphedema patients," said Senator Schumer.

The Lymphedema Treatment Act would clarify within the existing Medicare coverage guidelines compression therapy items as a reasonable and necessary treatment. Under current law, compression therapy equipment is not covered because it does not fall under the definition of durable medical equipment. This restriction creates a gap in coverage for people with lymphedema. A preventive treatment, compression therapy equipment can reduce the need for costly hospital admissions among Medicare beneficiaries with lymphedema.

Lymphedema is an incurable but treatable condition affecting between 3 and 5 million Americans, many of whom are Medicare beneficiaries. It is a chronic condition caused by injury, trauma or congenital defects in the lymphatic system.  If left untreated or inadequately treated it can lead to complications including loss of function, disability, and in some cases even death.

The Lymphedema Treatment Act has broad, bipartisan support. Companion legislation in the House (H.R. 1608) has 166 cosponsors. The bill is also supported by a wide range of advocacy groups including the American Cancer Society, American Physical Therapy Society, and Susan G. Komen for the Cure.

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Senate Gives Final Passage to Education Bill Including Grassley Provisions on Gifted and Talented Children, Foster Youth, Civics Education

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa included provisions in the education bill given final Senate approval today on gifted and talented students, school stability for foster youth, and an emphasis on the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in any federally funded civics education program.  Senate approval of the conference committee report on the Every Child Achieves Act sends the measure to the President for consideration.

"The bill returns much control of how best to teach children to states and local school districts and parents," Grassley said.  "It also includes provisions I worked on to alter federal incentives that were allowing gifted and talent kids from disadvantaged backgrounds to fall by the wayside, and help foster kids with school stability so they achieve an education.  I'm also pleased that the bill includes teaching about the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in any federally funded civics education program.  It makes sense that if the federal government supports civics education, there's an emphasis on the two documents that establish our fundamental principles."

The legislation includes the bipartisan bill from Grassley and co-sponsors that makes certain the needs of high ability students are included in federal education policy.  The bipartisan proposal is the TALENT Act, or the To Aid Gifted and High-Ability Learners by Empowering the Nation's Teachers Act.

"Federal education policy tends to overlook high potential students, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds," Grassley said.  "Often these kids aren't challenged and they might even drop out of school, when they could excel with the right encouragement.  These provisions give attention to the students who are bright and capable but are in danger of falling through the cracks."

On foster youth, the bill includes the bipartisan Educational Stability of Foster Youth Act, which Grassley co-authored, that supports students in the foster care system by strengthening connections between child welfare agencies and state and local education institutions.  Often, schools may be the only familiar place for a child in foster care, and the measure helps make sure that those kids can go to school in a safe, stable environment.

"It's important to remember that kids in foster care often don't have school stability. That can put them behind in their education, and getting behind can be hard to overcome," said Grassley, founder and co-chairman of the Senate Caucus on Foster Youth. "In the worst case, older kids drop out of school altogether. This provision will help make sure that school stability is at the forefront for foster kids."

Earlier versions of the bill contained a grant program for developing innovative civics education programs.  The provision Grassley negotiated in the final bill makes sure that a focus of the grant program is to support proven civics education programs that teach the history and principles of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

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Prepared Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa

Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee

Hearing on Oversight of the Federal Bureau of Investigation

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Director Comey, welcome and thank you for being here today.  The FBI's mission is to protect us from the most dangerous threats facing our nation.  The deadly attacks in Paris last month, and in California last week, confirmed that radical Islamic terrorism continues to be such a threat, regardless of whether that's politically correct or convenient for President Obama.

ISIS is a determined enemy executing a plan to gain and hold territory, enrich itself, inspire followers worldwide, and launch deadly attacks against the West.  And the American people are worried.  Not just about terrorism.  But about the President's inability or unwillingness to rally the country, lead our international partners, develop a credible strategy to destroy ISIS, and execute it.  We are now paying the price for that weakness.

At almost every turn, events have proven the President wrong about ISIS.  In August 2012, he drew a "red line," warning the Assad's regime not to use chemical weapons in Syria.  But the President backed down after Assad gassed his own people, and ISIS blossomed in the chaos that followed.  In January 2014, the President referred to ISIS as the "j.v.," or junior varsity.  It promptly spent the next six months conquering territory across Syria and Iraq.  In August of that same year, the President conceded that he didn't have a strategy to defeat ISIS.  A year and a half later, he remains without a coherent one.  Even former Secretary Clinton admitted the other day that we're not winning this fight.

The President has been hoping that ISIS will go away, because its existence doesn't fit his preferred political narrative.  But hope is not a strategy.  Hope is not a plan.  Hope is not action.

And all the while, the drumbeat of attacks in the United States continued.  In May, there was the attack on a convention center in Garland, Texas.  In June, police were forced to shoot a knife-wielding ISIS supporter on the streets of Boston.  In July, we had the attack on military facilities in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Director Comey, as of October you reported that the FBI was engaged in approximately 900 active domestic investigations against suspected ISIS-inspired operatives and other radicalized extremists.  And you estimated that approximately 250 Americans have left the U.S. and traveled to Syria to fight with ISIS, or tried to do so.

Nonetheless, in November, the President assured us that ISIS was "contained."  But the very next day, it inflicted the deadliest Islamic terrorist attacks in Europe in over a decade, a coordinated assault across Paris that killed 130 and injured over 350.  A few weeks later, in San Bernardino, two of its apparent supporters executed the deadliest such attacks on the homeland since September 11, 2001.

Unfortunately, President Obama has responded to this crisis by trying to divide us, deride us, and distract us.  He is doubling down on his failed strategy.

After reports suggested that one of the Paris terrorists possessed a Syrian passport and had entered Europe as a refugee, many expressed concern about the procedures used to screen refugees coming to the United States from Syria.  Director Comey, you expressed similar concerns in October.  You warned that there are "gaps" in the information we have to vet people coming out of a war zone.  And you warned that letting anyone come to the United States carries some risk.  We can point to the brothers who bombed the Boston Marathon as an example of terrorists who were granted asylum here.

The President responded to the concerns expressed by many Americans by mocking them for being afraid of "widows and orphans."

But events continued to prove the President spectacularly wrong.  As it turns out, women are radical Islamic terrorists, too, apparently to the President's surprise.  We now know that Ms. Malik, one of the San Bernardino attackers, arrived in the United States on a fiancée visa.  This is yet another example of the failure of the screening process for those entering the United States.  Our government apparently didn't catch the false address in Pakistan she listed on her application or other possible signs that she was radicalized or an operative.

To top it all off, earlier this week we learned that the National Counterterrorism Center has identified individuals with ties to terrorists in Syria who are attempting to enter the United States through the refugee program.  I guess that was one intelligence report the administration couldn't shade to fit its preferred conclusions.

Now, it always bears repeating that Islam is not our enemy.  Radical Islamic terrorists are.  The vast majority of Muslims in this country and around the world are non-violent and law-abiding.  We all should oppose, in no uncertain terms, any violence or intimidation against Muslims for their practicing their religion.  But I fear that one of the reasons for the regrettable backlash against Muslims in this country is the public's frustration with the President's repeated public failure to acknowledge the actual nature of the threat that we face, his reluctance to utter the words radical Islamic terrorism.

President Obama has also continued to divide us, deride us, and distract us with the issue of gun control.  To the President, radical Islamic terrorism is never to blame.  But the constitutional right to own a gun always is.

But terrorists aren't deterred by gun control.  Strict European gun control laws did not stop the Paris attacks.  California's assault weapons ban didn't stop the San Bernardino massacre.

Now, the Obama administration argues that allowing foreigners to buy guns who enter the United States through the visa waiver program is a problem.  I agree.  But at the same time, the administration's apparently fine with allowing refugees, asylees, people on deferred action, and other non-citizens who are not legal permanent residents to buy guns.  This makes no sense.  With few exceptions, we need to prevent all of these people from buying guns.

The administration's current fixation with guns and the visa waiver program can be explained, though, because it's another area where the administration's actions have made Americans less safe.  In fact, an opinion from the Obama Justice Department required the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to change its policy to permit persons arriving from visa waiver countries to buy guns.  And the administration removed the longstanding requirement that non-citizens at least establish residency for 90 days in the state where they want to purchase a gun.  These 90 days could be crucial in a terrorism investigation.

So when we address the issue of foreigners in the United States buying guns, we need to be comprehensive about it, not just clean up the mess this administration created.

Finally, the Democrats have attempted to divide us, deride us, and distract us with proposals to deny the right to purchase firearms to those on various terrorist watch lists, including the No Fly List.

The San Bernardino terrorists were apparently not on any terrorist watch list, so such a proposal wouldn't have stopped that attack.  In addition, the President's claim that "people we don't allow to fly could go into a store right now in the United States and buy a firearm and there's nothing we can do to stop them" just isn't true.  The FBI is notified when someone on the No Fly List attempts to purchase a gun, and can take steps to ensure that a gun doesn't fall into the wrong hands.  So the President and others have been misleading the American people on that matter.

But the more fundamental point is this: while these lists are useful in keeping us safe, they are the result of the executive branch's unilateral decisions to put people on them without any notice or opportunity to be heard.  As a result, they can be unreliable.  And it just isn't constitutional to condition the fundamental right to keep and bear arms on an administrative list that lacks that kind of due process.

We wouldn't consider conditioning any other constitutional right - such as the freedoms of speech or religion, or from unreasonable searches and seizures - on such a process.  That is why it is so surprising that this President, a former constitutional law professor, and so many Democrats, would support such a scheme.

The fact is, law enforcement hasn't raised gun purchases by people on terrorist watch lists as a huge problem.  And Director Comey, I know that you know how to tell us when you confront a serious obstacle to keeping us safe.  At our hearing in July, we all heard you talk about the "Going Dark" problem and the increasing use of encrypted communications by terrorists.   After these most recent attacks, I'll be interested in hearing how your discussions with technology companies on that issue are proceeding.

I also look forward to discussing a range of other issues with you today.  One is the FBI's treatment of whistleblowers.  You've expressed a strong commitment to whistleblowers.  During your confirmation hearing, you said that whistleblowers were "a critical element of a functioning democracy."

Our hearing in March this year showed that many FBI whistleblowers still have no protection, and the ones who are protected wait many years for relief.  I hope that I have your support in strengthening the FBI whistleblower law.

In addition, in March 2015, the American people learned that Secretary Clinton used a private email address and non-government server during her time at the Department of State.  Secretary Clinton unilaterally deleted approximately 30,000 emails without any government oversight.  Her email and server arrangement is an example of Freedom of Information Act interference, a statute that is within this committee's jurisdiction.  Concerns about the email arrangement extend beyond FOIA and involve national security.

And a former Department of State employee, Bryan Pagliano, has refused to communicate with this committee citing his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Both the Department of Justice and FBI have refused to confirm or deny any investigation relating to Secretary Clinton's email arrangement citing "long standing policy."  Yet, on a number of occasions, the department has publicly announced that it launched an investigation.  The American people ought to know what their government is doing.  I will have questions for you on this matter.

On another matter, in April, the Wall Street Journal reported that in 2012 the FBI helped facilitate a $250,000 ransom payment to al Qaeda from the family of kidnapped aid worker Warren Weinstein.

I wrote to the Department of Justice in May to ask if this was true.  I also asked if the FBI had facilitated any other ransom payments to terrorist organizations.  And I asked for more information about the FBI's policies and procedures relating to facilitating ransom payments to terrorist groups.  I got a response letter five months later.  That response did not really answer my questions.

Ransom payments are a significant source of terrorist financing.  The FBI says its policy is quote "to deny hostage-takers the benefits of ransom" end quote.  But the FBI also seems to say it may assist in private efforts to pay ransoms.  So, it is not clear what is actually happening.  It is not clear whether FBI has helped ransom payments get to terrorist groups.

In June, the Obama administration announced a new hostage recovery policy.  It put the FBI in charge of an interagency Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell.  Once again, it is unclear if the new hostage policy allows the FBI to facilitate ransom payments to terrorists.  Some media outlets say that the new policy makes it easier to make these payments.

So, I'd like to get some specific answers about what the FBI does or does not do when it comes to ransom payments to terrorists.  If it has helped with these payments, I'd like to know which terrorist groups received them and how much money they got.

Another issue I'll raise is the FBI's use of spyware.  Six months ago, I wrote to the FBI to ask about its use of spyware.  I still haven't received a response.  According to press reports, spyware is a type of software that can be remotely deployed to targeted computers and smart phones.  Spyware can secretly activate the computer's camera and microphone; collect passwords; search the computer's memory; and intercept phone calls, text messages, and other communications.  Spyware is a powerful surveillance tool.  It has also been mentioned as a possible way to combat the "Going Dark" problem posed by encryption.

Tools like this need to be subject to oversight to make sure they are not abused.  But the committee still does not know how the FBI is using these programs.  We have asked.  The FBI hasn't answered.

We don't know the types of spyware used or their capabilities.  We don't know the FBI's policies and procedures for using spyware, or the legal processes used.  And we don't know if there are any audit procedures in place to ensure spyware is used properly.

The Department of Justice is in the process of trying to change Rule 41 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure.  The proposed change would make it easier for the FBI to get warrants to use spyware.  Congress will eventually weigh in on the change.  But we need to know more about spyware in order to make an informed decision.

So, I hope that I can get answers about the FBI's use of spyware.  It is important for our oversight role, and it is important for the proposed change to Rule 41.

Finally, as you know, the FBI is conducting a review of federal and state criminal cases in which results of microscopic hair comparison analyses conducted in FBI Labs were used.  The FBI has identified over 21,600 cases assigned to hair examiners prior to the year 2000.  Cases since 2000 have had DNA analysis and so were not subject to the same potential problems that have led to the review.

Of those 21,600 cases, the FBI determined many of them did not have a microscopic hair analysis report sent to the requesting agency or there was not a conviction in the case.  This left 3,118 cases where faulty lab work may have led to a criminal conviction.

The key step in evaluating those remaining 3,118 cases is getting and evaluating a trial transcript.

In a September 2015 letter, your staff said 689 of those cases have been closed because the FBI can't get an adequate response from case contributors or prosecutors.   I will have a couple questions about those cases.

Again, thank you for being here, and I'll now recognize Ranking Member Leahy for his opening statement.

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