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- LETTERS, Page 10Senator's Silence
-
- You told how, in Washington, Senator Mark Hatfield saw one
- man fire a gun at another and did not call the authorities
- (NATION, April 3). Hatfield's explanation was that the police
- reaction to such an incident would be "So what?" No police
- officer anywhere in the U.S. would say that to a U.S. Senator.
- But the justice system is running out of courtrooms in which to
- try drug-related shooting cases, and prison cells in which to
- put those found guilty. Washington politicians are saying "No
- new taxes." But taxes are what is needed to build additional
- prison cells, so we can rid our streets of drug criminals.
-
- Bobbie Thompson Hamshire, Texas
-
- I must take exception to an elected official's neglect of
- his moral duty as a U.S. citizen. Senator Hatfield was an
- eyewitness to a shooting, yet he failed to contact the police
- and report his observations. Then he had the audacity to malign
- the Washington police for being indifferent to violent crimes.
- As a police officer, I am aware of the "I don't want to get
- involved" attitude. However, a Senator is a public servant and
- therefore must be held to a higher standard.
-
- James M. Jolliffe Orange, Calif.
-