ms. jayapal: thank you, mr. chairman. i want to go back to the amendment and the question of gang databases and i wanted to highlight a report that was just released by the inspector general for the city of chicago. and in that report, they talk about how immigration officials, education agencies, and the f.b.i. access the database more than a million times over the last decade. and in the report, it noted the police in the last 20 years identified more than 134,200 people as gang members, but 15,000 of those entries did not list gang membership or explain why they were listed as gang members. nearly 1,000 people were listed with multiple genders. 80 people were entered as zero years -- 0 years old. 90 people had a birth date before 1901. and thousands were identified as gang members despite not being arrested or accused of a crime. and so i think that this amendment is problematic on so many levels and i want to take us back to the underlying bill and extreme risk protection order act. which would incentivize states and