Archive for the ‘Eric Holder’ Category

GOP senators confront Eric Holder on U.S. fugitives in Cuba

A group of Senate Republicans pressed Attorney General Eric H. Holder on Friday to explain the administrations policy for U.S. fugitives in Cuba, including a convicted cop killer, following President Obamas announced normalization of relations with the communist island nation.

As the nations chief law enforcement officer, do you support the normalization of relations with Cuba without the return of fugitives from justice for prosecution who have the blood of Americans, including law enforcement officers on their hands? said the three senators in a letter to Mr. Holder.

The letter was signed by Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida, Ted Cruz of Texas and David Vitter of Louisiana. Mr. Rubio and Mr. Cruz are Cuban Americans.

The senators demanded information about the number of U.S. criminals currently harbored by the Castro regime and the indictments against the fugitives, as well as Mr. Holders legal opinion on the plan to remove Cuba from the list of state sponsors of terrorism.

They also demanded an explanation of Mr. Holders involvement in the decision to free three convicted Cuban spies, including one convicted of a murder conspiracy, from U.S. prison and transfer them to Cuba.

Mr. Holders office did not immediately respond to the letter or an inquiry from The Washington Times about it.

Mr. Obama announced on Dec. 17 that he was restoring diplomatic ties with Cuba, easing financial and travel restrictions on the country, though stopping short of completely lifting the 54-year-old U.S. embargo against the country.

The historic easing of tension between the two countries followed a deal for the release of U.S. aid worker Alan Gross, who had been imprisoned in Cuba for five years.

As many as 70 fugitives from U.S. justice could be living in Cuba. Several criminals on the FBIs Most Wanted List are known to have found refuge in Cuba.

JoAnne Chesimard, also known as Assata Shakur, fled to Cuba in 1979 after fellow members of the Black Liberation Army broke her out of prison, where she was serving a life sentence for the execution-style murder of a New Jersey State Trooper.

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GOP senators confront Eric Holder on U.S. fugitives in Cuba

Will Holder bring felony charges on Petraeus? / Eric Holder, David Petraeus – Video


Will Holder bring felony charges on Petraeus? / Eric Holder, David Petraeus
Will Holder bring felony charges on Petraeus? The New York Times has reported that FBI and Justice Department officials have recommended to Attorney General ...

By: MSNBC News

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Will Holder bring felony charges on Petraeus? / Eric Holder, David Petraeus - Video

UNNECESSARY Shooting Trayvon to Death, A G Eric Holder Addresses Zimmerman Not Guilty Verdict – Video


UNNECESSARY Shooting Trayvon to Death, A G Eric Holder Addresses Zimmerman Not Guilty Verdict

By: Berita Becak

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UNNECESSARY Shooting Trayvon to Death, A G Eric Holder Addresses Zimmerman Not Guilty Verdict - Video

What Is Eric Holder's Civil Rights Legacy? His Achievements Aren't Well Known, Experts Say

Trayvon Martin. Michael Brown. Eric Garner. The names of unarmed black men killed by police in recent years are etched in the consciousness of people in the U.S. who might have believed that Eric Holder, the first ever African-American attorney general hired by the nations first black president, would affect sweeping changes in the ways minorities are treated by the American justice system. Holders six-year tenure as the top law enforcement official has been rocky -- he stands as the only member of President Barack Obamas cabinet to be held in contempt by a congressional committee and censured by House Republicans on issues unrelated to criminal justice and civil rights. That Holder, who announced his resignation last fall, will likely leave the administration without prosecuting a single well-known case of perceived police brutality is a disappointment for many, experts say, even though less-publicized law enforcement reforms have happened under his watch.

When so many thousands of people have asserted that black lives matter, the reluctance by the Justice Department to bring forward a case is more than disappointing, said Dan Berger, assistant professor of comparative ethnic studies at the University of Washington, Bothell. I dont want to put it all at his door, but I think [Holder] has not been as proactive or aggressive in pursuit of racial justice as many would have hoped he would be and that the rather dire circumstances mandate.

Recent reports indicate that the Justice Department is unlikely to bring federal charges against Darren Wilson, the now-former police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, who shot and killed the 18-year-old and unarmed Brown last August. Neither Holder nor another Justice Department official had made an official announcement about charges on Thursday.

Civil rights experts and some former colleagues have mostly praised Holder, who they say gets little credit for policy changes on racial profiling, war-on-drugs era policing, prison sentencing reforms and his recent work with local police departments where citizens report high rates of excessive force. Earlier this month, Holder called on law enforcement agencies to collect more data in cases of police shootings, calling it unacceptable that such data wasnt being tracked.

In December, Holder announced the expansion of Justice Department rules for racial profiling to prevent the FBI from considering race and ethnicity, as well as gender, national origin, religion, sexual orientation and gender identity when opening federal and national security cases. Also in December, Holder brokered an agreement with the Cleveland Police Department requiring an independent monitor to oversee reforms in the departments use of force policies, stemming from a number of high-profile use of force incidents and requests from the community and local government, according to the Justice Department.

The seeming surge of civil rights activity by Holder in the wake of decisions not to indict officers in Browns killing and in the chokehold death of Garner in Staten Island, New York, last year -- which sparked both peaceful and violent protests around the nation -- is anything but a knee-jerk reaction by the Justice Department, said Jon Greenbaum, chief counsel and senior deputy director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law. I think that is his record on civil rights will be one of, if not the most shining aspects of his legacy as attorney general -- its pretty broad when you look at it, said Greenbaum, who formerly worked as a Justice Department lawyer and had been in meetings with Holder.

Holders career and his outspokenness -- he infamously remarked that the U.S. was a nation of cowards on the issues of race -- suggest he is both direct and strategic. Holder was sworn in as the nations 82nd attorney general in February of 2009, after Obama announced his nomination in 2008.

Holder was not new to the Justice Department. In 1997, President Bill Clinton named him deputy attorney general. Before that, hed been a U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia and an associate judge of the Superior Court in D.C. A native of New York City, Holder attended Columbia College and received his law degree there in 1976. While in law school, Holder was a clerk for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. The NAACP next monthwill honor Holder with the Chairmans Award, during the 46th Image Awards.

Tanya Clay House, public policy director for the Lawyers' Committee, a Washington-based nonprofit that works on issues of racial discrimination and inequality of opportunity, said policy changes that the organization lobbied for had not come out of Holders office as quickly as they would have like. But there is a feeling that the Justice Department was moving mountains to bring about the needed changes, she said.

Holder also hasbeen praised for his work on voting rights. Early on, he equated voter ID laws creeping up in conservative states in the South with poll taxes from the Jim Crow era. Ahead of the 2012 presidential election, Holder filed court cases against voter ID laws in three states, including Texas, that eventually invalidated restrictions disproportionately affecting black, Latino and young voters.

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What Is Eric Holder's Civil Rights Legacy? His Achievements Aren't Well Known, Experts Say

U.S. Attorney John Walsh appointed chair of national group

John Walsh (Andy Cross, Denver Post file photo)

Attorney General Eric Holder has appointed U.S. Attorney John Walsh of Colorado as chair of the national Attorney General's Advisory Committee.

Walsh replaces Attorney General-nominee Loretta E. Lynch, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. The AGAC was created in 1973 to serve as the voice of the U.S. Attorneys and to advise the attorney general on policy, management and operational issues impacting the offices of the U.S. Attorneys.

"I'm deeply honored that the Attorney General has asked me to serve as chair of this crucial advisory committee," Walsh said in a written statement. "And it is a great honor to represent the men and women of U.S. Attorney's Offices nationally, who work tirelessly every day to protect the American people and pursue justice in the courts."

Holder also appointed U.S. Attorney Richard S. Hartunian for the Northern District of New York to serve as vice chair. Both appointments are effective immediately.

Paul J. Fishman, the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey and former chairman of the AGAC, said the committee serves as a policy conduit both from the field where about 10,000 federal prosecutors and attorneys practice throughout the country to Washington D.C. and from Washington to the field.

"The Attorney General's Advisory Committee is the focal point for those matters to be discussed," Fishman said.

He said Walsh has huge experience as a prosecutor, is enormously respected among fellow U.S. Attorneys around the country, is a good administrator, is very articulate, reasonable and practical.

"He doesn't let his ego get in the way of doing a good job," Fishman said. "Most importantly he has the trust of Eric Holder and Loretta Lynch."

Walsh previously served on the AGAC from February 2011 to January 2013 as the chair of the Medical Marijuana Working Group and co-chair of the White Collar/Fraud Subcommittee.

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U.S. Attorney John Walsh appointed chair of national group