Archive for the ‘Eric Holder’ Category

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder speaks at UB … – University at Buffalo The Spectrum

Holder discusses early childhood, safe spaces and free speech By Troy Wachala / The Spectrum

EricHolder spoke as the 41st annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration Keynote Speaker as a part of UBs Distinguished Speaker Series on Thursday night.

Eric Holders biggest fear growing up was Raymond Ellis, the neighborhood thug.

That threat growing up of violence [when] going to the park to play basketball, to play softball or baseball was always that thing growing up in your subconscious, Holder said. Youre afraid about running into somebody or something and I wasnt a fighter. I wasnt the guy who was taking anyone on. I always tried to talk my way out of stuff.

Holder, the 82nd U.S. Attorney General and first black Attorney General, grew up in a lower-middle class neighborhood in Queens, NY with parents who emigrated from Barbados.

When Holder heard that Ellis was shot and killed in a robbery attempt a few blocks away from his house, his fear turned into bravery.

His childhood always reminded him how other children of color felt every day. Once he became attorney general, he knew that his primary responsibility was public safety.

[I had to make sure that] the child living in South Central Los Angeles, Chicago or some place in New York, didnt have that same fear that might've had an impact on his or her ability to maximize their potential. I tried never ever to forget that. Holder said.

Holder spoke as the 41st annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration Keynote Speaker as a part of UBs Distinguished Speaker Series on Thursday night. Holder told several jokes throughout the night, often sounding more like a friend than a politician. He gave a brief speech then took questions from interim Law School dean James Gardner and former law school dean and distinguished law professor Makau Mutua, who sat on stage beside him for the entire night.

Holder also answered questions from students at the event and took questions via Twitter. He joked that because hes no longer apart of the Obama Administration, he could say whatever he wants and encouraged the audience to ask him anything. Holder delved into politics but also discussed his early life growing up in New York City. He talked about blacks peoples relations with law enforcement, safe spaces and free speech.

Holder also held an informal session on Thursday afternoon where he answered questions from a crowd of predominantly law students and took selfies with them once the session concluded.

A student asked Holder about the role of free speech in college settings, specifically referencing the violent protests that emerged at UC Berkeley when controversial journalist Milo Yiannopoulos was pegged to speak.

Well let me start this way, Milo whatever his last name is, is an idiot, Holder said to a roaring applause. Hes an idiot, I disagree with him, hes a provocateur, hes not sincere in his beliefs and yet if we are going to be true to our First Amendment and the right of people to engage, he should have been allowed to speak. We have to have that safe space.

While Holder does agree with Yiannopoulos, he said free speech entitles him to be heard. He explained that college settings should offer all kinds of dialogue even if it's controversial or abhorrent.

But let me be clear, hes an idiot. Holder said.

Mutua read a question submitted via Twitter, which asked if getting into an Ivy League school meant students would lose touch on their black culture.

Holder earned his both his bachelor's degree in American history and J.D. from Columbia University.

Im still a brother, Holder responded with pride.

The low number of black students at Columbia did not take away from his experiences at the university, he said. Instead, it made him form a close community with students of color and he left college with even greater pride for his race.

I didnt lose my identity as a black man [or] black person at Columbia. In fact, in a lot of ways my perception of myself as an African American was enhanced by my experiences there.

Holder said he has three role models: his father, Malcolm X and Kareem Abdul Jabbar.

He described his father as a strong west-Indian who was abandoned by his father, who came to the U.S. around the age of 13 and made sure his boys did not have the experiences that he had.

When Holder was a teenager, he learned that his father didnt finish high school. His father waited to tell him because he was too ashamed.

He was the wisest man Ive ever known and a person I try to emulate even til this day, Holder said.

Holder didnt know Malcolm X personally, but when he read his autobiography and saw the transition from petty criminal, to race hater, to a person who understands the universality of human beings, he became his hero.

Holder loved Kareem Abdul Jabbar's combination of athleticism, intellectualism and his pride in his blackness. He now considers him not only a role model, but a friend.

Holder discussed a wealth of political issues during the night, including President Donald Trumps travel ban. He called the ban unconstitutional as a matter of law and unwise as a matter of policy.

I think it will make more difficult our struggles against terrorism, although thats what is aimed at. It tends to convert this war against terrorism into a religious war, which plays right into the hands of Al-Qaeda, ISIS and their derivatives, he said.

Gardner asked Holder how college students, who were born well after Dr. King made strides for civil rights, could keep his memory fresh and meaningful. Holder said students must study and understand who Dr. King was.

[Dr. King] was more than just a great speech in 1963 in Washington D.C. He was an activist. He was a person who was not popular in his time. He was person of great courage, Holder said.

Holder believes if Dr. Martin Luther King were to come back and ask what the country has become since he died, he would see that a black man was president of the U.S. and a black man was attorney general of the U.S. He would see blacks better off economically than they were in his time and he would see a rise in black political power.

And yet, he would come back and be very disappointed by the relationship between people of color and law enforcement, where a lack of trust existed back then and continues to exist today, Holder said.

Holder hoped people would find a way to become actively involved in politics.

He said the Vietnam War didnt end because Richard Nixon made a military decision that the war ended. It ended because people went out into the streets, protested and made the people in power understand that they didnt support the war.

Dont underestimate the power of American people in the streets protesting, but understand also that we cant simply have a moment, we need a movement. It means being involved, it means being understanding. Progress is not linear, as Dr. King knew. There are going to be setbacks, theres going to be failings, theres going to be problems. But that arc continues as long as people put their hands on it and it continues towards justice, Holder said.

Ashley Inkumsah is the co-senior news editor and can be reached at ashley.inkumsah@ubspectrum.com

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Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder speaks at UB ... - University at Buffalo The Spectrum

In UB address, Holder urges wait-and-see approach on Jeff Sessions – Buffalo News

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder will take a wait and see approach before saying anything critical about the newly confirmed head of the Justice Department, former Republican Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions.

In heated confirmation hearings earlier this month, Democrats accused Sessions of taking extreme positions on issues such as abortion and criminal sentencing guidelines and expressed concern that Sessions would roll back new civil rights protections advanced under President Obama and Holder.

But Holder, who served under Obama from 2009 to 2015, said Thursday that he did not oppose Sessions' nomination.

"It seems you ought to give people a chance, unless they're wholly unqualified," Holder told a group of about 120 University at Buffalo students, faculty, staff and alumni. "He may end up surprising us and he maybe will say, 'This is who I always was,' and I may end up saying, 'Well I've seen growth then.'"

Holder, the first African-American to be appointed Attorney General, predicted Sessions would more likely end up crossing some "red lines" on issues such as voting rights.

Holder is now an attorney in private practice with Covington & Burling, and he was hired by the state of California in January as a legal adviser on potential conflicts between the state and the Trump administration over immigration, health care and other issues.

Holder said he would be vocal on those key concerns, but he also planned to be "very sparing in my criticisms because I know how tough the job is. I know how tough the decisions are."

Holder also gave brief remarks, obliquely addressing the Trump administration, to 2,000 people Thursday night in UB's Alumni Arena as part of the university's 41st Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration event.

Holder called for a "new American engagement" and urged citizens to rid themselves of "ideological blindness" and "dangerous complacency" in rising to the challenges of the times.

"Institutions thought central to the American government, the press, the courts, have today been challenged. The reliance on facts to generate policy has been diminished and demeaned. The social progress we have made as a nation, that we have long fought for, is at risk, and effective alliances have been questioned," Holder said. "Unless proposed changes are rooted in the American values of tolerance, fairness, justice, respect for science and respect of others, that must be at a minimum questioned and, in the great tradition of the uniquely American experience, they must be opposed."

Holder spent less than five minutes speaking from a podium before retiring to a chair on a stage, alongside Interim Law School Dean James Gardner and former Law School Dean Makau Mutua, who moderated a question-and-answer session.

Earlier, Holder fielded questions for an hour inside a classroom in UB's O'Brian Hall.

He was asked why his office didn't prosecute individuals in connection with the collapse of financial markets in 2009.

"The bottom line is, if we could have made the cases, we would have," he said. "It wasn't for lack of trying."

When asked for his reflections on being the first black person to lead the Justice Department, Holder responded that he simply "didn't want to mess up."

"The thought in your mind is that you don't want to disappoint," he said.

Holder also weighed in on the recent friction between the judicial branch and executive branch and President Trump's penchant for criticizing judges, which he characterized as "worrisome" because judges have no way of really defending themselves against the personal attacks.

"In demeaning the court that way, challenging some of the pillars that I think make this nation great, that has a long-term negative impact that's just not good," he said.

But Holder said any talk of a "constitutional crisis" due to the current back and forth between the Trump administration and the courts was " a little bit overblown."

The case involving an executive order on immigration that was rejected by the Ninth Circuit was an example not of crisis, but of how the American system works. A court ruled that the order was not constitutional, and now the Trump Administration has said it plans to rewrite the order.

"I don't think there's a constitutional crisis in that sense," said Holder.

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In UB address, Holder urges wait-and-see approach on Jeff Sessions - Buffalo News

Eric Holder Believes Trump’s Relations With Russia Could Be A Historic Scandal – Essence.com

The former attorney general is calling for a thorough investigation of everyone in the current administration.

Eric Holder believes President Donald Trump should be held to the fire concerning his relations with Russia, even if it's the biggest scandal in modern political history.

"I think we have the makings of potentially a scandal, certainly a controversy, the likes of which we have not seen for many years," Holder told Mic.com in an exclusive interview.

"Exactly what the nature of the contact was between the Trump campaign and people in Russia be it the intelligence authorities or in the Russian government I think really needs to be fully explored and to be done in an impartial way, an unbiased way.

"The American people are entitled to know exactly what happened there so that judgments can be made about the roles of various people," he added.

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After Michael Flynn stepped down from his role as national security adviser earlier this week, speculation rose about Trump's ties to the communist nation that are said to go back as far as 2015. In January, President Barack Obama put a sanction against select Russian officials and entities because of evidence of election tampering.

Holder, who served as attorney general under the Obama administration, believes the newly instated AG Jeff Sessions should not be involved in the Russian investigation process. Sessions, who's been a longtime supporter of Trump, has not been tied to any of the Russian controversy, but would certainly not be unbiased.

"I think the investigation needs to be done fairly, I think it needs to be impartial," Holder said. "There are justice department regulations that really handle these kinds of situations so I think the new attorney general needs to look at those regulations, make a determination about the role he played in the campaign, what his degree of knowledge is with regard to these potential interactions between the Russian government and the Trump campaign and then make up his own mind as to whether or not he should recuse himself."

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Eric Holder Believes Trump's Relations With Russia Could Be A Historic Scandal - Essence.com

Sally Yates gets a standing O before a partisan hometown crowd – Atlanta Journal Constitution

Sally Yates appeared briefly before a hometown crowd Wednesday one of herfirst forays in public since President Donald Trump fired her as acting attorney general for defying his immigration order.

Yates, entering a Carter Center event with former Attorney General Eric Holder, received a standing ovation just for showing up. She is celebrated by the left, which asserts that she was standing on principle when sheinstructed the Justice Department not to enforce Trumps executive order, and vilified by the right, which asserts that she was just grandstanding.

Yates took a seat in the audience andlistened to a panel discussion on race, of which Holder was a part.When a member of the audience asked whether she planned to run for office, she replied quietly, I am just here in the audience.

Later, Holder saw fit to yell, Holder/Yates: 2020!

Someone yelled back, Yates/Holder!

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Sally Yates gets a standing O before a partisan hometown crowd - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Judicial Watch: Eric Holder’s Anti-Trump Gig to Pay $25k/mo for 40hrs Work – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News


AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Judicial Watch: Eric Holder's Anti-Trump Gig to Pay $25k/mo for 40hrs Work
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
Washington, DC -(Ammoland.com)- Judicial Watch announced today that on January 12, 2017, it obtained records from the California Legislature Joint Rules Committee revealing that the Legislature will pay the law firm of former Obama U.S. Attorney ...
California Corrupt Cronyism Hits TaxpayersNewsmax

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Judicial Watch: Eric Holder's Anti-Trump Gig to Pay $25k/mo for 40hrs Work - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News