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Holder to Resign

TownieDeac

words are futile devices
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Eric Holder To Step Down As Attorney General

Eric Holder Jr., the nation's first black U.S. attorney general, is preparing to announce his resignation Thursday after a tumultuous tenure marked by civil rights advances, national security threats, reforms to the criminal justice system and five and a half years of fights with Republicans in Congress.

Two sources familiar with the decision tell NPR that Holder, 63, intends to leave the Justice Department as soon as his successor is confirmed, a process that could run through 2014 and even into next year. A former U.S. government official says Holder has been increasingly "adamant" about his desire to leave soon for fear he otherwise could be locked in to stay for much of the rest of President Obama's second term.

Holder already is one of the longest serving members of the Obama cabinet and ranks as the fourth longest tenured AG in history. Hundreds of employees waited in lines, stacked three rows deep, for his return in early February 2009 to the Justice Department, where he previously worked as a young corruption prosecutor and as deputy attorney general — the second in command — during the Clinton administration.

But some of that early glow faded in part due to the politicized nature of the job and in part because of Holder's own rhetoric, such as a 2009 Black History Month speech where he said the country was "a nation of cowards" when it comes to discussions about racial tension.

Five years later, violence erupted between police and protesters in Ferguson, Mo., after a white policeman killed an unarmed black 18 year old. And this time, the White House dispatched Holder to speak his piece, in effect jump starting that conversation, and helping to settle nerves in the frayed community.

Another huge controversy — over his decision to try the 9-11 plotters in a New York courthouse in the shadow of the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center — prompted venomous reaction from lawmakers, New York City officials and some victim families.

Under pressure that threatened his job and his legacy, the attorney general reversed his decision and instead sent the cases to military court — where they continue to languish even as Osama Bin Laden's son-in-law and other terrorism defendants are serving life sentences in maximum security prisons on American soil.

Holder most wants to be remembered for his record on civil rights: refusing to defend a law that defined marriage as between one man and one woman; suing North Carolina and Texas over voting restrictions that disproportionately affect minorities and the elderly; launching 20 investigations of abuses by local police departments; and using his bully pulpit to lobby Congress to reduce prison sentences for non-violent drug crimes. Many of those sentences disproportionately hurt minority communities.

And then, there's his relationship with Congress. From the day Holder's nomination was announced, Republicans led by Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., signaled he would be a political lightning rod.

The attorney general's portfolio, which spans sensitive law enforcement cases and hot button social issues including marijuana and gay marriage, didn't help. But even longtime aides say Holder didn't do enough to help himself by shrugging off preparations and moot sessions before congressional appearances and speaking off the cuff — and obliquely.

Things hit a crisis point when the GOP-led House voted him in contempt for refusing to hand over documents about a gun trafficking scandal known as Fast and Furious. That represented the first time an attorney general had ever been rebuked that way but still Holder held onto his job.

In the end, the decision to leave was Holder's alone — the two sources tell NPR the White House would have been happy to have him stay a full eight years and to avoid what could be a contentious nomination fight for his successor. Holder and President Obama discussed his departure several times and finalized things in a long meeting over Labor Day weekend at the White House.

The attorney general told staff the news at DOJ this morning and has called civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., and Ethel Kennedy, the widow of former AG Robert F. Kennedy.

The sources say a leading candidate for that job is Solicitor General Don Verrilli, the administration's top representative to the Supreme Court and a lawyer whose judgment and discretion are prized in both DOJ and the White House.

Friends and former colleagues say Holder's made no decisions about his next professional perch, but they say it would be no surprise if he returned to the law firm Covington & Burling, where he spent years representing corporate clients.

The friends say Holder is also considering donating his papers to a university in D.C. or his native New York, where he could establish a civil rights center to work more on law enforcement interactions with communities of color and host public forums on those issues.

Even though the attorney general has his eyes on the door, the two sources say several more policy and enforcement initiatives are underway and could be announced soon.

For instance, Holder sent a memo to U.S. Attorneys Wednesday urging them not to use sentencing enhancements known as "851" tools to gain leverage in plea negotiations with defendants — in essence, threatening defendants into avoiding trial with huge amounts of prison time. The practice has been criticized by U.S. District Judge John Gleeson in Brooklyn, as well as other jurists.

Holder is also expected to notify federal prosecutors in coming days that the Justice Department will no longer require defendants who plead guilty to waive their rights to appeal based on ineffective lawyering. Many U.S. Attorneys now forgo that practice, but not all.

Long awaited racial profiling guidelines for federal agents will be released soon, too. Those guidelines will make clear sexual orientation, ethnicity and religion are not legitimate bases for law enforcement suspicion but controversial mapping of certain communities — including Muslim-American ones — would still be allowed for national security investigations, one of the sources said.
 
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To prepare his defense for his criminal trial?

And how damaging! There's about a year and half left in the lame duck administration. Make a statement, Eric!
 
He's lasted longer than most of his predecessors.
 
I'm glad Fast and Furious finally caught on.
 
He's lasted longer than most of his predecessors.

Through Thursday, Holder has now been in office 1,564 days (4 years, 3 months, 14 days) which is historically a very long time for the nation's Attorney General.

Holder currently claims the ninth longest tenure among the 82 individuals to hold the post in the nation's history and the fifth longest since the turn of the 20th Century.

William Wirt holds a record that will likely never be broken at 11 years, 3 months, and 16 days - spanning most of the James Monroe administration as well as the entirety of John Quincy Adams'.

Wirt was later the presidential nominee of the Anti-Masonic Party in 1832 and won 7.8 percent of the vote and carried the State of Vermont.

Janet Reno - the only woman to hold the post - has the second longest service record at 7 years, 10 months, and 8 days during the Clinton administration.

Reno followed that up with a failed Florida gubernatorial Democratic primary bid in 2002.

Wirt and Reno are the only two Attorney Generals to serve at least six years in office, a feat Holder would accomplish on February 3, 2015 should he last that long.

If Holder remains in office until the end of the year, he would climb into fifth place all-time, behind only FDR's first AG, Homer Cummings (5 years, 9 months, 29 days) and the nation's 3rd AG Charles Lee (5 years, 2 months, 22 days).

Along the way Holder would pass Wilson AG Thomas Gregory (4 years, 6 months, 1 day), Jackson/Van Buren AG Benjamin Butler (4 years, 9 months, 13 days), Eisenhower AG Herbert Brownell (4 years, 9 months, 18 days), and Jefferson/Madison AG Caesar Rodney (4 years, 10 months, 15 days) .

Holder will next pass Gregory for 8th place on August 5, 2013.

Top 10 Longest Serving U.S. Attorney Generals

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So in more substantial efforts, can we list his good stuff and bad stuff?

Good
Supported Windsor's challenge of DOMA
Lawsuits against voting restrictions in NC/Texas

Bad
Still hasn't closed Guantanamo, despite earnestly trying
Didn't get a single prosecution out of financial crisis
Fast and Furious


What else?
 
So in more substantial efforts, can we list his good stuff and bad stuff?

Good
Supported Windsor's challenge of DOMA
Lawsuits against voting restrictions in NC/Texas

Bad
Still hasn't closed Guantanamo, despite earnestly trying
Didn't get a single prosecution out of financial crisis
Fast and Furious


What else?

He had absolutely nothing to do with Fast and Furious. GITMO was outside of his power. He did everything he could to close it. To blame for either is really wrong.

On the other hand, it was totally disgraceful that he hasn't put hundreds of people in jail from Wall Street, mortgage companies and the banks. There is no excuse for not doing this. He truly abdicated his responsibilities here.
 
I guess he'll wait until Duval Patrick can take his place.
 
I wonder where he will be taking his skills...

Can't tell if this is supposed to be snark or not, but here's the answer: back into private practice to make $$$$ or into some law school in one of the big cities to make $$ and bathe in the prestige.
 
Holder provided the legal justification for the assassination of a US citizen without due process. He also has been impossibly silent regarding government surveillance.

Fuck him.
 
Holder provided the legal justification for the assassination of a US citizen without due process. He also has been impossibly silent regarding government surveillance.

Fuck him.

Yup, and completely abdicated his responsibility to prosecute anyone involved in the massive financial scandal that led to a crushing recession.
 
So Holder stays on until his successor is appointed AND confirmed by the Senate?


hahahaha -- shrewd political move. Sure, you can filibuster the new nomination, but then you'd just be keeping Holder in charge, Senate Republicans.
 
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