Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New U.S. attorney to push civil rights

Williams takes the oath in Manhattan

- LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — With Attorney General Merrick Garland looking on, Manhattan’s new U.S. attorney said Friday that he’s establishi­ng a civil rights unit in his office’s criminal division to concentrat­e greater resources on problems worsening in “troubled times.”

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams made the comments after he was formally sworn in as the first Black top federal law enforcemen­t official in the Southern District of New York — one of the country’s busiest offices — by Manhattan Chief U.S. District Judge Laura Taylor Swain.

“White supremacis­t groups are on the march. Anti-Semitism is on the march. Anti-Asian violence is on the march,” Williams said. “Abuse of the most vulnerable in our society is on the march, and that includes by the way, abuse of incarcerat­ed women and men who lose their liberty but not their right to be kept safe.”

He said the civil rights unit in the office’s criminal division was an improvemen­t “whose time has come.” The office’s civil division also has a civil rights unit, created in 1971.

Williams said he planned to engage with community partners, faith groups, advocacy organizati­ons and young people “to let them know that they have my attention and they have my ear.”

But, he added, “I also know that’s not enough because you know and I know that we are living in troubled times.”

The remarks were delivered to about 500 current and former law enforcemen­t personnel who gathered to hear Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer and Garland praise Williams as the right leader for the moment at the Harlem Armory. The location once housed a widely praised all-Black U.S. Army infantry regiment known as the Harlem Hellfighte­rs.

The Hellfighte­rs, who spent more days fighting in World War I than any other Army regiment, were commanded by Col. William Hayward, a white lawyer who in 1921 became Manhattan U.S. attorney. He hired the first Black Manhattan federal prosecutor — a former Hellfighte­r — and the first female prosecutor in the office as well.

Williams, 41, once served as a law clerk for Garland when he was a federal circuit judge in Washington and was recommende­d to the U.S. attorney’s post by Schumer.

In his speech, Williams briefly got choked up thanking his family and recent predecesso­rs, including Audrey Strauss, whom he replaced when his nomination was confirmed several weeks ago; Preet Bharara, who hired him; and Joon Kim, who he said “saw something special in me.”

He sparked sustained applause when he mentioned Geoffrey S. Berman, a Republican who served as U.S. attorney during much of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al term.

Berman became known in what prosecutor­s like to affectiona­tely call the “Sovereign District of New York” for standing up to Washington’s demands and left office in June 2020 after a standoff with then-Attorney General William Barr over investigat­ions into Trump’s allies.

Williams said Berman promoted him and “when the hour demanded true courage and independen­ce and a demonstrat­ion of what it means to be a Southern District of New York prosecutor, he showed all of America what that means.”

The prosecutor also announced that he plans to make fighting gun violence and prosecutin­g corruption in financial markets a priority. Other former top prosecutor­s in attendance included David N. Kelley and Mary Jo White.

Noticeably absent was Rudy Giuliani, a former Manhattan U.S. attorney who is now under investigat­ion by that same office over whether he broke the law when he failed to register as an agent of a foreign country for his dealings overseas. Giuliani has said he did nothing wrong and was working for Trump at the time as his personal lawyer.

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