Chicago Sun-Times

In blocking Perry from U.S. attorney post, J.D. Vance shows he’s pro-Trump, pro-crime

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It’s too bad someone can’t put a “procedural hold” on Republican Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance that would crimp what essentiall­y is his pro-crime politickin­g.

In June, Vance announced a procedural hold on all appointmen­ts for U.S. attorneys across the country, including April Perry, whom President Joe Biden had appointed to fill the seat for the Northern District of Illinois. Under the Senate’s byzantine rules, just one senator can block the confirmati­on of a U.S. attorney.

That has left northern Illinois with no one in the top job since John Lausch stepped down in March 2023. All because Vance, who pretty much owes his job to former President Donald J. Trump’s endorsemen­t, thinks Trump should be above the law instead of facing the four indictment­s and 88 criminal charges federal and state prosecutor­s have brought against him.

Because Vance has not relented, Biden on Wednesday appointed Perry to serve as a U.S. district court judge for the Northern District of Illinois, making it unlikely anyone else will be appointed to fill the U.S. attorney seat until after the November election. No U.S. attorney nominee since 1981 had to wait as long as Perry did for Senate confirmati­on. In September, the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by U.S.

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., recommende­d Perry’s nomination.

Vance’s treatment of

Perry has been beyond shameful.

“It is just a crime what they did to April Perry’s nomination,” Ron Safer, former head of the criminal division in the Chicago U.S. attorney’s office, told us. “She should be the U.S. attorney. She is supremely qualified, [and] it is important for the office to have a woman for the first time in history at the head of the office.”

Vance’s hostagetak­ing is also bad for the efforts to fight crime in the Northern District of Illinois, which serves some 9 million people in 18 counties. The federal prosecutor­s in the office of some 155 lawyers are still doing the day-to-day jobs in the district’s Chicago and Rockford offices. But in any large office, having no one at the top can create a vacuum and lead to inertia and uncertaint­y. That’s what playing politics with a prosecutor’s office can engender.

Vance puts loyalty to Trump above all

Acting U.S. Attorney Morris “Sonny” Pasqual, who was the first assistant under John Lausch, has a depth of experience and is widely regarded as someone with good judgment. Under his leadership, the office secured conviction­s against longtime Ald. Ed Burke (14th) and four former ComEd officials.

But Pasqual has been in limbo for a year. That makes it harder to make personnel and other long-range decisions. And with no Senate-confirmed leader, the northern Illinois office has less political clout within the U.S. Justice Department.

Moreover, Pasqual lacks his own first assistant, someone who normally acts as a sounding board for the U.S. attorney. Prosecutor­s have wide discretion in bringing charges, negotiatin­g pleas and setting office policy. Thorough discussion­s are needed to get all that right.

The top job in the criminal division is also vacant. The criminal chief serves a key role in the U.S. attorney’s office, supervisin­g everything that happens in that division, which prosecutes cases involving narcotics, money laundering, violent crimes, financial crimes, securities and commoditie­s fraud, public corruption, organized crime, attacks on national security, cybercrime­s and other crimes.

Does Vance think none of that is important? Does he not care about the safety of Americans? Does he put his loyalty to Trump above all of that?

What does Vance, who said he wants to grind the Justice Department “to a halt,” think he will achieve? That federal prosecutor­s, who have amassed voluminous evidence against Trump, will just drop all the charges because of one intractabl­e senator? Ironically, Vance’s hold on all U.S. attorney appointmen­ts has also left the job of U.S. attorney for Northern Ohio, in his home state, without an occupant for the longest stretch in its history.

Trying to get around Vance’s procedural hold is no easy task. If Durbin, for example, tried to pass a so-called “motion to proceed” to end Vance’s hold, such a vote would inevitably be blocked by a filibuster. Efforts over the years to reform procedural holds have gone nowhere in the Senate, which has so many interlocki­ng rules and precedents that attempts to fix something sometimes just make things worse.

Whatever else Vance thinks he is up to, he has made himself a friend of criminals and a foe of a qualified U.S. attorney nominee. He has gained nothing, and Illinois — and the rest of the nation — is suffering.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, arrives for the Senate session on Tuesday in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, arrives for the Senate session on Tuesday in Washington.
 ?? ?? April Perry
April Perry

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