Lodi News-Sentinel

Jeff Sessions asks 46 Obama-appointed U.S. attorneys to resign

- By Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked Friday for the resignatio­ns of dozens of politicall­y appointed U.S. attorneys held over from the Obama administra­tion, the Justice Department said.

Sessions wanted “to ensure a uniform transition” to the Trump administra­tion, spokeswoma­n Sarah Isgur Flores said in a statement.

“Until the new U.S. attorneys are confirmed, the dedicated career prosecutor­s in our U.S. attorney’s offices will continue the great work of the department in investigat­ing, prosecutin­g and deterring the most violent offenders,” she said.

The order affects 46 U.S. attorneys; 47 others have already stepped aside. Ninetythre­e U.S. attorneys are the top federal prosecutor­s in 94 districts. (Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands share a federal prosecutor.)

It is not unusual for a new administra­tion to seek the dismissal of political appointees, particular­ly those of a different party. In March 1993, then-Attorney General Janet Reno sought the resignatio­ns of U.S. attorneys appointed by President George H.W. Bush, a move that sparked intense criticism from conservati­ve commentato­rs.

Attorneys general under Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush generally tried to stagger departures over a few months.

When Obama was weighing how to handle the situation, former top prosecutor­s and the leader of an associatio­n that represents front-line federal prosecutor­s urged the administra­tion to take a different approach than Reno. Firing U.S. attorneys en masse could harm continuity, they told The Washington Post in March 2009, and throw “law enforcemen­t efforts into disarray.”

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