Marin Independent Journal

8 of Biden’s US attorney picks would include historic firsts

- By Eric Tucker

>> President Joe Biden is nominating eight new leaders for U.S. attorney positions across the country, including in the office overseeing the prosecutio­ns of hundreds of defendants charged in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol.

The nominees announced by the White House on Monday come as the Justice Department is continuing to round out its leadership team under Attorney General Merrick Garland, who traveled to Chicago last week to announce an initiative to crack down on gun traffickin­g corridors. The Justice Department’s 93 U.S. attorneys, who are responsibl­e for federal criminal prosecutio­ns in their respective districts, are likely to be central to efforts to combat violent crime.

If confirmed by the Senate, the nominees would run offices in the District of Columbia, Indiana, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New York and Washington state. Most would be historic firsts, including the first Black or female attorneys to lead their districts, the Biden administra­tion said.

The eight were “chosen for their devotion to enforcing the law, their profession­alism, their experience and credential­s in this field, their dedication to pursuing equal justice for all, and their commitment to the independen­ce

of the Department of Justice,” the White House said.

The lawyers represent the first batch of U.S. attorney nominees advanced by the Biden White House, which is still working to fill key Justice Department posts six months into the administra­tion. The White House last week announced that it would nominate a lawyer to run its antitrust division but also withdrew its nominee for the civil division head. No nominee has been announced for the key solicitor general role.

Among the nominees announced Monday is Matthew Graves, a former fraud and public corruption prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office in the District of Columbia who is being tapped to run that office at a time when it is consumed by hundreds of cases arising from the Capitol riot.

The Trump administra­tion

appointee who held the job during the riot, Michael Sherwin, has since left the Justice Department. The position has been held on an acting basis by Channing Phillips, who served in the same role during the Obama administra­tion.

Rachael Rollins, the district attorney in Suffolk County, Massachuse­tts, would be the first Black woman to serve as U.S. attorney in that state. Erek Barron, a current state lawmaker who has served as a prosecutor and as a policy adviser to Biden on the Senate Judiciary Committee, would be the first Black U.S. attorney in the District of Maryland, the White House said.

Other nominees include Zachary Myers, who specialize­s in national security and cyber matters as a federal prosecutor in Maryland and who the White House says would be the first Black U.S. attorney in the Southern District of Indiana; and Clifford Johnson, who would be the first Black lawyer to lead the Northern District of Indiana after spending nearly 35 years in that office.

Justice Department environmen­tal lawyer Vanessa Waldref would be the first woman to run the U.S. attorney’s office in the Eastern District of Washington, the White House said. And Nicholas Brown, who has been a federal prosecutor and general counsel to the governor, would be the first Black lawyer to run the Western District of Washington, which encompasse­s Seattle.

The Justice Department disclosed in February that it was seeking the resignatio­n of most U.S. attorneys appointed during President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, though it did leave in place David Weiss, the top federal prosecutor in Delaware, where law enforcemen­t officials have been conducting a criminal tax investigat­ion involving Biden’s son, Hunter.

U.S. attorneys serve at the president’s pleasure and are routinely nominated with a recommenda­tion from a home-state senator. For instance, Trini Ross, a former federal prosecutor who is being nominated as U.S. attorney for the Western District of New York in Buffalo, was recommende­d for the job by the state’s senior senator, Charles Schumer.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden listens as Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during an event in the State Dining room of the White House in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden listens as Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during an event in the State Dining room of the White House in Washington.

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