Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Holder calls his legacy a ‘golden age’

Attorney general says goodbye

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder bid farewell to the Justice Department on Friday after six years, outlining what he said were his major accomplish­ments and telling staffers they helped produce a “golden age” in the department’s history.

An emotional Mr. Holder, who has served as the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official since the start of the Obama administra­tion, addressed hundreds of lawyers and staff members one day after his successor, Loretta Lynch, was confirmed by the Senate following a monthslong delay.

“I am proud of you. I’m going to miss you. I am going to miss this building. I am going to miss this institutio­n. More than anything, I am going to miss you all,” Mr. Holder told the standing-room-only crowd, many of whom embraced him after he concluded his speech.

Mr. Holder, a former judge and U.S. attorney who took the job in 2009, will exit the department as the thirdlonge­st serving attorney general in U.S. history. He has not publicly announced what he’ll be doing next.

After attorney general-designate Loretta Lynch, 55, is sworn in at the Justice Department on Monday, she is likely to continue some of the same agenda as Mr. Holder as the Obama administra­tion draws to a close. But she is expected to bring her own management style and has spoken optimistic­ally about having cooperativ­e relationsh­ips with Congress following years of bitter feuding between Mr. Holder and Republican­s, who saw him as overly political and once held him in contempt.

Mr. Holder’s tenure was in many ways defined by his efforts on civil rights protection­s. His department challenged state laws that it saw as restrictin­g access to the voting booth and refused to defend the constituti­onality of a federal law banning recognitio­n of gay marriage. Mr. Holder also pushed for changes in the criminal justice system, directing prosecutor­s to sharply limit their use of harsh mandatory minimum sentences and championin­g alternativ­es to prison for nonviolent drug defendants.

Though Mr. Holder sees civil rights as a defining element of his legacy, his early years largely centered on national security concerns as the country confronted several terror plots, including a failed effort to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner on Christmas Day in 2009.

Media advocates criticized the Justice Department’s aggressive stance in news media leak investigat­ions involving national security cases, and human rights groups expressed frustratio­n when the department failed to bring charges over harsh interrogat­ion tactics of terror suspects.

One area where he has professed vindicatio­n is in his plan to transfer terror suspects from the Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba to the United States for prosecutio­n in the federal court system. The plan was abandoned amid congressio­nal opposition, but since then, the Justice Department has pointed to successful terror conviction­s in American courts even as the military tribunal system has slogged along without major results.

On Friday, he called that debate “dead” and settled and said it was now clear that civilian courts could adequately handle national security prosecutio­ns.

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