Santa Fe New Mexican

Critics question Sessions’ style after blunt comments

AG draws ire of New York City police commission­er with ‘soft on crime’ accusation in interview

- By Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON — With two dust-ups in a week, first with a judge in Hawaii and another with leaders of the nation’s largest and most powerful police department, Attorney General Jeff Sessions sounds to some more like the conservati­ve senator from Alabama he once was rather than the top prosecutor he is today.

And some observers say the Republican’s blunt style could strain relationsh­ips with the very law enforcemen­t officials whose partnershi­ps he contends are vital and risks politicizi­ng criminal justice issues that demand the Justice Department’s attention.

Sessions drew the ire of Hawaii’s Democratic lawmakers after saying on a radio show he was “amazed that a judge sitting on an island in the Pacific” could stop President Donald Trump’s travel ban, though he later indicated the comment was meant as a joke.

Two days after the radio show, the Justice Department accused New York City of being soft on crime, a statement the police commission­er called “absolutely ludicrous.” Sessions later said the criticism was directed not at the rank-and-file but at the policies of Mayor Bill de Blasio, a longtime Trump foe. But some officers saw it as an insult to their work.

“This is political point-scoring by the new administra­tion,” said Eugene O’Donnell, a former New York City police officer and now a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “This job is different. If Jeff Sessions wants to work in the White House political operation he can do that, but it should be a qualitativ­ely different job than any other Cabinet job. It should have a special place.”

As U.S attorney in Mobile, Ala., Sessions faced allegation­s of racially charged remarks and they cost him a federal judgeship. As a senator, Sessions was not afraid to be outspoken, even if it left him on the fringe. And as he closes in on his first 100 days as attorney general, he’s not couching his remarks.

Sessions played a prominent role in the campaign and remains a close ally to Trump, whose own verbal bombshells have been a unique trademark of his presidency. The attorney general has become enmeshed in the messaging around the administra­tion’s ban on travelers from predominan­tly Muslim countries and has escalated Trump’s threats to pull grant money from so-called sanctuary cities that refuse to share informatio­n with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

His comments about New York were accompanie­d by letters to that city and other jurisdicti­ons asking them to document their cooperatio­n.

“This is the Trump era. Progress is being made daily, and it will continue,” Sessions said Wednesday after a judge blocked attempts to strip sanctuary cities of funds, drawing on Trump and Sessions’ own comments in his decision. The judge noted that the attorney general had suggested the cities stood to lose far more than the relatively small pot of grant money at stake.

Though independen­t in its handling of cases, the Justice Department historical­ly is in sync with the law enforcemen­t priorities of the White House, and it’s not uncommon for personal bonds to exist between a president and attorney general.

Unless an attorney general says something that interferes with an open case, there’s no formal code that governs how he should speak publicly, said Daniel Feldman, a John Jay law professor who was a senior member of former New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s staff.

The head of one New York officers union defended Sessions for denouncing de Blasio’s sanctuary city policy. But some officers already feel that major changes enacted over the past four years haven’t been recognized, and the attorney general’s comments added salt to the wound. Crime continues to go down; the city had the fewest shootings ever in 2016, and barely missed a record low for murders.

“When you have the attorney general picking fights with the NYPD, it drives a wedge between the two agencies,” said Matthew Miller, who led Holder’s public affairs office. “When the attorney general makes the kind of statement Sessions has done in the first 100 days, it really discredits his authority.”

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks Friday in New York. With two dust-ups in one week, Sessions sounds to some more like the conservati­ve senator from Alabama he once was rather than the nation’s top prosecutor.
FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks Friday in New York. With two dust-ups in one week, Sessions sounds to some more like the conservati­ve senator from Alabama he once was rather than the nation’s top prosecutor.

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