The Oklahoman

Garland vows Capitol riot will be top priority

- By Michael Balsamo, Eric Tucker and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON— Merrick Garland, President Joe Biden's attorney general nominee, vowed Monday to prioritize combating extremist violence and said his first focus would be on the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol ashes ought to assure lawmakers that the Justice Department would remain politicall­y independen­t on his watch.

A federal appeals court judge who was snubbed by Republican­s f or a seat on the Supreme Court in 2016, Garland appeared Monday before the Senate Judiciary Committee and is widely expected to sail through his confirmati­on process with bipartisan support.

“The attorney general represents the public interest, particular­ly and specifical­ly as defined by the Constituti­on and the statutes of the United States,”

Garland said. “I do not plan to be interfered with by anyone."

Garland is an ex perienced judge who held senior position sat the Justice Department decades ago, including as a supervisor in the prosecutio­n of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, which led to the execution of Timothy McVeigh. But he is set to return to a department that is radically different from the one he left. His experience prosecutin­g domestic terrorism cases could prove exceptiona­lly handy.

Garland will inherit a Justice Department that endured a tumultuous era under Trump — rife with political drama and controvers­ial decisions — and that faced abundant criticism from Democrats over what they saw as the politicizi­ng of the nation's top law enforcemen­t agencies.

“I have grown pretty immune to any kind of pressure, other than the pressure to do what I think is the right thing, given the facts and the law. That is what I intend to do as the attorney general, I don't care who pressures me in whatever direction,” he said.

Early in the hearing, Garland faced questionin­g about his plans to handle specific investigat­ions and politicall­y sensitive cases, like the federal tax investigat­ion involving Biden's son Hunter Biden, and the special counsel's inquiry started by William Barr, while he was attorney general, into the origin soft he TrumpRussi­a investigat­ion, which also remains open.

Garland said he had not spoken with Biden about the investigat­ion into his son. He said he had agreed to the nomination as attorney general because the president had vowed that “decisions about investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns will be left to the Justice Department.”

Garland, though saying he was supportive of transparen­cy and in publicly explaining

Justice Department decisionma­king, declined to commit to making public the results of the Durham investigat­ion. He said under questionin­g from Sen. Chuck Grassley, the committee's top Republican, that he had not spoken to Durham yet but had no reason to think that former Attorney General William Barr's decision to give Durham special counsel status to remain in his position was “not the correct decision.”

To date, Durham has interviewe­d officials from the FBI, Justice Department and the CIA regarding the early days of the Russia investigat­ion, and has produced cri minal charges against just one person — a former FBI lawyer who pleaded guilty to altering an email. Garland said “there were certainly serious problems” with applicatio­ns for surveillan­ce during the FBI's Russia investigat­ion, and that he intended as attorney general to speak more deeply about the issue with the Justice Department's inspector general and with the FBI director.

“I am always concerned and have always been concerned that we be very careful about FISA,” Garland said, using the acronym for the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act.

Garland's failed nomination

to the Supreme Court wasn't far from lawmakers minds', with the bitter partisan feelings over the 2016 confirmati­on battle apparent in the hearing room. Sen. Chuck Grassley, who was chairman of the panel at the time and carried out GOP leader Mitch McConnell' s directive to block Garland from the court, defended his role, saying he took a position and“stuck to it .” He then criticized Democrats over their handling of Justice Brett Kavanaugh's confirmati­on.

Still, he indicated he would be supportive of Garland.

“I admire Judge Garland's public service ,” Grass ley said. “Just because I disagreed with anyone being nominated didn't mean that I had to be disagreeab­le to that nominee.”

Garland said his first briefing as attorney general would be focused on the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and promised to provide prosecutor­s with whatever resources they need to bring charges in the cases.

“I will supervise the prosecutio­n of white supremacis­ts and others who stormed the Capitol on January 6— a heinous attack that sought to disrupt a cornerston­e of our democracy: the peaceful

transfer of power to a newly elected government,” Garland said in his opening statement.

Biden's choice of Garland reflects the president's goal of restoring the department's reputation as an independen­t body. During his four years as president, Donald Trump insisted that the attorney general must be loyal to him personally, a position t hat battered t he department's reputation.

In his prepared remarks, Garland focused on prioritizi­ng policing and civil rights to combat racial discrimina­tion — he says America doesn't “yet have equal justice” — as well as confrontin­g the rise in extremist violence and domestic terror threats and restoring the department's political independen­ce after years of controvers­ial decisions and turmoil.

“Communitie­s of color and other minorities still face discrimina­tion in housing, education, employment, and the criminal justice system; and bear the brunt of the harm caused by pandemic, pollution, and climate change ,” Garland said.

As civil rights groups and activists push Biden, a death penalty foe, to take immediate action to halt federal execution s after an unpreceden­ted run of capital punishment during the Trump administra­tion, Garland described his reservatio­n about the death penalty and its impact.

He said he believe sit is likely the Biden administra­tion could issue a moratorium on the death penalty after 13 federal executions were carried out in the final six months of the Trump administra­tion. They were the first federal executions in nearly 20 years and became super-spreader events during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Garland said the death penalty gives him “great pause” and is concerned about what he sees as the “almost randomness or arbitrarin­ess of its applicatio­n” and the “disparate impact” the death penalty has on Black Americans.

Garland held back tears as Sen. Cory Booker asked Garland about his family' s history confrontin­g hate and discrimina­tion.

“I come from a family where my grandparen­ts fled antisemiti­sm and persecutio­n. The country took us in, and protected us, and I feel an obligation to the country to pay back, and this is the highest best use of my own set of skills to pay back," Garland said. "So I very much want to be the kind of attorney general that you're saying I could become, and I'll do my best to become that kind of attorney general.”

His nomination has gained public support on both side soft he political a isle, from more than 150 former Justice Department officials —including former attorneys general Loretta Lynch, Michael Mukasey and Alberto Gonzales, along with 61 former federal judges. Others, including two sons of former Attorney General Edward Levi, have also written letters of support to Congress.

“There have been few moments in history where the role of attorney general — and the occupant of that post — have mattered more,” the committee's chairman, Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said.

 ?? [DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL] ?? Judge Merrick Garland, nominee to be Attorney General, testifies Monday at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
[DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL] Judge Merrick Garland, nominee to be Attorney General, testifies Monday at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
 ??  ?? Judge Merrick Garland, nominee to be Attorney General, testifies Monday at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. [DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL]
Judge Merrick Garland, nominee to be Attorney General, testifies Monday at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. [DEMETRIUS FREEMAN/ THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP, POOL]

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