The Sun (Lowell)

Barr blasted for slavery comment

Compared virus lock-in

- By Eric Tucker

Attorney General William Barr drew sharp condemnati­on Thursday for comparing lockdown orders during the coronaviru­s pandemic to slavery.

In remarks Wednesday night at an event hosted by Hillsdale College, Barr had called the lockdown orders the “greatest intrusion on civil liberties in American history” since slavery.

His comments, at a Northern Virginia event hosted by the school, also criticized his own prosecutor­s for behaving as “headhunter­s” in their pursuit of prominent targets and for using the weight of the criminal justice system to launch what he said were “ill-conceived” political probes.

Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., the No. 3 House Democratic leader, told CNN that Barr’s remarks were “the most ridiculous, tone-deaf, God-awful things I’ve ever heard” because they wrongly equated human bondage with a measure aimed at saving lives.

“Slavery was not about saving lives. It was about devaluing lives,” Clyburn said. “This pandemic is a threat to human life.”

It’s not the first time Barr has condemned stay-at-home orders.

He has previously said that some orders were “disturbing­ly close to house arrest,” and the Justice Department sent letters to several states warning that some of their virus-related restrictio­ns might be unlawful.

Prosecutor­s also filed statements of interest in several civil cases challengin­g some of the restrictio­ns.

Barr has faced scrutiny for overruling the decisions of Justice Department prosecutor­s who work for him, including in criminal cases involving associates of President Donald Trump.

But in his remarks, he rejected the notion that prosecutor­s should have final say in cases that they bring.

Instead, Barr described them as part of the “permanent bureaucrac­y” and suggested they need to be supervised, and even reined in, by politicall­y appointed leaders accountabl­e to the president and Congress.

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