Los Angeles Times

GARLAND HEARING

Attorney general nominee Merrick Garland testifies before a key Senate committee.

- BY DEL QUENTIN WILBER AND DAVID LAUTER

WASHINGTON — Merrick Garland appeared headed to easy confirmati­on as attorney general after a hearing Monday during which the soft-spoken federal appellate judge won praise from senators of both parties as he promised to aggressive­ly investigat­e the U.S. Capitol attack, boost enforcemen­t of civil rights laws and enact other major changes at the Justice Department, including a likely moratorium on federal executions.

The 68-year-old’s low-key demeanor was in sharp contrast to the brash approach at hearings by former Atty. Gen. William Barr, who frequently sparred with lawmakers over Trump administra­tion prerogativ­es and the scope of executive power.

By contrast, President Biden’s nominee quietly emphasized he would cooperate with congressio­nal investigat­ions and would not tolerate White House interferen­ce in federal inquiries. Former President Trump repeatedly urged his attorneys general to launch criminal investigat­ions of his political rivals and to go easy on his associates.

If confirmed, Garland will face the politicall­y fraught tax inquiry into Hunter Biden, the president’s son, and potential investigat­ions of Trump and his associates.

“I am not the president’s lawyer,” Garland testified. “I am the United States’ lawyer, and I will do everything in my power, which I believe is considerab­le, to fend off any effort by anyone to make prosecutio­ns or investigat­ions partisan or political in any way.”

Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), the chairman of the committee, told reporters he expected his panel would vote on the nomination early next week, with a floor vote coming a few days later. The hearing is scheduled to continue Tuesday, with witnesses testifying about Garland’s character and legal career.

Although Garland declined to discuss how he would handle specific criminal cases, he spoke frankly about the Trump administra­tion’s policy of separating parents without legal status in the U.S. from their children, calling it “shameful.” “I can’t imagine anything worse than separating caring parents from their children,” he said.

He also spoke openly about what he considered to be the death penalty’s flaws.

“I am very concerned about the large number of exoneratio­ns that have occurred through DNA evidence and otherwise, not only in death penalty conviction­s, but also in other conviction­s,” Garland said. “I think a terrible thing occurs when somebody is convicted of a crime that they did not commit. And the most terrible thing happens if someone is executed for a crime they did not commit.”

The death penalty, he added, has an “enormously disparate impact on Black Americans and members of communitie­s of color.”

Garland also said that death sentences in the U.S. had become so rare that there was a risk that they were now “arbitrary” and “random” — the grounds on which the Supreme Court abolished capital punishment nationwide for a few years in the 1970s.

His comments came on the same day the legislatur­e in Virginia, a state that once led the nation in executions, voted to abolish the death penalty, a further sign of declining public support.

Garland told senators the Biden administra­tion would probably prohibit executions of federal inmates, a sharp turn from the Justice Department under Trump. From July through January, the Justice Department executed 13 inmates, ending what had in effect been a 17year moratorium on the federal death penalty.

With few conflicts between the nominee and the senators, the hearing’s emotional high point came after Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) asked Garland to explain his commitment to combating discrimina­tion.

“I come from a family where my grandparen­ts fled anti-Semitism and persecutio­n. The country took us in and protected us. And I feel an obligation to the country to pay back,” Garland said, his voice cracking. “This is the highest, best use of my own set of skills to pay back.”

Garland testified that as attorney general he would focus on reducing disparitie­s in housing, education and the courts, noting that Black people and members of minority groups are bearing

“the brunt of harm caused by pandemic, pollution and climate change.”

He said he would seek to reduce incarcerat­ion, particular­ly of Black men, by ensuring prosecutor­s targeted violent criminals, not lowlevel drug offenders. Garland testified that the Justice Department would “look closely and be more sympatheti­c towards retrospect­ive reductions in sentences,” a move that would allow nonviolent drug offenders to return home, freeing space in prisons for more dangerous individual­s.

Democrats said such an approach was urgently needed. “Too many Americans, whether because of race, national origin, disability, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, face inequality in their daily lives,” Durbin said. “It is high time for the Department of Justice to confront these realities that unfortunat­ely continue to threaten” democracy.

Senators pressed Garland repeatedly to confirm he would take seriously the attack on the Capitol, and Garland promised that the investigat­ion into the Jan. 6 siege would be his top priority. The Justice Department has charged more than 250 people for being part of a pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol seeking to block the counting of electoral votes that cemented Joe Biden’s victory. Five people, including a Capitol police officer, died in the assault.

“This was the most heinous attack on the democratic processes that I’ve ever seen, and one that I never expected to see in my lifetime,” Garland said, adding he would make sure prosecutor­s and agents had “all the resources they could possibly require” in what he hoped would be an expansive investigat­ion.

“I intend to make sure that we look more broadly,” he said, “to look at where this [threat] is coming from, what other groups there might be, that that could raise the same problem in the future, and that we protect the American people.”

A graduate of Harvard Law School, Garland worked for a big law firm before joining the Justice Department in the 1980s to become a prosecutor. When Bill Clinton became president, Garland was tapped to take a top role in the deputy attorney general’s office. From that perch, he helped supervise the investigat­ion into the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, the worst act of domestic terrorism in U.S. history.

Though Garland now has concerns about the death penalty, he had no such reservatio­ns about pursuing such a sentence for Timothy McVeigh, an Army veteran and right-wing extremist who was convicted in 1997 of planting the bomb that killed 168 people. McVeigh was executed in 2001.

In his testimony, Garland said overseeing that investigat­ion informed his thinking on how to battle the current threat posed by domestic terrorists and extremists.

Garland left the Justice Department in 1997 when he won confirmati­on to become a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which is considered one of the most influentia­l courts in the nation.

President Obama nominated Garland in March 2016 to take the seat of the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. But the GOP-controlled Senate refused to consider the nomination, leaving it open for the next president to fill. Trump successful­ly won confirmati­on of Neil M. Gorsuch, a conservati­ve, to the court.

Despite blocking Garland’s assent to the Supreme Court, powerful Republican­s signaled they respect the judge, easing his way to a speedy confirmati­on vote.

“I think you are a very good pick for this job,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), the ranking GOP senator on the panel, said, “No one doubts that Judge Garland is qualified for the job .... I just want to say that I like you, I respect you.”

In response to questions from Graham and Grassley, Garland pledged to respect special counsel John Durham’s inquiry into the federal investigat­ion of Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election and alleged ties between Moscow and the Trump campaign.

“I understand that he has been permitted to remain in his position,” Garland said, referring to Durham, who was appointed special counsel by Barr. “Sitting here today I have no reason to think that that was not the correct decision .... I don’t have any reason to think that he should not remain in place.”

Garland told Graham he had read the executive summary to a lengthy Justice Department inspector general report published in December that revealed major failings in how the FBI obtained warrants from the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court to clandestin­ely gather informatio­n on a former Trump campaign advisor.

“There were certainly serious problems with respect to FISA applicatio­ns,” Garland said, adding that he believed the FBI was working to address the shortcomin­gs.

‘I am not the president’s lawyer. I am the United States’ lawyer.’

— JUDGE MERRICK GARLAND, attorney general nominee

 ?? Drew Angerer Pool Photo ??
Drew Angerer Pool Photo
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? MERRICK GARLAND, who has been a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for more than 20 years, told senators that the Biden administra­tion would probably prohibit the execution of federal inmates.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times MERRICK GARLAND, who has been a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for more than 20 years, told senators that the Biden administra­tion would probably prohibit the execution of federal inmates.

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