The Capital

Barron nominated for U.S. Attorney for Md.

He’s the first Democrat tapped for post in 20 years

- By Justin Fenton Sun reporter Jeff Barker contribute­d to this article.

President Joe Biden has nominated Prince George’s County Del. Erek Barron to become the next U.S. Attorney for Maryland; if confirmed, he would be the first Black person to hold the post, and the first Democrat in 20 years.

Barron, 47, a defense attorney, has been a member of the House of Delegates since 2015. Before that he worked stints as a federal prosecutor and as an assistant state’s attorney in Prince George’s and Baltimore.

The Bowie resident has a direct tie to Biden: He worked as his counsel and policy adviser when Biden was a U.S. Senator from 2007 to 2009, and on the Obama-Biden transition team’s justice and civil rights review team.

Barron and seven other U.S. Attorney nominees announced Monday are the first to be put forward by the White House since Biden took over. Six are Black; three are women.

It’s long been known in political and legal circles that Barron was the likely pick, but Maryland’s congressio­nal delegation has been tight-lipped about the process. Barron declined to comment on the announceme­nt but said he will continue to serve in the legislatur­e until confirmed.

Republican Gov. Larry Hogan said Barron “will bring considerab­le legal and legislativ­e experience to the post, and we look forward to working with him on a number of critical issues, including violent crime and criminal justice reform.”

Del. Jazz Lewis, a Prince George’s Democrat who serves with Barron, said he would be a “phenomenal” U.S. Attorney for Maryland.

“His history as a prosecutor, both at the state level and federal, gives him deep knowledge about what is needed for the role, and his work to reform the criminal justice system in the legislatur­e shows he is aware of what we need in a federal partner,” Lewis said.

Howard County State’s Attorney Richard Gibson, who worked as a prosecutor with Barron, called him a “gifted prosecutor” who is “fair and balanced.”

“He’s certainly sensitive to the issues of social justice and changes going on right now in the country,” Gibson said.

There hasn’t been a Democrat confirmed by the Senate as U.S. Attorney for Maryland since Lynne A. Battaglia left in 2001. President Obama kept Rod Rosenstein — a Republican appointee of George W. Bush — in the post. Three Democrats have held the title as acting U.S. attorneys during that time frame, including current acting U.S. Attorney Jonathan F. Lenzner.

There has never been a Black top federal prosecutor in Maryland.

In 2015 and 2016, Barron served as a member of the Justice Reinvestme­nt Coordinati­ng Council and co-authored the Justice Reinvestme­nt Act, bipartisan legislatio­n that overhauled Maryland’s sentencing and correction­s practices.

Sen. Christophe­r R. West, a Baltimore County Republican, said he and Barron were “partners in crime” — working together for seven years on crime-related bills.

“He’s a person of great intelligen­ce and judgment,” West said. “He’s not a ‘limelighte­r’ — he listens really well.”

House Speaker Del. Adrienne Jones said Barron’s “work with both Democrats and Republican­s on the Justice Reinvestme­nt Act helped Maryland become a national leader on bipartisan correction­s and sentencing reform to reinvest in smarter public safety strategies.”

“While he is the first Black U.S. Attorney for Maryland, he also brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to represent and protect the people of our state,” Jones said.

Barron was a prosecutor in Prince George’s County from 2001 to 2004, and in Baltimore from 2004 to 2006. In Baltimore, he worked in a unit that handled gun cases. As a defense attorney, Barron helped get a new trial for a Delaware man on death row in that state. The man subsequent­ly won a new trial and was acquitted.

If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Barron could be in an uncomforta­ble position of overseeing the ongoing federal investigat­ion of Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby and her husband Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby, both Democrats.

The Mosbys have preemptive­ly alleged that the investigat­ion is politicall­y and racially-motivated because she is a progressiv­e and challengin­g the status quo.

Barron and Marilyn Mosby have worked together on or championed bills in Annapolis. Barron partnered with Mosby to introduce a bill granting more authority to prosecutor­s to throw out conviction­s. The bill came in the fallout of the Gun Trace Task Force case, as Mosby said judges were in some cases blocking prosecutor­s’ attempts to undo conviction­s they considered tainted.

 ?? PAUL W. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Del. Erek L. Barron, of Prince George’s County.
PAUL W. GILLESPIE/CAPITAL GAZETTE Del. Erek L. Barron, of Prince George’s County.

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