Janet Reno | |
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Official portrait, c. 1990s | |
78th United States Attorney General | |
In office March 12, 1993 – January 20, 2001 | |
President | Bill Clinton |
Jan 29, 2018 · After several years in private practice, Reno ran for county prosecutor for Dade County in the late 1970s. She served in that position from 1978 to 1993, developing a …
Mar 16, 2021 · Seventy-Eighth Attorney General 1993-2001. Janet Reno was born on July 21, 1938 in Miami, Florida. She received her A.B. degree from Cornell University in 1960, and her LL.B. degree from Harvard Law School in 1963. From 1963-1967, Ms. Reno was an associate at Brigham & Brigham.
Nov 07, 2016 · Janet Reno, (born July 21, 1938, Miami, Florida, U.S.—died November 7, 2016, Miami), American lawyer and public official who became the first woman attorney general (1993–2001) of the United States.
Jul 08, 2020 · From 1978 until the time of her appointment, Ms. Reno served as the State's attorney for Dade County, FL. She was initially appointed to the position by the Governor of Florida and was subsequently elected to that office five times.
Nov 07, 2016 · SEE PHOTOS: Janet Reno, first female attorney general “Nobody ever ran against me [in 1980],” said Reno, who was elected five times during her …
Reno was thrust into the national spotlight in 1993 when President Bill Clinton appointed her to become the first female U.S. attorney general.
After attending Cornell University for her undergraduate degree and Harvard Law School in 1960, Janet Reno worked as an attorney in Florida for several years. Her work in Florida as an attorney and as county prosecutor from 1978 to 1993 established Reno's stern and liberal reputation.
Despite this controversy, Reno became one of the most respected members of the Clinton administration in its first term, known for launching innovative programs designed to steer non-violent drug offenders away from jail and espousing the rights of criminal defendants.
Early Life and Career. Janet Reno was born in Miami, Florida on July 21, 1938. After receiving her bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Cornell University in 1960, she attended Harvard Law School. Reno graduated in 1963 and returned to her native Florida. After several years in private practice, Reno ran for county prosecutor for Dade County in ...
Reno became involved in negotiations and when they stalled in April 2000 she ordered a raid on the U.S. relatives’ Miami home that would ultimately return the young refugee back to his father in Cuba. Her controversial intervention enraged the Cuban American community in Miami.
Reno was also in charge during the Justice Department's prosecution of several high-profile cases including the convictions of Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman for his role in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing; Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols for their deadly bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City; and Ted Kaczynski, who became known as the “Unabomber” for a 17-year domestic terrorist campaign of mailing letter bombs.
In early 1993, cult leader David Koresh and his followers, known as the Branch Davidians, ended up in a 51-day standoff with agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Reno was called upon to help resolve the situation.
She stayed in that position until 1993, when she was appointed Attorney General by President Clinton. Ms. Reno was the President of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association from 1984 to 1985. Additionally, she was a member of the Special Committee on Criminal Justice in a Free Society of the American Bar Association from 1986-1988.
She received the Medal of Honor Award, the Florida Bar Association in 1990. On March 12, 1993 , Ms. Reno became the first woman and 78th attorney general.
Artist: Janet Reno was born on July 21, 1938 in Miami, Florida. She received her A.B. degree from Cornell University in 1960, and her LL.B. degree from Harvard Law School in 1963. From 1963-1967, Ms. Reno was an associate at Brigham & Brigham. In 1967, she became a partner at Lewis & Reno and remained there until 1971, ...
Two years after she became Attorney General, Reno was diagnosed with Parkinson’s after noticing a trembling in her left hand. She announced the diagnosis during a weekly news conference in Washington, and insisted the condition was being controlled by medication and would not impair her ability to do her job. She underscored the point by extending a rock-steady hand.
During her 15 years as prosecutor in Miami’s Dade County, where voters returned her to the office five times, Reno gained plenty of experience on cases with national implications, including on narcotics, immigration and corruption. The Ivy League law graduate also had a reputation as an innovator who introduced a special court for drug offenders that mixed punishment with treatment.
They escaped with 12 companions in a small aluminum motorboat, which sank in heavy seas and drowned Elizabet and 10 of the others. After drifting for two days, Elian was rescued in good condition and taken to Miami to be cared for by relatives – but became embroiled in a bitter, international custody battle.
6 Things Janet Reno Will Be Remembered For. Sorry, the video player failed to load. (Error Code: 100013) Janet Reno, the first female Attorney General of the United States, who served for eight years after being nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993, has died at the age of 78 from complications related to Parkinson’s disease.
Gunfire erupted during the raid, and four agents and six members of the religious sect perished. That led to a 51-day standoff, which ended on April 19 1993, when Reno approved a raid on the compound using tear gas.
The boy was discovered lashed to an inner tube off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Fla, after he and his mother, Elizabet, fled their Cuban town of Cardenas.
The standoff, which began on Feb. 28 1993, before Reno became Attorney General, was sparked when U.S. agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms made a surprise raid on the compound, trying to execute a search warrant.
Janet Reno, (born July 21, 1938, Miami, Florida, U.S.—died November 7, 2016, Miami), American lawyer and public official who became ...
Janet Reno, (born July 21, 1938, Miami, Florida, U.S.—died November 7, 2016, Miami), American lawyer and public official who became the first woman attorney general (1993–2001) of the United States. Meet extraordinary women who dared to bring gender equality and other issues to the forefront.
Reno settled with her family on 20 acres (8 hectares) of wilderness at the edge of the Everglades, outside Miami, Florida, when she was eight years old.
Reno graduated from Coral Gables High School, where she excelled on the debating team, and went on to Cornell University, earning a degree in chemistry in 1960. She then attended Harvard Law School, and, after graduating in 1963, she went to work as a lawyer.
Her most controversial early decision, however, was her ordering agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to conduct the final raid on the compound of the Branch Davidian cult near Waco, Texas. Eighty-six adults and 17 children died as a result of this police action.
Reno was among the highest-profile cabinet officials, and, despite criticism, she appeared on the television show Saturday Night Live, which had a recurring spoof of her while she served in Washington. In 2002 Reno unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for governor in Florida.
READ MORE: Janet Reno dies at 78. “What impressed people was that she went into the black community at night without a police escort and was able to convince people that she did the best she could with the case,” said Florida International University professor Marvin Dunn, once one of Reno’s most vocal black critics.
on May 17, 1980. She had just lost her biggest case against four Miami-Dade County cops charged in the beating death of a black insurance agent.
Over the next two decades, Ayers worked with Reno on an array of stubborn problems — drug use, juvenile offenders, domestic violence, welfare fraud and deadbeat dads.
Reno became a target for criticism in part because she was so easy to hit. A Herald series showed that in 1992 — her last year as state attorney — Miami-Dade had the highest crime rate in the nation, but sent convicted felons to state prison at a lower rate than any other large metropolitan area in the country.
Reno said during her 1993 confirmation hearing as attorney general that her conviction rate was lower because many nonviolent, first-time offenders were placed in Miami-Dade’s drug court for treatment and supervision. Her drug-court model, though viewed by some as flawed liberalism, has been copied around the country.
Gerstein, playing it safe, recommended both Reno and Ed Carhart, his chief assistant and one of his best prosecutors. Reno sent a letter in support of Carhart to Askew, but then changed her mind as she became the obvious front-runner. When Askew offered the job, Reno answered: “Governor, I’m honored.”.
While Reno was converting enemies, the Miami Herald’s editorial board abandoned her for Garcia-Pedrosa in the race for state attorney. The paper’s editorial described Reno as a “lightning rod for much of this community’s free-lance hatred and frustration.”.