Mar 10, 2021 · Merrick Garland, President Joe Biden's nominee for attorney general was confirmed Wednesday by the U.S. Senate. His confirmation comes nearly five years to the day since he was nominated by ...
Mar 10, 2021 · Garland Confirmed as US Attorney General, Faces Major Challenges. Merrick Garland, a federal appeals court judge and former Justice Department official whose 2016 nomination to the Supreme Court ...
Mar 10, 2021 · Merrick Garland Confirmed As Biden's Attorney General The Senate has confirmed Merrick Garland to run the Justice Department. He's vowed to crack down on violent domestic extremists and reduce ...
Mar 11, 2021 · Lincolnwood Native Merrick Garland Confirmed As Attorney General. SKOKIE, IL — Forty years after he was voted the most intelligent boy at Niles West High School, Lincolnwood native Merrick ...
Mar 10, 2021 · WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate on Wednesday confirmed Merrick Garland to serve as U.S. attorney general in a 70-30 vote. Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee advanced his nomination in a 15-7 vote. Garland served as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. As attorney general, he’ll lead the Justice Department as …
Garland said during his confirmation hearings he plans to make the probe into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol “one of the very first things” he tackles after taking office, calling it a “heinous attack.”
“The Justice Department has turned into the president’s private law firm, ” Biden said on the campaign trail in September. “I’m not gonna pursue prosecuting anybody, I’m gonna do what the Justice Department says should be done and not politicize it.”
Cruz said he was “deeply disappointed” by Garland’s performance in confirmation hearings, taking aim at his refusal to commit to not firing John Durham, who was tapped by the Trump administration to investigate the origins of the Trump-Russia probe. “He refused to commit to following the same standards of integrity that Bill Barr committed to,” Cruz said.
Merrick Garland speaks during his attorney general confirmation hearing with the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on Feb. 22. A new chapter of Merrick Garland's long career in the law has opened after the Senate voted to pave the way for him to serve as attorney general.
Garland, who would be the 86th attorney general, has pledged to return the Justice Department to normal order after four years of tumult under former President Donald Trump.
During an earlier stint at the Justice Department, in 1995, Garland traveled to Oklahoma City after a bombing at the federal building there killed 168 people. His colleagues credited him with helping to build a meticulous trail of evidence that helped convict Timothy McVeigh and his co-conspirator, Terry Nichols. That experience, as well as his cool head during a later standoff with the Montana Freemen, could help inform his approach to the current wave of extremism.
Lisa Monaco, who's in line to become second in command at the Justice Department, won praise from Republican lawmakers. They had more pointed questions for civil rights lawyer Vanita Gupta, who would be the first woman of color to serve as associate attorney general.
Biden said his administration would work to promote racial justice and eliminate systemic sources of discrimination in the justice system.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, Democrat from Rhode Island, asked Merrick Garland if he'd be willing "to look upstream" from the Jan. 6 rioters and investigate the "funders, organizers, leaders or aiders and abetters" of the Capitol attack.
At his Senate confirmation hearing, Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland told GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley that he had not discussed the federal investigation into Hunter Biden with President Biden.
In his opening remarks at his Senate confirmation hearing, President Biden's Attorney General nominee Merrick Garland said he would supervise the prosecution of the White supremacists and others who stormed the US Capitol on Jan. 6.
Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin told reporters he thinks Judge Merrick Garland’s first priority as attorney general should be the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
Merrick Garland will likely face questions from both sides of the aisle on how he would steer the Justice Department amid policy debates over race and the criminal justice system, which came to the fore after a summer of mass protests spurred by the police killings of Black men and women.
Judiciary Committee Chair and Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin called Merrick Garland's nomination for attorney general "one of the most critical" in the Justice Department's history.
The Senate confirmation hearing for President Biden's nominee to lead the Justice Department just began.
The department’s priorities and messaging are expected to shift drastically in the Biden administration, with a focus more on civil rights issues, criminal justice overhauls and policing policies in the wake of nationwide protests over the death of Black Americans at the hands of law enforcement.
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