It’s a normal thing to replace U.S. Attorneys. Every President does it. Every one. Because Liberals have such short (and selective) memories, here’s a video report about when Bill Clinton told Janet Reno to fire all 93 U.S. Attorneys in one day ( via Cernovich ):
Every President does it. Every one. Because Liberals have such short (and selective) memories, here’s a video report about when Bill Clinton told Janet Reno to fire all 93 U.S. Attorneys in one day ( via Cernovich ):
Because Liberals have such short (and selective) memories, here’s a video report about when Bill Clinton told Janet Reno to fire all 93 U.S. Attorneys in one day ( via Cernovich ): When @billclinton asked his Attorney General (shortly after taking office) to fire all U.S. Attorneys in one day: pic.twitter.com/Hyg8L5Aj5m
Sessions maintained he had not done anything wrong and refused to leave amid calls for his resignation. Bill Clinton ultimately fired Sessions on July 19, 1993. "We cannot have a leadership vacuum at an agency as important to the United States as the FBI," Clinton said at a White House press conference after the dismissal.
Clinton nominated Louis Freeh to be FBI Director on July 20. Then-FBI Deputy Director, Floyd I. Clarke, who Sessions suggested had led a coup to force his removal, served as Acting Director until September 1, 1993, when Freeh was sworn in.
Christopher WrayAugust 2, 2017 - Present Christopher Wray became the eighth Director of the FBI on August 2, 2017. Mr. Wray was born in New York City. He graduated from Yale University in 1989 and earned his law degree from Yale Law School in 1992.
FBI AgentFederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) employees with the job title FBI Agent make the most with an average annual salary of $73,453, while employees with the title Special Agent (Federal) make the least with an average annual salary of $70,760.
In the U.S. and its territories, FBI special agents may make arrests for any federal offense committed in their presence or when they have reasonable grounds to believe that the person to be arrested has committed, or is committing, a felony violation of U.S. laws.
Paul AbbateDeputy Director of the Federal Bureau of InvestigationSeal of the FBIFlag of the FBIIncumbent Paul Abbate since February 1, 2021Reports toDirector of the Federal Bureau of Investigation4 more rows
From January 2016 to July 2017, the month of his confirmation, Wray earned $9.2 million working as an attorney for the law firm King & Spalding, significantly more than his salary as FBI Director.
How much does a Director make at Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the United States? Average Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director yearly pay in the United States is approximately $145,936, which is 68% above the national average.
J. Edgar HooverPresidentCalvin Coolidge Herbert Hoover Franklin D. Roosevelt Harry S. Truman Dwight D. Eisenhower John F. Kennedy Lyndon B. Johnson Richard NixonDeputyClyde TolsonPreceded byHimself (as director of the Bureau of Investigation)Succeeded byClarence M. Kelley24 more rows
SO STOP CRYING BHARARA: This is the letter Sessions got when he was booted by the incoming Clinton administration pic.twitter.com/XPqfMYpNdn
This week, he told members of the military that the greatest threat we face is climate change. Have you noticed that both of those things are part ]
Liberals said there’s something bad behind this. They said Trump must be wanting to stop corruption investigations. They said this is an affront to everything everyone holds dear.
While it’s true that presidents from both parties make their own choices for U.S. attorney positions across the country, they have always done so in an orderly fashion that doesn’t put ongoing investigations at risk. They ask for letters of resignation but the attorneys are allowed to stay on the job until their successors are confirmed.
government is not a swamp, the liberals are swamp creatures who have created a swamp in our government... Trump is filling it in with good honest and admirable people.
America has seen the morons, the haters and that would be you and the liberal maniacs. In fact Sessions notified them on a conference call. they were only hired by Obama for a 4 year term. It's more whining from you. It gets really old. The lawyers themselves can drop dead for all I care. We've seen the Obama lawyers in action. Lawyers not knowing the law having to be overturned continually, wasting taxpayer $$$, that's NOT COOL.
Rather, it is about the way he did it. Look at the letter, which thanked Sessions for his service. That is the way you do it. Instead, Sessions said NOTHING in a conference call with the attorneys ONE DAY before he fired them without even having the decency of sending a letter thanking them for their service. Instead, some found out on social media. NOT COOL.
Joycelyn Elders served as surgeon general of the United States from 1993 until her firing in late 1994. Sticky: A (Self) Love Story. A new documentary explores the history and enduring taboo of masturbation—including the curious case of Joycelyn Elders, the surgeon general whose tenure came to an abrupt end after she suggested ...
Along the way are colorful interviews with pro-wanking celebrities like comedian Janeane Garofalo, Circle Jerks frontman Keith Morris and the owner of a San Francisco sex shop that declared National Masturbation Month in honor of Elders.
Appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1993, Dr. Elders became the first African-American to serve as surgeon general of the United States. Her outspoken views soon began to outrage the religious right. On the subject of reproductive rights, Elders encouraged Americans to "get over this love affair with the fetus.".
Well this is a shocker…#N#Democrats are making a stink over the fact that Attorney General Gonzales firing 8 US attorneys despite the fact that when Bill Clinton came into office he fired all 93 US attorneys in 1993!#N#The Political Grapevine reported this news tonight:
Jim Hoft is the founder and editor of The Gateway Pundit, one of the top conservative news outlets in America. Jim was awarded the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award in 2013 and is the proud recipient of the Breitbart Award for Excellence in Online Journalism from the Americans for Prosperity Foundation in May 2016.
Trump told NBC's Lester Holt on Thursday that he made the decision to fire Comey before meeting with Sessions and Rosenstein, contradicting statements the White House had been putting out since Tuesday night about the DOJ officials' letters being the impetus behind the firing.
In 1993, Bill Clinton became the first US president to dismiss the head of the bureau. He did so after the Department of Justice produced a 161-page internal report with sworn testimony from more than 100 FBI agents citing the numerous and severe ethical failures of its director, William Sessions.
Sessions and Rosenstein recommended Comey be fired based on his handling of the FBI's investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. But Trump said on Thursday that he was going to fire Comey "regardless" of either Sessions' or Rosenstein's recommendations.
Rosenstein also criticized Comey's decision to tell Congress 11 days before the election that the FBI would revisit the probe — a move that both Trump and Sessions applauded at the time.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the current White House deputy press secretary, said on Wednesday that Trump did not fire Comey immediately after he was elected because he "wanted to give Comey a chance." But his confidence in Comey had been steadily eroding, Sanders said, to the point where he agreed with the recommendation Comey be fired.
On the morning of Yates' hearing, Trump tweeted she should be asked, "under oath, if she knows how classified information got into the newspapers soon after she explained it to W.H. Counsel."
The Justice Department's report about William Sessions, published in January 1993, recounted how the director frequently abused his power and misused FBI resources to fund travel and vacations for him and his wife, Alice.
In what appeared to be a final indignity, moments before the president called Sessions to fire him, Deputy Attorney General Philip Heymann was dispatched to instruct the director on the "ground rules" for the removal of his papers and other possessions, a source said. Sessions was "quite matter of fact. . . . He obviously knew this was coming," said the source.
Senate Minority Leader Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.) yesterday criticized the firing, calling it a "potentially worrisome precedent" that might undermine the FBI's independence.
Calling a news conference moments after he got the word, Sessions maintained his defiant and proud posture to the end, saying he had led the bureau to "astounding accomplishments" and had refused to submit to pressures to resign because he wanted to preserve the "independence" of the FBI.
On Saturday morning Sessions was summoned to a meeting with Reno and White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum and was told to quit by Monday or be fired. Sessions again refused and then, upon leaving the Justice Department, tripped over a curb, fell and broke his elbow.
But there was soon a consensus that many of the findings could not be dismissed.
But Sessions's future was thrown into doubt earlier this year when the OPR report found that he had abused his office by setting up official appointments to justify charging the government for personal travel, improperly billed the FBI nearly $10,000 for a fence around his home, and refused to turn over documents on his $375,000 home mortgage, which investigators said they suspected involved a "sweetheart deal."