Dec 20, 2015 · A former deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration, Holder was pulled away from private practice to reshape a Justice Department that …
Sep 25, 2014 · The keenly legacy-conscious Holder has never been in better standing, leaving on arguably the highest personal note of his tenure, after a year of progress on his plan to reform sentencing laws and...
Sep 25, 2014 · Holder had been attorney general since the beginning of President Obama’s administration, and will, if he remains in office through the end of the year, be the third-longest serving attorney ...
Sep 25, 2014 · Why Is Eric Holder Resigning? Eric Holder has had his share of controversy in his six years as U.S. attorney general, but why is he quitting …
Sep 25, 2014 · While his drug reform efforts did earn him some praise from Republicans, many members of the GOP took Holder's exit as an opportunity to criticize the outgoing attorney general. Advertisement “Eric Holder is the most divisive U.S. Attorney General in modern history,’’ Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), a frequent Holder antagonist, said in a statement .
Holder was succeeded as attorney general by Loretta Lynch in April 2015. He returned to Covington & Burling, where he continues to practice corporate litigation, and is also involved with efforts at gerrymandering reform through the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.
Holder was arrested on April 2, 2019, and has remained in jail since then.Sep 23, 2021
Loretta LynchPresidentBarack ObamaDeputySally YatesPreceded byEric HolderSucceeded byJeff Sessions20 more rows
71 years (January 21, 1951)Eric H. Holder, Jr. / Age
He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted. Holder is due to face a jury on January 5th, 2022, and his lawyer, Deputy Public Defender Aaron Jansen, told Rolling Stone: “He's nervous, but he knows it's time to get the case moving to trial.”
Eric Himpton Holder, SrMiriam HolderEric H. Holder, Jr./Parents
Eric Himpton Holder, SrEric H. Holder, Jr. / Father
Eric R. Holder Jr., the man accused of gunning down the Victory Lap rapper and wounding two others in a brazen daylight ambush more than two years ago, is due to face a jury on January 5th, 2022, a Los Angeles County judge said Wednesday.Sep 22, 2021
Holder was nominated by President Ronald Reagan to become an Associate Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. He sat on the bench until 1993, when President Bill Clinton appointed him U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia.Aug 24, 2017
AmericanSharon Malone / Nationality
Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, Jr. is a favorite of Obama’s, and a person valued as a team player inside the West Wing—not as widely known but someone who might have an inside track, thanks to Obama’s penchant for picking trusted insiders over high-profile outsiders.
In recent days the president’s team has also taken a close look at California Attorney General Kamala Harris, an African-American woman who would likely pursue the same civil rights agenda championed by Holder—but may opt to stay in her state to pursue gubernatorial ambitions.
The purpose of the plan was to allow guns be freely sold along southern border states, in the hopes of tracking them to Mexican drug cartels. The plan was a disaster with CNN estimating 1,400 guns were lost in Mexico. Guns sold during the operation were found at the scene of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry’s murder in Arizona in 2010.
When put to a vote in the house, Holder contempt charge was upheld by a vote of 255-67. In total, 17 Democrats voted against Holder.
In an emotional ceremony at the White House on Thursday, President Obama said that saying goodbye to Holder was "bittersweet. ". He described the attorney general as having a "deep, abiding commitment to equal justice under the law," and to taking steps that further guarantee everyone's right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Eric Holder Jr., the nation's first black U.S. attorney general, will resign his post after a tumultuous tenure marked by civil rights advances, national security threats, reforms to the criminal justice system and 5 1/2 years of fights with Republicans in Congress.
After graduating from Columbia Law School, Holder joined the U.S. Justice Department 's new Public Integrity Section, where he worked from 1976 to 1988. During his time there, he assisted in the prosecution of Democratic Congressman John Jenrette for bribery discovered in the Abscam sting operation. In 1988, Ronald Reagan appointed Holder to serve as a judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.
Under Holder's leadership, the Department of Justice brought six leak-related prosecutions against current or former U.S. government employees, while all previous Presidential administrations combined had tried a total of three such cases. Holder was reportedly "surprised" by news reports pointing out this statistic, and was said to have told associates that he did not wish to have leak prosecutions be his legacy. Several prominent leak prosecutions under Holder involved communications between criminal defendants and journalists, and the pervasive use of traceable electronic communications between journalists and their sources provided the prosecution with a tool to determine the potential origin of published information. Under Holder, the Justice Department argued that journalists had no legal protection to maintain the confidentiality of their sources, and can be compelled by the government to reveal them, or potentially face criminal contempt charges. On September 17, 2018, the Freedom of the Press Foundation obtained documents regarding the use of FISA courts to spy on journalists.
Early life and education. Eric Himpton Holder Jr. was born in The Bronx, New York, to parents with roots in Barbados. Holder's father, Eric Himpton Holder Sr. (October 29, 1903 – February 12, 1998), was born in Saint Joseph, Barbados, and arrived in the United States at the age of 11. He later became a real estate broker.
In May 2011, House Oversight Committee chairman, California Republican Rep. Darrell Issa and Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley sent Attorney General Holder a letter requesting details about Operation Fast and Furious, which had been a failed federal firearms sting operation that allegedly allowed some 2,000 weapons to reach Mexican drug gangs. Grassley and Issa urged Holder to cooperate and turn over subpoenaed records that would reveal the scope of the alleged government coverup.
special forces killed Osama bin Laden earlier that month. Holder testified that the operation to kill bin Laden was legal, stating that international law allows for targeting enemy commanders. To support this point, Holder said that computer evidence seized from the raid demonstrated that bin Laden was still leading al-Qaeda. Moreover, Holder said, the Navy SEAL team that carried out the raid conducted itself in a manner consistent with American values, and that the parameters of the mission included capturing bin Laden.
would continue to support the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia. Holder also vowed to work closer with African officials to stop terrorism, and announced that the FBI would be providing a team of forensic specialists to help assist in the investigation of the terrorist bombings in Kampala during the World Cup.
Holder stepped down from the bench in 1993 to accept an appointment as United States Attorney for the District of Columbia from President Bill Clinton. He was the first Black American U.S. Attorney in that office.