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Third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department stepping down - William P J Lynch Jr com

Third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department stepping down Third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department stepping downby wpjljron Saturday, February 10th, 2018.Third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department stepping downRachel L. Brand, the third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department and the first woman to serve as associate attorney general, plans to step down, the department announced Friday a resignation that comes at a moment of intense political scrutiny for the department, including some harsh criticism from President Trump. Brand, 44, who has […] Rachel L. Brand, the third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department and the first woman to serve as associate attorney general, plans to step down, the department announced Friday a resignation that comes at a moment of intense political scrutiny for the department, including some harsh criticism from President Trump.

The Tattered Histories of Possible Future Ambassadors Like Rahm Emanuel

Yves here. While most Americans who follow politics know that the appointment of ambassadors includes quite a few patronage postings, few follow the sausage-making on that beat. This post fills that lapse, and shows the cooking is as rotten as you’d expect. And dispatching to Rahm to Japan makes perfect sense, in a sick sort of way. The Japanese are not know nfor racial tolerance, so misdeeds against people of color on his watch would not register with them as an issue. By Max Moran, a research director for the personnel team at the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR)’s Revolving Door Project, which aims to increase scrutiny on executive branch appointments. Produced in partnership by the Center for Economic and Policy Research and Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute

Candace Jackson-Akiwumi, nominee for Chicago federal appeals court, would be rare judge who was defense lawyer; Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday

Zuckerman Spaeder WASHINGTON The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday will hold a confirmation hearing for Candace Rae Jackson-Akiwumi, nominated by President Joe Biden to sit on the Chicago-based Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the very rare judge, if confirmed, who brings the perspective of a criminal defense lawyer to the bench. A partner in a D.C. law firm only since last year, Jackson-Akiwumi spent a formative 10 years, between 2010 and 2020, as a staff attorney at the Federal Defender Program for the Northern District of Illinois. If confirmed, as expected Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin recruited her for the position she will mark two milestones: Jackson-Akiwumi will be only the second Black woman ever on the Seventh Circuit and will be the only person of color currently on the Chicago appe

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