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U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.
and President Barack Obama |
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Eric H. Holder Jr.'s swearing-in
as the nation's first black
attorney general
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New
U.S. Attorney General seen as a
Chance to Right Racial Wrongs
WASHINGTON
(By Carrie Johnson and Krissah
Thompson, Washington Post) February
5, 2009
―
For decades, the face of the
criminal justice system in this
country has been black and male:
hundreds of thousands locked behind
bars, arrested in disproportionate
numbers and facing execution at
rates far greater than those for the
general population.
This week, Eric H. Holder Jr.'s
swearing-in as the nation's first
black attorney general and its top
law enforcement official came
weighted with heavy expectation that
the system could change.
Known as a prosecutor who was
unflinchingly tough on crime,
Holder, 58, is also a former civil
rights lawyer who has mentored young
black men. Many advocates view him
as the best chance in decades to
right what they consider unchecked
racial injustice and insensitivity
by federal officials.
'A person who gets it'
Civil rights advocates are already
outlining a long list of priorities,
including changing laws that lead to
disproportionate prison terms for
blacks, ending racial profiling and
stepping up the policing of
discrimination in employment and
housing.
"The most important thing is that we
have a person who gets it," said
Benjamin Jealous, president of the
NAACP. "He understands that the purpose
of incarceration is not just punishment
and protection but it is also
redemption. He understands that people
shouldn't be targeted because of what
they look like but because of what they
do. He understands that enforcing civil
rights serves the interest of law
enforcement. It's not about what he
looks like, it's about what he
believes."
Holder will oversee civil rights
enforcement, crime prevention and racial
justice -- issues with a broad impact
and audience -- among many competing
priorities in an agency that also plays
a central role in fighting terrorism and
policing corporate abuse. Fixing decades
of perceived injustices is a difficult
task at any time but will be especially
challenging for Holder now, when
government budgets have tightened and
scarce money is allocated to national
security and defense efforts.
In public statements since his
nomination, Holder has emphasized civil
rights enforcement, but he has not
indicated a desire to plunge headlong
into broad changes to the criminal laws.
Civil rights enforcement represents a
fraction of the Justice Department's
wide-ranging responsibilities.
As he settles in during his first days
in office, Holder said his personal
story will inevitably shape his view of
the job. His father served in World War
II and was forced to stand in a
segregated railroad car, Holder said.
His grandmother was not allowed to sit
at the counter at Woolworth in New
Jersey. His sister-in-law was on the
front lines of integrating the
University of Alabama.
"As someone who witnessed the civil
rights movement and whose family members
literally suffered through the evils of
segregation, I hope I can bring a unique
perspective to the department," he said.
"This department has played a historic
role in civil rights over the years, and
I owe it to those who came before me and
to the American people I serve to
oversee a vigorous enforcement program
that deals with the realities we
confront today."
A hard-nosed, law-and-order
prosecutor
On issues of crime and punishment,
Holder brings his background as a
hard-nosed, law-and-order prosecutor. As
a U.S. attorney in the District, he
lobbied for tougher minimum sentences
for drug offenders but later changed
course on nonviolent criminals,
according to Families Against Mandatory
Minimums, a D.C.-based group that calls
for changing the sentencing system.
In his time away from the office,
friends say, Holder worried about young
black men caught up in the criminal
justice system.
In the 1980s, he and his fellow public
corruption prosecutor Reid H. Weingarten
began to volunteer at the Oak Hill
juvenile detention center. And as the
crack epidemic ravaged the District in
the mid-1980s, Holder became an early
member of the local chapter of Concerned
Black Men, a mentoring group founded to
provide positive black male role models.
From the judge's bench, he sent scores
of young black men to prison, but in his
chambers, he hosted children involved in
the mentoring program.
At one of the group's fundraisers,
Holder met his wife, prominent
Washington obstetrician Sharon Malone.
He still makes financial contributions
to the organization, said Executive
Director George L. Garrow Jr.
"We like to believe that we've helped
him keep in touch with the community,"
Garrow said.
Holder's presence at the top of the
Justice Department, along with his
history, sends a powerful signal, said
Larry Thompson, who succeeded Holder as
the second black deputy attorney
general.
"You bring your full self to the job,
your experiences, your background," he
said.
President Obama and Holder have vowed to
restore public faith in the department,
which was plagued by political hiring
scandals during the years that George W.
Bush was president. Last month,
Inspector General Glenn A. Fine exposed
hiring abuses and racial insults at the
civil rights division, underscoring
persistent complaints from Democrats
that it had lost its way as the nation's
premier protector of the rights of
African Americans.
The black community's relationship with
the department has long been
complicated. The distrust of law
enforcement organizations was increased
by the FBI, which for years harassed and
spied on the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
At the same time, activists have taken
pride in the glory days of the civil
rights division, which was established
in 1957. Over the next decade, the
department helped protect Freedom Riders
and students seeking to break color
barriers at state universities.
Sentencing disparities
For criminal justice activists, a
pressing concern has been sentencing
disparities for convicts caught with
crack cocaine versus powder cocaine.
Possession of crack carries longer
criminal penalties, and 80 percent of
people prosecuted for crack offenses
have been African American, according to
the Sentencing Project. Obama has said
repeatedly that he wants to end the
sentencing disparity.
But when Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.)
asked Holder at his confirmation hearing
to work with Congress to promote more
fairness in sentencing laws, he
responded with the cool of a longtime
judge and prosecutor: "We have to be
tough. We have to be smart. And we have
to be fair. Our criminal justice system
has to be fair. It has to be viewed as
being fair."
The sentence disparities have combined
with social and economic factors to lead
to the increasing number of African
Americans in prison, a figure that has
grown from 100,000 in 1954 -- the year
of the Supreme Court's seminal school
desegregation case -- to 900,000 today,
according to the Sentencing Project, a
research and advocacy group.
"When we look at the prison system, it's
a much worse situation than we had seen
before the rise of the modern-day civil
rights movement," said Mark Mauer,
executive director of the group. "If
current trends continue, one of every
three black males today can expect to go
to prison in their lifetime. It is one
in every six for Hispanic men."
Locally, four out of five D.C. prisoners
are black men.
Holder seldom broaches the topic of race
directly, but in a 1997 National Public
Radio interview conducted soon after his
appointment as the Justice Department's
second in command, he shared a quote by
the late Samuel Proctor, a pastor in
Harlem, that he carried in his wallet.
"It says that blackness is another issue
entirely apart from class in America,"
Holder said. "No matter how affluent,
educated and mobile a black person
becomes, his race defines him more
particularly than anything else."