She is a graduate of the Harvard Law School. That is all I have to know as it indicates she did not have a decent legal education.
Gotta kill all the democrat guards first then the warden, (DNC chair). The left are the prison keepers.......
Does she mean the way blacks are again underepresented, regarding illegal immigration in particular?
They are free. All they have to do is walk out the door of the Democrat Plantation. The only ones stopping them are the Democrat Uncle Toms.
At some point a few reasonable democrats (sic) need to step up and stop Obama from destroying their party and our nation. His cabinet is made up of either radicals or incompetents, or both.
Rearranging the deck chairs
How about freeing them from the prison of the race-baiters? That will do it.
She would probably give blanket amnesty to violent criminals on the basis of “race”. It’s amazing that people don’t question why felons always vote Democrat.
Just how is she going to convince the blacks to not be racist? She doesn’t have that much time on this earth.
Any republican besides Cruz ready to voice disapproval of Ms Lynch? I hope so.
No one can free a person from a prison of their own making.
Only they have the key.
How many people think Loretta Lynn would make a better Attorney General than this yutz?
There is always the question of how they can prosecute blacks like Condoleeza Rice, Clarence Thomas, Tim Scott, Mia Love and others for turning white.
She should start with the man who nominated her. But then, she’s a racist too.
(no links)
Prosecutor in Louima case recalls her Durham roots
The News & Observer - Monday, May 31, 1999
Author: JOHN SULLIVAN, STAFF WRITER
DURHAM As prosecutors begin closing arguments this week in their case against four New York City police officers accused of torturing a Haitian immigrant, Loretta E. Lynch will be standing before the jury arguing principles she learned here.
Lynch , a chief assistant U.S. attorney, said in an interview this week that although she went to Harvard-Radcliffe College and later Harvard School of Law, much of what made her love justice came from listening to her father as pastor of White Rock Baptist Church on Fayetteville Street in Durham .
The church was a microcosm of the city where people were acting out their need to control or need to serve and help people, Lynch said. In church it all got stripped away down to the barest personality.
After church, Lynch said, her father would tell his three children tales of her grandfather, Augustus Lynch , and his dedication to equality.
In those days, if you were black, there was no due process, said Lynch , who was born in Greensboro and brought up in Durham . They just decided you were in trouble and you would have to just leave the state. For those who were unjustly persecuted, my grandfather would hide them. I can tell you that because the statute has run out on harboring criminals.
(snip)
Police trial just another case for prosecutor
Herald-Sun, The ( Durham , NC) - Wednesday, May 26, 1999
Author: GEOFFREY M. GRAYBEAL The Herald-Sun
A longtime Durham resident is propelling justice in a New York courtroom.
(snip)
Lynch s fondness for the law grew stronger as she entered college and watched colleagues enter careers in the profession.
I had several friends that were lawyers and they felt that they were doing something very positive, she said. I feel that way as well.
Lynch is a 1981 graduate of Harvard Radcliffe College and the Harvard School of Law in 1984.
She was an associate in the law firm of Cahill, Gordon and Reindel in the Wall Street area of New York City before joining the U.S. Attorneys office.
She wanted to make an impact, said Lorenzo Lynch . This is her motivation. She put money aside.
Emotional rewards
Loretta Lynch said working on Wall Street was intellectually rewarding, but her job as prosecutor provides emotional rewards.
She gains pleasure from participating in the entire judicial process and said she likes being involved in the investigation as well as the courtroom proceedings.
I like being on what I view as the good guys side of the law, she said.
Lorenzo Lynch has watched his daughter in action on several occasions.
Shes tough in presentation and rebuttal, he said. Shes not theatrical. She doesnt put on a show, but shes hard-hitting.
The steadfast prosecutor is no stranger to important cases, either.
In 1992, Lynch helped prosecute nine members of the Green Dragons, a Chinese gang that made Queens its stomping ground. Between 1986 and 1990, the Green Dragons ran illegal gambling and loan-sharking operations, pulled armed robberies, extorted cash from merchants and assaulted rival gangs. Thanks in part to the efforts of Lynch , nine gang members were convicted of racketeering and murder.
Lynch was pleased to have helped free an entire community from the grasp of terror.
To see people come out from fear was really rewarding, she said.
While proud of his daughters work, Lorenzo Lynch said he cant help but feel some sympathy for the people she puts away.
You start wondering what could we have done to help these people come out of the wilderness in human relations, he said.
The former pastor said he understands all human beings have the potential to commit violence, but that he cant fathom what prompts people to do such heinous things. I have deep sympathy for the persons on trial, he said. Im saddened by this trial.
Her audience, ObeyMe’s audience, all the race-hustling pimps’ audience — is the same. Poor, uneducated, angry black Americans. And perhaps now: poor, uneducated, angry hispanics?
Do ANY of them ever wonder, even for a second, how all these “black leaders” got to be graduates of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. if “racism” was so rampant and ready to hold them down? Do ANY of them ever wonder... gee... if they were able to do it without “black leadership”, can’t I?
Will the DOJ now be known as the “Lynch Mob”?
Lorretta, its called a plantation and people like you run it.
Obola, the MSM and the rest of the demonic legions have been trying to create a race war in this country for the last six years.