Posted on 10/15/2014 2:30:15 PM PDT by Olog-hai
An American Civil Liberties Union attorney was named Wednesday to be the acting head of the Justice Departments Civil Rights Division.
Vanita Gupta, who has served for the past four years as deputy legal director of the ACLU and director of its Center for Justice, starts at the Justice Department next week. She previously worked as a lawyer at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.
A person familiar with the process said President Barack Obama plans to nominate Gupta to serve in the job permanently. The person was not authorized to discuss the selection process by name and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...
Is she a lesbian? A midget? A muslim? A minority with a birth defect? Not even Laz would hit it?
All of the above?
Then yeah. Welcome to The Obola Regime!
Well if she’s from the ACLU, its a given that she is very very liberal.
Don’t worry McConnell’s Senate will stop approving all of Obama’s appointments...
(...in 2016).
Oh my God! Sharia here it comes!!! These ACLU folks from the pit of hell buttholes side with the radical Muslims 110% and we Americans are so freaking cooked!!! Sweet Jesus please make it stop!!
(no link)
Justice Dept. Opens Door To Freedom For Some Nonviolent Offenders
NPR - Wednesday, April 23, 2014
AUDIE CORNISH: The Justice Department wants to grant an early release to thousands of nonviolent drug offenders in crowded federal prisons and they’ve unveiled a plan to do it. Inmates will receive notice starting next week that they may be eligible to apply. That has government lawyers gearing up for a huge amount of work. Here’s NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson.
CARRIE JOHNSON: Deputy Attorney General Jim Cole says there’s no time to waste.
JIM COLE: We are launching this clemency initiative in order to quickly and effectively identify appropriate candidates, candidates who have a clean prison record do not present a threat to public safety and were sentenced under out-of-date laws that have since been changed and are no longer seen as appropriate.
CARRIE JOHNSON: In order to apply, federal prison inmates will also need to show they have served at least 10 years of their sentence and have no ties to gangs or cartels. About 12 percent of the U.S. prison population, more than 20,000 people, may be eligible for the early release program. But Cole says he expects only a fraction of the applications will be granted.
He’s enlisting outside groups to help inmates with the paperwork. Vanita Gupta is deputy legal director at the ACLU, which is taking part in the clemency project.
VANITA GUPTA: We are going to need hundreds, if not thousands, of lawyers to step up and take these cases and write petitions so that we can get the right picture sent before the Department of Justice. This is a massive effort.
CARRIE JOHNSON: The Office of Pardon Attorney, which operates within the Justice Department to review those applications has been criticized by its own inspector general for huge backlogs and its approach to inmates. The deputy attorney general today named a new leader for that office, Deborah Leff.
JIM COLE: Debbie has committed her career to the very basis of this initiative: achieving equal justice under law.
CARRIE JOHNSON: Cole says he’s moving a group of prosecutors into the Pardon Office to help her and in an unusual approach, some public defenders will work there, too. All this is raising some hackles inside the Justice Department where people are usually focused on putting criminals in prison instead of letting them out. At a news conference, Cole was asked how confident he was that prosecutors across the country would buy into the project.
JIM COLE: Well, I think it’s a question of being fair and I think there’s a lot of buy-in from every single prosecutor and every single employee in the Justice Department in ensuring fairness.
CARRIE JOHNSON: Long before any inmates are released, Cole says, the Justice Department will consult the U.S. attorneys who prosecuted those criminals and the judges who sentenced them. President Obama, who’s made the issue a priority, will have the final say. Gupta , of the ACLU, says the administration is doing what it can to correct injustice. But she says the real power is in the hands of lawmakers who are considering legislation that would shorten prison sentences across the board for many drug crimes.
VANITA GUPTA: It would be a terrible shame for Congress to not enact that reform. That’s the kind of reform that will result in a much wider impact on the federal criminal justice system.
CARRIE JOHNSON: And, she says, resonate far beyond today’s historic announcement. Carrie Johnson, NPR News, Washington.
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