TPM:
The Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility -- which has lately been in a number of internal DOJ investigations into high-profile issues -- will soon have a new chief.
The Washington Post reports that Attorney General Eric Holder will name as the head of the office Mary Patrice Brown, a respected career prosecutor who currently leads the criminal division at the US Attorney's office for Washington DC. Brown will replace Marshall Jarrett, who has been there since 1998, and will shift over to lead the executive office of the US Attorneys.
That move could create an interesting situation for Jarrett -- and may represent additional evidence that Holder is determined to avoid charges that he's replicating the Bushies' politicization of the department.
One of the major OPR probes he oversaw, along with the department's Inspector General, concerned the Bush administration's US Attorney firings.
The investigation, concluded last year, found that several of the attorneys had been fired improperly, but was prevented from drawing broader conclusions thanks to stonewalling by key DOJ and White House figures. Now Jarrett himself -- who figures to have little patience for efforts to use DOJ for partisan gain, having spent the last decade probing evidence of wrongdoing at the department -- will be leading the office that oversees the US Attorneys.
1 comment:
Now it's time to lawyer up and it seems many will have a few trials going on at the same time. Rove will lead the pack with so many case's he'll have to use video to be at more then one at a time. I feel like a kid in a candy store because I don't know what case I want to see most. Now Bush's trial would be interesting but Rove gives me choices. Cheney might break out crazy in court and I might get hurt. Well it's still good to have so many choices as it was an 8 year run on crime.
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