Tag: Garland

  • Garland wants marshals off security duty for Supreme Court justices

    Garland wants marshals off security duty for Supreme Court justices

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    Garland ordered deputy U.S. marshals to the homes of Supreme Court justices last May, after protests broke out there following a bombshell POLITICO report that a majority of the high court had voted privately to overturn the federal right to abortion established a half-century ago in Roe v. Wade.

    To continue the protective details, the Marshals Service is seeking $21 million to pay for 42 additional deputy marshals in the next fiscal year, Garland said during his testimony on the Justice Department’s budget.

    The attorney general noted that, last June, Congress passed legislation to expand the Supreme Court Police’s authority to provide security for the families of justices. But he politely observed that Congress didn’t provide money to cover the expansion.

    The Supreme Court’s own budget request seeks an additional $5.9 million to beef up security.

    Last June, local police arrested a California man outside Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s suburban Maryland home in the middle of the night after the man said he’d traveled there to kill the justice. The suspect, Nicholas Roske, allegedly told police he was angry about Supreme Court decisions on abortion and guns. Roske was later charged in federal court with seeking to assassinate Kavanaugh and has pleaded not guilty.

    Republican lawmakers recently stepped up their complaints that the marshals have not acted aggressively enough to curtail noisy protests outside the homes of some conservative justices. At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this month, Garland was pressed on why the marshals haven’t sought to arrest demonstrators under a federal statute prohibiting protests aimed at influencing federal court decisions.

    “We are trying to protect the lives of justices. That is our principal priority,” Garland said on March 1. “Decisions have to be made on the ground about what is the best way to protect those lives.”

    At the budget hearing Tuesday, Sen. Katie Britt (R-Ala.) displayed enlargements of training materials for the marshals’ protection mission showing that the deputies were strongly discouraged from making arrests unless they were essential to protecting the justices or their families. A spokesperson for Britt said her office obtained them from a whistleblower “concerned about the attorney general’s misleading testimony before the Judiciary Committee.”

    “Avoid, unless absolutely necessary, criminal enforcement action involving the protest or protestors, particularly on public space,” one bullet point from the training presentation said.

    While Justice Department officials have repeatedly declined to comment on whether they consider the anti-protest statute constitutional, the training materials suggest that DOJ lawyers concluded that enforcing the statute against ordinary protests aimed at the justices could run afoul of the First Amendment.

    “The ‘intent of influencing any judge’ language thus logically goes to threats and intimidation, not 1st [Amendment] protected protest activities,” the training materials say, calling any arrests a “last resort to present physical harm to the Justices and/or their families.”

    Britt said the slides undercut Garland’s earlier claim that the marshals “have full authority to arrest people under any federal statute, including that federal statute.”

    “Were you at any point before your testimony in front of the Judiciary Committee aware of these training materials?” the Alabama senator asked.

    Garland said he wasn’t and he rebuffed a suggestion by Britt that he “amend” his statements earlier this month.

    “There’s nothing for me to amend because, as I said, I’ve never seen those slides before,” the attorney general replied.

    “It’s clear the marshals were given a different directive and I would ask you to look into that, please,” Britt responded.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Garland makes surprise visit to Ukraine

    Garland makes surprise visit to Ukraine

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    “Just over twelve months ago, invading Russian forces began committing atrocities at the largest scale in any armed conflict since the Second World War,” Garland said at the conference, according to a readout provided by the Justice Department. “We are here today in Ukraine to speak clearly, and with one voice: the perpetrators of those crimes will not get away with them.”

    “In addition to our work in partnership with Ukraine and the international community, the United States has also opened criminal investigations into war crimes in Ukraine that may violate U.S. law,” Garland added.

    “The United States recognizes that what happens here in Ukraine will have a direct impact on the strength of our own democracy,” Garland said, before invoking historical parallels including the Holocaust and Nuremberg war trials.

    Garland stressed that U.S. human rights and environmental prosecutors are providing advice and assistance to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s office on specific cases, including environmental war crimes.

    The surprise visit comes just after the one-year anniversary of Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, and just about two weeks after President Joe Biden made his first trip to the country — which had also been unannounced — since the war began. Garland is the second Cabinet official to visit Ukraine in recent weeks, with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen traveling to Kyiv to meet with Zelenskyy on Feb. 27.

    This is also the second surprise visit Garland has made to Ukraine since Russia invaded. The first was in June 2022, when he traveled to western Ukraine to discuss the actions the U.S. was taking to hold Russia accountable for war crimes and atrocities.

    Garland said in a February statement marking the one-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion that prosecutors from the Justice Department’s War Crimes Accountability Team were “working closer than ever before” with its Ukrainian counterparts to “investigate specific crimes committed by Russian forces, including attacks on civilian targets.”

    “Over the past year, the Ukrainian people have shown the world what courage looks like,” Garland said in the statement. “And for as long as it takes, the Department of Justice will continue to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with our Ukrainian and international partners in defense of justice and the rule of law.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Garland promises free rein for prosecutors probing Hunter Biden

    Garland promises free rein for prosecutors probing Hunter Biden

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    When Garland was nominated as attorney general, he agreed to leave Weiss — an appointee of former President Donald Trump — in place to complete the Hunter Biden investigation.

    While offering those assurances about independence, Garland did not share any substantive update on the investigation into the president’s son. The probe is reportedly focused on Hunter Biden’s failure for years to pay a federal income tax bill that eventually amounted to about $1 million and a false statement Hunter Biden allegedly made about his drug use when purchasing a gun in 2018. Hunter Biden has said he is confident the investigation will clear him of wrongdoing.

    While the Hunter Biden questions were the most politically explosive issues aired in the early hours of Wednesday’s hearing, questioning from senators was a potpourri, spanning concerns ranging from violent crime to drugs to guns to the impact of social media platforms on American society.

    Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) challenged Garland about federal law enforcement’s handling of protests that broke out at the homes of several Supreme Court justices after POLITICO reported last May on a draft Supreme Court opinion that would overturn the federal constitutional right to abortion established in 1973 in Roe v. Wade. The protests intensified after the court formally issued its ruling the next month in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, with the opinion in much the same form as the earlier draft.

    Lee, a former law clerk to the author of Justice Samuel Alito, who wrote Dobbs, pressed Garland on why no one has been arrested under a federal statute that prohibits trying to influence the administration of justice by picketing or parading near the homes of federal judges.

    “It’s very clear they’re tying to influence in one way or another that those serving on the United States Supreme Court,” Lee said of the protesters. “Yet, not one person to my knowledge has been prosecuted for such things.”

    Cruz, who served as a law clerk to the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist, later thundered at Garland over the department’s failure to act against what the senator called “rioters” at the justices’ homes.

    “You’re perfectly content with justices being afraid for their children’s lives,” the Texas Republican shouted.

    Garland stressed that he responded rapidly to the leak and the protests by assigning more than 70 deputy U.S. Marshals to guard the justices and their families around the clock. “As soon as the Dobbs draft leaked, I ordered the marshals to do something that the marshals had never done in United States history before, which was to protect the justices and their families, 24-7.”

    The attorney general eventually conceded that no protester has been charged under the federal law, but he said the “priority” of the marshals is keeping the justices and their families safe, not policing the demonstrators. Garland insisted, however, that no directive has been given to the marshals to ignore that law.

    “They have full authority to arrest people under any federal statute, including that statute,” Garland said.

    Some experts have said the federal law could be open to a First Amendment challenge, although the attorney general noted that the Supreme Court marshal wrote to local law enforcement in Maryland and Virginia last year urging them to enforce similar local ordinances.

    Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) also challenged Garland on abortion-related issues, grilling him over alleged “anti-Catholic bias” at the Justice Department. Hawley pointed to an intelligence memo prepared by the FBI’s Richmond, Va., field office and dated in January that warned of the potential for violence from “radical-traditionalist Catholics,” particularly among those who favor the Latin mass.

    “It’s appalling. It’s appalling. I’m in complete agreement with you,” Garland replied. “I understand that the FBI has withdrawn it and is now looking into how this would ever have happened….It does not reflect the methods the FBI is supposed to be using.”

    “Are you cultivating sources and spies in Latin-mass parishes and other Catholic parishes around the country?…How many informants do you have in Catholic churches across America?” Hawley asked.

    “I don’t think we have any informants,” Garland said, pointing to longstanding Justice Department policies.

    Democrats also used the hearing to cajole Garland for support for their key issues, with Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) railing against social media companies for enabling drug trafficking and dangerous behavior by teenagers.

    “This is out of hand,” Durbin told the attorney general. The chair also bemoaned the influence of the 1996 law known as Section 230, which gives online platforms broad immunity from being sued over content third parties post online and from being sued over the adequacy of their efforts to police that content.

    “I think Section 230 has become a suicide pact. We are basically saying you are absolved from liability, make money and deaths result from it,” Durbin said.

    Garland called the situation Durbin described “horrible,” but was careful to limit his specific criticism to the role social media plays in drug dealing.

    “We do have to do something to force them to provide information to search their own platforms for drugs,” the attorney general said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Garland defends handling of Biden, Trump classified document probes

    Garland defends handling of Biden, Trump classified document probes

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    Earlier this month, Garland appointed a special counsel to determine whether laws were broken in connection with the presence of the apparently-classified records at the Penn Biden Center in Washington and later at Biden’s Delaware home.

    Asked if he had any regrets about the way the matters had been handled thus far, Garland called the law enforcement decisions “appropriate” and unaffected by politics.

    “That is what we’ve done and that is what we will continue to do,” Garland said, flanked by a Justice Department task force handling fallout from the Supreme Court’s decision in June to overturn the federal constitutional right to abortion.

    While Garland said Monday that the Justice Department has pursued the Trump- and Biden-related cases “without regard to who the subjects are,” there remain special protections for a sitting president under longstanding Justice Department legal opinions. Those opinions preclude criminal charges against a president while he remains in office, but they do not rule out the possibility of such charges once a president leaves office.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )