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01 December 2008 |
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Video: Eric Holder Profile - Download (WM)
Video: Eric Holder Profile
- Watch (WM)
U.S.
President-elect Barack Obama has nominated private practice lawyer Eric
Holder to become the nation's first African-American U.S. attorney
general.
Attorney General-designate Eric Holder speaks during a news conference with President-elect Barack Obama in Chicago, 1 Dec. 2008
If the U.S. Senate confirms his appointment, Holder would become the first African-American to head the U.S. Justice Department.
Holder
previously made history as the highest ranking African-American law
enforcement official in the country when he was appointed deputy
attorney general under then-President Bill Clinton in 1997.
Democratic
Party officials say one of Holder's top priorities will be to reform
the Justice Department's reputation, after controversies surrounding
its hiring practices and anti-terror regulations.
But some
lawmakers have criticized the selection because of Holder's involvement
in the controversial 2001 pardon of a fugitive financier, Marc Rich, by
the Clinton presidency. At the time, Holder said he was neutral and
leaning toward favoring the pardon.
The head of the U.S. Senate
Judiciary Committee, Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, has
said Holder would make an outstanding nominee and should have
bipartisan support.
An early supporter of Mr. Obama's campaign,
Holder helped investigate candidates to become Mr. Obama's vice
presidential running mate.
The former prosecutor and judge has also served as U.S. Attorney in the District of Columbia.








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