XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, law.court.federal, sac.politics
XPost: talk.politics.guns
On 01 Nov 2021, "Andrew Anglin - White Supremacist Pedo Boy"
<
al@ssaohell.com> posted some news:slpkrs$j6n$
100@news.dns-netz.com:
Mighty Wannabe wrote
Kamala got her sister whore into this position.
BOSTON (AP) — Rachael Rollins, who has pushed for progressive criminal
justice reforms as the first woman of color to serve as a district
attorney in Massachusetts, has been nominated by President Joe Biden to
become the state’s top federal prosecutor.
If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Rollins, who has led the Suffolk County district attorneys office since 2019, would become the first Black woman
to serve as U.S. attorney for Massachusetts.
Rollins defeated the district attorney candidate backed by the longtime incumbent and police groups in the 2018 Democratic primary on a promise to decline prosecution for certain low-level crimes. She argued people
shouldn’t be jailed for crimes that result from mental health or addiction problems and said she wanted to focus her attention on serious crimes,
like homicides.
Rollins’ office said in an emailed statement that she is “incredibly
humbled” by the nomination and “remains focused on doing the hard work of keeping the residents of Suffolk County safe.”
Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, who recommended Rollins for the job,
said they are “certain that she will be a tremendous U.S. attorney” and
pledged to work to make sure she’s confirmed as quickly as possible.
“District Attorney Rollins is a national leader on transforming the
criminal justice system and shifting away from an approach based on
punishment and penalization to one that combats the root causes of
injustice, whether it be poverty, substance use, or racial disparity,”
they said in an emailed statement.
As the top prosecutor for Boston and surrounding communities, Rollins has
been outspoken about the need for police reform in the wake of high-
profile killings of people of color by law enforcement across the U.S. In
an interview with The Associated Press in April, she said the country must
do away with the misconception that questioning the police or suggesting
ways they can improve means “you don’t back the blue.”
“The police have an incredibly hard job, and believe me, I know there are violent people that harm community and police but that’s not all of us. So
we have to acknowledge that it’s not working and we have to sit together
to come up with solutions, but it’s urgent,” Rollins said at the time.
“I’m afraid, I’m exhausted and I’m the chief law enforcement officer so
imagine what other people feel like,” she said.
Rollins has also sparred with Boston’s largest police union, which accused
her last summer of inciting violence against law enforcement after she
tweeted: “We are being murdered at will by the police ... No more words.
Demand action.” Rollins rebuffed the union’s criticism, saying on Twitter, “White fragility is real people.”
In one high-profile Boston case, she moved to overturn the remaining
firearm conviction for a man who spent more than 20 years in prison for
the killing of a police officer before his murder conviction was
overturned. Rollins’ said the case of Sean Ellis, whose fight to prove his innocence was documented in the Netflix series “Trial 4,” was “tainted by significant and egregious police corruption and prosecutorial misconduct.”
Rollins has also pledged to vacate drug convictions for potentially tens
of thousands of defendants whose cases are tied to a troubled former state
drug testing lab. Two chemists who worked there, Annie Dookhan and Sonja
Farak, were convicted of tampering with evidence. Thousands of convictions across the state have already been tossed because of their misconduct.
As district attorney, Rollins has also vowed to push to end mandatory life-without-parole sentences for those who committed killings between the
ages of 18 and 20. Such punishments are already outlawed in Massachusetts
for juveniles. She said in an interview with the AP last month that she
would ask the state’s highest court to rule that people who commit
killings as young adults a special sentencing hearing to consider their
youth before punishments can be handed down.
“We are going to move now to make sure that overwhelmingly Black and brown
men aren’t disproportionately impacted by the criminal legal system,”
Rollins told the AP. “We’re going to do what’s right and at least have
them have more hope and opportunity … to believe that they can change
after 10, 15, 20 or so years.”
Rollins, who used to work as an assistant U.S. attorney in Massachusetts,
would be just the second woman to head the state’s federal prosecutors’
office. Carmen Ortiz became the first woman and the first Hispanic to
serve as U.S. attorney for Massachusetts in 2009.
<
https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-race-and-ethnicity-massachusetts- police-reform-9954fe1f03a5b54951e6536cc0677409>
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