Attorney General Eric Holder is being called lawless, threatened
with impeachment, and generally regarded as out of control. Yet there are efforts to give his Department
even more money in the latest Omnibus
Appropriations proposal.
Of course, the other thing
needed with the Civil Rights Division is a cutback in its budget, which has
grown considerably, and gives Eric Holder the resources to file numerous suits
challenging common sense voter ID, immigration, and other state laws he does
not like. There are also at least two
dozen lawyers and support staff in the Voting Section of the Civil Rights
Division who have seemingly had nothing to do since the U.S. Supreme Court
declared the coverage formula for Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act
unconstitutional in June 2013. These DOJ personnel who worked on Section 5
matters are now on a permanent, extended coffee break – yet not a single one of
them has been laid off. This is an enormous waste of taxpayer funds that should
have been eliminated by Congress.
Former DOJ Career Attorney Christian Adams adds
more details:
Inside the Justice
Department Civil Rights Division Voting Section, almost three dozen federal
jobs were rendered irrelevant after the Supreme Court’s decision in Shelby v. Holder. Sources report that after the decision, the
employees have done next to nothing, or taken “extended coffee breaks” as von
Spakovsky reports. Here are the federal
employees von Spakovsky is referring to, and salaries from public records
searches provided to PJ Media.
Berman, Robert; Deputy
Chief, Section 5, $155,500
Bashir-Boulghassoul, Lema;
Trial Attorney, Section 5, $136,134
Falwell, Marie; Equal
Opportunity Assistant, Section 5, $56,791
Greene, Judybeth; Trial
Attorney, Section 5, $155,500
Grigsby, Kevin; Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $64,548
Gyamfi, Stephanie, Lead
Civil Rights Analyst, Section 5, $97,936
Hamilton-Hill, Sandra, Civil
Rights Analyst, Section 5, $81,204
Harrison, Martin; Legal
Technician (File Librarian), Section 5, $54,534
Hyatt, Joi; Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $70,794
Johnson, Phyllis; Case
Management Specialist, Section 5, $65,343
Jones, Nadine; Legal
Technician (Classifier), Section 5, $68,230
Kim, Elizabeth, Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $64,548
King, Ryan, Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $62,467
Le, Tran-Chau, Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $70,794
Lowell, Robert; Attorney
Reviewer, Section 5, $155,500
Murray, Joseph, Lead Civil
Rights Attorney (Trainer), Section 5, $97,936
Payne, Autumn; Lead Civil
Rights Attorney, Section 5, $94,969
Powers, John; Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $79,864
Reed, Judith; Trial
Attorney, Section 5, $155,500
Rich, James Eric; Trial
Attorney, Section 5, $152,635
Riggins, Jesmond; Civil
Rights Analyst, Section 5, $62,467
Riordan, Maureen; Trial
Attorney, Section 5, $155,500
Robinson, Pamela; Secretary,
Section 5, $52,061
Schaffer, Tracy; Lead Civil
Rights Analyst, Section 5, $94,969
Soo-Tim, Tiffani; Secretary,
Section 5, $ 43,616
Stafford, Suzanne; Civil
Rights Analyst, Section 5, (mostly works on FOIA), $92,341
Stephens, Jennifer; Civil
Rights Analyst, Section 5, $62,467
Thorpe, Nicole; Supervisory
Civil Rights Analyst, Section 5, $119,238
Travett, Rosita; Legal
Technician, Section 5, $60,765
Wake, Brittany; Civil Rights
Analyst, Section 5, $62,467
That this many lawyers and support staff are doing
nothing except taking taxpayer money is yet another reason why Eric Holder
should resign.
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